delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought to restrain the collection of a tax, imposed by the State of South Carolina, ,of six cents a gallon with respect to gasoline purchased by complainant in that State and used by complainant in interstate commerce. The complainant charged that the state Act *151 placed a direct burden upon interstate commerce and hence was repugnant to the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution. Art. I, § 8. The District Court, composed of three judges as required by statute, denied an interlocutory injunction, 52 F. (2d) 456, and the complainant appeals to this Court. Jud. Code, § 266; U. S. C., Tit. 28, § 380.
From the findings of the District Court it appears that the complainant is a Delaware corporation operating, in interstate commerce, air transport lines across the State of South Carolina; that its planes make regular stops at various points in the State but do not carry freight or passengers between such points, and practically its entire business is interstate in character; that it purchases gasoline in South Carolina for the use of its planes and that the seller adds to the price the amount of the state gasoline tax which the seller is required to pay under the Act in question, and thus, complainant has to, pay six'cents a gallon more than it otherwise would, the'excess amounting to about $5,000 a year.
The tax is described in the statute
1
as a license tax, which, as applied in the instant case against the dealer,
*152
is for the privilege of carrying on the business of selling gasoline within the State. The tax is thus imposed upon the seller and the sales in question are intrastate sales. The appellant emphasizes the fact, that the tax has been construed by the Supreme Court of the State to be an excise tax and not a property tax.
Gregg Dyeing Co.
v.
Query,
166 S. C. 117;
In
Helson
v.
Kentucky,
Decree affirmed.
Notes
Act of February. 23, 1922, as amended (South Carolina Acts, 1922, pp. 835-838; 1929, pp. 107-112). Section 1 provides: “That every oil company, person, firm or corporation doing domestic or intra-state business within this State, and engaging in the business of selling, consigning, using, shipping, or distributing for the purpose of sale within this State, any gasoline or any substitute therefor, or combination thereof, for the privilege of carrying on such business shall be subject to the payment of a license tax, which tax shall be measured by and graduated in accordance vdth the volume of sales of such oil company within the State. Every such oil company shall pay to the State an amount of money equal to six (6) cents per gallon on all gasoline, combinations thereof, or substitute therefor, sold or consigned, used, shipped or distributed for the purpose of sale within the State. ...”
Brown v. Maryland,
Coe
v.
Errol,
Panhandle Oil Co.
v.
Knox,
Dahnke-Walker Milling Co.
v.
Bondurant,
