1. When goods imported in interstate commerce have become part
of the common mass of property within the destination, that State
may subject them to a property tax, or to a tax upon their use. P.
300 U. S.
582.
The privilege of use is only one of the privileges that make up
property or ownership. A State is at liberty to tax them all
collectively or tax them separately, and calling a tax on the use
alone an excise does not affect its validity under the commerce
clause.
2. A Washington statute provides that, after May 1, 1935, every
retail sale of tangible personal property made in that State (with
some enumerated exceptions) shall be subject to a tax of 2% of the
selling price; it also lays a tax or excise, called "compensation
tax," on the privilege of using within the State any article of
tangible personal property, purchased at retail after April 30,
1935 at the rate of 2% of the purchase price, including in such
price the cost of transportation from the place where the article
was purchased; but the compensation tax is not to apply to the use
of any article the sale or use of which has already been subjected
to a tax equal to or in excess of 2% whether such prior tax was
under the laws of Washington or those of some other State, and if
the rate of such other tax is less than 2%, the Washington use tax
rate is to be measured by the difference. In practical effect, the
use tax helps retail sellers in Washington to compete upon terms of
equality with retail dealers in other States who are exempt from a
sales tax or any corresponding burden, and tends to avoid a drain
upon the revenues of the State through the placing of orders in
other States to escape the taxes on local sales.
Held, as applied to machinery and other things
purchased in other States but which had had continuous use in
Washington long after the time when delivery there was over:
(1) That the use tax is not upon the operations of interstate
commerce, but upon the privilege of use after commerce is at an
end. P.
300 U. S.
582.
Page 300 U. S. 578
(2) The tax upon the use after the property is at rest is not so
measured or conditioned as to hamper the transactions of interstate
commerce or discriminate against them. P.
300 U. S.
583.
(3) Reading the statute as not taxing the use of articles
manufactured by the users, or received as legacies, or acquired in
any other way except purchase at retail does not make the tax on
use in fact a tax on the foreign sales. P.
300 U. S.
587.
3. Motives leading to its adoption can seldom, if ever,
invalidate a tax which, apart from motives, would be recognized as
lawful. P.
300 U. S.
586.
4. A legislature has a wide range of choice in classifying and
limiting the subjects of taxation. The choice is as broad where the
tax is laid upon one or a few of the attributes of ownership as
when laid upon them all. P.
300 U. S.
587.
15 F. Supp. 958 reversed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court of three judges
holding unconstitutional a tax on the use of chattels bought in
other States and brought into the Washington and used there. The
suit was by the taxpayer to enjoin the Tax Commission of Washington
from collecting the tax.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
A statute of Washington taxing the use of chattels in that state
is assailed in this suit as a violation of the commerce clause
(Constitution of the United States, Article 1, § 8) insofar as the
tax is applicable to chattels purchased in another state and used
in Washington thereafter.
Page 300 U. S. 579
Plaintiffs (appellees in this Court) are engaged either as
contractors or as subcontractors in the construction of the Grand
Coulee Dam on the Columbia river. In the performance of that work,
they have brought into the State of Washington machinery,
materials, and supplies, such as locomotives, cars, conveyors,
pumps, and trestle steel, which were bought at retail in other
states. The cost of all the articles, with transportation expenses
added, was $921,189.34. Defendants, the Tax Commission of
Washington (appellants in this Court) gave notice that plaintiffs
had become subject through the use of this property to a tax of
$18,423.78, 2 percent of the cost, and made demand for payment. A
District Court of three judges, organized in accordance with § 266
of the Judicial Code (28 U.S.C. § 380), adjudged the statute void
upon its face, and granted an interlocutory injunction, one judge
dissenting. 15 F. Supp. 958. The case is here upon appeal. 28
U.S.C. § 380.
