When an act of Congress is claimed to be unconstitutional, the
presumption is in favor of its validity, and it is only when the
question is free from any reasonable doubt that this Court should
hold an act of the lawmaking power of the nation to be in violation
of that fundamental instrument upon which all the powers of the
government rest.
The tax authorized by the Act of June 13, 1898, by the board of
trade or exchanges upon the sale of property is not a direct tax,
nor a tax upon the business itself which is so transacted, but is a
duty upon the facilities made use of and actually employed in the
transaction of the business, separate and apart from the business
itself, and is a constitutional exercise of the powers of taxation
granted to Congress.
A sale at an exchange forms a proper basis for a classification
which excludes all sales made elsewhere from taxation.
The means actually adopted by Congress in the act in question do
not illegally interfere with or obstruct the internal commerce of
the states, and are not a restraint upon that commerce so far as to
render illegal the means adopted.
There is no difference, for the purposes of this decision,
between the Union Stock Yards and an exchange or board of
trade.
Page 173 U. S. 510
These cases involve the validity and construction of some of the
provisions of section 6, and a portion of Schedule A, therein
referred to, of the Act of Congress approved June 13, 1898, c. 448,
30 Stat., entitled "An act to provide ways and means to meet war
expenditures, and for other purposes," commonly spoken of as the
"War Revenue Act." The cases come before the Court in this way:
No. 435 is an appeal to this Court from an order made by the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Illinois discharging a writ of habeas corpus and remanding the
petitioner to the custody of the marshal. The petition to the
circuit court for the writ alleged that the petitioner, Nicol, had
been convicted in the United States Court for the Northern District
of Illinois upon an information, duly filed, charging him with
selling at the Chicago Board of Trade, and at its rooms, two
carloads of oats
"without then and there making and delivering to the buyer any
bill, memorandum, agreement, or other evidence of said sale,
showing the date thereof, the name of the seller, the amount of the
same, and the matter or thing to which it referred, as required by
the act of Congress"
above mentioned. He was sentenced to pay a fine and to be
imprisoned until paid. He refused to pay, and was taken into
custody by the marshal. That part of the act referring to the
making and delivering of a bill or memorandum, etc., the petitioner
claimed was unconstitutional. The circuit court, after argument,
held the law valid, and the conviction legal. 89 F. 144.
No. 4 is an application to this Court for leave to file a
petition for a writ of habeas corpus to bring before the court the
petitioner, George R. Nichols, and for a rule requiring the Marshal
for the Northern District of Illinois, in whose custody the
petitioner is, to show cause why the writ should not issue. The
petition states that Nichols was convicted and sentenced, under the
act of Congress above mentioned upon an information filed in the
District Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Illinois for selling at the Chicago Board of Trade, of which he was
then a member, for immediate delivery, to one Roloson, also a
member of such board,
Page 173 U. S. 511
ten tierces, or three thousand pounds, of hams, then in Chicago
at a price named, amounting to $195, and on the sale unlawfully
making and delivering to Roloson a bill and memorandum of the sale
showing the date thereof, the name of the seller, the amount of the
same, and the matters and things to which it referred without
having the proper stamps affixed to said bill or memorandum
denoting the internal revenue accruing upon said sale, bill, or
memorandum, as required by law, but, on the contrary, unlawfully
refusing and neglecting to affix any such stamps to said bill or
memorandum. Upon the trial, the jury rendered a verdict finding the
petitioner guilty as charged in the information, and the court
sentenced him to pay a fine of $500, and to be committed to the
county jail until such fine and costs should be paid. The
petitioner refused to pay the fine, and an order of commitment was
made out and placed in the hands of the marshal, who arrested the
petitioner, and he is now in the custody of the marshal. The
petitioner upon the trial claimed that the act in regard to the
matters named in the information was unconstitutional, and
therefore no offense was charged in the information, that the court
had no jurisdiction to try him, and that his conviction and
subsequent arrest and detention were wholly without jurisdiction.
