30 S.E.2d 521 | W. Va. | 1944
Lead Opinion
By a final decree entered by the Circuit Court of Ohio County in a chancery cause in which the plaintiff sought to enjoin the Tax Commissioner of this State from the collection of certain taxes, the injunction was denied and the bill of complaint dismissed. On application of the plaintiff we awarded this appeal.
Minnie E. Wilson in her lifetime did business under the style of "Uwanta Toilet Towel Supply". The bill describes this business as follows:
"The principal place of business of the plaintiff is located at 309 Kenney Street, in the City of Wheeling, Ohio County, West Virginia. Plaintiff's said business consists in providing a linen and towel supply service by delivering to various customers in the State of West Virginia and in the State of Ohio clean towels, linen aprons, coats, and similar articles of wearing apparel which, after use, are collected by the plaintiff's employees and returned to plaintiff's place of business for laundering and preparation for re-delivery to customers. The linen and towels are owned by the plaintiff and the laundering of them is performed at the plaintiff's said place of business in the City of Wheeling. The plaintiff charges her various customers a fee for the use of the clean linen and towels.
"In order to facilitate collection of plaintiff's linen and toweling from and delivery to her customers in and near the City of Steubenville, in the State of Ohio, the plaintiff has established a branch depot in that city. The linen and toweling delivered from plaintiff's said Steubenville depot is laundered at her place of business in the City of Wheeling, forwarded to her depot at Steubenville and delivered from said depot to plaintiff's various customers in the State of Ohio. *709 The charge for the service is made to the Ohio customers the same as to the West Virginia customers, the billing being performed at the Wheeling office and payments being made to plaintiff's agents at the Steubenville depot and there deposited to her credit in a Steubenville Bank. After the towels and linen are used in the State of Ohio, they are collected by plaintiff's employees and returned to the Wheeling office for laundering and preparation for further service. The only marking placed on plaintiff's toweling and linen is the plaintiff's own trade name and the customers do not always receive for use the same items of toweling and linen.
"In addition to deliveries to plaintiff's customers in and near the City of Steubenville, performed in the manner aforesaid, the plaintiff also provides its service to certain customers in and near the Cities of Martins Ferry, Bridgeport and Bellaire, in the State of Ohio, deliveries being made to the latter customers directly from the plaintiff's place of business in the City of Wheeling."
The bill further shows that, by notice dated August 7, 1940, the Tax Commissioner made a supplemental assessment of taxes against the plaintiff for the privilege of continuing in, and carrying on, her business in the State of West Virginia during the years 1936 to 1938, both inclusive. This additional levy for these years was for the sums of $157.33, $168.94 and $155.65, respectively, and was based upon the proceeds of business done by the plaintiff with customers in the State of Ohio, which had been omitted from the returns made by her, on which her tax for the privilege of carrying on the business within this State was based. The bill prayed for an injunction against the collection of these additional taxes.
The Tax Commissioner demurred to the bill of complaint on the grounds that the tax was assessed for carrying on a "service business or calling" in this State; that the service rendered was exclusively in this State and is taxable as a local activity; and that the taxes levied are *710 for the privilege of conducting this business and not on the business itself, and therefore does not burden interstate commerce. A short, formal answer was also filed which does nothing but raise the same legal questions which are involved in the demurrer. The cause was submitted on bill, demurrer and answer, resulting in the final decree as above noted.
Pending the suit the original plaintiff died and the cause was revived in the name of her personal representative; and upon the expiration of the term of office of the then Tax Commissioner, the suit was revived in the name of his successor.
The statutory provisions involved are the following sections of Chapter
"Sec. 2. There is hereby levied and shall be collected annual privilege taxes against the persons, on account of the business and other activities, and in the amounts to be determined by the application of rates against values or gross income as set forth in sections two-(a) to two-(i) inclusive, * * *
Sec. 2h. Upon every person engaging or continuing within this state in any service business or calling not otherwise specifically taxed under this act, there is likewise hereby levied and shall be collected a tax equal to one per cent of the gross income of any such business.
"Sec. 2i. Upon every person engaging or continuing within this state in the business of collecting incomes from the use of real or personal property or of any interest therein, whether by lease, conveyance or otherwise, and whether the return be in the form of rentals, royalties, fees, interest or otherwise, the tax shall be one per cent of the gross income of any such activity. * * *"
The Tax Commissioner asserts that the business for which these additional assessments were made was a "service business or calling" as defined in Section 2h, *711 and that this business must be considered as having been carried on exclusively in this State; while the plaintiff insisted that her business was that of "collecting incomes from the use" of personal property as specified in Section 2i, and, further that even if her business is to be considered a "service business", the part thereof which was done with customers in Ohio was interstate commerce and cannot be included in her gross income for the purpose of calculating her tax for the privilege of carrying on business within this State.