Chapter 180 of the Laws of Washington for the year 1935,
consisting of twenty titles, lays a multitude of excise taxes on
occupations and activities. Only two of these taxes are important
for the purposes of the case at hand -- the "tax on retail sales,"
imposed by Title III, and the "compensating tax," imposed by Title
IV on the privilege of use. Title III provides that, after May 1,
1935, every retail sale in Washington, with a few enumerated
exceptions, [
Footnote 1] shall
be subject to a tax of 2 percent of
Page 300 U. S. 580
the selling price. Title IV, with the heading "compensating
tax," provides (§§ 31, 35) that there shall be collected from every
person in the state "a tax or excise for the privilege of using
within this state any article of tangible personal property
purchased subsequent to April 30, 1935," at the rate of 2 percent
of the purchase price, including in such price the cost of
transportation from the place where the article was purchased. If
those provisions stood alone, they would mean that retail buyers
within the state would have to pay a double tax, 2 percent upon the
sale and 2 percent upon the use. Relief from such a burden is
provided in another section (§ 32) which qualifies the use tax by
allowing four exceptions. Only two of these exceptions (b and c)
call for mention at this time. [
Footnote 2] Subdivision (b) provides that the use tax
shall not be laid unless the property has been bought at retail.
Subdivision (c) provides that the tax shall not
Page 300 U. S. 581
apply to the
"use of any article of tangible personal property the sale or
use of which has already been subjected to a tax equal to or in
excess of that imposed by this title whether under the laws of this
state or of some other state of the United States."
If the rate of such other tax is less than 2 percent, the
exemption is not to be complete (§ 33), but, in such circumstances,
the rate is to be measured by the difference.
The plan embodied in these provisions is neither hidden nor
uncertain. A use tax is never payable where the user has acquired
property by retail purchase in the state of Washington, except in
the rare instances in which retail purchases in Washington are not
subjected to a sales tax. On the other hand, a use tax is always
payable where the user has acquired property by retail purchase in
or from another state, unless he had paid a sales or use tax
elsewhere before bringing it to Washington. The tax presupposes
everywhere a retail purchase by the user before the time of use. If
he has manufactured the chattel for himself, or has received it
from the manufacturer as a legacy or gift, he is exempt from the
use tax, whether title was acquired in Washington or elsewhere. The
practical effect of a system thus conditioned is readily perceived.
One of its effects must be that retail sellers in Washington will
be helped to compete upon terms of equality with retail dealers in
other states who are exempt from a sales tax or any corresponding
burden. Another effect, or at least another tendency, must be to
avoid the likelihood of a drain upon the revenues of the state,
buyers being no longer tempted to place their orders in other
states in the effort to escape payment of the tax on local sales.
Do these consequences, which must have been foreseen, necessitate a
holding that the tax upon the use is either a tax upon the
operations of interstate commerce or a discrimination against such
commerce obstructing or burdening it unlawfully?
Page 300 U. S. 582
1. The tax is not upon the operations of interstate commerce,
but upon the privilege of use after commerce is at an end.
Things acquired or transported in interstate commerce may be
subjected to a property tax, nondiscriminatory in its operation,
when they have become part of the common mass of property within
the state of destination.
Wiloil Corp. Pennsylvania,
294 U. S. 169,
294 U. S. 175;
Cudahy Packing Co. v. Minnesota, 246 U.
S. 450,
246 U. S. 453;
Brown-Forman Co. v. Kentucky, 217 U.
S. 563,
217 U. S. 575;
American Steel & Wire Co. v. Speed, 192 U.
S. 500,
192 U. S. 519;
Woodruff v.
Parham, 8 Wall. 123,
75 U. S. 137.
This is so, indeed, though they are still in the original packages.
Sonneborn Bros. v. Cureton, 262 U.
S. 506;
American Steel & Wire Co. v. Speed,
supra; Woodruff v. Parham, supra. For like reasons, they may
be subjected, when once they are at rest, to a nondiscriminatory
tax upon use or enjoyment.
Nashville, C. & St.L. Ry. Co. v.
