Appellant is a mail order house with its principal place of
business in Missouri. It owns no tangible property in Illinois, has
no sales outlets, representatives, telephone listing, or solicitors
in that State, and does not advertise there by radio, television,
billboards, or newspapers. It mails catalogues twice a year to
customers throughout the United States, including Illinois,
supplemented by occasional "flyers." Orders for merchandise are
mailed to appellant's Missouri plant, and goods are sent to
customers by mail or common carrier. Appellee obtained a judgment
from the Illinois Supreme Court requiring appellant to collect and
pay to the State the use tax imposed by Illinois upon consumers who
purchase appellant's goods for use within the State.
Held: The Commerce Clause prohibits a State from
imposing the duty of use tax collection and payment upon a seller
whose only connection with customers in the State is by common
carrier or by mail. Pp.
386 U. S.
756-760.
34 Ill. 2d
164,
214 N.E.2d
755, reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion the Court.
The appellant, National Bellas Hess, is a mail order house with
its principal place of business in North Kansas
Page 386 U. S. 754
City, Missouri. It is licensed to do business in only that State
and in Delaware, where it is incorporated. Although the company has
neither outlets nor sales representatives in Illinois, the
appellee, Department of Revenue, obtained a judgment from the
Illinois Supreme Court that National is required to collect and pay
to the State the use taxes imposed by Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 120, § 439.3
(1965). [
Footnote 1] Since
National's constitutional objections to the imposition of this
liability present a substantial federal question, we noted probable
jurisdiction of its appeal. [
Footnote 2]
The facts bearing upon National's relationship with Illinois are
accurately set forth in the opinion of the State Supreme Court:
"[National] does not maintain in Illinois any office,
distribution house, sales house, warehouse or any other place of
business; it does not have in Illinois any agent, salesman,
canvasser, solicitor or other type of representative to sell or
take orders, to deliver merchandise, to accept payments, or to
service merchandise it sells; it does not own any tangible
property, real or personal, in Illinois; it has no telephone
listing in Illinois, and it has not advertised its merchandise for
sale in newspapers, on billboards, or by radio or television in
Illinois. [
Footnote 3]"
All of the contacts which National does have with the State are
via the United States mail or common carrier. Twice a year,
catalogues are mailed to the company's active or recent customers
throughout the Nation, including Illinois. This mailing is
supplemented by advertising "flyers" which are occasionally mailed
to past and potential customers. Orders for merchandise are mailed
by the
Page 386 U. S. 755
customers to National, and are accepted at its Missouri plant.
The ordered goods are then sent to the customers either by mail or
by common carrier.
This manner of doing business is sufficient under the Illinois
statute to classify National as a "[r]etailer maintaining a place
of business in this State," since that term includes any
retailer:
"Engaging in soliciting orders within this State from users by
means of catalogues or other advertising, whether such orders are
received or accepted within or without this State."
Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 120, § 439.2 (1965). Accordingly, the statute
requires National to collect and pay to the appellee Department the
tax imposed by Illinois upon consumers who purchase the company's
goods for use within the State. [
Footnote 4] When collecting this tax, National must give
the Illinois purchaser "a receipt therefor in the manner and form
prescribed by the [appellee]," if one is demanded. [
Footnote 5] It must also
"keep such records, receipts, invoices and other pertinent
books, documents, memoranda and papers as the [appellee] shall
require, in such form as the [appellee] shall require,"
and must submit to such investigations, hearings, and
examinations as are needed by the appellee to administer and
enforce the use tax law. [
Footnote
6] Failure to keep such records or to give required receipts is
punishable by a fine of up to $5,000 and imprisonment of up to six
months [
Footnote 7] Finally, to
allow service of process on an out-of-state company like National,
the statute designates the Illinois Secretary of State as
National's appointed agent, and jurisdiction in tax collection
suits attaches
Page 386 U. S. 756
when process is served on him and the company is notified by
registered mail. [
Footnote
8]
National argues that the liabilities which Illinois has thus
imposed violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
and create an unconstitutional burden upon interstate commerce.