The petitioner gives as a reason for his application to this Court
for the writ of habeas corpus that one James Nicol (the appellant
in No. 435) had been convicted of substantially the same offense in
the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, and that
he had made application for a writ of habeas corpus to the circuit
court held in that district, which court, after a hearing upon the
writ, decided against Nicol and in favor of the constitutionality
of the act of Congress herein questioned, and the petitioner herein
alleges that it would be a vain act to apply for a writ of habeas
corpus to the same circuit court which had already, after a
hearing, decided the question in a way unfavorable to the claims of
the petitioner herein.
No. 625 is also an appeal to this Court from an order of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Illinois discharging a writ of habeas corpus, and remanding
Page 173 U. S. 512
the petitioner, Skillen, to the custody of the marshal. The
petitioner was convicted upon an information of the same nature as
is above set forth in No. 435 excepting that the information in
this case alleged that the contract was for future delivery of
5,000 bushels of corn, and that Skillen unlawfully failed and
refused to make and deliver to the buyer any bill or memorandum as
required by the act. The petitioner was convicted upon a trial had
upon such information, and the court imposed upon him a fine in the
sum of $500, besides costs, and directed that he should be
committed to the county jail until such fine and costs were paid.
The same proceedings were then taken as are set forth in No.
435.
No. 636 is a writ of error to the District Court of the United
States for the Northern District of Illinois to review a conviction
of the plaintiff in error upon an information charging him with
making a sale of certain cattle at the Union Stock Yards, Chicago,
and delivering the same, without making any written memorandum,
etc., as required by the act of Congress. The information also
charged, in a second count, a sale at the same place of certain
livestock, and a delivery of a memorandum of the kind mentioned in
the act of Congress, and a failure and refusal to affix the stamps
as provided for in such act. Upon the trial, a
nolle
prosequi was duly entered upon the first count. The plaintiff
in error claims that the act of Congress is unconstitutional on the
same grounds mentioned in the other cases, and sets up as a special
and separate defense that a sale at the stockyards is not included
in the act of Congress, as it is not an "exchange or board of trade
or other similar place" within the meaning of that act.
Page 173 U. S. 513
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after stating the facts, delivered the
opinion of the Court.
These cases may be considered together because they involve
substantially the same question, only the last one includes, in
addition, a question of construction, as distinguished from a
question of the validity, of the statute.
That portion of the act which is involved is set forth in the
margin.* 30 Stat. 448, 450, 458.
Page 173 U. S. 514
It is seen that the cases embrace the facts of a member of the
Board of Trade of Chicago, selling, for immediate delivery,
products or merchandise (a) without making a memorandum; (b) making
a memorandum, but omitting to put stamps on it; (c) making a sale
for future delivery and failing to put stamps on the
memorandum.
In the
Nicol case (No. 435), the sale was by a citizen
to a citizen of the State of Illinois.
The case of sales at the Union Stock Yards at Chicago is also
included, where a memorandum is delivered but the vendor neglects
and refuses to affix the stamps to the memorandum.
The objections to the validity of the act are, stated generally,
that it is a direct tax, and is illegal because not apportioned as
required by the Constitution. If an indirect tax, it is a stamp tax
on documents not required to be made under state law in order to
render the sale valid, and Congress has no power to require a
written memorandum to be made of transactions within the state for
the purpose of placing a stamp thereon. It is not a "privilege
tax," within the meaning of that term, because there is no
privilege other than that which every man has to transact his own
business in his own house or in his own office under such
regulations as he may choose to adopt, and such a choice cannot be,
in any fair use of the term, a privilege which is subject to
taxation.
These questions are involved in each case, while in the last one
it is further objected that the sales at the stockyards are not
included in the terms of the act, and evidence was adduced upon the
trial as to the nature of the business conducted at the stockyards
and the manner in which it was performed. It will be adverted to
hereafter when we come to a discussion of the meaning and proper
construction of the act.
