1. A Statute of South Carolina imposed on foreign insurance
companies as a condition on their doing business within the State
an annual tax of three percent of premiums from business done
within the State, without reference to the character of the
transactions as interstate or local. No similar tax was imposed on
South Carolina corporations.
Held, in view of the provisions of the Act of Congress
of March 9, 1945, 59 Stat. 33, authorizing state regulation and
taxation of the business of insurance, that the tax was not in
violation of the Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution,
notwithstanding this Court's ruling in
United States v.
South-Eastern Underwriters Assn., 322 U.
S. 533 (1944). Pp.
328 U. S.
410-411,
328 U. S.
422.
Page 328 U. S. 409
2. A state tax or regulation discriminating against interstate
commerce, which would be invalid under the Commerce Clause in
absence of action by Congress, may be validated by the affirmative
action of Congress consenting thereto. Pp.
328 U. S.
421-427.
3. The Commerce Clause is not a limitation upon the power of
Congress over interstate and foreign commerce, but a grant to
Congress of plenary and supreme authority over those subjects. P.
328 U. S.
423.
4. The state tax here involved is clearly sustained by the Act
of March 9, 1945, the purpose of which was broadly to give support
to the existing and future state systems for regulating and taxing
the business of insurance. Pp.
328 U. S.
427-433.
5. The power of Congress over commerce is not restricted, except
as the Constitution expressly provides, by any limitation which
forbids it to discriminate against interstate commerce and in favor
of local trade. P.
328 U. S.
434.
6. If authority over interstate commerce is exercised by
Congress in conjunction with the States, their joint action is
limited only by those provisions in the Constitution which forbid
action altogether by any power or combination of powers in our
governmental system. P.
328 U. S.
434.
7. In validating the state tax here involved, the Act of March
9, 1945, is not in violation of the due process clause of the Fifth
Amendment, nor of the first clause of Art. I, § 8, requiring that
"all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the
United States," nor of Art. I, § 1, conferring the legislative
power on Congress, nor of the Tenth Amendment. Pp.
328 U. S.
437-439.
8. As here construed, the Act of March 9, 1945, does not involve
an unconstitutional delegation by Congress of its power to the
States. P.
328 U. S.
439.
207 S.C. 324, 35 S.E.2d 586, affirmed.
By an original proceeding in the Supreme Court of South
Carolina, appellant challenged the validity under the Federal
Constitution of a state statute which imposed a tax upon foreign
insurance companies. The state court upheld the tax, 207 S.C. 324,
35 S.E.2d 586, and an appeal was taken to this Court.
Affirmed, p.
328 U. S. 440.
Page 328 U. S. 410
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case and
Robertson v. California, post, p.
328 U. S. 440,
bring not unexpected sequels to
United States v. South-Eastern
Underwriters Assn., 322 U. S. 533. In
cycle reminiscent conversely of views advanced there and in
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, claims are put forward on
the basis of the
South-eastern decision to sustain
immunity from state taxation and, in the
Robertson case,
from state regulation of the business of insurance.
The specific effect asserted in this case is that South Carolina
no longer can collect taxes from Prudential, a New Jersey
corporation, which, for years prior to 1945, the state had levied
and the company had paid. The tax is laid on foreign insurance
companies. and must be paid annually as a condition of receiving a
certificate of authority to carry on the business of insurance
within the state. The exaction amounts to three percent of the
aggregate of premiums received from business done in South
Carolina, without reference to its interstate or local character.
[
Footnote 1]
Page 328 U. S. 411
No similar tax is required of South Carolina corporations.
[
Footnote 2]
Prudential insists that the tax discriminates against interstate
commerce and in favor of local business, since it is laid only on
foreign corporations and is measured by their gross receipts from
premiums derived from business done in the state, regardless of its
interstate or local character. Accordingly, it says the tax cannot
stand consistently with many decisions of this Court outlawing
state taxes which discriminate against interstate commerce.
[
Footnote 3] South Carolina
denies that the tax is discriminatory [
Footnote 4] or
Page 328 U. S. 412
has been affected by the
South-Eastern decision. But,
in any event, it maintains that the tax is valid, more particularly
in view of the McCarran Act, [
Footnote 5] by which it is claimed Congress has consented
to continuance of this form of taxation, and thus has removed any
possible constitutional objection which otherwise might exist. This
Prudential asserts Congress has not done, and could not do.
The State Supreme Court has held the continued exaction of the
tax not to be in violation of the commerce clause or affected by
the ruling made in the
South-Eastern case. 35 S.E.2d 586.
That holding presents the principal basis for this appeal.
I
The versatility with which argument inverts state and national
power, each in alternation to ward off the other's incidence,
[
Footnote 6] is not simply a
product of protective self-interest. It is a recurring
manifestation of the continuing necessity in our federal system for
accommodating the two great basic powers it comprehends. For this
Court's
Page 328 U. S. 413
part, from
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, no phase of that process has
been more continuous or at times perplexing than reconciling the
paramount national authority over commerce, created by Article I, §
8 of the Constitution, with appropriate exercise of the states'
reserved powers touching the same or related subject matter.
[
Footnote 7]
The continuing adjustment has filled many of the great
constitutional gaps of Marshall's time and later. [
Footnote 8] But not all of the filling has
been lasting. Great emphases of national policy swinging between
nation and states in historic conflicts have been reflected,
variously and from time to time, in premise and therefore in
conclusion of particular dispositions. [
Footnote 9] In turn, their sum has shifted and reshifted
the general balance of authority, inevitably producing some anomaly
of logic and of result in the decisions.
No phase has had a more atypical history than regulation of the
business of insurance. This fact is important for the problems now
presented. They have origin in that history. Their solution cannot
escape its influence. Moreover, in law as in other phases of
living, reconciliation
Page 328 U. S. 414
of anomalous behavior, long continued, with more normal
attitudes is not always easy when the time for that adjustment
comes.
Essentially the problems these cases tender are of that
character. It is not necessary to renew the controversy presented
in
South-Eastern. Whether or not that decision properly
has been characterized as "precedent-smashing," [
Footnote 10] there was a reorientation of
attitudes toward federal power in its relation to the business of
insurance conducted across state lines. Necessarily, this worked in
two directions. As the opinion was at pains to note,
322 U. S. 322 U.S.
533,
322 U. S. 545
ff., no decision previously had held invalid an Act of Congress on
the ground that such business was beyond reach of its power,
because previously no attempted exercise of that authority had been
brought here in litigation. But, from
Paul v. Virginia to
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Deer Lodge County, 231 U.
S. 495, negative implication from the commerce clause
was held not to place any limitation upon state power over the
business, however conducted with reference to state lines. And,
correlatively, this was taken widely, although not universally, to
nullify federal authority until the question was squarely presented
and answered otherwise in the
South-Eastern case.
Whether
Paul v. Virginia represented, in its day, an
accommodation with or a departure from the preexisting evolution of
commerce clause law, and whether its ruling, together with later
ones adhering to it, remained consonant with the subsequent general
development of that law, may still be debated. But all may concede
that the
Paul case created for the business of insurance a
special, if not a wholly unique, way of thinking and acting in the
regulation of business done across state lines.