These two claims are closely related. For the test whether a
particular state exaction is such as to invade the exclusive
authority of Congress to regulate trade between the States, and the
test for a State's compliance with the requirements of due process
in this area are similar.
See Central R. Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 370 U. S. 607,
370 U. S.
621-622 (concurring opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK). As to
the former, the Court has held that
"State taxation falling on interstate commerce . . . can only be
justified as designed to make such commerce bear a fair share of
the cost of the local government whose protection it enjoys."
Freeman v. Hewit, 329 U. S. 249,
329 U. S. 253.
See also Greyhound Lines v. Mealey, 334 U.
S. 653,
334 U. S. 663;
Northwestern Cement Co. v. Minnesota, 358 U.
S. 450,
358 U. S. 462.
And, in determining whether a state tax falls within the confines
of the Due Process Clause, the Court has said that the "simple but
controlling question is whether the state has given anything for
which it can ask return."
Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co.,
311 U. S. 435,
311 U. S. 444.
See also Standard Oil Co. v. Peck, 342 U.
S. 382;
Ott v. Mississippi Barge Line,
336 U. S. 169,
336 U. S. 174.
The same principles have been held applicable in determining the
power of a State to impose the burdens of collecting use taxes upon
interstate sales. Here too, the Constitution requires "some
definite link, some minimum connection, between a state and the
person, property or transaction it seeks to tax."
Miller Bros.
Co. v. Maryland, 347 U. S. 340,
347 U. S. 31
345;
Scripto,
Page 386 U. S. 757
Inc. v. Carson, 362 U. S. 207,
362 U. S.
210-211. [
Footnote
9]
See also American Oil Co. v. Neill, 380 U.
S. 451,
380 U. S.
458.
In applying these principles, the Court has upheld the power of
a State to impose liability upon an out-of-state seller to collect
a local use tax in a variety of circumstances. Where the sales were
arranged by local agents in the taxing State, we have upheld such
power.
Felt & Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher, 306 U. S.
62;
General Trading Co. v. Tax Comm'n,
322 U. S. 335. We
have reached the same result where the mail order seller maintained
local retail stores.
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
312 U. S. 359;
Nelson v. Montgomery Ward, 312 U.
S. 373. [
Footnote
10] In those situations, the out-of-state seller was plainly
accorded the protection and services of the taxing State. The case
in this Court which represents the furthest constitutional reach to
date of a State's power to deputize an out-of-state retailer as its
collection agent for a use tax is
Scripto, Inc. v. Carson,
362 U. S. 207.
There, we held that Florida could constitutionally impose upon a
Georgia seller the duty of collecting a state use tax upon the sale
of goods shipped to customers in Florida. In that case, the seller
had
"10 wholesalers, jobbers, or 'salesmen' conducting continuous
local solicitation in Florida and forwarding the resulting
orders
Page 386 U. S. 758
from that State to Atlanta for shipment of the ordered
goods."
362 U.S. at
362 U. S.
211.
But the Court has never held that a State may impose the duty of
use tax collection and payment upon a seller whose only connection
with customers in the State is by common carrier or the United
States mail. Indeed, in the
Sears, Roebuck case, the Court
sharply differentiated such a situation from one where the seller
had local retail outlets, pointing out that "those other concerns .
. . are not receiving benefits from Iowa for which it has the power
to exact a price." 312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 365.
And in
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U.
S. 340, the Court held that Maryland could not
constitutionally impose a use tax obligation upon a Delaware seller
who had no retail outlets or sales solicitors in Maryland. There,
the seller advertised its wares to Maryland residents through
newspaper and radio advertising, in addition to mailing circulars
four times a year. As a result, it made substantial sales to
Maryland customers, and made deliveries to them by its own trucks
and drivers.