Wallace, 288 U. S. 249,
288 U. S. 267;
Edelman v. Boeing Air Transport, Inc., 289 U.
S. 249,
289 U. S. 252;
Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson, 292 U. S.
86,
292 U. S. 93.
The privilege of use is only one attribute, among many, of the
bundle of privileges that make up property or ownership.
Nashville, C. & St.L. Ry. Co. v. Wallace, supra; Bromley v.
McCaughn, 280 U. S. 124,
280 U. S.
136-138;
Burnet v. Wells, 289 U.
S. 670,
289 U. S. 678.
A state is at liberty, if it pleases, to tax them all collectively,
or to separate the faggots and lay the charge distributively.
Ibid. Calling the tax an excise when it is laid solely
upon the use (
Vancouver Oil Co. v. Henneford, 183 Wash.
317, 49 P.2d 14) does not make the power to impose it less, for
anything the commerce clause has to say of its validity, than
calling it a property tax and laying it on ownership.
"A nondiscriminatory tax upon local sales . . . has never been
regarded as imposing a direct burden upon interstate commerce, and
has no greater or different effect upon that commerce than a
general property tax to which all those enjoying the protection of
the
Page 300 U. S. 583
state may be subjected."
Eastern Air Transport, Inc. v. South Carolina Tax
Commission, 285 U. S. 147,
285 U. S. 153.
A tax upon the privilege of use or storage when the chattel used or
stored has ceased to be in transit is now an impost so common that
its validity has been withdrawn from the arena of debate.
Nashville, C. & St.L. Ry. Co. v. Wallace, supra; Edelman v.
Boeing Air Transport, Inc., supra; Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson,
supra. Cf. Vancouver Oil Co. v. Henneford, supra.
The case before us does not call for approval or disapproval of
the definition of use or enjoyment in the rules of the Commission.
Those rules inform us that
"property is put to use by the first act after delivery is
completed within the state by which the article purchased is
actually used or is made available for use with intent actually to
use the same within the state. The term 'made a available for use'
means and includes the exercise of any right or power over tangible
personal property preparatory to actual use within the state, such
as keeping, storing, withdrawing from storage, moving, installing,
or performing any act by which dominion or control over the
property is assumed by the purchaser."
A tax upon a use so closely connected with delivery as to be in
substance a part thereof might be subject to the same objections
that would be applicable to a tax upon the sale itself. If the
rules are too drastic in that respect or others, the defect is
unimportant in relation to this case. Here, the machinery and other
chattels subjected to the tax have had continuous use in Washington
long after the time when delivery was over. The plaintiffs are not
the champions of any rights except their own.
2. The tax upon the use after the property is at rest is not so
measured or conditioned as to hamper the transactions of interstate
commerce or discriminate against them.
Equality is the theme that runs through all the sections of the
statute. There shall be a tax upon the use, but subject
Page 300 U. S. 584
to an offset if another use or sales tax has been paid for the
same thing. This is true where the offsetting tax became payable to
Washington by reason of purchase or use within the state. It is
true in exactly the same measure where the offsetting tax has been
paid to another state by reason of use or purchase there. No one
who uses property in Washington after buying it at retail is to be
exempt from a tax upon the privilege of enjoyment except to the
extent that he has paid a use or sales tax somewhere. Every one who
has paid a use or sales tax anywhere, or, more accurately, in any
state, is to that extent to be exempt from the payment of another
tax in Washington.
When the account is made up, the stranger from afar is subject
to no greater burdens as a consequence of ownership than the
dweller within the gates. The one pays upon one activity or
incident, and the other upon another, but the sum is the same when
the reckoning is closed. Equality exists when the chattel subjected
to the use tax is bought in another state and then carried into
Washington. It exists when the imported chattel is shipped from the
state of origin under an order received directly from the state of
destination. In each situation, the burden borne by the owner is
balanced by an equal burden where the sale is strictly local.
"There is no demand in [the] Constitution that the state shall
put its requirements in any one statute. It may distribute them as
it sees fit if the result, taken in its totality, is within the
state's constitutional power."