See
Ribble, State and National Power over Commerce (1937) 89,
186-187.
Page 328 U. S. 415
The aegis of federal commerce power continued to spread over and
enfold other business so conducted, in both general and specific
legislative exertions. Usually this was with judicial approval,
and, despite notable instances of initial hostility, the history of
judicial limitation of congressional power over commerce, when
exercised affirmatively, has been more largely one of retreat than
of ultimate victory. [
Footnote
11] The plain words of the grant have made courts cautious,
except possibly in some of the instances noted, about nullifying
positive exertions of Congress' power over this broad and
hard-to-define field. At the same time, physical and economic
change in the way commerce is carried on has called forth a
constantly increasing volume of legislation exercising that power.
[
Footnote 12]
Concurrently with this general expansion, however, from
Paul to
South-Eastern, the states took over
exclusively the function of regulating the insurance business in
its specific legislative manifestations. Congress legislated only
in terms applicable to commerce generally, without particularized
reference to insurance. At the same time, on the rationalization
that insurance was not commerce, yet was business affected with a
vast public
Page 328 U. S. 416
interest, [
Footnote 13]
the states developed comprehensive regulatory and taxing systems.
And litigation of their validity came to be freed of commerce
clause objections -- at any rate, from
Deer Lodge on to
South-Eastern. Due process, in its jurisdictional aspects,
remained to confine the reach of state power in relation to
business affecting other states. [
Footnote 14] But the negative implications of the
commerce clause became irrelevant, as such, for the valid exercise
of state regulatory and taxing authority.
Meanwhile, the business of insurance experienced a nationwide
expansion graphically depicted not only in the facts of the
situation presented in the
South-Eastern case, but also in
the operations of Prudential as described by its advocates in this
cause. [
Footnote 15] These
divergent facts,
Page 328 U. S. 417
legal and economic, necessarily were reflected in state
legislation. States grappling with nationwide, but nationally
unregulated, business inevitably exerted their powers to limits and
in ways not sought generally to be applied to other business held
to be within the reach of the commerce clause's implied
prohibition. Obvious and widespread examples are furnished in broad
and detailed licensing provisions for the doing of business within
the states, and in connected or distinct taxing measures drawn in
apparent reliance upon freedom from commerce clause limitations.
[
Footnote 16]
Now we are told many of these statutes no longer can stand. The
process of readjustment began affirmatively with
South-Eastern. Since the commerce clause is a two-edged
instrument, the indicated next step, indeed the constitutionally
required one, as the argument runs, is to apply its negatively
cutting edge. Conceptions so developed with reference to other
commerce must now be extended to the commerce of insurance in
completion of the readjustment. This, it is confidently asserted,
will require striking down much of the state legislation
enacted
Page 328 U. S. 418
and effective prior to the
South-Eastern decision.
Particularly will this be true of all discriminatory state taxes,
of which it is said South Carolina's is one. Moreover, those
results must follow regardless of the McCarran Act's provisions.
For, by that Act, in Prudential's assessment, Congress neither
intended to nor could validate such taxes.
It is not surprising that the attack is thus broad. When a
decision is conceived as precedent-smashing, rightly or wrongly,
the conception's invitation may be to greater backtracking than is
justified, in spite of warning to proceed with care.
322 U. S. 322 U.S.
533,
322 U. S. 547
ff.
Prudential's misconception relates not to the necessity for
applying, but to the nature and scope of the negative function of
the commerce clause. It is not the simple, clean-cutting tool
supposed. Nor is its swath always correlative with that cut by the
affirmative edge, as seems to be assumed. For, cleanly as the
commerce clause has worked affirmatively on the whole, its implied
negative operation on state power has been uneven -- at times
highly variable. More often than not, in matters more governable by
logic and less by experience, the business of negative implication
is slippery. Into what is thus left open for inference to fill
divergent ideas of meaning may be read much more readily than into
what has been made explicit by affirmation. That possibility is
broadened immeasurably when not logic alone, but large choices of
policy, affected in this instance by evolving experience of
federalism, control in giving content to the implied negation. In
all our constitutional history, this has become no more apparent
than in commerce clause dispositions.
That the clause imposes some restraint upon state power has
never been doubted. For otherwise the grant of power to Congress
would be wholly ineffective. But the limitation not only is
implied. It is open to different implications of meaning. And this
accounts largely for
Page 328 U. S. 419
variations in this field continuing almost from the beginning
until now. [
Footnote 17]
They started with Marshall and Taney,
Page 328 U. S. 420
went forward from Waite to Fuller, and have been projected in
later differences perhaps less broad, but hardly less
controversial. [
Footnote 18]
Consequently, in its prohibitive, as in its affirmative or
enabling, effects, the history of the commerce clause has been one
of very considerable judicial oscillation.
Moreover, the parallel encompasses the latest turn in the
long-run trend. For, concurrently with the broadening of the scope
for permissible application of federal authority, [
Footnote 19] the tendency also has run
toward sustaining state regulatory and taxing measures formerly
regarded as inconsonant with Congress' unexercised power over
commerce, [
Footnote 20] and
to doing so by a new or renewed emphasis on facts and practical
considerations, rather than dogmatic logistic. [
Footnote 21] These facts are of great
importance for disposing
Page 328 U. S. 421
of such controversies. For, in effect, they have transferred the
general problem of adjustment to a level more tolerant of both
state and federal legislative action.
II
We are not required, however, to consider whether, on that
level, the authorities on which Prudential chiefly relies would
require invalidation of South Carolina's tax. For they are not in
point.
As has been stated, they are the cases which from
Welton v.
Missouri, 91 U. S. 275, until
now, have outlawed state taxes found to discriminate against
interstate commerce. [
Footnote
22] No one of them involved a situation like that now here. In
each, the question of validity of the state taxing statute arose
when Congress' power lay dormant. In none had Congress acted or
purported to act, either by way of consenting to the state's tax or
otherwise. Those cases therefore presented no question of the
validity of such a tax where Congress had taken affirmative action
consenting to it or purporting to give it validity. Nor,
consequently, could they stand as controlling precedents for such a
case.
This would seem so obvious as hardly to require further comment,
except for the fact that Prudential has argued
Page 328 U. S. 422
so earnestly to the contrary. Its position puts the McCarran Act
to one side, either as not intended to have effect toward
validating this sort of tax or, if construed otherwise, as
constitutionally ineffective to do so. Those questions present the
controlling issues in this case. But, before we turn to them, it
will be helpful to note the exact effects of Prudential's
argument.
Fundamentally it maintains that the commerce clause, "of its own
force" and without reference to any action by Congress, whether
through its silence [
Footnote
23] or otherwise, forbids discriminatory state taxation of
interstate commerce. This is to say, in effect, that neither
Congress acting affirmatively nor Congress and the states thus
acting coordinately can validly impose any regulation which the
Court has found or would find to be forbidden by the commerce
clause, if laid only by state action taken while Congress' power
lies dormant. In this view, the limits of state power to regulate
commerce in the absence of affirmative action by Congress are also
the limits of Congress' permissible action in this respect, whether
taken alone or in coordination with state legislation.
