Under Art. I, § 8, cl. 17, of the Constitution, land purchased
by the United States for an Army station, with the consent of the
legislature of the state in which it lies, comes under the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, and private personal
property there situate cannot be taxed by the state. P.
281 U. S.
649.
174 Ark. 507 reversed.
Page 281 U. S. 648
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Arkansas sustaining
a tax on personal property located on a federal military
reservation.
Page 281 U. S. 649
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit by the sheriff and collector of taxes of Pulaski
County, Arkansas, to enforce payment by the Surplus Trading Company
of taxes for the years 1922 and 1923, with penalties, upon certain
personal property. The chancery court, in which the suit was
brought, gave a decree for the defendant, and, on appeal, the
supreme court of the state affirmed that decree as to the tax for
1923 and reversed it as to the tax for 1922, with a direction that
a decree be entered for the plaintiff for the amount of that tax
and the penalty, both of which were specified in the record.
Haynie v. Surplus Trading Co., 174 Ark. 507.
The defendant resisted the collection of the tax for 1922 on the
ground that the personal property on which it was laid was located
within Camp Pike, an army mobilization, training, and supply
station of the United States laying within the exterior limits of
Pulaski county, the lands in which had been purchased by the United
States, with the consent of the legislature of the state, for the
purpose of establishing, erecting, and maintaining such an army
station, and that the tax laws of the state could not be applied to
property so located
Page 281 U. S. 650
without bringing them, in that regard, into conflict with
Article I, § 8, cl. 17, of the Constitution of the United States,
which prescribes that the Congress shall have power
"to exercise exclusive Legislation in all cases whatsoever, over
such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession
of particular states, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the
Seat of the government of the United States, and to exercise like
Authority over all Places purchased by the consent of the
legislature of the state in which the Same shall be, for the
Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, Dock-Yards, and other
needful Buildings."
The property attempted to be taxed consisted of a large quantity
of woolen blankets which the defendant, a New York concern,
purchased from the United States at an advertised sale a few days
before the day fixed by the state law for listing personal property
for taxation, and which in much the greater part was on that day in
the army storehouses within Camp Pike awaiting shipment
therefrom.
The supreme court of the state, although recognizing that the
status of Camp Pike was as just stated and that the property on
which the tax was laid was in much the greater part located
therein, rejected the contention that the tax laws of the state
could not be applied to property so located consistently with the
constitutional provision cited.
It is not unusual for the United States to own within a state
lands which are set apart and used for public purposes. Such
ownership and use, without more, do not withdraw the lands from the
jurisdiction of the state. On the contrary, the lands remain part
of her territory and within the operation of her laws, save that
the latter cannot affect the title of the United States or
embarrass it in using the lands or interfere with its right of
disposal.
Page 281 U. S. 651
A typical illustration is found in the usual Indian reservation
set apart within a state as a place where the United States may
care for its Indian wards and lead them into habits and ways of
civilized life. Such reservations are part of the state within
which they lie, and her laws, civil and criminal, have the same
force therein as elsewhere within her limits, save that they can
have only restricted application to the Indian wards. Private
property within such a reservation, if not belonging to such
Indians, is subject to taxation under the laws of the state.
Another illustration is found in two classes of military
reservations within a state -- one where the reservation, although
established before the state is admitted into the Union, is not
excepted from her jurisdiction at the time of her admission, and
the other where the reservation, although established after the
admission of the state, is established either upon lands set apart
by the United States from its public domain or upon lands purchased
by it for the purpose without the consent of the legislature of the
state. In either case, unless there be a later and affirmative
cession of jurisdiction by the state, the reservation is a part of
her territory and within the field of operation of her laws, save
that they can have no operation which would impair the effective
use of the reservation for the purposes for which it is maintained.
If there be private property within such a reservation which is not
held or used as an incident of military service, it may be
subjected to taxation like other private property within the
state.
As respects such a military reservation -- that is, one which is
neither excepted from the jurisdiction of the state at the time of
her admission nor established upon lands purchased therefor with
the consent of her legislature -- the state undoubtedly may cede
her jurisdiction to the United States, and may make the cession
either absolute or qualified as to her may appear desirable,
provided the qualification is consistent with the purposes
Page 281 U. S. 652
for which the reservation is maintained and is accepted by the
United States. And, where such a cession is made and accepted, it
will be determinative of the jurisdiction of both the United States
and the state within the reservation.
But Camp Pike is not in the same class with any of the
reservations of which we have spoken, and should not be confused
with any of them. Nor should it be confused with military or other
reservations within a territory of the United States. It is not
questioned, nor could it well be, that Camp Pike comes within the
words "forts, magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, and other needful
buildings" in the constitutional provision. The land therefor was
purchased by the United States with the consent of the legislature
of the state in 1917. The constitutional provision says that
Congress shall have power to exercise "exclusive legislation in all
cases whatsoever" over a place so purchased for such a purpose.
