OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiff brought this action to challenge a City of Albany ordinance which imposes a special tax on "transient” retailers who operate at temporary business sites. At the heart of plaintiff’s complaint is its claim that the tax discriminates in favor of local retail businesses and therefore violates the Commerce Clause of the Unites States Constitution (US Const, art I, § 8, cl [3]). The City, in contrast, contends that the ordinance is inoffensive to the Constitution because it applies evenhandedly to both in-State and out-of-State transient retailers and serves a legitimate public purpose. Having reviewed the relevant Supreme Court precedent, we conclude that the challenged ordinance is unconstitutionally discriminatory and that, accordingly, it is invalid.
Plaintiff is an Indiana corporation authorized to transact business in this State and 40 others. Plaintiff’s business, the wholesaling and retailing of hardware, electrical tools and re *156 lated consumer products, is conducted at prescheduled sales held over three- to four-day periods. Plaintiff generally reserves facilities in a particular community, conducts advance advertising in that community and then makes its sales from a temporary location within the community. The merchandise is brought onto the sale site before the sale and any unsold goods are taken to the next site when the local sale is over. It is undisputed that plaintiff collects sales tax and files sales tax returns for the transactions it completes within the State.
The present dispute arose from a sale plaintiff conducted between August 20 and August 23, 1992 at a rented site within the City of Albany. Pursuant to the challenged ordinance (Albany City Code §§ 7-240, 7-243), the City required plaintiff to obtain a transient business license, to pay a tax calculated on the basis of its gross sales and to post a $2,500 bond to insure compliance with its tax obligation. The amount of the tax, $3,031.16, was calculated by reducing plaintiff’s gross sales ($283,451.43) by the City’s applicable real property tax equalization rate (8.75%) and applying the City’s 1992 real property tax rate ($134.31 per $1,000) to the resulting "assessed value” ($24,802). 1 Plaintiff paid the tax under protest and then commenced the present action, seeking, among other things, a declaration that the ordinance violates the Commerce Clause.
On plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, the Supreme Court rejected plaintiff’s arguments and dismissed its causes of action based on the Commerce Clause
(but cf., Lanza v Wagner,
The Appellate Division affirmed the Supreme Court’s order on the basis of that court’s opinion. Having stipulated to the discontinuance of its remaining cause of action based on the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, plaintiff then appealed as of right from the stipulation, deemed a judgment, bringing up for review the prior nonfinal Appellate Division order
(see, Voorheesville Rod & Gun Club v Tompkins Co.,
The Albany City ordinance challenged in this proceeding imposes a tax burden on "transient” retailers that is not imposed on retailers who operate from fixed locations within the City. 2 The local law was enacted pursuant to the enabling provisions of General Municipal Law § 85-a, which gives localities the power "to provide that a tax shall be levied upon all persons or corporations conducting transient retail businesses therein * * * based upon the gross amount of sales and [calculated] at the same rate as other property is taxed for the year [within the locality].”
Adopted in 1917 (L 1917, ch 199, § 1), General Municipal Law § 85-a supplemented former section 85, which, until 1968, authorized municipalities to impose a fixed "license” fee of up to $100 on transient retailers engaging in fire or bankruptcy liquidation sales. Former section 85 was held unconstitutional in
People ex rel. Moskowitz v Jenkins
(
*158 Despite the 80 years that have elapsed since its enactment, this Court has not yet had occasion to address the constitutionality of General Municipal Law § 85-a or of any of the municipal ordinances that may have been adopted under its authority. Indeed, this proceeding represents the first reported case in which a local transient-retailer tax ordinance has been challenged. As we did in Moskowitz, we now conclude that the tax cannot be sustained, although, unlike in Moskowitz, our current conclusion is based solely on modern Commerce Clause principles.