It is always an exceedingly grave and delicate duty to decide
upon the constitutionality of an act of the Congress of the United
States. The presumption, as has frequently been
Page 173 U. S. 515
said, is in favor of the validity of the act, and it is only
when the question is free from any reasonable doubt that the Court
should hold an act of the lawmaking power of the nation to be in
violation of that fundamental instrument upon which all the powers
of the government rest. This is particularly true of a revenue act
of Congress. The provisions of such an act should not be lightly or
inadvisedly set aside, although, if they be plainly antagonistic to
the Constitution, it is the duty of the Court to so declare. The
power to tax is the one great power upon which the whole national
fabric is based. It is as necessary to the existence and prosperity
of a nation as is the air he breathes to the natural man. It is not
only the power to destroy, but it is also the power to keep
alive.
This necessary authority is given to Congress by the
Constitution. It has power from that instrument to lay and collect
taxes, duties, imposts, and excises in order to pay the debts and
provide for the common defense and general welfare, and the only
constitutional restraint upon the power is that all duties,
imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States
and that no capitation or other direct tax shall be laid unless in
proportion to the census or enumeration directed to be taken, and
no tax or duty can be laid on articles exported from any state.
(Constitution, Article I, Section 8, and Section 9, subdivisions 4
and 5.) As thus guarded, the whole power of taxation rests with
Congress.
The commands of the Constitution in this as in all other
respects, must be obeyed. Direct taxes must be apportioned, while
indirect taxes must be uniform throughout the United States. But,
while yielding implicit obedience to these constitutional
requirements, it is no part of the duty of this Court to lessen,
impede, or obstruct the exercise of the taxing power by merely
abstruse and subtle distinctions as to the particular nature of a
specified tax where such distinction rests more upon the differing
theories of political economists than upon the practical nature of
the tax itself.
In deciding upon the validity of a tax with reference to these
requirements, no microscopic examination as to the purely economic
or theoretical nature of the tax should be
Page 173 U. S. 516
indulged in for the purpose of placing it in a category which
would invalidate the tax. As a mere abstract, scientific, or
economical problem, a particular tax might possibly be regarded as
a direct tax, when, as a practical matter, pertaining to the actual
operation of the tax, it might quite plainly appear to be indirect.
Under such circumstances, and while varying and disputable theories
might be indulged as to the real nature of the tax, a court would
not be justified, for the purpose of invalidating the tax, in
placing it in a class different from that to which its practical
results would consign it. Taxation is eminently practical, and is
in fact brought to every man's door; and, for the purpose of
deciding upon its validity, a tax should be regarded in its actual,
practical results, rather than with reference to those theoretical
or abstract ideas whose correctness is the subject of dispute and
contradiction among those who are experts in the science of
political economy.
In searching for proper subjects of taxation to raise moneys for
the support of the government, Congress must have the right to
recognize the manner in which the business of the country is
actually transacted; how among other things, the exchange of
commodities is effected; what facilities for the conduct of
business exist; what is their nature, and how they operate, and
what, if any, practical and recognizable distinction there may be
between a transaction which is effected by means of using certain
facilities, and one where such facilities are not availed of by the
parties to the same kind of a transaction. Having the power to
recognize these various facts, it must also follow that Congress is
justified, if not compelled, in framing a statute relating to
taxation, to legislate with direct reference to the existing
conditions of trade and business throughout the whole country and
to the manner in which they are carried on.
Coming to a consideration of the objections raised to this
statute, it is well to first consider the nature of an exchange or
board of trade and then to inquire more in detail as to the
validity of the act with reference to sales at such places. The
Chicago Board of Trade may be taken as a type of the
Page 173 U. S. 517
others in existence throughout the country, because the same
features exist in all of them, while the size and importance of the
Chicago institution serve only to make such features more prominent
and their effect more easily discernible. We say the same features
exist in all of the exchanges or boards of trade because we have
the right to consider facts, without particular proof of them,
which are universally recognized and which relate to the common and
ordinary way of doing business throughout the country, and while we
could not take notice, without proof, as to any particular
Constitution or bylaw of a body of this description, yet we are not
thereby cut off from knowledge of the general nature of those
bodies and of the manner generally in which business therein is
conducted.
It appears in this record that the Chicago Board of Trade is a
voluntary association of individuals who meet together at a certain
building owned by the association for the purpose of there
transacting business. This particular board is incorporated under
an act of the Legislature of Illinois, though its corporate
character does not, in our judgment, form a material consideration
in the inquiry. The members of the association meet daily, between
certain business hours, for the purpose of buying and selling
flour, wheat, corn, oats, and other articles of food products, and
for the transaction of such other business as is incident thereto.