The question in issue, as we conceive it, thus becomes narrow and relatively simple. We cannot adopt the view that the business of the plaintiff was simply, or chiefly a "service" to her customers. Certainly the laundering of the linen and other articles was not the real object of the contract between the furnisher and the customers. It is difficult to perceive how the customers had any interest whatever in the renovating of these soiled articles. It mattered nothing to them whether the reclaimed linen and other articles were ever laundered, or ever put to any further use. The customers were not entitled to receive back the identical articles which they had used, and, in fact, would receive them again only as a coincidence. The customers' sole right was to have clean articles for use. They had no interest whatever in the articles before they were delivered or after they were reclaimed. The laundering of these articles was no more a service to the customers than a like cleaning and preparing of ordinary commercial commodities for sale such as vegetables or fruits, or in the conditioning of automobiles, carriages, teams or pianos, and other like chattels kept for hire, which require a substantial amount of repeated labor to restore them to a condition suitable for use.
There was, of course, a certain amount of service in the delivery of the plaintiff's linen and towels to her customers and possibly some vestige of service in removing them from the user's premises, but this service does *712 not in the least differ from that which ordinarily attends the everyday retail sale.
The word "service" as used with reference to the plaintiff's business in her bill of complaint, signifies nothing. All public utility concerns are spoken of as public service companies. The public carrying of goods, passengers, messages, and power, and the public furnishing of commodities such as gas, water and electric current are spoken of as rendering a "public service" not only in common parlance but also in law books and in statutes. A vast amount of modern business consists of "service" of this character and includes transactions which are in fact sales, or leases as well as such as are service in the strict and accurate sense of the term. Hence we have concerned ourselves only with the actual character of the plaintiff's business.
On the other hand it is perfectly clear that the dominant feature of the plaintiff's business was a hiring or leasing of the articles furnished and a collecting of income for their use. The bill specifically alleges, and the answer directly admits, that the fee paid to her by her customers was "for the use of the clean linen and towels". But without this formal admission in the record, there could be no question but that the sole interest of customers was in the use of the articles furnished by the plaintiff. It was for this use that they contracted and for this use that they paid. The plaintiff's contract, or obligation, to her customers was completely performed when they were kept supplied with clean articles. Nothing that she did preliminary to delivering such linen and other articles to the customers or after reclaiming them would have constituted a performance, or any part of a performance of her contract, with these users. The use of the articles is all that the customer received, all that he was entitled to claim and all for which he paid. Therefore, the business between the plaintiff and her customers must be treated as a hiring or leasing of chattels, or, in the language of the statute, a "collecting incomes from" the use of personal property. *713
Gross income from which a tax for the privilege of carrying on a business in this State is computed, cannot include income from interstate business. We consider this proposition settled definitely by the case of Bluefield Produce and ProvisionCompany v. City of Bluefield,
"In the administration of an ordinance of a municipality imposing a license tax on the 'opening, establishing, operating or maintaining' of stores therein, based on the 'gross proceeds of sales of such store', sales made from a store licensed thereunder effected by actual delivery to purchasers outside the municipality, and outside this state, may not be included in fixing the gross proceeds of sales from which the tax is computed, the same being in violation of Sections 8 and 10 of Article I of the Constitution of the United States."
This decision is in exact accord with many express decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. Gwin, White Prince v.Henneford,
It is true that in the Bluefield case only sales in interstate commerce were involved; but the case was decided, not upon the fact that the transactions were sales, but by reason of their being interstate commerce. The word *714
"commerce" as used in the Constitution of the United States has not a technical, but a practical, meaning. It is in no wise limited to sales, but includes many other dealings between points in different states which produce a movement of goods across state lines. Specifically, it has often been held that the leasing or hiring of chattels which requires their transfer from the owner in one state to the user in another constitutes interstate commerce. James v. United Artists Corporation,
The decree of the Circuit Court of Ohio County will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter *715 a decree in accordance with the views herein announced.
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
Judge Lovins and I find ourselves unable to concur in the opinion of the majority filed in this case.
The facts in this case are not in dispute. Plaintiff is engaged in a special type of business in the City of Wheeling. She owns towels, aprons, coats, etc., which are laundered and prepared for use at Wheeling, in this State, and they are then delivered to customers in this State and in the adjoining State of Ohio. Compensation for the use thereof is charged, and is uniform whether the customer is located in Ohio or in this State. When used, they are collected and returned to the plaintiff's principal place of business in Wheeling, and are there re-cleaned, repaired and laundered, and then re-delivered to customers for use. The same article may be, and usually is, delivered to different customers. On this state of facts the question arises as to whether the defendant is entitled to impose a tax based upon the gross income derived from furnishing such supplies to customers in the State of Ohio.
