DUNBAR-STANLEY STUDIOS, INC. v. ALABAMA
No. 376
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 16, 1969. Decided February 25, 1969.
393 U.S. 537
William H. Burton, Assistant Attorney General of Alabama, argued the cause for appellee. With him on the brief were MacDonald Gallion, Attorney General, and Willard W. Livingston, Assistant Attorney General.
Alabama levies a tax upon photograph galleries and persons engaged in photography. If the business is conducted “at a fixed location,” the tax in the large cities1 is $25 a year for each such location. For each “transient or traveling photographer,” the tax is $5 per week for each county, town, or city in which he plies his trade.2
This case involves state assessments of the transient photographers tax against appellant and its predecessor partnership.3 Appellant sought a declaration from the state courts that the assessment was improper, claiming that the tax was levied upon interstate commerce, in conflict with the Commerce Clause of the Constitution. The Supreme Court of Alabama sustained the tax. 282 Ala. 221, 210 So. 2d 696 (1968). We affirm.
Appellant is a photography firm specializing in selling photographs of children. It is organized as a North Carolina corporation and its principal office and process-
The Penney stores advertised the photographic service, inviting parents to bring their children to be photographed during the visit by appellant‘s photographer. Each store took the order for the photographs, arranged the time for the sitting, provided a place in the store for the temporary studio, collected the money, and delivered the pictures to the customer when completed. Appellant was paid a percentage of the receipts from the Penney stores.
Appellant‘s activities were limited to taking the pictures, transmitting the exposed film to its office in North Carolina where it was developed, printed, and finished, and mailing the finished prints to the Penney stores in Alabama.
It is clear from the taxing statute itself and from the decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama that the tax is laid upon the distinctive business of the photographer, not upon the soliciting of orders or the processing of film. Graves v. State, 258 Ala. 359, 62 So. 2d 446 (1952); Haden v. Olan Mills, Inc., 273 Ala. 129, 135 So. 2d 388
But these cases are not applicable to the present facts. In determining whether a state tax imposes an impermissible burden on interstate commerce, the issue is whether the local activity which is made the nominal subject of the tax is “such an integral part of the interstate process, the flow of commerce, that it cannot realistically be separated from it.” Michigan-Wisconsin Pipe Line Co. v. Calvert, 347 U.S. 157, 166 (1954). If, for example, a license tax were imposed on the acts of engaging in soliciting orders or making deliveries, conflict with the Commerce Clause would be evident because these are minimal activities within a State without which there can be no interstate commerce. But in the present case, the “taxable event,” as defined by the State‘s courts, is “pursu[ing] the art of photography in Alabama.” Graves v. State, 258 Ala. 359, 362, 62 So. 2d 446, 448. When appellant‘s photographers set up their equipment
It could hardly be suggested that if J. C. Penney had set up its own resident or transient photography studios, using its own employees, such a photography business would have been exempt from state licensing merely because it chose to send the exposed film out of the State for processing. The extraction of a natural resource within a State is not immunized from state taxation merely because, once extracted, the product will immediately be shipped out of the State for processing and sale to consumers. Alaska v. Arctic Maid, supra, at 203-204; Oliver Iron Mining Co. v. Lord, 262 U.S. 172, 177-179 (1923). Cf. Toomer v. Witsell, 334 U.S. 385, 394-395 (1948). A fortiori, the fact that an intermediate processing stage takes place outside the State before the pictures are returned to the State for final delivery does not make the taking of the pictures—the activity on which the tax was imposed—so inseparable a part of the flow of interstate commerce as to be immune from state license taxation. The mere substitution for J. C. Penney‘s own employees of a transient photographer who comes into Alabama from North Carolina does not convert the essentially local activity of photographing the subjects into an interstate activity immune from the state privilege tax. Cf. Caskey Baking Co. v. Virginia, 313 U.S. 117 (1941); Wagner v. City of Covington, 251 U.S. 95 (1919).
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, concurring.
Alabama taxes its transient photographers on a different, and often more burdensome, basis than those not