Among its members are some whose business it is to purchase in the
country, or to receive on consignment from persons in the country,
some or all of the articles which are dealt in on the floor of the
exchange, and there are other members whose business it is to buy
such articles upon the exchange, either for themselves or on
commission, and to deliver or ship the same to consumers or
distributors throughout the country and in Europe.
It is common knowledge that these exchanges encourage and
promote honest and fair dealing among their members, that they
provide penalties for the violation of their rules in that regard,
and that contracts between members relating to business on the
exchange have the advantage of the sanction provided by the
exchange for such purposes. They furnish a
Page 173 U. S. 518
meeting place for those engaged in the purchase and sale of
commodities or other things to be sold, and in that way they offer
facilities for a market for them. Dealings among members so engaged
tend to establish the market price of the articles they deal in,
and that price is very apt to be the price for the same article
when bought or sold outside. The price is arrived at by offers to
sell, on the one side, and to purchase on the other, until, by what
has frequently been termed, the "higgling" of the market, a price
is agreed upon and the sales are accomplished. In arriving at this
price, of course, the great law of the cost of production, and also
that of supply and demand, enter into the problem, and it is upon a
consideration of all matters regarded as material that the
agreement to buy and sell is made. The prices thus fixed are
usually followed when the transaction occurs outside, and the
"market price" means really the "exchange price." That an enormous
amount of the business of the country which is engaged in the
distribution of the commodities grown or produced therein is
transacted and takes place through the medium of boards of trade or
exchanges cannot be doubted. Nor is there any doubt that these
exchanges facilitate transactions of purchase and sale, and it
would seem that such facilities or privileges, even though not
granted by the government or by a state, ought nevertheless to be
recognized as existing facts and to be subject to the judgment of
Congress as fit matters for taxation.
We will now examine the several objections that have been
offered to this statute.
It may be stated, of course, that if the tax herein is a direct
tax within the meaning of the Constitution, it is void, for there
is no apportionment as required by that instrument.
It is asserted to be a direct tax because it is a tax upon the
sale of property measured by the value of the thing sold, and such
a tax is a direct tax upon the property itself, and therefore
subject to the rule of apportionment. Various cases are cited, from
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, down to those involving
the validity of the income tax,
157 U. S. 157 U.S.
429,
158 U. S. 158 U.S.
601, for the purpose of proving the correctness of this
proposition. All the cases involved the question whether the
Page 173 U. S. 519
taxes to which objection was taken amounted practically to a tax
on the property. If this tax is not on the property or on the sale
thereof, then these cases do not apply.
We think the tax is in effect a duty or excise laid upon the
privilege, opportunity, or facility offered at boards of trade or
exchanges for the transaction of the business mentioned in the act.
It is not a tax upon the business itself which is so transacted,
but it is a duty upon the facilities made use of, and actually
employed, in the transaction of the business, and separate and
apart from the business itself. It is not a tax upon the members of
the exchange, nor upon membership therein, nor is it a tax upon
sales generally. The act limits the tax to sales at any exchange,
or board of trade or other similar place, and its fair meaning is
to impose a duty upon those privileges or facilities which are
there found and made use of in the sale at such place of any
product or merchandise. Whether this facility or privilege is such
a thing as can be legally taxed, while leaving untaxed all other
sales made outside of such places, will be discussed further on. At
present, it is enough to say that the tax is not upon the property
sold, and cannot on that ground be found to be direct. The tax laid
in the same act upon a broker's note or memorandum of sale is a
separate tax, although it may have reference to the same
transaction. It is a tax on the note or memorandum itself, where
made by a broker, while in the other case, the tax, although
measured in amount by a reference to the value of the thing sold,
is in reality upon the privilege or facility used in the
transaction or sale. The tax is not a direct tax within the meaning
of the Constitution, but is, as already stated, in the nature of a
duty or an excise. The amount of such a tax, when imposed in a case
like this, may be increased or diminished by the extent to which
the privilege or facility is used, and it is measured in this act
by the value of the property transferred by means of using such
privilege or facility, but this does not make the tax a direct one.