Merely to state the position in this way compels its rejection.
So conceived, Congress' power over commerce would be nullified to a
very large extent. [
Footnote
24] For, in all the variations of commerce clause theory, it
has never been the law that what the states may do in the
regulation of commerce, Congress being silent, is the full measure
of its power. Much less has this boundary been thought to
Page 328 U. S. 423
confine what Congress and the states, acting together, may
accomplish. So to regard the matter would invert the constitutional
grant into a limitation upon the very power it confers.
The commerce clause is in no sense a limitation upon the power
of Congress over interstate and foreign commerce. On the contrary,
it is, as Marshall declared in
Gibbons v. Ogden, a grant
to Congress of plenary and supreme authority over those subjects.
The only limitation it places upon Congress' power is in respect to
what constitutes commerce, including whatever rightly may be found
to affect it sufficiently to make Congressional regulation
necessary or appropriate. [
Footnote 25] This limitation, of course, is entirely
distinct from the implied prohibition of the commerce clause. The
one is concerned with defining commerce, with fixing the outer
boundary of the field over which the authority granted shall
govern. The other relates only to matters within the field of
commerce, once this is defined, including whatever may fall within
the "affectation" doctrine. The one limitation bounds the power of
Congress. The other confines only the powers of the states. And the
two areas are not coextensive. The distinction is not always
clearly observed, for both questions may, and indeed at times do,
arise in the same case, and in close relationship. [
Footnote 26] But to blur them, and thereby
equate the implied prohibition with the affirmative endowment, is
altogether fallacious. There is no such equivalence.
This appears most obviously, perhaps, in the cases most
important for the decision in this cause. They are the ones
involving situations where the silence of Congress or the dormancy
of its power has been taken judicially,
Page 328 U. S. 424
on one view or another of its constitutional effects, [
Footnote 27] as forbidding state
action, only to have Congress later disclaim the prohibition or
undertake to nullify it. [
Footnote 28] Not yet has this Court held such a
disclaimer invalid, or that state action supported by it could not
stand. On the contrary, in each instance, it has given effect to
the Congressional judgment contradicting its own previous one.
[
Footnote 29]
It is true that rationalizations have differed concerning those
decisions, [
Footnote 30]
indeed, also that the judges participating in them differed in this
respect. [
Footnote 31] But
the results have been lasting, and are at least as important, for
the direction given to the process of accommodating federal and
state authority, as the reasons stated for reaching them. None
Page 328 U. S. 425
of the decisions conceded, because none involved any question
of, the power of Congress to make conclusive its own mandate
concerning what is commerce. But, apart from that function of
defining the outer boundary of its power, whenever Congress'
judgment has been uttered affirmatively to contradict the Court's
previously expressed view that specific action taken by the states
in Congress' silence was forbidden by the commerce clause, this
body has accommodated its previous judgment to Congress' expressed
approval.
Some part of this readjustment may be explained in ways
acceptable on any theory of the commerce clause and the relations
of Congress and the Courts toward its functioning. [
Footnote 32] Such explanations, however,
hardly go to the root of the matter. For the fact remains that, in
these instances, the sustaining of Congress' overriding action has
involved something beyond correction of erroneous factual judgment
in deference to Congress' presumably better-informed view of the
facts, [
Footnote 33] and
also beyond giving due
Page 328 U. S. 426
deference to its conception of the scope of its powers, when it
repudiates, just as when its silence is thought to support, the
inference that it has forbidden state action. [
Footnote 34]
Prudential has not squarely met this fact. Fixed with the sense
of applicability of the
Welton or Shelby County line of
cases, it rather has posed an enigma for the bearing of the bridge
and liquor cases upon the decision to be made. It is, if the
commerce clause, "by its own force," forbids discriminatory state
taxation or other measures, how is it that Congress, by expressly
consenting, can give that action validity?
The answer need no be labored. Prudential in this case makes no
contention that commerce is not involved. Its argument is exactly
the opposite. Its contention
Page 328 U. S. 427
founded on the commerce clause is one wholly of implied
prohibition within the filed of commerce.
This it regards as operative not only in Congress' silence, but
in the face of its positive expression by the McCarran Act that the
continued regulation and taxation by the states of the business of
insurance is in accord with Congress' policy. That expression
raises questions concerning its own validity, and also concerning
whether the policy stated extends to the kind of state legislation
which is immediately in issue. But those questions are not
answered, as Prudential seeks to have them answered, by any
conception that Congress' declaration of policy adds nothing to the
validity of what the states have done within the area covered by
the declaration or, in other words, that it is mere
brutum
fulmen. For to do this not only would produce intolerable
consequences for restricting Congress' power. It would ignore the
very basis on which the second
Wheeling Bridge case, and
indeed the
Clark Distilling case, have set the pattern of
the law for governing situations like that now presented. [
Footnote 35] Accordingly, we turn to
the issues which are more alive and significant for the future.
III
In considering the issues raised by the McCarran Act and the
question of its applicability, ground may be cleared by putting
aside some matters strenuously argued in the state supreme court
and here. First, it follows from what has been said that we are not
required to determine whether South Carolina's tax would be valid
in the dormancy of Congress' power. For Congress has expressly
stated its intent and policy in the Act. And, for reasons to be
stated, we think that the declaration's effect is clearly to
sustain the exaction, and that this can be done without violating
any constitutional provision.
Page 328 U. S. 428
By the same token, we need not consider whether the tax, if
operative in Congress' unilluminated silence, would be
discriminatory in the sense of an exaction forbidden by the
commerce clause, as Prudential categorically asserts, or not so, as
South Carolina maintains with equal certitude. Much attention has
been given both here and in the state court to these questions.
But, in the view we take of the case, the controlling issues
undercut them. Nor do we determine, as Prudential's argument seems
to subsume, whether all of its business done in South Carolina and
affected by the tax should be regarded as constituting interstate
commerce so as to fall within the "in commerce" classification or,
on the other hand, some of it may properly be considered as being
only local or intrastate business. [
Footnote 36] These questions we put to one side.
Page 328 U. S. 429
And, for present purposes, we assume that the tax would be
discriminatory in the sense of Prudential's contention, and that
all of its business done in South Carolina and affected by the tax
is done "in" or as a part of interstate commerce.
It is not necessary to spend much time with interpreting the
McCarran Act. Pertinently, it is as follows:
". . . the Congress hereby declares that the continued
regulation and taxation by the several States of the business of
insurance is in the public interest, and that silence on the part
of the Congress shall not be construed to impose any barrier to the
regulation or taxation of such business by the several States."
"SEC. 2. (a) The business of insurance, and every person engaged
therein, shall be subject to the laws of the several States which
relate to the regulation or taxation of such business."
"(b) No Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate,
impair, or supersede any law enacted by any State for the purpose
of regulating the business of insurance, or which imposes a fee or
tax upon such business, unless such Act specifically relates to the
business of insurance. . . ."
