delivered the opinion of the Court in which
In this case we consider whether oil which is imported from abroad directly into Texas, which is its final destination, may be taxed while in transit within Texas under the Import-Export Clause and the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. We hold that it may, and we therefore affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
Diamond Shamrock brought this action as a petition for review under the provisions of Chapter 42 of the Tеxas Property Tax Code, challenging the determination by the Nueces County Appraisal District and the Nueces County Appraisal Review Board that certain crude oil owned by Diamond Shamrock was taxable for the years 1988, 1989 and 1990. The parties tried this case upon an agreed statement of facts pursuant to Tex.R.Civ.P. 263.
The parties stipulated that the grounds of Diamond Shamrock’s complaint were as follows:
Plaintiff [Diamond Shamrock] protested the inclusion of its property on such appraisal rolls to Defendant, the Appraisal Review Board, pursuant to Chapter 41 of the Texas Property Tax Code on the ground that such property was not subject to ad valorem taxation in Texas for tax years 1988, 1989 and 1990, because such taxation is precluded by the Commerce Clause and the Import/Export Clause of the United States Constitution. Plaintiff did not protest the situs in Texas at which the property is taxed, nor its market value, and neither is at issue in these cases.
The trial court decreed that the oil in question was exempt from taxation by Nueces County for the tax years in question, and it ordered that the property be deleted from the applicable appraisal rolls for those tax years. The court of appeals reversed, rendering judgment that Diamond Shamrock’s oil in Nueces County is not exempt property under either the Commerce Clause or the Import-Export Clause of the United States Constitution.
In this Court, Diamond Shamrock contends that, under both the Import-Export Clause and the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, cl. 2 and § 8, cl. 3, the oil is not taxable in Nueces County because it is “in transit.” To support this proposition, Diamond Shamrock cites, e.g.,
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Durham County,
Under these facts, we do not resolve a number of significant questions. For instance, we do not decide whether oil passing through Texas on its way to a foreign country or to another State is taxable under the Import-Export Clause or the Commerce Clause. Nor do we decide whether oil arriving in Tеxas from another State is taxable. Rather, the only question presented is whether oil that enters Texas from a foreign country and reaches its ultimate destination here may, under the United States Constitution, be taxed in a particular Texas county, despite the fact that it is still “in transit” while there.
I.
The Import-Export Clause of the United States Constitution states:
No state shall, without the consent of the Congress, lay any impоsts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws: and the net product of all duties and imposts laid by any State on imports or exports, shall be for the use of the treasury of the United States: and all such laws shall be subject to revision and control of the Congress.
U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, cl. 2. The leading case interpreting this Clause is
Michelin
Michelin
involved a challenge to a county ad valorem property tax on tires imported from France and Nova Scotia which were being held in a wholesale distribution warehouse. From there, the tires wеre distributed to franchised dealers in six southeastern states.
Michelin,
[ (1) ] the Federal Government must speak with one voice when regulating commercial relations with foreign governments, and tariffs, which might affect foreign relations, could not be implemented by the States consistent with that exclusive power; [ (2) ] import revenues were to be the major source of revenue of the Federal Government and should not be diverted to the States; and [ (3) ] harmony among the States might be disturbed unless seaboard States, with their crucial ports of entry, were prohibited from levying taxes on citizens of other States by taxing goods merely flowing through them ports to the inland States not situated as favorably geographically.
Id.
at 285-86,
Because the tax was a nondiscriminatory proрerty tax, the Court held that it did not violate either the “one voice” policy or the “federal revenue enhancement” policy.
Id.
at 286, 287,
Michelin
went on, however, to qualify its holding slightly for goods “merely in transit through the State,” stating that “to the extent there is any conflict whatsoever with this purpose of the Clause, it may be secured merely by prohibiting the assessment of even nondiscriminatory property taxes on goods which are merely in transit through the State when the tax is assessed.”
Id.,
Pointing to the parties’ stipulation that its crude oil is “in transit” while in Nuecеs County, Diamond Shamrock argues that the tax here falls within the “merely in transit” qualification. We disagree. The tax in question here does not in any way impinge on the third “harmony among the States” policy of the Import-Export Clause. Although still on its foreign import journey and
II.
The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution grants Congress power “[t]o regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Modern analysis of this Clause is governed by
Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady,
Diamond Shamrock argues that the tax here cannot pass the first and fourth prongs of the
Complete Auto
test because the goods are “in transit.”
4
We disagree.
5
The
Obviously, where the four prongs of Complete Auto are not met, goods are not taxable under the Commerce Clause whether or not they are “in transit.” And, the circumstances whiсh make the goods “in transit” may inform a court’s decision that the first and fourth nexus requirements of Complete Auto are not met. For instance, if oil in tanks on trucks merely passed through Nueces County without stopping, it would be “in transit” in a way that would cause it to have little or no nexus with the county. But under other circumstances, as in this case, there can be sufficient nexus to support a tax even if goods are technically “in transit.” 7
We do not agree that when determining whether a large quantity of oil is to be taxed we should consider the situs of each individual barrel sеparately.... We do not view this mass of oil as a continual flow of singular barrels which independently do not remain in the County long enough to establish a tax situs there. Rather, because Exxon held a quantity of over 400,-000 barrels of oil in San Patricio County in seventeen tanks at all times, a massive quantity was located in the County throughout 1987 and 1988 for more than a temporary period. That the particular oil present on Jаnuary 1,1988, shortly left the county is not determinative.