A tax on professional receipts was recognized by the present Chief
Justice, in delivering the opinion of the Court on the first
hearing of the
Income Tax Case, 157 U.
S. 429,
157 U. S. 579,
as an excise or duty, and
Page 173 U. S. 520
therefore indirect, while a tax on the income of personalty, he
thought, might be regarded as direct. And upon the rehearing,
158 U. S. 158 U.S.
601, it was distinctly held that the tax on personal property, or
on the income thereof, was a direct tax. This tax is neither a tax
on the personal property sold nor upon the income thereof, although
its amount is measured by the value of the property that is sold at
the exchange or board of trade.
It is also said that the tax is direct because it cannot be
added to the price of the thing sold, and therefore ultimately paid
by the consumer. In other words, that it is direct because the
owner cannot shift the payment of the amount of the tax to some one
else. This, however, assumes that the tax is not in the nature of a
duty or an excise, but that it is laid directly upon the property
sold, which we hold is not the case. It is not laid upon the
property at all, nor upon the profits of the sale thereof, nor upon
the sale itself, considered separate and apart from the place and
the circumstances of the sale.
We do not see that any material difference exists when the sale
is for future delivery. The thing agreed to be sold is the same,
whether for immediate or future delivery, and the fact that the
sale for future delivery may subsequently be carried out by the
actual payment of the difference between the agreed and the market
price at the time agreed upon for such delivery does not affect the
case. The privilege used is the same whether for immediate or
future delivery, and the same rule applies to both.
Passing these grounds of objection, it is urged that if this is
an indirect tax, it is not uniform throughout the United States, as
required by the Constitution. Sales at an exchange or board of
trade, it is said, are singled out for taxation under this act,
although they differ in no substantial respect from sales at other
places, and there is therefore no just ground for segregating or
classifying such sales from those made elsewhere. A sale at an
exchange or board of trade, it is claimed, is not a privilege or
facility which can or justly ought to be taxed, while all other
sales at all other places are exempted from
Page 173 U. S. 521
taxation, and there is no reasonable ground, therefore, for the
assertion that such a tax is uniform within the meaning of the
Constitution. It is said not to be uniform because it is unequal,
taxing sales at exchanges and exempting all other sales, while at
the same time there is no natural basis for any distinction between
such sales; the distinction made being purely arbitrary and
unreasonable.
This general objection on the ground of want of uniformity is
not, in our judgment, well founded. Whether the word "uniform" is
to be understood in what has been termed its "geographical" sense
or as meaning uniformity as to all the taxpayers similarly situated
with regard to the subject matter of the tax, we think this tax is
valid within either meaning of the term. In our judgment, a sale at
an exchange does form a proper basis for a classification which
excludes all sales made elsewhere from taxation. If it were to be
assumed that taxes upon corporate franchises or privileges may be
imposed only by the authority that created them, it does not follow
that no privilege or facility can be taxed which is not created by
the government of a state or by Congress. In order to tax it, the
privilege or facility must exist in fact, but it is not necessary
that it should be created by the government. The question always
is, when a classification is made, whether there is any reasonable
ground for it or whether it is only and simply arbitrary, based
upon no real distinction, and entirely unnatural.
Gulf,
Colorado &c. Railway v. Ellis, 165 U.
S. 150,
165 U. S. 155;
Magoun v. Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, 170 U.
S. 283,
170 U. S. 294.
If the classification be proper and legal, then there is the
requisite uniformity in that respect.
A tax upon the privilege of selling property at the exchange,
and of thus using the facilities there offered in accomplishing the
sale, differs radically from a tax upon every sale made in any
place. The latter tax is really and practically upon property. It
takes no notice of any kind of privilege or facility, and the fact
of a sale is alone regarded. Although not created by government,
this privilege or facility in effecting a sale at an exchange is so
distinct and definite in its character, and constitutes so clear
and plain a difference from a sale
Page 173 U. S. 522
elsewhere, as to create a reasonable and substantial ground for
classification and for taxation when similar sales at other places
are untaxed. A sale at an exchange differs from a sale made at a
man's private office or on his farm or by a partnership because,
although the subject matter of the sale may be the same in each
case, there are at an exchange certain advantages in the way of
finding a market, obtaining a price, the saving of time, and in the
security of payment, and other matters, which are more easily
obtained there than at an office or upon a farm. To accomplish a
sale at one's farm or house or office might, and probably would,
occupy a great deal of time in finding a customer, bringing him to
the spot, and agreeing on a price. All this can be done at an
exchange in the very shortest time and at the least inconvenience.