59 Stat. 34, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1011-1015. [
Footnote 37]
Obviously Congress' purpose was broadly to give support to the
existing and future state systems for regulating and taxing the
business of insurance. This was done in two ways. One was by
removing obstructions which might be thought to flow from its own
power, whether dormant or exercised, except as otherwise expressly
provided
Page 328 U. S. 430
in the Act itself or in future legislation. [
Footnote 38] The other was by declaring
expressly and affirmatively that continued state regulation and
taxation of this business is in the public interest, and that the
business and all who engage in it "shall be subject to" the laws of
the several states in these respects.
Moreover, in taking this action, Congress must have had full
knowledge of the nationwide existence of state systems of
regulation and taxation; of the fact that they differ greatly in
the scope and character of the regulations imposed and of the taxes
exacted, and of the further fact that many, if not all, include
features which, to some extent, have not been applied generally to
other interstate business. Congress could not have been
unacquainted with these facts, and its purpose was evidently to
throw the whole weight of its power behind the state systems
notwithstanding these variations.
It would serve no useful purpose now to inquire whether or how
far this effort was necessary in view of the explicit reservations
made in the majority opinion in the
South-Eastern case.
Nor is it necessary to conclude that Congress, by enacting the
McCarran Act, sought to validate every existing state regulation or
tax. For in all that mass of legislation must have lain some
provisions which may have been subject to serious question on the
score of other constitutional limitations in addition to commerce
clause objections arising in the dormancy of Congress' power. And
we agree with Prudential that there can be no inference that
Congress intended to circumvent constitutional limitations upon its
own power.
But, though Congress had no purpose to validate unconstitutional
provisions of state laws except insofar as the Constitution itself
gives Congress the power to do this by removing obstacles to state
action arising from its own
Page 328 U. S. 431
action or by consenting to such laws, H.Rep. No.143, 79th Cong.,
1st Sess., p. 3, it clearly put the full weight of its power behind
existing and future state legislation to sustain it from any attack
under the commerce clause to whatever extent this may be done with
the force of that power behind it, subject only to the exceptions
expressly provided for.
Two conclusions, corollary in character and important for this
case, must be drawn from Congress' action and the circumstances in
which it was taken. One is that Congress intended to declare, and
in effect declared, that uniformity of regulation, and of state
taxation, [
Footnote 39] are
not required in reference to the business of insurance by the
national public interest, except in the specific respects otherwise
expressly provided for. This necessarily was a determination by
Congress that state taxes, which in its silence might be held
invalid as discriminatory, do not place on interstate insurance
business a burden which it is unable generally to bear or should
not bear in the competition with local business. Such taxes were
not uncommon, among the states, [
Footnote 40] and the statute clearly included South
Carolina's tax now in issue.
Page 328 U. S. 432
That judgment was one of policy, and reflected long and clear
experience. For, notwithstanding the long incidence of the tax and
its payment by Prudential without question prior to the
South-Eastern decision, the record of Prudential's
continuous success in South Carolina over decades [
Footnote 41] refutes any idea that payment
of the tax handicapped it in any way tending to exclude it from
competition with local business or with domestic insurance
companies. Indeed, Prudential makes no contrary contention on any
factual basis, nor could it well do so. For the
South-Eastern decision did not, and could not, wipe out
all this experience or its weight for bearing, as a matter of the
practical consequences resulting from operation of the tax, upon
that question.
Robertson v. California, 328 U.
S. 440.
Consequently Prudential's case for discrimination must rest upon
the idea either that the commerce clause forbids the state to exact
more from it in taxes than from purely local business; or that the
tax is somehow technically of an inherently discriminatory
character, or possibly of a type which would exclude or seriously
handicap new entrants
Page 328 U. S. 433
seeking to establish themselves in South Carolina. As to each of
these grounds, moreover, the argument subsumes that Congress'
contrary judgment, as a matter of policy relating to the regulation
of interstate commerce, cannot be effective either "of its own
force" alone or as operative in conjunction with and to sustain the
state's policy.
IV
In view of all these considerations, we would be going very far
to rule that South Carolina no longer may collect her tax. To do so
would flout the expressly declared policies of both Congress and
the state. Moreover, it would establish a ruling never heretofore
made, and, in doing this, would depart from the whole trend of
decision in a great variety of situations most analogous to the one
now presented. For, as we have already emphasized, the authorities
most closely in point upon the problem are not, as appellant
insists, those relating to discriminatory state taxes laid in the
dormancy of Congress' power. They are, rather, the decisions which,
in every instance thus far not later overturned, [
Footnote 42] have sustained coordinated
action taken by Congress and the states in the regulation of
commerce. [
Footnote 43]
Page 328 U. S. 434
The power of Congress over commerce, exercised entirely without
reference to coordinated action of the states, is not restricted,
except as the Constitution expressly provides, [
Footnote 44] by any limitation which
forbids it to discriminate against interstate commerce and in favor
of local trade. Its plenary scope enables Congress not only to
promote, but also to prohibit, interstate commerce, as it has done
frequently and for a great variety of reasons. [
Footnote 45] That power does not run down a
one-way street, or one of narrowly fixed dimensions. Congress may
keep the way open, confine it broadly or closely, or close it
entirely, subject only to the restrictions placed upon its
authority by other constitutional provisions and the requirement
that it shall not invade the domains of action reserved exclusively
for the states.
This broad authority Congress may exercise alone, subject to
those limitations, or in conjunction with coordinated action by the
states, [
Footnote 46] in
which case limitations imposed for the preservation of their powers
become inoperative, and only those designed to forbid action
altogether by any power or combination of powers in our
governmental
Page 328 U. S. 435
system remain effective. [
Footnote 47] Here, both Congress and South Carolina have
acted, and in complete coordination, to sustain the tax. It is
therefore reinforced by
Page 328 U. S. 436
the exercise of all the power of government residing in our
scheme. [
Footnote 48] Clear
and gross must be the evil which would nullify such an exertion,
one which could arise only by exceeding beyond cavil some explicit
and compelling limitation imposed by a constitutional provision or
provisions designed and intended to outlaw the action taken
entirely from our constitutional framework.
In this light, the argument that the degree of discrimination
which South Carolina's tax has involved, if any, puts it beyond the
power of government to continue must fall of its own weight. No
conceivable violation of the commerce clause, in letter or spirit,
is presented. Nor is contravention of any other limitation.
Page 328 U. S. 437
A word should be added in the latter respect. Prudential has not
urged grounds founded upon other constitutional provisions than the
commerce clause, except in relation to the McCarran Act, and then
only in the event it should be construed as having effect to
validate continued exaction of the tax. As has been said, it
regards the statute as neither intended nor effective to "validate,
authorize, or sanction state statutes which discriminate against
interstate commerce." But, against the event that the Act should be
taken as intended to have such an effect, it puts forward the
somewhat novel contentions that the statute would be in violation
of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment; of the first
clause of Article I, § 8, requiring that "all Duties, Imposts and
Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;" of Article
I, § 1, "which requires legislation to be enacted by Congress;"
and, apparently of the Tenth Amendment, "as a violation of the
states' power to tax for purposes of raising revenue for their own
use, which power is vested exclusively in the states." [
Footnote 49]
These arguments may be summarily disposed of. As for the due
process contention, it was settled by a long line of authorities
prior to the
South-Eastern decision that the similar
provision of the Fourteenth Amendment,
Page 328 U. S. 438
as well as that requiring equal protection of the laws, does not
forbid the states to lay and collect such a tax as South
Carolina's. [
Footnote 50]
Certainly the Fifth Amendment does not more narrowly confine the
power of Congress; nor do it and the Fourteenth, taken together,
accomplish such a restriction upon the coordinated exercise of
power by the Congress and the states.