Gregg Dyeing Co. v. Query, 286 U.
S. 472,
286 U. S. 480.
If the sales tax were abolished, the buyer in Washington would pay
at once upon the use. He would have no longer an offsetting credit.
While the sales tax is in force, he pays upon the sale, and pays at
the same rate. For the owner who uses after buying from afar, the
effect is all one whether his competitor is taxable under one title
or another. This common sense conclusion has ample precedent behind
it. Alabama laid a tax on
Page 300 U. S. 585
the sale of spirituous liquors, the products of sister states.
Comparing the tax with others applicable to domestic products, the
court upheld the statute. The methods of collection were different,
but the taxes were complementary, and were intended to effect
equality.
Hinson v.
Lott, 8 Wall. 148. Louisiana laid a tax in lieu of
local taxes on rolling stock operated within the state, but
belonging to corporations domiciled elsewhere. The court compared
the tax with the local taxes upon residents, and found
discrimination lacking.
General American Tank Car Corp. v.
Day, 270 U. S. 367,
270 U. S.
372-373. South Carolina laid a tax on the storage of
gasoline brought from other states and held for use in local
business. The statute was interpreted by the state court as
covering "all gasoline stored for use and consumption upon which a
like tax has not been paid under other statutes." Upon comparison
of all the statutes, the impost was upheld. The taxpayers had
"failed to show that, whatever distinction there existed in form,
there was any substantial discrimination in fact."
Gregg Dyeing
Co. v. Query, supra.
Baldwin v. G.A.F. Seelig, Inc., 294 U.
S. 511, is invoked by appellees as decisive of the
controversy, but the case is far apart from this one. There, a
statute of New York had made provision for a minimum price to be
paid by dealers in milk to producers in that state.
Cf. Nebbia
v. New York, 291 U. S. 502;
Hegeman Farms Corp. v. Baldwin, 293 U.
S. 163. The same statute provided that, when milk from
another state had been brought into New York, the dealer should be
prohibited from selling it at any price unless, in buying the milk
from the out-of-state producer, he had paid the price that would be
necessary if he had bought within the state. New York was
attempting to project its legislation within the borders of another
state by regulating the price to be paid in that state for milk
acquired there. She said, in effect, to farmers in Vermont: your
milk cannot be sold by dealers to whom you ship it in
Page 300 U. S. 586
New York unless you sell it to them in Vermont at a price
determined here. What Washington is saying to sellers beyond her
borders is something very different. In substance, what she says is
this: you may ship your goods in such amounts and at such prices as
you please, but the goods, when used in Washington after the
transit is completed, will share an equal burden with goods that
have been purchased here.
We are told that a tax upon the use, even though not unlawful by
force of its effects alone, is vitiated by the motives that led to
its adoption. These motives cause it to be stigmatized as
equivalent to a protective tariff. But motives alone will seldom,
if ever, invalidate a tax that, apart from its motives, would be
recognized as lawful.
Magnano Co. v. Hamilton,
292 U. S. 40,
292 U. S. 44;
Fox v. Standard Oil Co., 294 U. S. 87,
294 U. S.
100-101. Least of all will they be permitted to
accomplish that result when equality, and not preference, is the
end to be achieved. Catchwords and labels such as the words
"protective tariff" are subject to the dangers that lurk in
metaphors an symbols, and must be watched with circumspection lest
they put us off our guard. A tariff, whether protective or for
revenue, burdens the very act of importation, and, if laid by a
state upon its commerce with another, is equally unlawful whether
protection or revenue is the motive back of it. But a tax upon use,
or, what is equivalent for present purposes, a tax upon property
after importation is over, is not a clog upon the process of
importation at all, any more than a tax upon the income or profits
of a business. The contention would be futile that Washington, in
laying an ownership tax, would be doing a wrong to nonresidents in
allowing a credit for a sales tax already borne by the owner as a
result of the same ownership. To contend this would be to deny that
a state may develop its scheme of taxation in such a way as to rid
its exactions of unnecessary oppression. In the statute in dispute,
such a scheme has
Page 300 U. S. 587
been developed with sedulous regard for every interest affected.