The market is there, and all that is necessary is to send the
commodity. Although a sale is the result in each case and the thing
sold may be of the same kind, the difference exists in the means
and facilities for accomplishing such sale, and those means and
facilities, there is no reason for saying, may not be taxed unless
all sales are taxed, whether the facilities be used or not.
In this case, there is that uniformity which the Constitution
requires. The tax or duty is uniform throughout the United States
and it is uniform, or, in other words, equal, upon all who avail
themselves of the privileges or facilities offered at the
exchanges, and it is not necessary in order to be uniform that the
tax should be levied upon all who make sales of the same kind of
things, whether at an exchange or elsewhere.
Another objection taken is that Congress taxes only those who
make sales, and not those who make purchases, and those who sell
products or merchandise, and not those who sell bonds, stocks, etc.
These are discriminations, it is said, which do not follow the rule
of uniformity, and hence render the tax void.
A purchase occurs whenever a sale is effected, and to say that a
purchaser at an exchange sale must be taxed for the facilities made
use of in making the purchase, or else that the tax on the seller
is void, is simply to insist upon doubling the tax.
Page 173 U. S. 523
Nor is it necessary to tax the use of the privilege under all
circumstances in order to render the tax valid upon its use in
particular cases. We see no reason why it should be necessary to
tax a privilege whenever it is used for any purpose or else not to
tax it at all. It is not in its nature indivisible. A tax upon the
privilege when used for one purpose does not require for its
validity that the same privilege should also be taxed when used for
another and a totally distinct purpose. It may be the same
privilege, but when it is used in different cases to accomplish
sales of wholly different things, between which there is no
relation whatever, one use may be taxed and the other not, and no
rule of uniformity will thereby be violated.
It is also objected that there is no power in Congress to
require a party selling personal property, in the course of
commerce within the state, to make a written note or memorandum of
the contract, and to punish him by fine and imprisonment for a
failure to do so; if the state do not require a memorandum on a
sale, Congress cannot, in the exercise of the taxing power, compel
a citizen to make one in order that it may be taxed by the United
States.
In holding that the tax under consideration is a tax on the
privilege used in making sales at an exchange, we thereby hold that
it is not a tax upon the memorandum required by the statute, upon
which the stamp is to be placed. The act does not assume to in any
manner interfere with the laws of the state in relation to the
contract of sale. The memorandum required does not contain all the
essentials of a contract to sell. It need not be signed, and it
need not contain the name of the vendee or the terms of payment.
The statute does not render a sale void without the memorandum or
stamp which by the laws of the state would otherwise be valid. It
does not assume to enact anything in opposition to the law of any
state upon the subject of sales. It provides for a written
memorandum containing the matters mentioned simply as a means of
identifying the sale and for collecting the tax by means of the
required stamp, and for that purpose it secures, by proper
penalties, the making of
Page 173 U. S. 524
the memorandum. Instead of a memorandum, Congress might have
required a sworn report, with the proper amount of stamps thereon,
to be made at certain regular intervals, of all sales made subject
to the tax. Other means might have been resorted to for the same
purpose. Whether the means adopted were the best and most
convenient to accomplish that purpose was a question for the
judgment of Congress, and its decision must be conclusive in that
respect.
The means actually adopted do not illegally interfere with or
obstruct the internal commerce of the states, nor are such means a
restraint upon that commerce so far as to render the means adopted
illegal. That Congress might have adopted some other means for
collecting the tax which would prove less troublesome or annoying
to the taxpayer can surely be no reason for holding that the method
set forth in the act renders the tax invalid. As it has power to
impose the tax, the means to be adopted for its collection, within
reasonable and rational limits, must be a question for Congress
alone.