The argument grounded upon the first clause of Article I, § 8,
requiring that excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States, identifies the state exaction with the laying of an excise
by Congress, to which alone the limitation applies. This is done on
the theory that no more has occurred than that Congress has
"adopted" the tax as its own, a conception which obviously ignores
the state's exertion of its own power and, furthermore, seeks to
restrict the coordinated exercise of federal and state authority by
a limitation applicable only to the federal taxing power when it is
exerted without reference to any state action. [
Footnote 51] The same observation applies
also to the contention based on Article I, § 1.
The final contention that to sustain the Act, and thus the tax,
would be an invasion of the state's own power of
Page 328 U. S. 439
taxation is so clearly lacking in merit as to call for no
comment other than to point out that, by juxtaposition with the
contentions discussed in the preceding paragraph, the effect would
be at one stroke to bring the Act into collision with limitations
operative only upon the federal power, and at the same time to
nullify state authority.
No such anomalous consequence follows from the division of
legislative power into the respective spheres of federal and state
authority. There are limitations applicable to each of these
separately, and some to their coordinated exercise. But neither the
former nor the latter are to be found merely in the fact that the
authority is thus divided. Such a conception would reduce the joint
exercise of power by Congress and the states to achieve common ends
in the regulation of our society below the effective range of
either power separately exerted, without basis in specific
constitutional limitation or otherwise than in the division itself.
[
Footnote 52] We know of no
grounding, in either constitutional experience or spirit, for such
a restriction. For great reasons of policy and history not now
necessary to restate, these great powers were separated. They were
not forbidden to cooperate or, by doing so, to achieve legislative
consequences, particularly in the great fields of regulating
commerce and taxation, which, to some extent at least, neither
could accomplish in isolated exertion. [
Footnote 53]
We have considered appellant's other contentions, including the
suggestion that the McCarran Act, construed as we have interpreted
it and thus given effect, would involve an unconstitutional
delegation by Congress of its
Page 328 U. S. 440
power to the states. For reasons already set forth and others,
including the fact that no instance of delegation is involved on
the facts, we find them without merit.
The judgment accordingly is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The statute imposing the tax are §§ 7948 and 7949, South
Carolina Code of 1942. Each section in fact imposes a separate tax,
the former of two percent, the latter of one percent, on gross
premium returns "from the State," with provisions under § 7948 for
reduction in the amount of the tax scaled to specified investments
in South Carolina securities or property. Both taxes are laid "in
addition to the annual license fees now provided by law," and are
stated in terms to be required "an an additional and graded license
fee" (§ 7948) or as "a graduated license fee." § 7949. The two
taxes have been treated in combination, for purposes of this
litigation, as being in effect a single tax of three percent.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 7948 and 7949 expressly exempt South Carolina
corporations from payment of the tax. They, however, are subject to
other taxes, which Prudential maintains have no bearing upon the
issues, other than possibly to demonstrate the discriminatory
character and effects of the exaction in issue.
See
328 U. S. These
are chiefly taxes on real and personal property, incidence of which
Prudential largely escapes by the location of its property in other
states.
[
Footnote 3]
Extending from
Welton v. Missouri, 91 U. S.
275, to
Nippert v. Richmond, 327 U.
S. 416.
See the collection of authorities in
McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Co., 309 U. S.
33,
309 U. S. 56,
note 11.
[
Footnote 4]
In apparent reliance not only upon decisions rendered prior to
the
South-Eastern decision or made without reference to
its ruling,
e.g., Lincoln National Ins. Co. v. Read,
325 U. S. 673;
Bethlehem Motors Corp. v. Flynt, 256 U.
S. 421, but indeed also
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168;
Hooper v.
California, 155 U. S. 648, and
like authorities.
The state also maintains that Prudential's South Carolina
business is not altogether interstate commerce, but consists, in
substantial part, of local transactions, the aggregate of which
measures the tax, for which view it relies upon such diverse
decisions as
McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Co., 309 U. S.
33;
International Shoe Co. v. Shartel,
279 U. S. 429;
Western Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue, 303 U.
S. 250, and
Polish National Alliance v. Labor
Board, 322 U. S. 643.
See note 36 and
text
[
Footnote 5]
The pertinent portion of the Act are set forth in the text, Part
III at
note 37
[
Footnote 6]
Cf. United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters,
322 U. S. 533, at
notes 9 and 23;
but see also note 33 for an early and highly authoritative but less
mutually exclusive view of the possible alternatives
[
Footnote 7]
Among the volumes which have been written, special reference may
be made to Frankfurter, The Commerce Clause (1937); Ribble, State
and National Power over Commerce (1937); Gavit, The Commerce Clause
(1932),
and see Dowling, Interstate Commerce and State
Power (1940) 27 Va.L.Rev. 1. For thoughtful comment since the
South-Eastern decision,
see Patterson, The Future
of State Supervision of Insurance (1944) 23 Tex.L.Rev. 18; Note,
Congressional Consent to Discriminatory State Legislation (1945),
45 Col.L.Rev. 927.
[
Footnote 8]
"Judges legislate interstitially and the interstices were great
in Marshall's time." Ribble, State and National Power over Commerce
(1937) 47.
[
Footnote 9]
"Lines of demarcation are drawn largely according to the pull of
the Court at one period towards the interests of local
self-government, and at another in the direction of a nationwide
rule."
Frankfurter, The Commerce Clause (1937) 97.
[
Footnote 10]
S.Rep. No.1112, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 2.
[
Footnote 11]
E.g., Hammer v. Dagenhart, 247 U.
S. 251,
overruled by United States v. Darby
Co., 312 U. S. 100,
compare United States v. E. C. Knight Co., 156 U. S.
1,
with United States v. American Tobacco Co.,
221 U. S. 106;
Schechter Corp. v. United States, 295 U.
S. 495;
with Labor Board v. Jones & Laughlin
Steel Corp., 301 U. S. 1.
See
also discussion in
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.
S. 111,
317 U. S. 118
ff.
See Ribble, State and National Power over Commerce
(1937) 63, n. 39, for listing of the decisions invalidating Acts of
Congress prior to 1879, noting that Mr. Justice Miller was "but
slightly in error" in the statement, in
Trade-Mark Cases,
100 U. S. 82,
100 U. S. 96,
that one then might count "on his fingers" those decisions.
[
Footnote 12]
Beginning in modern phase with enactment of Interstate Commerce
Commission and antitrust legislation near the beginning of the
present century. The catalogue is now too long to repeat here.
[
Footnote 13]
See German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Lewis, 233 U.
S. 389,
233 U. S.
414-415;
La Tourette v. McMaster, 248 U.
S. 465,
248 U. S. 467;
National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Wanberg, 260 U. S.