In order to uphold the power of Illinois to impose use tax
burdens on National in this case, we would have to repudiate
totally the sharp distinction which these and other decisions have
drawn between mail order sellers with retail outlets, solicitors,
or property within a State and those who do no more than
communicate with customers in the State by mail or common carrier
as part of a general interstate business. But this basic
distinction, which, until now, has been generally recognized by the
state taxing authorities, [
Footnote 11] is a valid one, and we decline to obliterate
it.
Page 386 U. S. 759
We need not rest on the broad foundation of all that was said in
the
Miller Bros. opinion, for here there was neither local
advertising nor local household deliveries, upon which the
dissenters in
Miller Bros. so largely relied. 347 U.S. at
347 U. S. 358.
Indeed, it is difficult to conceive of commercial transactions more
exclusively interstate in character than the mail order
transactions here involved. And if the power of Illinois to impose
use tax burdens upon National were upheld, the resulting
impediments upon the free conduct of its interstate business would
be neither imaginary nor remote. For if Illinois can impose such
burdens, so can every other State, and so, indeed, can every
municipality, every school district, and every other political
subdivision throughout the Nation with power to impose sales and
use taxes. [
Footnote 12] The
many variations in rates of tax, [
Footnote 13] in allowable exemptions, and in
administrative and recordkeeping requirements [
Footnote 14] could entangle National's
interstate
Page 386 U. S. 760
business in a virtual welter of complicated obligations to local
jurisdictions with no legitimate claim to impose "a fair share of
the cost of the local government."
The very purpose of the Commerce Clause was to ensure a national
economy free from such unjustifiable local entanglements. Under the
Constitution, this is a domain where Congress alone has the power
of regulation and control. [
Footnote 15]
The judgment is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Ill.2d 164,
214 N.E.2d
755.
[
Footnote 2]
385 U.S. 809.
[
Footnote 3]
34 Ill. 2d at 166-167, 214 N.E.2d at 757.
[
Footnote 4]
Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 120, § 439.3 (1965).
[
Footnote 5]
Id., § 439.5
[
Footnote 6]
Id., § 439.11.
[
Footnote 7]
Id., § 439.14.
[
Footnote 8]
Id., § 439.12a.
[
Footnote 9]
Strictly speaking, there is no question of the connection or
link between the State and "the person . . . it seeks to tax." For
that person in
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U.
S. 340, in
Scripto, Inc. v. Carson,
362 U. S. 207, and
in the present case is the user of the goods to whom the
out-of-state retailer sells. National is not the person being
directly taxed, but, rather, it is asked to collect the tax from
the user. It is, however, made directly liable for the payment of
the tax, whether collected or not. Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 120, § 4398
(1965).
[
Footnote 10]
National acknowledges its obligation to collect a use tax in
Alabama, Kansas, and Mississippi, since it has retail outlets in
those States.
[
Footnote 11]
As of 1965, 11 States besides Illinois had use tax statutes
which required a seller like National to participate in the tax
collection system. However, state taxing administrators appear to
have generally considered an advertising nexus insufficient. For
they have testified that doubts as to the constitutionality of such
statutes underlay their failure to take full advantage of their
statutory authority. Report of the Special Subcommittee on State
Taxation of Interstate Commerce of the House Committee on the
Judiciary, H.R.Rep. No. 565, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 631-635 (1965).
These doubts were substantiated by the only other State Supreme
Court that has considered the issue now before us. The Alabama
Supreme Court, dealing with a situation very much like the present
one, found that this application of the use tax statute would be
invalid under the Federal Constitution.
State v. Lane Bryant,
Inc., 277 Ala. 385,
171 So. 2d
91.
[
Footnote 12]
"Local sales taxes are imposed today [1965] by over 2,300
localities. . . . In most States, the local sales tax is
complemented by a use tax." H.R.Rep. No. 565,
supra, at
872.