We come now to the special objection raised in the
Case of
Ingwersen, No. 636, and which applies to this case alone.
The sales were made at the Union Stock Yards, and it is claimed
the statute does not cover the case of sales there made, because it
is not an exchange or board of trade or other similar place.
The facts upon which the question arises are found in the
record, and it shows that the Union Stock Yard & Transit
Company of Chicago is a corporation which was incorporated under
the laws of the State of Illinois in 1865. Under that charter, the
company had power to maintain cattle yards for the reception and
safekeeping, feeding, weighing, and transfer of cattle and other
matters connected therewith which are set out in full in the
charter. The character of the business and the manner in which it
is conducted are fully set forth in the record, from which the
following extract is taken:
"The Union Stock Yards, described in this information, at the
respective times therein mentioned, and theretofore and since,
covered and cover three hundred and thirty-five acres of land
situated between Thirty-Ninth Street and Forty-Seventh
Page 173 U. S. 525
Street and Halsted Street and Ashland Avenue in the City of
Chicago, in the County of Cook, and State of Illinois, of which two
hundred acres are covered by pens, which are made by fences
surrounding and enclosing the same, there being alleys running
through the yards, separating the pens, into which alleys gates
lead from the pens. The number of the pens is about five thousand,
and they are in size, respectively, from eight feet square to fifty
feet square. Railway tracks belonging to and operated by the
Chicago Junction Railway Company, which connect with all the lines
of railway to the City of Chicago, extend into the yards, over
which cattle, hogs, and other livestock received at or shipped from
the Union Stock Yards are carried. Upon the arrival of cattle,
hogs, or other livestock at the Union Stock Yards, consigned to the
commission merchant at the Union Stock Yards, such cattle, hogs, or
other livestock are placed by the owner or consignee thereof or his
or its agents in one or more of the pens, and are there cared for,
fed, and watered by such owner or consignee. Any person is at
liberty to send, take, or to receive cattle, hogs, or other
livestock into the Union Stock Yards, and there place, or have the
same placed, in a pen or pens, care for the same, and there sell
any cattle belonging to him or which he has the right to sell. Any
person has access to the pens containing cattle, hogs, or other
livestock for the purpose of buying the same, and has liberty to
purchase or negotiate for the purchase thereof. Sales of cattle,
hogs, and other livestock in the yards are at private sale.
Commission merchants having cattle, hogs, or other livestock in a
pen or pens in the yards seek and solicit a buyer therefor, and
when a proposed buyer is so found, take him to the pens in which
such livestock is contained and there exhibit such livestock, and
to such proposed buyer, or to any person who may come to said pen
and who may desire to buy, such livestock is sold in the pen in
which they are yarded. Sales of cattle, hogs, and sheep in the
yards are by weight, and, upon a sale thereof being made, such
livestock is taken by the owner or commission merchant having
charge thereof from the pen in which it is confined to a scale or
scales in the yard, and belonging to the Union Stock
Page 173 U. S. 526
Yard & Transit Company, and are there weighed by a
weighmaster employed by the Union Stock Yard & Transit Company,
and in charge of the scale in which said livestock are weighed, and
the weight of such livestock is thereby determined as the weight
for which the purchaser pays upon his purchase, and the amount of
the purchase price at the price per pound of per hundred pounds
fixed in such sale is thereby determined."
The corporation has nothing to do with the selling or purchasing
of stock of any kind. The market at the Union Stock Yards is
unquestionably the largest in the country.
The plaintiff in error at these yards, as agent for a
corporation then carrying on the business of a livestock commission
character, and which was a dealer in livestock, sold to another, as
agent for the Eastman Company, also a corporation created for the
purpose of dealing in livestock, a certain amount of merchandise,
for present delivery, without affixing any stamp to the
memorandum.
We cannot see any real distinction sufficient in substance to
call for a different decision between the Union Stock Yards and an
exchange or board of trade. We think it is a "similar place,"
within the meaning of the statute under consideration.