71,
260 U. S. 74;
cf. Osborn v. Ozlin, 310 U. S. 53,
310 U. S. 65:
"Government has always had a special relation to insurance."
See also United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters
Assn., 322 U. S. 533,
dissenting opinion at
322 U. S.
585.
[
Footnote 14]
See Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U.
S. 578;
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Head,
234 U. S. 149;
Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Tafoya,
270 U. S. 426;
St. Louis Cotton Compress Co. v. Arkansas, 260 U.
S. 346;
Hoopeston Co. v. Cullen, 318 U.
S. 313; Powell, The Supreme Court and State Public
Power, 1922-1930 (1932) 140
et seq.; also St. Louis
Southwestern R. Co. of Texas v. Alexander, 227 U.
S. 218,
with which compare Henderson, The
Position of Foreign Corporations in American Constitutional Law
(1918) c. V.
Cf. International Harvester Co. v. Dept. of
Treasury, 322 U. S. 340,
concurring opinion,
322 U. S. 349 at
322 U.S. 353 ff.;
and
see International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.
S. 310.
[
Footnote 15]
According to Prudential's brief, it transacts business in all
forty-eight states, and, on December 31, 1944,
"had in force 33,933,077 policies, insuring approximately
22,900,000 persons, for a total amount of $22,741,134,075, and
36,733 annuity contracts operative during the lives of
approximately 300,000 persons and providing for an annual income of
approximately $63,200,000 on such lives. During the year 1944, the
Appellant issued 2,412,150 policies, insuring the lives of
approximately 2,170,000 persons, in the total amount of
$2,668,714,022, and entered into 451 annuity contracts operative
during the lives of approximately 600 persons and providing for an
annual income of approximately $150,000 on such lives. During the
year 1944, the Appellant collected as premiums on insurance
policies $681,052,095.07, and paid out as claims on policies
$246,776,197.45, and it paid out $13,690,781,93 on annuity
contracts."
For South Carolina, the company
"had in force 26,373 policies insuring the lives of
approximately 20,000 persons resident in said State for a total
amount of $30,827,184.00. During the year ending December 31, 1944,
1,439 policies insuring the lives of approximately 1,000 persons
resident in said State for a total amount of $1,475,062.00 were
issued, and $457,602.28 in claims were paid on policies covering
the lives of residents."
The South Carolina premium tax for 1943 amounted to $18,496.87;
for 1944, $19,676.94. All other state or local taxes paid in 1944
amounted to $3,103.92, making a total for the year for all taxes of
$22,780.86.
[
Footnote 16]
322 U. S. 322 U.S.
533, dissenting opinion at
322 U. S. 590;
see note 40 infra; cf. Robertson v. California,
post, p.
328 U. S. 440.
[
Footnote 17]
That the question was discussed, but not settled, in the
Constitutional Convention itself appears from debate on September
15, 1787, two days before submission of the proposed Constitution
to Congress, a portion of which bears quotation:
"Mr. McHenry & Mr. Carrol moved that 'no State shall be
restrained from laying duties of tonnage for the purpose of
clearing harbours and erecting lighthouses.'"
"Col. Mason, in support of this, explained and urged the
situation of the Chesapeak, which peculiarly required expenses of
this sort."
"Mr. Govr. Morris. The States are not restrained from laying
tonnage as the Constitution now Stands. The exception proposed will
imply the Contrary, and will put the States in a worse condition
than the gentleman (Col. Mason) wishes."
"Mr. Madison. Whether the States are now restrained from laying
tonnage duties depends on the extent of the power 'to regulate
commerce.' These terms are vague, but seem to exclude this power of
the States. They may certainly be restrained by Treaty. He observed
that there were other projects for tonnage duties as the support of
Seamen &c. He was more & more convinced that the regulation
of Commerce was in its nature indivisible, and ought to be wholly
under one authority."
"Mr. Sherman. The power of the U. States to regulate trade,
being supreme, can controul interferences of the State regulation
[when] such interferences happen, so that there is no danger to be
apprehended from a concurrent jurisdiction."
"Mr. Langdon insisted that the regulation of tonnage was an
essential part of the regulation of trade, and that the States
ought to have nothing to do with it. On motion 'that no State shall
lay any duty on tonnage without the Consent of Congress.'"
"N.H., ay; Mas. ay.; Ct., divd.; N.J., ay.; Pa. no.; Del., ay.;
Md., ay; Va., no; N.C., no; S.C. ay; Geo., no. [Ayes -- 6; noes --
4; divided -- 1.]"
Farrand, Records of the Federal Constitutional Convention of
1787 (1937), Vol. II, 625-626.
See Note, Congressional Consent to Discriminatory State
Legislation (1945) 45 Col.L.Rev. 927, 946 ff., for a short summary
of views expressed in the debates and later by members of the
Convention.
See also Abel, The Commerce Clause in the
Constitutional Convention and in Contemporary Comment (1941) 25
Minn.L.Rev. 432; Hamilton and Adair, The Power to Govern
(1937).
[
Footnote 18]
"The categories of 'burdens' on interstate commerce, of state
laws 'directly affecting' commerce, etc., are natural concomitants
of Marshall's doctrine. The theories as to the silence of Congress
are the outgrowth of Taney's. When diverse theories cohabit, the
miscegenation may produce strange progeny."
[
Footnote 19]
See note 11 and
text
[
Footnote 20]
Cf., e.g., South Carolina State Highway Dept. v. Barnwell
Bros., 303 U. S. 177;
Western Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue, 303 U.
S. 250;
McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Co.,
309 U. S. 33;
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 312 U.
S. 359;
California v. Thompson, 313 U.
S. 109;
Duckworth v. Arkansas, 314 U.
S. 390;
Union Brokerage Co. v. Jensen,
322 U. S. 202,
322 U. S. 209
ff.
[
Footnote 21]
Cf. Nippert v. Richmond, 327 U.
S. 416, notes 9 and 23, and authorities cited.
[
Footnote 22]
See 328 U. S. and
compare:
". . . State laws are not invalid under the Commerce Clause
unless they actually discriminate against interstate commerce or
conflict with a regulation enacted by Congress."
Gwin, White & Prince v. Henneford, 305 U.
S. 434, dissenting opinion at
305 U. S.
446.
". . . except for State acts designed to impose discriminatory
burdens on interstate commerce because it is interstate -- Congress
alone must 'determine how far [interstate commerce] . . . shall be
free and untrammeled, how far it shall be burdened by duties and
imposts and how far it shall be prohibited.'"
Id. at
305 U. S.
455.
See also, for essentially the same position,
Adams
Mfg. Co. v. Storen, 304 U. S. 307,
dissenting opinion;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Arizona,
325 U. S. 761,
dissenting opinion at
325 U. S.
795t.
[
Footnote 23]
See note 18
[
Footnote 24]
Thus, for instance, the limitations upon the length of trains
imposed by the Arizona Train Limit Law, and held to be in violation
of the commerce clause in
Southern Pacific Co. v. Arizona,
325 U. S. 761,
would be beyond the power of Congress, perhaps also of Congress and
the states acting together, to impose, and, on commerce clause
grounds, thus nullifying the very power conferred in order to
regulate such matters. The argument is reminiscent of that of Mr.