[
Footnote 13]
In 1964, there were seven different rates of sales and use
taxes: 2, 2 1/4, 2 1/2, 3, 3 1/2, 4, and 5%. H.R.Rep. No. 565,
supra at 611-613, 607-608. The State of Washington has
recently added an eighth, 4.2%. Wash.Rev.Code § 82.12.020 (Supp.
1965).
[
Footnote 14]
"The prevailing system requires [the seller] to administer rules
which differ from one State to another and whose application --
especially for the industrial retailer -- turns on facts which are
often too remote and uncertain for the level of accuracy demanded
by the prescribed system."
H.R.Rep. No. 565,
supra, at 673.
"Given the broad spread of sales of even small and moderate
sized companies, it is clear that, if just the localities which now
impose the tax were to realize anything like their potential of
out-of-State registrants the recordkeeping task of multistate
sellers would be clearly intolerable."
Id. at 88.
[
Footnote 15]
Congress has, in fact, recently evidenced an active interest in
this area.
See Tit. II, Pub.L. 86-272, 73 Stat. 556, as
amended by Pub.L. 87-17, 75 Stat. 41, which authorized the detailed
congressional study of state taxation of interstate commerce that
resulted in H.R.Rep. N. 565,
supra. See also
H.R.Rep. No. 2013, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. (1966).
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS join, dissenting.
In my opinion, this Court's decision in
Scripto, Inc. v.
Carson, 362 U. S. 207
(1960), as well as a realistic approach to the facts of appellant's
business, dictates affirmance of the judgment of the Supreme Court
of Illinois.
National Bellas Hess is a large retail establishment
specializing in wearing apparel. Directly and through subsidiaries,
it operates a national retail mail order business with headquarters
in North Kansas City, Missouri, and its wholly owned subsidiaries
operate a large number of retail stores in various States. In 1961,
appellant's net sales were in the neighborhood of
Page 386 U. S. 761
$60,000,000, and its accounts receivable amounted to about
$15,500,000. [
Footnote 2/1]
Its sales in Illinois amounted to $2,174,744 for the
approximately 15 months for which the taxes in issue in this case
were assessed. This substantial volume is obtained by twice-a-year
catalogue mailings, supplemented by "intermediate smaller
sales
books' or `flyers,'" as the court below styled them. The catalogue
contains about 4,000 items of merchandise. The company's mailing
list includes over 5,000,000 names. The "flyers" are sent to an
even larger list than the catalogues, and are occasionally mailed
in bulk, addressed to "occupant."
A substantial part of Bellas Hess' sales is on credit. Its
catalogue features "NBH Budget Aid Credit" -- which requires no
money down, but requires the purchaser to make monthly payments
which include a service fee or interest charge, and which also
incorporates an agreement, unless expressly rejected by the
purchaser, for "Budget Aid Family Insurance." The company also
offers "charge account" services -- payable monthly, including a
"service charge" if the account is not fully paid within 30 days.
The form to be filled in for credit purchases contains the usual
type of information, including place of employment, name of bank,
marital status, home ownership or rental. Merchandise can also be
bought c.o.d. or by sending a check or money order with the order
for goods. [
Footnote 2/2]
There should be no doubt that this large-scale, systematic,
continuous solicitation and exploitation of the Illinois consumer
market is a sufficient "nexus" to require Bellas Hess to collect
from Illinois customers and to
Page 386 U. S. 762
remit the use tax, especially when coupled with the use of the
credit resources of residents of Illinois, dependent as that
mechanism is upon the State's banking and credit institutions.
Bellas Hess is not simply using the facilities of interstate
commerce to serve customers in Illinois. It is regularly and
continuously engaged in "exploitation of the consumer market" of
Illinois (
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U.
S. 340,
347 U. S. 347
(1954)) by soliciting residents of Illinois who live and work there
and have homes and banking connections there, and who, absent the
solicitation of Bellas Hess, might buy locally and pay the sales
tax to support their State. Bellas Hess could not carry on its
business in Illinois, and particularly its substantial credit
business, without utilizing Illinois banking and credit facilities.
