BURLINGTON NORTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF SUPERIOR, WISCONSIN, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 90-3086.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued April 1, 1991. Decided May 20, 1991.
932 F.2d 1185
SO ORDERED.
Carol Skornicka, Michael, Best & Friedrich, Madison, Wis., Ellen M. Pokrass, Michael, Best & Friedrich, Milwaukee, Wis., James W. McBride, Anne M. Stolee, Laughlin, Halle, McBride, Lunsford & Fletcher, Washington, D.C., for plaintiff-appellant.
Bonnie A. Wendorff, Jon C. Nordenberg, James F. Lorimer, Boardman, Suhr, Curry & Field, Madison, Wis., for defendant-appellee.
Before POSNER, FLAUM and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
Captioned “Tax Discrimination Against Rail Transportation Property,” section 306 of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976,
In 1977 Wisconsin enacted a statute that empowers its municipalities to levy an occupational tax on the owners and operators of “iron ore concentrates docks” at the rate of 5 cents per ton handled.
The tax is not a property tax and the railroad isn‘t complaining about an assessment. We are therefore in subsection (b)(4) (“another tax that discriminates against a rail carrier“). The railroad‘s position is that a tax on an activity that is engaged in exclusively by a railroad in the course of its railroad business is discriminatory per se, and since the tax in this case is of that character no other evidence was required to prove a violation of the federal statute. The city responds that since another entity could operate the iron ore concentrates docks—for consider the coal dock—those docks are not an integral part of Burlington‘s railroad business; or at least that the railroad has failed to prove that they are. The response is wide of the mark. Who conducts the activity that is taxed is irrelevant. The tax will increase the cost of the activity, to the railroad‘s detriment. The statute applies to taxes on rail transportation property and to other taxes if they discriminate against rail carriers; it thus is not limited to cases in which the railroad is the taxpayer. Trailer Train Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 710 F.2d 468, 471 (8th Cir. 1983).
But we have still to evaluate the per se rule that the railroad argues for. The federal statute is aimed primarily at property taxes and as to them it sets forth clear standards designed to prevent the placing of an excess burden on railroads. Subsection (b)(4) is a catch-all designed to prevent the state from accomplishing the forbidden end of discriminating against railroads by substituting another type of tax. It could be an income tax, a gross-receipts tax, a use tax, an occupation tax as in this case—whatever. It is true that the House committee report described subsection (b)(4) as forbidding the “so-called ‘in-lieu’ tax,” H.R. Rep. No. 725, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (1975); see also id. at 113, the reference being to gross receipts taxes that a few of the states impose in lieu of property taxes. Dennis L. Thompson, Taxation of American Railroads: A Policy Analysis 70 (1981). The Senate report, however, appears to reject this characterization. S. Rep. No. 595, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 166 (1976), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 1976, 14, 148, 180-181. And rightly so: to confine subsection (b)(4) to gross receipts
The preceding subsections of the statute, perhaps to facilitate administration of the statute, forbid states to tax railroad property proportionately more heavily than other commercial and industrial property, even if the railroad derives a greater benefit from the public services defrayed by the tax. By analogy, we may assume that a tax is “discriminatory” within the meaning of the fourth subsection if it imposes a proportionately heavier tax on railroading than on other activities, even if the taxing authority might be able to show that the activity imposes a disproportionate burden on public services. Cf. Trailer Train Co. v. State Tax Comm‘n, 929 F.2d 1300, 1303 (8th Cir. 1991). A tax that, as in this case, is imposed on an activity in which only a railroad or railroads engage—such as placing iron ore concentrates on wharves—is prima facie discriminatory under the suggested test. It could be a tax on operating rail crossing signals, on selling railroad passenger tickets, on loading tank cars, on hoisting containers from flat cars onto flatbed trucks—or on placing iron ore concentrates shipped by rail on wharves for further shipment, a form of unloading.
Should the taxing authority be allowed to rebut the prima facie case of discrimination by showing that taxes on equivalent services eliminate any discrimination against rail carriers? Maybe the tax is on railroad boxcars (cf. Trailer Train Co. v. State Tax Comm‘n, supra) but the taxing authority presents evidence that there is an equal tax on truck trailers. Would the burden then shift back to the railroad to produce evidence that the apparent neutrality of the tax system considered as a whole is spurious? If so, this case may have a long life. Coal, iron ore concentrates, and other goods shipped by rail are not the only goods that are loaded onto ships docked at the city of Superior. We do not know how the operators of the wharves on which those goods are placed for loading are taxed. Maybe like the operator of the coal dock they pay 5 cents a ton. That would make it like our railroad boxcar and truck trailer case, and under the approach we are considering the burden would shift back to the railroad to show that, perhaps because iron ore concentrates are much heavier than other things shipped by boat, the tax system, considered as a whole, burdens railroads disproportionately.
Since the railroad made in our view a prima facie case simply by proving that the tax was imposed on an activity (the operation of iron ore concentrates docks) in which only a railroad engages, the district judge erred in granting summary judgment for the city. The harder question is whether the case should go back to the district court for a trial at which the city, as in Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. v. Bair, 338 N.W.2d 338 (Ia. 1983), would be entitled to present evidence that the tax on the railroad‘s wharves is not discriminatory when other taxes on comparable services are factored into the analysis, or, as the railroad argues, whether rebuttal should be precluded and the tax deemed discriminatory per se.