Whether plaintiff is engaged in a service business, or in the business of collecting income for the use of real or personal property is in dispute. The measure of the tax and the rate of levy being the same, in either event, this dispute is, in my view of the entire case, of little practical importance. Service business or calling is defined in Section 1, Chapter
It should always be remembered that the tax in question was imposed for the privilege of doing business in this State. Section 2 of Chapter
The tax imposed upon plaintiff's business is in effect based on, and measured by, the gross income therefrom; but its underlying basis is that of the privilege of doing business in this State. Therefore, the question of where the business is established and carried on is paramount. Few businesses of any magnitude are confined to a single state. We may take judicial notice of the fact that in this State a number of the most important cities are located at or very near the boundaries of adjoining and adjacent states, and necessarily businesses established and carried on in any of these cities, and in smaller communities so situated, extend beyond the borders of this State. Of course, if business carried on in these border cities and communities is that of the sale of tangible property, and there is a delivery beyond the State, no tax can be imposed, because of the direct burden imposed thereby on interstate commerce. Bluefield Produce Provision Co. v. Cityof Bluefield,
The answer to this question involves a consideration of what was intended by the framers of the Federal Constitution. The inhibition upon the taxing power of a state, so far as it affects commerce between states, will be found in Section 8 and 10 of Article I of the Constitution of the United States. By Section 8, Congress is given *719 power "to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes", and by Section 10 it is provided that, "No State, shall without the consent of the Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws, * * *." The purpose is manifest. It was to prevent any restrictions upon the free flow of commerce between the states. It was not intended to curtail the power of the states to impose taxes upon businesses established and carried on within their borders, which did not directly or substantially impose a burden upon interstate commerce. The imposition of any tax, even property taxes, on businesses which engage in interstate commerce creates an incidental burden on such commerce. Imposition of such tax has never been understood to come within the inhibition of the Federal Constitution.
I am of the opinion that the tax in question in this case is not a direct or substantial burden on interstate commerce, but only an incidental one; and not a tax, burden or regulation of interstate commerce which the Federal Constitution intended to prevent. The business of the plaintiff is of a particular and unusual nature. To begin with, the instrumentalities of the business — towels, aprons, coats, etc. — are assembled at her place of business in this State; they are received and prepared for use in this State; entire control and direction of every step of the business is exercised and given in this State; the charges for the service are determined here, and such charges assembled in this State; there is no discrimination as between customers, whether within or without the State; when used, the instrumentalities are collected and returned to her place of business in this State, and are there processed and redistributed from that point. It is the same type and class of service wherever performed, and the only distinction is that the towels and garments are in one case delivered to customers within this State, and in the other outside. Should it be held that by reason of the fact that, in the course of a business established and *720 carried on in this State, a single element — delivery outside the State — such outside deliveries are to be treated as a business not carried on within this State? I do not think it should be so held, and I assert that there is ample authority to sustain that position.
The plaintiff relies in particular upon two cases to sustain her contention. First, the case of Gwin, White Prince, Inc. v. Henneford,
On the other side of the proposition, we have the case ofWestern Livestock v. Bureau of Revenue,
In Coverdale v. Arkansas-Louisiana Pipe Line Co.,
Another case, strongly relied upon by the court below, is that of Department of Treasury of Indiana v. Ingram-RichardsonManufacturing Co.,
In the case of Holland Furnace Co. v. Department of Treasury,
The questions presented in this case are technical in their nature, and involve many difficulties in their solution. The border line between a tax which burdens interstate commerce, and one which does not, is often difficult of definition, and it is so in this case. There is plausible argument for the proposition that the plaintiff is engaged in the sale of a service, and when that service is sold and performed outside the State, is subject to the same rule as if a transfer of title to tangible personal property were involved, and as to such sale it is admitted that no tax could be imposed, and reasonable arguments may be found in support of the proposition that the business of plaintiff is that of collecting incomes for the use of personal property; but, for reasons given above, I would discard both theories because I think the plaintiff's business is that of furnishing a service from an established place of business in this State, rather than a sale in interstate commerce, or collecting incomes. Furthermore, taxation is a practical matter, and courts should not attempt to construe a particular tax as a burden on interstate commerce when, in fact, it is not such burden.
The plaintiff's business is local in its nature. It serves a limited community. By reason of the fact that it is located on the line between states makes it feasible, and even necessary, for it to do business in both states. The plaintiff selected this State as the location of her business, and has had thrown around that business the protection of this State, and it should bear its equal share of the burden of local and state taxation. If the tax imposed by the State in fact created a burden on interstate commerce, it could not be collected, but until that burden is shown, or from the circumstances it can be clearly seen that such burden exists, there would seem to be no occasion for holding it to be a tax beyond the power of the State to impose. Then, the majority opinion will add to the complexities and difficulties in administering the privilege tax law, and open avenues for tax evasions, compared to which, the *725
benefits secured to the plaintiff and others engaged in like business, are small indeed. I concede, of course, that if the statute requires such a result, it must be so; but I do not think a fair and practical consideration thereof calls for an interpretation which will bring about such a result, and I do not think we should take pains to find reasons to sustain an interpretation out of which so many difficulties are likely to arise. In saying this, I am not unmindful of the rule that, in tax matters, doubts are resolved in favor of the taxpayer. These considerations lead us to believe that the judgment of the Circuit Court of Ohio County should be affirmed. We would hold that a person who owns towels, aprons, coats and other textile products, which he cleans and prepares for use at a place of business, established for that purpose, in this State, and who, for a consideration, delivers from such place of business such products to customers of his business in this and adjoining states, and when such products become soiled, collects the same and returns them to his place of business in this State, where they are cleaned and prepared for further use, and from there re-delivered to his customers, is engaged in a service business or calling, the privilege of engaging in which in this State is taxable under subsections 2(h) of Chapter