Justice McLean in the second
Wheeling Bridge case,
cf. note 34
[
Footnote 25]
Cf. note 11 and
text
[
Footnote 26]
See the argument for the plaintiff in error in
Paul
v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, 172-173 [argument of counsel omitted
in USSC+], as a classic instance.
[
Footnote 27]
Cf. note 18
See also the discussions cited in
note 7
[
Footnote 28]
Legislation which, typically, has presented the problem is found
in a variety of measures, of which the Wilson Act, 26 Stat. 313, is
the prototype. Earlier legislation presenting the difficulty was
that involved in the second of the
Wheeling Bridge cases,
Pennsylvania v. Wheeling &
Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How. 421.
See
note 43 for further
citations
[
Footnote 29]
Pennsylvania v. Wheeling &
Belmont Bridge Co., 13 How. 518,
with which
compare 59 U. S. Wheeling
& Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How. 421,
and 77 U.
S. 10 Wall. 454;
Leisy & Co. v.
Hardin, 135 U. S. 100,
with which compare In re Rahrer, 140 U.
S. 545;
Bowman v. Chicago & Northwestern R.
Co., 125 U. S. 465,
with which compare Clark Distilling Co. v. Western Maryland R.
Co., 242 U. S. 311.
[
Footnote 30]
See, e.g., Ribble at 62, 106, and other materials cited
above in
note 7
[
Footnote 31]
For the modern record, it is interesting to note that, in the
first
Bridge case, Justice McLean spoke for the Court,
Chief Justice Taney and Justice Daniel dissenting in separate
opinions, and the same division prevailed in the further opinions
filed upon consideration of the master's report and entry of the
decree. In the second
Bridge case, Justice Nelson spoke
for the Court, with Justices McLean, Grier, Wayne, and Daniel each
filing separate opinions dissenting on one or more of the issues
presented.
[
Footnote 32]
[
Footnote 33]
In the first
Wheeling Bridge case, the Court itself
made the finding, upon evidence taken by a master, that the bridge
in fact obstructed navigation, to which it added the legal
conclusion that it was a public nuisance, and went on to specify
the height to which it must be raised to avoid this effect. Not
only this finding of fact, therefore, but also the legal conclusion
drawn from it, was, in effect, overturned by the Act of Congress.
See note 34 The
finding of obstruction in fact depended in no sense upon previous
determination by Congress. But the Court found in Congress' prior
legislation a policy of freedom for navigation which it applied to
outlaw the bridge.
[
Footnote 34]
See note 33
"So far, therefore, as this bridge created an obstruction to the
free navigation of the river, in view of the previous acts of
congress, they are to be regarded as modified by this subsequent
legislation, and, although it still may be an obstruction in fact,
is not so in the contemplation of law. . . . The regulation of
commerce includes intercourse and navigation, and, of course, the
power to determine what shall or shall not be deemed in judgment of
law an obstruction to navigation."
Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking for the Court, in the second
Wheeling
Bridge case, 18 How. 421,
59 U. S.
430-431.
Compare the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice McLean,
who wrote for the majority in the first
Wheeling Bridge
case, going not only on the ground, among others, that the Act of
Congress invaded the judicial function, but also that the Act,
apart from this effect, was unconstitutional:
"It [Congress] may, under this power, declare that no bridge
shall be built which shall be an obstruction to the use of a
navigable water. And this, it would seem, is as far as the
commercial power of congress can be exercised."
18 How. at
59 U. S. 442.
Thus was the grant of authority to Congress upon which he relied in
the first decision, in part to outlaw the bridge, converted into a
limitation.
Cf. text, Part II, at
note 24 ff
[
Footnote 35]
Cf. note 29 and
text And see 328 U. S.
[
Footnote 36]
Whether within or without the "affectation" doctrine.
Cf.
United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters Assn.,
322 U. S. 533,
322 U. S. 548,
and authorities cited.
In making these assumptions, however, it is not improper to note
that the record, as made in the state court, does not purport to
deal factually with the latter question as a matter of proof. It
simply alleged that all of Prudential's South Carolina business is
done interstate, an allegation which is denied, and there are
supporting allegations concerning the extent of the business and
manner of conducting it.
Nor is the case in much better shape factually on the question
of discrimination. While the briefs include tables of figures
designed to show that Prudential pays more proportionately under
the tax than South Carolina corporations pay under other taxes
levied against them,
cf. note 2 these figures were not made part of the record in
the state court until the petition for rehearing was filed, and
Prudential has insisted both there and here that they have no
proper place in consideration of the questions presented. Its
position is that the tax is discriminatory on the face of the
statute, and without reference to other taxes South Carolina
corporations may pay.
Cf. note 4
We express no opinion concerning whether such a showing, in
either respect, would be sufficient to require determination of the
issues to which it is directed, tendered in the absence of action
by Congress.
[
Footnote 37]
The remainder of the statute, including a proviso to § 2(b),
relates to applicability of the Sherman Act and other related
federal statutes to the business of insurance before and after
January 1, 1948; provides that the McCarran Act shall not affect in
any manner the application to that business of the National Labor
Relations Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act, or the Merchant Marine
Act of 1920, extends the term "State" as used in the Act to include
specified territories and the District of Columbia, and provides
for severability.
[
Footnote 38]
See note 37
[
Footnote 39]
There is, of course, no constitutional requirement that state
taxes must be uniform, in the sense of that requirement as laid
upon the federal taxing power by the first clause of Article I, §
8. Nor has it ever been held that such a requirement is made by the
commerce clause or any other constitutional provision. This is a
different thing entirely from the strictures against discrimination
within or by a state laid under the equal protection and commerce
clauses.
The McCarran Act is, in effect, a determination by Congress that
the business of insurance, though done in interstate commerce, is
not of such a character as to require uniformity of treatment
within the distinction taken in the doctrine of
Cooley v.
Board of Wardens, 12 How. 299, except as otherwise
expressly declared.
[
Footnote 40]
As of the effective date of the McCarran Act, sixteen states had
imposed on "foreign" life insurance companies taxes substantially
similar to the South Carolina tax in issue. Ala.Code (1940) tit.
51, §§ 816, 819; Fla.Stat. (1941) § 205.43(1), (6); Ill.Rev.Stat.
(1943) c. 73, § 1021; Ind.Stat.Ann. (Burns, 1940) § 39-4802;
Kan.Gen.Stat.Ann. (Corrick, 1935) § 40-252; Ky.Rev.Stat. (1944)
136.330; La.Gen.Stat. (Dart.1939) § 8369, Act No. 66 of 1906;
Mich.Comp.Laws (1929) § 12387; Mo.Rev.Stat. (1939) § 6094;
Neb.Rev.Stat. (1943) § 77-902; N.M.Stat.Ann. (1941) § 60-401;
N.D.Comp.Laws (1913) § 4924; Ohio Code Ann. (Throckmorton, 1940) §
5433; Pa.Stat.Ann. (Purdon) tit. 72, § 2261; S.C.Code Laws (1942)
§§ 7948, 7949; Tex.Civ.Stat. (Vernon) Art. 4769.