Since the case was tried on affidavits, we are not informed as to
the details of the company's credit operations in Illinois. We do
not know whether it utilizes credit information or collection
agencies, or similar institutions. The company states that it has
"brought no suits in the State of Illinois." Accepting this as
true, it would nevertheless be unreasonable to assume that the
company does not either sell or assign its accounts or otherwise
take measures to collect its delinquent accounts, or that
collection does not include local activities by the company or its
assignees or representatives.
Bellas Hess enjoys the benefits of, and profits from the
facilities nurtured by, the State of Illinois as fully as if it
were a retail store or maintained salesmen therein. Indeed, if it
did either, the benefit that it received from the State of Illinois
would be no more than it now has -- the ability to make sales of
its merchandise, to utilize credit facilities, and to realize a
profit; and, at the same time, it would be required to pay
additional taxes. Under the present arrangement, it conducts its
substantial, regular, and systematic business in Illinois, and the
State demands
Page 386 U. S. 763
only that it collect from its customer-users -- and remit to the
State -- the use tax which is merely equal to the sales tax which
resident merchants must collect and remit. To excuse Bellas Hess
from this obligation is to burden and penalize retailers located in
Illinois who must collect the sales tax from their customers. In
Illinois the rate is 3 1/2%, and, when it is realized that, in some
communities, the sales tax requires, in effect, that as much as 5%
be added to the amount that customers of local, tax paying stores
must pay, [
Footnote 2/3] the
importance of the competitive discrimination becomes apparent.
While this advantage to out-of-state sellers is tolerable and a
necessary constitutional consequence where the sales are
occasional, minor and sporadic, and not the result of a calculated,
systematic exploitation of the market, it certainly should not be
extended to instances where the out-of-state company is engaged in
exploiting the local market on a regular, systematic, large-scale
basis. In such cases, the difference between the nature of the
business conducted by the mail order house and by the local
enterprise is not entitled to constitutional significance. The
national mail order business amounts to over $2,400,000,000 a year.
[
Footnote 2/4] Some of this is
undoubtedly subject to the full range of taxes because of the
location of stores in the various States, [
Footnote 2/5] and some of it is and should be exempt
from state use tax because of its sporadic or minor nature.
See Report of the Special Subcommittee on State Taxation
of Interstate Commerce of the House Judiciary Committee, H.R.Rep.
No. 565, 89th Cong., 1st Sess.,
Page 386 U. S. 764
Vol. 3 (1965), at 770-777. But the volume which, under the
present decision, will be placed in a favored position and exempted
from bearing its fair burden of the collection of state taxes
certainly will be substantial, and, as state sales taxes increase,
this haven of immunity may well increase in size and
importance.
In
Scripto, supra, this Court applied a sensible,
practical conception of the Commerce Clause. The interstate seller
which, in that case, claimed constitutional immunity from the
collection of the Florida use tax had, like appellant here, no
office or place of business in the State, and had no property or
employees there. It solicited orders in Florida through local
"independent contractors" or brokers paid on a commission basis.
These brokers were furnished catalogues and samples, and forwarded
orders to Scripto out of state. The Court noted that the seller was
"charged with no tax -- save when . . . he fails or refuses to
collect it" 362 U.S. at
362 U. S. 211,
[
Footnote 2/6] and that the State
"reimburs[ed the seller] . . . for its service" as tax collector
(362 U.S. at
362 U. S.
212). The same is true in the present case. [
Footnote 2/7] I do not see how
Scripto is
Page 386 U. S. 765
meaningfully distinguishable from this case. In fact,
Scripto involved the sale of a single article of commerce.
The "exploitation" of the State's market was by no means as
pervasive or comprehensive as is here involved, nor was there any
reference to the company's use of the State's credit
institutions.
The present case is, of course, not at all controlled by
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U.