"Exclusive legislation" is consistent only with exclusive
jurisdiction. It can have no other meaning as to the seat of
government, and what it means as to that it also means as to forts,
magazines, arsenals, dockyards, etc. That no divided jurisdiction
respecting the seat of government is intended is not only shown by
the terms employed, but is a matter of public history. Why, as to
forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, etc., is the power given
made to depend on purchase with the consent of the legislature of
the state if the jurisdiction of the United States is not to be
exclusive and that of the state excluded?
The question is not an open one. It long has been settled that,
where lands for such a purpose are purchased by the United States
with the consent of the state legislature, the jurisdiction
theretofore residing in the state passes, in virtue of the
constitutional provision, to the United States, thereby making the
jurisdiction of the latter the sole jurisdiction.
Page 281 U. S. 653
The first reported decision on the question is
Commonwealth
v. Clary, 8 Mass. 72. The question there was whether the law
of Massachusetts restricting the sale of intoxicating liquors to
persons procuring and paying for licenses could be applied to an
arsenal of the United States in Springfield, the land for which had
been purchased with the consent of the commonwealth. The court held
that the license law could not be so applied, and, in that
connection, said, p. 77:
"An objection occurred to the minds of some members of the court
that, if the laws of the commonwealth have no force within this
territory, the inhabitants thereof cannot exercise any civil or
political privileges under the laws of Massachusetts within the
Town of Springfield. We are agreed that such consequence
necessarily follows, and we think that no hardship is thereby
imposed on those inhabitants, because they are not interested in
any elections made within the state, or held to pay any taxes
imposed by its authority, nor bound by any of its laws. And it
might be very inconvenient to the United States to have their
labourers, artificers, officers, and other persons employed in
their service subjected to the services required by the
commonwealth of the inhabitants of the several towns."
In
Mitchell v. Tibbetts, 17 Pick. 298, the question was
whether a law of Massachusetts relating to vessels bringing stone
within that commonwealth could be applied to a vessel landing stone
at the Charlestown Navy Yard, the land for which had been purchased
by the United States with the consent of the commonwealth. The
court ruled that the law could not be so applied, because the
commonwealth no longer had any jurisdiction over the Navy Yard.
In
United States v. Cornell, Fed.Cas. No. 14,867, Mr.
Justice Story, at circuit, held that a state consenting to the
purchase by the United States of land for a fort was
Page 281 U. S. 654
without jurisdiction of a public offense subsequently committed
therein, and he stated his reasons as follows:
"The Constitution of the United States declares that congress
shall have power to exercise 'exclusive legislation' in all 'cases
whatsoever' over all places purchased by the consent of the
legislature of the state in which the same shall be for the
erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards and other needful
buildings. When, therefore, a purchase of land for any of these
purposes is made by the national government, and the state
legislature has given its consent to the purchase, the land so
purchased, by the very terms of the Constitution,
ipso
facto falls within the exclusive legislation of Congress, and
the state jurisdiction is completely ousted. This is the necessary
result, for exclusive jurisdiction is the attendant upon exclusive
legislation, and the consent of the state legislature is, by the
very terms of the Constitution, by which all the states are bound
and to which all are parties, a virtual surrender and cession of
its sovereignty over the place. Nor is there anything novel in this
construction. It is under the like terms in the same clause of the
Constitution that exclusive jurisdiction is now exercised by
Congress in the District of Columbia; for if exclusive jurisdiction
and exclusive legislation do not import the same thing, the states
could not cede, or the United States accept for the purposes
enumerated in this clause, any exclusive jurisdiction."
Of like import is the opinion of Mr. Justice Woodbury given at
circuit in
United States v. Ames, Fed.Cas. No. 14,441.
In
Sinks v. Reese, 19 Ohio St. 306, which related to
lands purchased with the consent of the Legislature of Ohio for a
national home for disabled volunteer soldiers, a question arose
respecting the effect of a proviso in the act of consent declaring
that nothing in the act should be construed to prevent residents of
the home from exercising
Page 281 U. S. 655
the right of suffrage within the township in which the home was
located. The supreme court of the state held that, through the
purchase of the site for the home with the consent of the state
legislature, the United States acquired exclusive jurisdiction over
the site, and that the residents of the home, being within that
exclusive jurisdiction, were not residents of the state, and
therefore not entitled to vote therein.
In
Foley v. Shriver, 81 Va. 568, it was held of lands
within the State of Virginia, purchased with her consent for
another national home for disabled volunteer soldiers, that, in
virtue of the constitutional provision, the purchase invested the
United States with complete jurisdiction of the lands to the
exclusion of the state, so that they were "no longer a part of the
State of Virginia." And there was a like ruling in
Bank of
Phoebus v. Byrum, 110 Va. 708.
