Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court:
By the Enabling Act Congress required as a condition precedent to the admission of Oklahoma into the Union that her constitution should make provision for common schools; and for their benefit it granted certain lands to the State with the proviso that those valuable for min
In January, 1914, some of these lands were leased tó the Coronado Oil and Gas Company; renewals followed in 1919. Under the first lease the State received fifty per cent, and under the second twelve and one-half per cent, of the gross production of oil and gas. During the years here important the lessee’s entire income came from the sale of its portion of such output.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed income and excess-profits taxes upon the corporation’s net income for 1917, 1918 and 1919. The Board of Tax Appeals approved his action; the Court of Appeals, District of Columbia, ruled otherwise. The latter held that the lease to the Coronado Company was an instrumentality of the State for the utilization of lands dedicated to the support of public schools and that to tax the fruits of the lease would burden her in the performance of the governmental function of maintaining such schools. This conclusion, it. properly thought, was necessary under Gillespie v. Oklahoma,
We are disposed to apply the doctrine of Gillespie v. Oklahoma strictly and only in circumstances closely analogous to those which it disclosed. In principle, however, the present claim of exemption cannot be distinguished from the one presented in the earlier cause and we adhere .to the rule there approved.
“ Just what instrumentalities of. either a state or the federal government are exempt from taxation by the other cannot be stated in terms of universal application. But this Court has repeatedly held that those agencies through which either government immediately and directly exercises its sovereign powers, are immune from the taxing power of the other.” Metcalf Eddy v. Mitchell,
The opinion in Gillespie v. Oklahoma, supra, has often been referred to as the expression of an accepted principle.
When Oklahoma undertook to lease her public lands for the benefit of the public schools she exercised a function strictly governmental in- character. Consequently, South Carolina v. United States,
The States are essential parts of the plan adopted by the Federal Constitution; and we accept as settled doctrine that the United States can lay no tax upon their governmental instrumentalities. Texas v. White,
“ It is an established principle of our constitfitional system of dual government that the instrumentalities; means and operations whereby the United States exercises its governmental powers are exempt from taxation by the States, and that the instrumentalities, means and operations whereby the States exert the governmental powers belonging to them are equally exempt from taxation by the United States.” Indian Motocycle Co. v. United States, supra. Each government is supreme in its sphere; and in order to preserve our dual system this fact must be given practical recognition.
Here the lease to the respondent was an instrumentality of the State for the purpose of carrying out her duty in respect of public schools. To tax the income of the lessee
The challenged judgment must be
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I think the judgment below should be reversed and Gillespie v. Oklahoma,
The State, of Texas, like the State of Oklahoma, has set apart a portion of its public domain for educational purposes. It has granted oil and gas leases of these lands, not differing in any material respect from the Oklahoma lease involved in this case. The royalties received by the State from the leases are devoted to the University of Texas, as Oklahoma devotes the income derived from its leases to its public schools. In Group No. 1 Oil Corp. v. Bass, supra, decided less than a year ago, this Court, not- • withstanding its decision in the Gillespie case that the income of the lessees of Indian oil lands could not be taxed ',by Oklahoma, upheld the right of the National Government to assess and collect a tax upon the income received by the lessee of one of the Texas leases, from the sale of oil produced from the leased land. It was pointed out that under Texas law the lessee, by virtue of his/ lease, became the owner of the oil underground and that the taxed income was derived from the sale of oil which was his own property. In upholding the tax the Court said (pp. 282-283):
“ Property sold or otherwise disposed of by the- government, either state or national, in order to raise revenue for government purposes, is in a broad sense a government instrumentality, with respect to which neither' the
“ But the remote and indirect effects upon -the one government of such a non-discriminatory tax by the other have never been considered adequate grounds for thus aiding the one at the expense of the taxing power of the other. See Willcuts v. Bunn,
The doctrine thus announced was not a new one. More than fifty years before, and long before the decision in the Gillespie case, it had been definitely decided in Forbes v. Gracey,
In deciding the Group No. 1 Oil Corp. case, it was not necessary to determine whether the result in that case would have been different if the oil, from the sale of which the taxpayer derived his income, had become his only when severed from the soil, or whether there were other distinguishing features between that' case and the Gillespie case. It was enough, there, that, as the taxed income was derived from the lessee’s sale of the oil, title to which was, by the lease, vested in him before severance, the case was definitely controlled by precedents whose avowed principles the Court approved. Now, we ,are concerned with a lease identical with that involved in the Gillespie case, and comparison of it with the Texas lease is unavoidable. If we can find no distinction of substance between the operation and effect of the Texás leases and the Oklahoma leases, the Gillespie case should no longer be followed. That no such distinction can be drawn is obvious.
