BUCKSTAFF BATH HOUSE CO. v. McKINLEY, COMMISSIONER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR OF ARKANSAS, ET AL.
No. 201
Supreme Court of the United States
December 18, 1939
308 U.S. 358
The judgment is
Affirmed.
Mr. W. L. Pope submitted for respondents.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner is an Arkansas corporation, organized for profit and with its only place of business situated on the United States Government Reservation known as Hot Springs National Park. It operates a bath house, which it erected and equipped, under a long term lease from the Secretary of the Interior. By the terms of that lease the operation and use of the bath house facilities are subject to certain control by the Department of the Interior, which in the main relate to the number of bath tubs which may be used, the charges to the public, the qualifications of employees, the maintenance and care of the premises, a prohibition of employment of agents to solicit patronage, and control over an assignment or transfer of the lease or any interest therein.
Respondents are officials of the State of Arkansas charged with the duty of enforcement of the Arkansas Unemployment Compensation Law,1 an act reciprocal to, and integrated with, the Social Security Act.2 Pursuant to that act respondents sought to collect from petitioner as an employer the required contributions for the calendar year 1937. Petitioner paid into the Treasury of the United States the tax required by the Social Security Act
Petitioner‘s contention here, as below, is based primarily on the
We agree with the Supreme Court of Arkansas that the state had jurisdiction to impose the tax in question.
There can be no question but that petitioner is liable for the tax levied by
That petitioner is subject to the Social Security Act is extremely relevant to the solution of the problem at hand. For that Act laid the foundation for a cooperative endeavor between the states and the nation to meet a grave emergency problem. As pointed out by this Court in Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, supra, p. 588, that Act was an attempt to find a method by which the states and the federal government could “work together to a common end.” Prior thereto many states had “held back through alarm lest, in laying such a toll upon their industries, they would place themselves in a position of economic disadvantage as compared with neighbors or competitors,” id., p. 588. The Act was designed therefore to operate in a dual fashion—state laws were to be integrated with the federal Act; payments under state laws could be credited against liabilities under the other. That it was designed so as to bring the states into the cooperative venture is clear. The fact that it would operate though the states did not come in does not alter the fact that there were great practical inducements for the states to become components of a unitary plan for unemployment relief. It is this invitation by the Congress to the states which is of importance to the issue
Hence, it is our view that on the facts of this case, Congress has given Arkansas implied authority to tax petitioner under its Unemployment Compensation Law since the Congress has included under the Social Security Act employers such as petitioner. Clear evidence of a contrary intention would, of course, negative the existence of the implied authority. But here there is none. That conclusion is strengthened by the exemption of certain classes of employers from the sweep of the federal Act. Thus, the exclusion of federal instrumentalities from the scope of the federal Act, and hence from the complementary state systems, emphasizes the purpose to exclude from this statutory system only that well defined and well known class of employers who have long enjoyed immunity from state taxation. Had it been desired to exempt the equally well known class, of which petitioner is a member, so as to save it from reciprocal state systems, it would seem that an equally clear exception would have been made.
Whether the same result would follow in case the cession act had absolutely forbidden a state to impose any tax on petitioner we need not decide. For here Arkansas did have a prior express power to tax petitioner‘s property. The implied authority which we here find to
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE REED concurs on the ground that the