Yet a word of caution should be added here to avoid the chance of
misconception. We have not meant to imply by anything said in this
opinion that allowance of a credit for other taxes paid to
Washington made it mandatory that there should be a like allowance
for taxes paid to other states. A state, for many purposes, is to
be reckoned as a self-contained unit, which may frame its own
system of burdens and exemptions without heeding systems elsewhere.
If there are limits to that power, there is no need to mark them
now. It will be time enough to mark them when a taxpayer paying in
the state of origin is compelled to pay again in the state of
destination. This statute, by its framework, avoids that
possibility. The offsetting allowance has been conceded, whether
the concession was necessary or not, and thus the system has been
divested of any semblance of inequality or prejudice. A taxing act
is not invalid because its exemptions are more generous than the
state would have been free to make them by exerting the full
measure of her power.
Finally, there is argument that the tax now in question, though
in form upon the use, was in fact upon the foreign sale, and not
upon the use at all, the form being a subterfuge. The supposed
basis for that argument is a reading of the statute whereby the use
shall not be taxable if the chattel was manufactured by the user or
received as a legacy or acquired in any way except through the
medium of purchase, and a retail one at that. But the fact that the
Legislature has chosen to lay a tax upon the use of chattels that
have been bought does not make the tax upon the use a tax upon the
sale. One could argue with as much reason that there would be a tax
upon the sale if a property tax were limited to chattels so
acquired. A legislature has a wide range of choice in classifying
and limiting the subjects of taxation.
Bell's
Gap R. Co. v.
Page 300 U. S. 588
Pennsylvania, 134 U. S. 232,
134 U. S. 237;
Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway, 281 U. S. 146,
281 U. S. 159.
The choice is as broad where the tax is laid upon one or a few of
the attributes of ownership as when laid upon them all.
Flint
v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U. S. 107,
220 U. S.
158-159. True, collections might be larger if the use
were not dependent upon a prior purchase by the user. On the other
hand, economy in administration or a fairer distribution of social
benefits and burdens may have been promoted when the lines were
drawn as they were. Such questions of fiscal policy will not be
answered by a court. The Legislature might make the tax base as
broad or as narrow as it pleased.
The interlocutory injunction was erroneously granted, and the
decree must be
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
"Sec.19. The tax hereby levied shall not apply to the following
sales:"
"(a) Casual and isolated sales by a person who is not engaged in
the business of selling tangible personal property at retail;"
"(b) Sales made by persons in the course of business activities
with respect to which tax liability is specifically imposed under
title V of this act, when the gross proceeds from such sales must
be included in the measure of the tax imposed under said title
V;"
"(c) The distribution and news stand sale of newspapers;"
"(d) Sales which the Washington is prohibited from taxing under
the constitution of this state or the constitution or laws of the
United States;"
"(e) Sales of motor vehicle fuel taxable under chapter 58 of the
Laws of 1933 § 5 (being Rem.Rev.Stat., section 8327-5);"
"(f) Sales made on relief vouchers issued by the department of
public welfare or by any county or city or other welfare
agency;"
"(g) Sales of fresh sweet milk, raw unprocessed fruits and
vegetables, butter, eggs, cheese, canned milk and unsweetened bread
in loaf form (including rolls and buns), sold for consumption off
the premises."
[
Footnote 2]
For greater certainty, exceptions (a) and (d) are stated in this
note:
"The provisions of this title shall not apply:"
"(a) In respect to the use of any article of tangible personal
property brought into the Washington by a nonresident thereof for
his or her use or enjoyment while within the state;"
"
* * * *"
"(d) In respect to the use of tangible personal property
purchased during any calendar month, the total purchase price of
which is less than twenty ($20.00) dollars."