The Fifth Circuit‘s powerful opinion in McNamara recommends the second course; see also Trailer Train Co. v. State Tax Comm‘n, supra, at 1302. The court thought it unrealistic to suppose that the overall burden of a state‘s tax system could be rationally evaluated by the methods of litigation—unrealistic to think a court could figure out whether different taxes on other activities might offset the burden on the
To all legal generalizations (well, almost all) there are exceptions. We can imagine a case in which a railroad so dominated the economy of a jurisdiction that a tax general in form—a property tax on commercial and industrial property—was in fact a tax on railroads alone, because railroads were the only owners of such property in the jurisdiction. Or suppose Superior levied a tax on theater receipts, and the Burlington Northern then bought the only theater in town. In either case, the application of the standard of McNamara would produce a tax exemption for railroads, which was not the intention behind section 306(d). We can deal with such cases when and if they arise. For today it is enough to hold that a state cannot be allowed to place staggering burdens of inquiry on the judicial system by picking out a narrow class of activities that just happen to be engaged in solely by railroads, or a narrow set of inputs (boxcars, for example) that just happen to be used only in railroading; taxing that class; and asking the court to consider whether the state‘s tax system as a whole avoids burdening the railroad industry disproportionately.
Another difficult question that we need not decide today is how the judicial inquiry should be structured if the tax is imposed on an activity in which railroads are not the sole, but are the principal, actors. Suppose a tax of 5 cents per ton handled by all docks in the State of Wisconsin is levied, and railroads handle 85 percent of all the cargo handled by docks in Wisconsin. Trailer Train Co. v. Leuenberger, supra, 885 F.2d at 418, holds, sensibly in our view, that the inclusion of some nonrail activities in a class of activities dominated by railroads does not immunize a tax from challenge under section 306. But what sort of proof the railroad must present and what rebuttals or defenses are available to the taxing authority are questions for another day.
REVERSED.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part.
Wisconsin imposes occupational taxes on operators of metalliferous mines,
Congress addressed more fully the proper analysis to be conducted in determining whether a tax discriminates against railroads in the provisions of
The majority apparently draws from this silence the message that once it has been shown that a tax affects railroads, it is unnecessary to allow the state to present evidence that the tax in fact does not discriminate against railroads. Relying on the Fifth Circuit‘s opinion in Kansas City Southern Railway Co. v. McNamara, 817 F.2d 368 (5th Cir. 1987), the majority reasons that courts are poorly equipped to evaluate “whether different taxes on other activities might offset the burden on the railroad industry of a tax limited to railroads.” Ante at 1188. The majority acknowledges that such an analysis has been a consistent feature of cases in which state taxes are challenged on the ground that they burden interstate commerce or deny equal protection to out-of-state taxpayers. See, e.g., Goldberg v. Sweet, 488 U.S. 252, 267 (1989); D.H. Holmes & Co. v. McNamara, 486 U.S. 24, 32 (1988). However, it distinguishes those cases because they arose in the course of constitutional adjudication, where the Supreme Court “is operating without the benefit of a congressional policy directive.”
Like the majority, I read
This approach, which compares occupational taxes on activities only railroads engage in with activities that may rely on other forms of transportation, is substantially less ambitious than the open-ended comparison of benefits, burdens, and incidence employed in Commerce Clause cases. Nevertheless, it answers the central question of whether a state taxes railroads only “as members of a larger taxpayer group,” ante at 1188, defeating the inference that a tax on railroad activities is part and parcel of the history of discriminatory taxation against railroads that Congress sought to bring to an end in passing
I recognize that the view the majority adopts today has previously won the favor of the Fifth Circuit in Kansas City Southern and the Eighth Circuit in its recent opinion in Trailer Train v. State Tax Comm‘n, 929 F.2d 1300 (1991). Both of these opinions relied on Arizona Public Service Co. v. Snead, 441 U.S. 141 (1979), to reach the conclusion that no discrimination analysis was necessary. In Snead, the Supreme Court held that the appropriate way to determine whether a state tax contravened an act of Congress was “[t]o look narrowly to the type of tax the federal statute names, rather than to consider the entire tax structure of the State.” Id. at 149-50. Applying this approach, the Court in Snead struck down a New Mexico statute on electricity generated in the state and exported elsewhere as inconsistent with a statute Congress had passed prohibiting discriminatory taxes on power sold out of state. As the defendant in Snead conceded, Congress‘s enactment was aimed directly at the New Mexico tax; indeed, the sponsors of the statute had gone so far as to identify the New Mexico tax by name. See 441 U.S. at 147-48. Striking down the tax regardless of whatever other activities New Mexico might tax was thus “faithful not only to the language of the statute but to the expressed intent of Congress in enacting it.” Id. at 150.
So, I contend, is the approach recommended here. By comparing state taxes on activities engaged in solely by railroads with similar activities that do not have a similar nexus with rail transportation, courts could distinguish taxes on railroads from taxes that form part of a comprehensive state scheme to impose special burdens on activities that state legislators conclude have an unusual impact on scarce resources. It would also avoid the harsh consequences that applying