Exxon,
The court’s opinion in Exxon also answers the argument that, if the oil in question here is held to be taxable despite being “in transit,” all goods that likewise enter the state of Texas as the state of final destination will become taxable merely by crossing the state line, thus creating the potential for taxation by numerous counties in the State. In rejecting a similar argument, the court explained:
Exxon analogizes the constant flow of oil through working tanks and pipelines to the transport of oil in tanker trucks, whereby the trucks sporadically рass through a county and are located by chance within that county’s boundaries on January 1st of a Tax Year. We disagree. In that scenario, individual units of oil are carried directly through the county, from border to border, with little or no delays so that amassive quantity of oil does not remain within the county continuously.
Id. at 273. Oil passing through a county without stopping, in pipelines or on trucks, would thus not be located in that county “for mоre than a temporary period” so as to allow taxation under the Code.
Under Exxon, the oil at issue here does attain situs in Nueces County and is taxable in Texas despite being “in transit” through the state. Indeed, the parties stipulated that if the crude oil had originated from sources within the State of Texas it would be subject to ad valorem taxation in this State. The “in transit” nature of the oil does not call its taxation in Nueces County into question under either the Commerce Clause or the Import^Export Clause of the United States Constitution. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
Notes
. By these policies, the Framers sought to cure one of the "major defects” of the Articles of Confederation, namely "the fact that the Articles essentially left the individual States free to burden commerce both among themsеlves and with foreign countries very much as they pleased."
Michelin,
The Supreme Court has since explained its new approach as follows:
To repeat: we think it clear that this Court in Michelin specifically abandoned the concept that the Import-Export Clause constituted a broad prohibition against all forms of state taxation that fell on imports. Michelin changed the focus of Import-Export Clause cases from the nature of the goods as imports to the nature of the tax at issue. The new focus is not on whether the goods have lost their status as imports but is, instead, on whether the tax sought to be imposed is an "Impost or Duty.”
Hooven II,
. We agree with Diamond Shamrock that, in stating that the oil in question was not “in transit" because it was held in storage for a business purpose, as opposed to being held in storage merеly to accommodate its transportation into the pipeline to Three Rivers, the court of appeals made an impermissible inference that conflicts with the facts as stipulated by the parties in this Agreed Case under Tex.R.CivP. 263. We do not agree, however, that the court’s judgment was grounded on this fact. To the contrary, the court held that “the concept of 'in transit’ loses any rational meaning” once the purposes of the Import-Export Clause have been satisfied.
. Likewise, the "in transit" nature of the oil does not bring its taxation in Nueces County into conflict with the first two policy prongs of the Import-Export Clause, as identified in
Michelin.
Although a tax on goods in transit into the foreign export stream of commerce may negatively impact the "one voice" policy,
see Louisiana Land,
. Diamond Shamrock does not argue that the second and third prongs of
Complete Auto
are not met in this case. Even if there was a question of fair apportionment, it would have to be answered under Texas law since the oil is only being taxed in the State of Texas. The Supreme Court in
Goldberg v. Sweet,
. We likewise reject Diamond Shamrock’s argument that the District waived error under the
. We note that while the “transit” at issue here involves foreign goods that enter only one state and remain there, all but one of the many cases cited by Diamond Shamrock for the proposition that goods "in transit” are not taxable under the Commerce Clause involve taxes on goods “in transit” through one State on the way to or from another State or on the way to a foreign cоuntry.
See, e.g., Michigan-Wisconsin Pipe Line Co. v. Calvert,
. Our holding today is limited to foreign goods "in transit” through only one state, which remain in that state. Even as to goods in interstate commerce, however, the question of whether Diamond Shamrock's “in transit” argument has any remaining validity under the modern Commerce Clause analysis is questionable, at least as
We recognized [in Complete Auto~\ that, with certain restrictions, interstate commerce may be required to pay its fair share of state taxes. Accordingly, in the present case, it makes little difference for Commerce Clause purposes whether appellant's catalogues "came to rest” in the mailboxes of its Louisiana customers or whether they were still considered in the stream of interstate commerce. This distinction may be of some importance for other purposes (in determining, for instance, whether a "taxable moment” has occurred ...), but for Commerce Clause analysis it is largely irrelevant.
D.H. Holmes,
. The Exxon opinion also provides support for our holding that the fourth prong of Complete Auto is met in this case. Considering the oil as present within the county in large quantities year-round, as opposed to focusing on specific barrels in the county for only a period of days, there can be no doubt that the tax in question here is fairly related to the government services that are provided.
. For the same reasons, assuming the Import-Export Clause might be implicated by similar concerns in this case, taxation of the oil is not invalid under that constitutional provision.