In
State v. Mack, 23 Nev. 359, which related to a
purchase by the United States with the state's consent of land for
a post office and federal court building, it was held,
notwithstanding a provision in the act of consent purporting to
"except the administration of the criminals laws of the state,"
that the purchase operated under the constitutional provision to
pass full jurisdiction over the land to the United States and to
divest the state of all jurisdiction thereover, criminal as well as
civil.
Like views of the operation of the constitutional provision are
stated by Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries, vol. 1, pp. 429-431,
and by Judge Story in his work on the Constitution (5th ed.) vol.
2, §§ 1224-1227.
In
Fort Leavenworth R. Co. v. Lowe,, this Court
said:
"When the title is acquired by purchase by consent of the
legislatures of the states, the federal jurisdiction is exclusive
of all state authority. This follows from the declaration of the
constitution that congress shall have
Page 281 U. S. 656
'like authority' over such places as it has over the district
which is the seat of government -- that is, the power of 'exclusive
legislation in all cases whatsoever.' Broader or clearer language
could not be used to exclude all other authority than that of
congress."
And, after reviewing some of the earlier cases here cited, the
Court further said, p.
114 U. S.
537:
"These authorities are sufficient to support the proposition,
which follows naturally from the language of the constitution, that
no other legislative power than that of Congress can be exercised
over lands, within a state purchased by the United States with her
consent for one of the purposes designated, and that such consent,
under the Constitution, operates to exclude all other legislative
authority."
And the view thus expressed was given approving recognition in
our recent decision in
United States v. Unzeuta,
281 U. S. 138,
where it is said that, where the United States purchases lands by
the consent of the legislature of the state within which they are
situated for the purposes named in the constitutional provision,
"the federal jurisdiction is exclusive of all state authority."
Apparently some of the cases to which we have referred were not
brought to the attention of the Supreme Court of Arkansas. In its
opinion, it appears to have been guided largely by cases dealing
with reservations in territories and with reservations in states of
lands which were not purchased by the United States with the
consent of the states. Such cases are not in point, for they do not
turn on the constitutional provision which is of controlling
influence in cases like this. Another matter to which that court
attached some importance is that the act by which the legislature
consented to the purchase of the site for Camp Pike declares that
the state "releases and relinquishes her right to tax" the lands
and improvements during the ownership of the United States. Laws
Ark.
Page 281 U. S. 657
1903, No. 180, p. 346. These words of release, it is argued,
disclose a purpose to reserve the power to tax, save as to the
lands and improvements. But to this we do not assent. The words are
ill adapted to expressing such a purpose -- so much so that, had it
existed, there can be little doubt that it would have been stated
differently. Not only so, but to construe the release as suggested
would lead to a serious question respecting the validity of the
release, and would bring it into conflict with the preceding
section, which directly states that the state "hereby consents to
the purchase" of the site, and "the jurisdiction of this state
within and over" the site "is hereby ceded" to the United States.
The release is not in form or substance a proviso, but is an
affirmative provision inserted as an independent section, and we
think it means what it says, and no more. That the legislature
understood how to use a saving clause or proviso is evident from
the following, which appears at the end of the first section:
"Provided, that this grant of jurisdiction shall not prevent
execution of any process of this state, civil or criminal, upon any
person who may be on said premises."
Such a proviso is common to nearly all acts giving consent to
purchase, and is regarded, says Chancellor Kent, as amounting, when
accepted, to "an agreement of the new sovereign to permit the free
exercise of such process, as being
quoad hoc his own
process." Kent's Commentaries, vol. 1, p. 430.
For the reasons which have been stated, we are of opinion that
the supreme court of the state erred in holding that her tax laws
could be applied to personal property within Camp Pike consistently
with § 8, cl. 17, of Article I of the Constitution, and therefore
that the judgment of that court must be reversed.
But, to avoid any misapprehension, it is well to state that our
ruling is limited to the blankets which were within Camp Pike on
May 1, 1922, the day fixed for
Page 281 U. S. 658
listing personal property for assessment. We are led to make
this statement because the record suggests, if it does not show,
that, on that day, 21,235 of the blankets purchased by the
plaintiff were held by it in a private warehouse in Little Rock,
the county seat of Pulaski county, and 64,371 was the number
remaining in the government storehouses at Camp Pike. Whether the
assessment, which was on the whole, can be proportionally sustained
as to the part in Little Rock, so that the plaintiff will be
charged with only such portion of the tax as pertains to that part
of the blankets, is a question of state law on which we intimate no
opinion.
The judgment will be reversed, and the case remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.