We express no opinion concerning the validity of any feature of
these statutes not substantially identical with those of the South
Carolina tax dealt with herein.
[
Footnote 41]
Prudential was first authorized to do business in South Carolina
in 1897, and, since that time, it has received annual renewals of
its license. As to the present scope of its business in South
Carolina and in all the states,
see note 15
[
Footnote 42]
Cf. Ashton v. Cameron County District, 298 U.
S. 513, which may be said in effect to have been
overruled by
United States v. Bekins, 304 U. S.
27.
See Jackson, The Struggle for Judicial
Supremacy (1941) 240-241.
[
Footnote 43]
See Carmichael v. Southern Coal Co., 301 U.
S. 495;
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis,
301 U. S. 548;
Kentucky Whip & Collar Co. v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
299 U. S. 334;
Clark Distilling Co. v. Western Maryland Ry. Co.,
242 U. S. 311;
Whitfield v. Ohio, 297 U. S. 431;
In re Rahrer, 140 U. S. 545;
Perkins v. Pennsylvania, 314 U.S. 586;
Standard
Dredging Co. v. Murphy, 319 U. S. 306,
319 U. S. 308;
International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U.
S. 310;
cf. Parker v. Richard, 250 U.
S. 235,
250 U. S.
238-239.
See generally Keenig, Federal and
State Cooperation under the Constitution (1938) 36 Mich.L.Rev.
752.
[
Footnote 44]
North American Co. v. Securities and Exchange
Commission, 327 U. S. 686;
United States v. Darby Lumber Co., 312 U.
S. 100,
312 U. S.
114-115;
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 196. For
example, the provisions of Article I, § 9, forbidding the giving of
preferences "by any Regulation of Commerce or Revenue to the Ports
of one State over those of another," and commanding that "No Tax or
Duty shall be laid on Articles exported from any State," held
applicable only to foreign commerce in
Dooly v. United
States, 183 U. S. 151.
But compare the further provision of Article I, § 10,
empowering Congress to consent to laying of duties or imposts on
exports by the states.
See also note 47
[
Footnote 45]
E.g., Reid v. Colorado, 187 U.
S. 137;
Champion v. Ames, 188 U.
S. 321;
Hipolite Egg Co. v. United States,
220 U. S. 45;
Hoke v. United States, 227 U. S. 308;
United States v. Darby Lumber Co., 312 U.
S. 100,
overruling Hammer v. Dagenhart,
247 U. S. 251.
[
Footnote 46]
See cases cited in notes
29 and |
29 and S.
408fn43|>43.
[
Footnote 47]
It is perhaps impossible to point with certainty to any such
explicit limitation among the various commerce clauses of the
Constitution, for decision in the application of such provisions to
such a combined exercise of powers is sparse.
See,
however, the discussion in
Pennsylvania
v. Wheeling and Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How. 421,
59 U. S. 433,
relating to the clause of Article I, § 9, providing:
"No Preference shall be given by any Regulation of Commerce or
Revenue to the Ports of one State over those of another, nor shall
Vessels bound to, or from, one State, be obliged to enter, clear,
or pay Duties in another."
It was thus expressly contemplated, in some instances, that the
combined exercise of the powers of Congress and the states should
be free from restrictions expressly applicable to each when exerted
in isolation. It is true that some of these provisions have been
held applicable only to foreign commerce,
e.g., the
prohibition of Article I, § 10, against levy of duties on imports
or exports without Congress' consent.
Woodruff
v. Parham, 8 Wall. 123;
American Steel &
Wire Co. v. Speed, 192 U. S. 500,
192 U. S. 519,
et seq.; but see 25 U. S.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419. But others apply to coastwise trade
-- indeed to trade between towns in the same state -- in other
words, to intrastate commerce.
In re State Tonnage Tax
Cases, 12 Wall. 24 ,
79 U. S. 219,
and see Pennsylvania v. Wheeling and Belmont Bridge Co., supra;
Louisiana Public Service Comm'n v. Texas & N.O. R. Co.,
284 U. S. 125;
cf. Williams v. United States, 255 U.
S. 336,
and see also United States v. The
William, 28 Fed.Cas. No. 16,700.
All these provisions are intimately and expressly related to the
commerce power. Notwithstanding their diversities, in application
to interstate and foreign commerce or both, and also to federal and
state power or their combined operation, no conclusion can be drawn
from them that our constitutional policy was, or is, to give
Congress and the states, acting together, broad powers, in some
instances denied to each acting alone, in relation to foreign
commerce, but to deny such authority altogether in reference to
interstate commerce. Indeed, the opposite conclusion is clearly
indicated both by virtue of express provision where applicable and
by strong inference where not expressly forbidden.
[
Footnote 48]
The ruling is not new or only recent.
"We have already said, and the principle is undoubted, that the
Act of the Legislature of Virginia conferred full authority to
erect and maintain a bridge, subject to the exercise of the power
of Congress to regulate the navigation of the river. That body
having, in the exercise of this power, regulated the navigation
consistent with its preservation and continuation, the authority to
maintain it would seem to be complete. That authority combines the
concurrent powers of both governments, state and federal, which, if
not sufficient, certainly none can be found in our system of
government."
Pennsylvania v. Wheeling and
Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How. 421,
59 U. S. 430.
Compare this with Mr. Justice McLean's dissenting view,
note 34 above
[
Footnote 49]
The contentions are stated in appellant's brief as follows:
"If it be assumed that the McCarran-Ferguson Act is an adoption
by Congress of legislation of the states, then the Act is
unconstitutional (1) as a violation of the due process clause of
Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, (2) as a violation of Article
I, Section 8, Clause 1 of the Constitution which requires that
excises shall be uniform throughout the United States in the
exercise by Congress of its taxing power, (3) as a violation of
Article I, Section 1 of the Constitution which requires legislation
to be enacted by Congress, and (4) as a violation of the states'
power to tax for purposes of raising revenue for their own use,
which power is vested exclusively in the states."
[
Footnote 50]
". . . It has never been held that a State may not exact from a
foreign [insurance] corporation as a condition to admission to do
business the payment of a tax measured by the business done within
its borders."
Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. v. Read, 325 U.
S. 673,
325 U. S. 677.
See Ducat v.
Chicago, 10 Wall. 410;
Fire Assn. of
Philadelphia v. New York, 119 U. S. 110;
Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Harding, 272 U.
S. 494;
Continental Assurance Co. v. Tennessee,
311 U. S. 5.
See discussion in Henderson, the Position of Foreign
Corporations in American Constitutional Law (1918) 101 ff.
[
Footnote 51]
The related contention that Congress' "adoption" of South
Carolina's statute amounts to an unconstitutional delegation of
Congress' legislative power to the states obviously confuses
Congress' power to legislate with its power to consent to state
legislation. They are not identical, though exercised in the same
formal manner.
See Clark Distilling Co. v. Western Maryland Ry.
Co., 242 U. S. 311,
242 U. S.
327.
[
Footnote 52]
"It would be a shocking thing if state and federal governments,
acting together, were prevented from achieving the end desired by
both simply because of the division of power between them."
Ribble, 211.
And see note 48
[
Footnote 53]
Cf. note 47