The leasing by the National Government of Indian oil lands in Oklahoma to private lessees, for the benefit of the
Since comparison of the two methods of disposing, of state assets reveals only formal differences, this Court must now deal with an irreconcilable conflict in the theories upon which two of its decisions rest. One, the Gillespie case, extends the doctrine of tax immunity, beyond any other case, to income from private business enterprises, merely because the property used in the business was acquired from a sovereign government which ap
It is plain that if we place emphasis on the orderly administration of justice, rather than on a blind adherence to conflicting precedents, the Gillespie case must be overruled. It is true that for ten years the State of Oklahoma has been deprived, by the decision in that case, of taxes upon the income derived from private business of lessees of Indian lands in that state, but that is no reason why it should continue to be so deprived or why the National Government should now be denied the right to like taxes and at the same time be permitted to tax the income of the lessees under the Texas leases. No interest which could be subserved by so rigid an application of stare decisis, is superior to that of a system of justice based on a considered and consistent application of the Constitution of the United States.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Under the rule of Gillespie v. Oklahoma vast private incomes' are being given immunity from state and federal taxation. I agree with Mr. Justice Stone that that case was wrongly decided and should now be frankly overruled'. Merely to construe strictly its doctrine will not adequately protect the public revenues. Compare Jaybird Mining Co. v. Weir,
Stare, decisis is not, like the rule of res judicata, a universal, inexorable command. "The rule of stare decisis, though one tending to consistency and uniformity
The reasons why this Court should refuse to follow an earlier constitutional decision which it deems erroneous are particularly strong where the question presented is one of applying, as distinguished from what may accurately be called interpreting, the Constitution. In the cases which now come before us there is seldom any dispute as to the interpretation of any provision. The controversy is usually over the application to existing conditions of some well-recognized constitutional limitation.
The issue presented by the case at bar is of the character of those discussed above. Here, also, the applicable provision of law is beyond dispute. Confessedly, the United States may not,-by a tax, interfere substantially with the functions of a State. The question at issue is, whether, as a practical matter, it does so interfere by a statute which includes among the items on which its general income tax is laid, the profits derived by. the taxpayer from operating some of the State’s school lands under a lease. The question resembles closely that presented and decided in Willcuts v. Bunn,
The doctrine of res judicata demands that a decision made by the highest court, whether it be a determination of a fact or a declaration of a rule of law, shall be accepted as a final disposition of the particular controversy, even if confessedly wrong. But the decision of the Court, if, in essence, merely the determination of a fact, is not entitled, in later controversies between other parties, to that sanction which, under the policy of stare decisis, is accorded to the decision of a proposition purely of law. For not only may the decision of the fact have been rendered upon an inadequate presentation of then existing conditions, but the conditions may have changed meanwhile. Compare Abie State Bank v. Bryan,
Notes
This Court has, in matters deemed important, occasionally overruled its earlier decisions although correction might have been secured by legislation. See Chicago & Eastern Illinois R. Co. v. Industrial Commission,
Besides cases in note 4, see East Ohio Gas Co. v. Tax Commission,
Movement in constitutional interpretation and application — often involving no less striking departures from doctrines previously established — takes place also without specific overruling or qualification of the earlier cases. Compare, for example, Allgeyer v. Louisiana,
Compare Taney, C. J., in The Passenger Cases,
Compare Field, J., in Barden v. Northern Pacific R. Co.,
See Alpha Cement Co. v. Massachusetts,
The policy of stare decisis may be more appropriately applied to constitutional questions arising under the fundamental laws of those States whose constitutions may be easily amended. The action following the decision in Ives v. South Buffalo Ry. Co.,
Compare London Street Tramways Co. v. London County Council, (1898) A. C. 375; Stuart v. Bank of Montreal, 41 Sup. Ct. Can. 516. See Arthur L. Goodhart, “Case Law in England and America,” 15 Cornell Law Quarterly, 173, 188, 193; E. K. Williams, “ Stare Decisis,” 4 Canadian Bar Review 289.
See Frankfurter and Landis, “The Business of the Supreme Court,” pp, 307-318.
Arthur W. Machen, Jr., “ The Elasticity of the Constitution,” 14 Harv. L. Rev. 273; Henry Wolf Biklé, “Judicial Determination of Questions of Fact Affecting the Constitutional Validity of Legislative Action,” 38 Harv. L. Rev. 6.
Roscoe Pound, “ The Theory of Judicial Decision,” 36 Harv. Law Rev. (1923), 641, 651; Ray A. Brown, “Due Process of Law, Police Power, and the Supreme Court,” 40 Harv. L. Rev. (1927), 943, 961, 967; “Police Power—Legislation for Health and Personal Safety,” 42 Harv. L. Rev. (1929), 866, 867, 872; Percy H. Winfield, “Public Policy in the English Common Law,” 42 Harv. L. Rev. (1928), 76, 101, 102. See Charles Warren, “The Supreme Court-in United States History,” Vol. III, pp. 470, 471.