It is true that there are no sales or purchases of stock made by
members of the stockyards company as such. Anyone is accorded the
right to bring his cattle to the stockyards upon payment of the
regular fees and compliance with the regulations made by the
company, and, having brought his cattle, he has the right accorded
him by the company to have them kept, fed, watered, etc., and to
sell them himself, or by a commission merchant, who need not be a
member of the stockyards company.
It is plain to be seen that the privilege or facility for a sale
of the cattle or other stock at the yards of such company is of
precisely the same nature and character as that which exists at an
exchange or board of trade which is so described in terms. That the
sales are made by the owners of the cattle, or by commission
merchants who are not members of the
Page 173 U. S. 527
stockyards company is not material. The facilities for a sale
exist and are made use of in each case, and are in truth the same
in each. A perusal of the facts contained in the record in the case
shows that those yards answer all the purposes of an exchange or
board of trade, and that they in truth amount in substance to the
same thing. The differences existing between them are unsubstantial
so far as this point is concerned. The sales at that place are
accomplished with a facility which it is plain could not exist but
for the conditions and advantages afforded by the use of those
yards.
The owner of the cattle, who brings them to the yards and avails
himself of the privilege of selling them at that place, does
without doubt make use of a privilege which everyone knows is an
advantage sufficient to constitute a material difference between a
sale at the yards and a sale elsewhere. This advantage, although
one which any person could use, is yet of precisely the same nature
as that existing in the case of an exchange or board of trade, and
it is therefore a similar place within the meaning of the statute.
Being a similar place, the reasons stated in the foregoing cases
apply with equal force here, and demand the same judgment.
For the reasons above stated, we make the following disposition
of the cases before us:
In Nos. 435 and 625, the orders of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Northern District of Illinois are
affirmed.
In No. 4 Original, the petition for a writ of habeas corpus is
denied.
In No. 636, the judgment of the District Court of the United
States for the Northern District of Illinois is affirmed.
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN and MR. JUSTICE WHITE concurred in the
result.
*
"
Adhesive Stamps"
"SEC. 6. That on and after the first day of July, 1898, there
shall be levied, collected and paid, for and in respect of the
several bonds, debentures or certificates of stock and of
indebtedness, and other documents, instruments, matters and things
mentioned and described in Schedule A of this act, or for or in
respect of the vellum, parchment or paper upon which such
instruments, matters or things, or any of them, shall be written or
printed by any person or persons, or party who shall make, sign or
issue the same, or for whose use or benefit the same shall be made,
signed or issued, the several taxes or sums of money set down in
figures against the same, respectively, or otherwise specified or
set forth in the said schedule."
"
Schedule A. Stamp Taxes (30 Stat. 448-458)"
". . . Upon each sale, agreement of sale or agreement to sell
any products or merchandise at any exchange or board of trade, or
other similar place, either for present or future delivery, for
each one hundred dollars in value of said sale or agreement of sale
or agreement to sell, one cent, and for each additional one hundred
dollars or fractional part thereof in excess of one hundred
dollars, one cent,
provided that on every sale or
agreement of sale or agreement to sell as aforesaid there shall be
made and delivered by the seller to the buyer a bill, memorandum,
agreement or other evidence of such sale, agreement of sale, or
agreement to sell, to which there shall be affixed a lawful stamp
or stamps in value equal to the amount of the tax on such sale. And
every such bill, memorandum, or other evidence of sale or agreement
to sell shall show the date thereof, the name of the seller, the
amount of the sale, and the matter or thing to which it refers, and
any person or persons liable to pay the tax as herein provided, or
anyone who acts in the matter as agent or broker for such person or
persons, who shall make any such sale or agreement of sale or
agreement to sell or who shall, in pursuance of any such sale,
agreement of sale or agreement to sell deliver any such products or
merchandise without a bill, memorandum, or other evidence thereof
as herein required, or who shall deliver such bill, memorandum, or
other evidence of sale or agreement to sell, without having the
proper stamps affixed thereto, with intent to evade the foregoing
provisions, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon
conviction thereof shall pay a fine of not less than five hundred
nor more than one thousand dollars, or be imprisoned not more than
six months, or both, at the discretion of the court."