S. 340 (1954). In that case, as this Court said, the
company sold its merchandise at its store in Delaware; there was
"no solicitation other than the incidental effects of general
advertising . . . no invasion or exploitation of the consumer
market. . . ." 347 U.S. at
347 U. S. 347. As the Court noted in
Scripto, supra,
Miller Bros. was a case in which there was "no regular,
systematic displaying of its products by catalogs, samples or the
like." 362 U.S. at
362 U. S. 212.
On the contrary, in the present case, appellant regularly sends not
only its catalogue, but even bulk mailings soliciting business
addressed to "occupant," and it offers and extends credit to
residents of Illinois based on their local financial
references.
As the Court says, the test whether an out-of-state business
must comply with a state levy is variously formulated: "whether the
state has given anything for which it can ask return"; [
Footnote 2/8] whether the out-of-state
business enjoys the protection or benefits of the State; [
Footnote 2/9] whether there is a sufficient
nexus: "some definite link, some minimum connection, between a
state and the person, property or transaction it seeks to tax."
[
Footnote 2/10] However this is
formulated, it seems to me entirely clear that a mail order house
engaged in the business of regularly, systematically, and on a
large scale offering merchandise for sale in a State in competition
with local retailers, and
Page 386 U. S. 766
soliciting deferred payment credit accounts from the State's
residents, is not excused from compliance with the State's use tax
obligations by the Commerce Clause or the Due Process Clause of the
Constitution.
It is hardly worth remarking that appellant's expressions of
consternation and alarm at the burden which the mechanics of
compliance with use tax obligations would place upon it and others
similarly situated should not give us pause. The burden is no
greater than that placed upon local retailers by comparable sales
tax obligations, and the Court's response that these administrative
and recordkeeping requirements could "entangle" appellant's
interstate business in a welter of complicated obligations vastly
underestimates the skill of contemporary man and his machines.
There is no doubt that the collection of taxes from consumers is a
burden, but it is no more of a burden on a mail order house such as
appellant located in another State than on an enterprise in the
same State which accepts orders by mail, and it is, indeed, hardly
more of a burden than it is on any ordinary retail store in the
taxing State.
I would affirm.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Moody's Industrial Manual (1962).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Because this case was tried on affidavits, reference has also
been made to the National Bellas Hess Catalogue, Spring and Summer
1967, to supplement the picture of appellant's business afforded by
the record.
[
Footnote 2/3]
This is the current rate in Pennsylvania. Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 72,
§ 3403-201 (1964).
See The World Almanac (1967, Newspaper
Enterprise Assn.) 136-137.
[
Footnote 2/4]
U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1963 Census of Business, Retail
Trade-Area Statistics, pt. 1, table 2, p. 1 (1966).
[
Footnote 2/5]
See Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 312 U.
S. 359 (1941);
Nelson v. Montgomery Ward,
312 U. S. 373
(1941).
[
Footnote 2/6]
Our observation in
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
312 U. S. 359,
312 U. S.
365-366 (1941), is an apt response to appellant's claim
that it will not be able to collect all of the tax from its
purchasers:
"[S]o far as assumed losses on tax collections are concerned,
respondent is in no position to found a constitutional right on the
practical opportunities for tax avoidance which its method of doing
business affords Iowa residents, or to claim a constitutional
immunity because it may elect to deliver the goods before the tax
is paid."
Actually, it appears that appellant's method of doing business
is such as to minimize the noncollection of the tax.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The Illinois statute provides for a
"discount of 2% or $5 per calendar year, whichever is greater .
. . to reimburse the retailer for expenses incurred in collecting
the tax, keeping records, preparing and filing returns, remitting
the tax and supplying data. . . ."
Ill.Rev.Stat. c. 120, § 439.9 (1965). Appellant does not claim
that this amount is inadequate to reimburse it for its expenses in
collecting the tax for the State.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co., 311 U.
S. 435,
311 U. S. 444
(1940).
[
Footnote 2/9]
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 312 U.
S. 359,
312 U. S. 364
(1941).
[
Footnote 2/10]
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U.
S. 340,
347 U. S.
344-345 (1954).