The literal language of the Commerce Clause contains only an affirmative grant of authority to Congress. The Supreme Court, however, has long construed the Clause to imply a corresponding prohibition against State measures that unduly or discriminatorily burden interstate commerce
(e.g.,. Cooley v Board of Wardens,
12 How [53 US] 299, 319;
Gibbons v Ogden,
9 Wheat [22 US] 1, 197-209;
see, Oklahoma Tax Commn. v Jefferson Lines,
A regulation or tax that discriminates in favor of local economic interests is invalid unless it is narrowly tailored to accomplish a compelling local purpose or, in the case of a tax, can meet the stringent standards of the "compensatory tax” doctrine
(see, C & A Carbone v Clarkstown,
The Supreme Court has repeatedly stressed that a benevolent underlying purpose cannot justify a facially discriminatory regulation or tax
(Oregon Waste Sys. v Department of Envtl. Quality, supra,
at 100;
Chemical Waste Mgt. v Hunt,
In the courts below, the challenged Albany City ordinance was deemed "even-handed” and not discriminatory because it was imposed on all transient retailers and did not differentiate among them "based on the in- or out-of-State origin of the merchandise sold * * * or the location of the transient retailer”
(supra,
More than half a century ago, the Supreme Court made clear that a local law is impermissibly discriminatory if it imposes a burden on interstate commerce and affords local merchants an economic advantage
(Nippert v
Richmond,
*160
One of the Supreme Court’s most recent expositions on the subject can be found in
C & A Carbone v Clarkstown (supra),
a case involving an ordinance that required all nonhazardous solid waste within the Town of Clarkstown to be deposited for processing at a particular local transfer station. The Court expressly rejected the Town’s argument that the ordinance did not discriminate because it did not "differentiate solid waste on the basis of its geographic origin”
(id.,
at 390-391). On this point, the Court stated that "[t]he ordinance is no less discriminatory because in-state or in-town processors are also covered by the prohibition”
(id.,
at 391). Citing
Dean Milk Co. v Madison (supra)
and reiterating that "[discrimination against interstate commerce in favor of local business * * * is
per se
invalid”, the
C & A Carbone
Court stated that the challenged law was discriminatory "for it allow[ed] only the favored [local] operator to process waste [within the town]” (
The principle on which the C & A Carbone holding rests is directly applicable in this case. Albany’s transient-retailer tax is imposed on all merchants who do not operate from a fixed location within the City’s borders and, consequently, it confers an economic advantage on a particular class of local businesses, i.e., those that ply their wares from fixed locations. Since, by definition, the class of favored business includes only locals, the ordinance cannot be considered "even-handed” and is, thus, per se invalid (see, id., at 392; see also, Bacchus Imports v Dias, supra).
Contrary to the Attorney-General’s argument, we are not persuaded that a different analysis is mandated in this case by the Supreme Court’s holding in
Dunbar-Stanley Studios v Alabama
(
Further, even assuming that the decision in Dunbar-Stanley means what the Attorney-General says it means, we would nonetheless conclude that the force of the decision has been vitiated by more recent case law which unequivocally establishes that a law which discriminates against interstate commerce cannot be upheld on the ground that some in-State entities are also affected (e.g., C & A Carbone v Clarkstown, supra; Fort Gratiot Sanitary Landfill v Michigan Dept. of Natural Resources, supra, at 361-363; Bacchus Imports v Dias, supra). Significantly, in the nearly three decades that have elapsed since Dunbar-Stanley was decided, the Supreme Court has not *162 once cited that case for the proposition that the Attorney-General urges.
Similarly unpersuasive as authority for upholding the Albany City ordinance are the so-called "peddler” cases on which the lower courts relied (e.g.,
Machine Co. v Gage,
Whether the present case is "more conceptually and factually similar” to the latter line, as the Supreme Court below opined
(supra,
Finally, since it does not satisfy the criteria for a "compensatory” tax, the discriminatory Albany City tax on transient retailers cannot be justified on the theory that it merely places such retailers on an equal footing with fixed-location retailers who pay for local services through other forms of taxes
(see generally, Chemical Waste Mgt. v Hunt,
The City of Albany argues that its transient-retailer tax is designed to approximate the tax burden that falls on fixed-location retailers whose property tax bill subsidizes the local services on which all merchants and citizens rely. However, unlike in the case of sales and compensating use taxes
(see generally, Henneford v Silas Mason Co.,
In the final analysis, the City’s attempt to justify the transient-retailer tax as a substitute for a tax on real property must fail because it rests on a patently fallacious assumption. Although some fixed-location merchants support local services through their direct payment of real estate taxes, there are a substantial number of such merchants, including the vast majority of shopping mall tenants, whose retail sites are leased and who therefore are not directly responsible for property taxes. To be sure, these lessee-merchants may indirectly absorb some portion of the property owner’s property tax bill through their rent payments. The same observation can be made, however, about transient retailers like plaintiff, who ordinarily operate from temporary rented quarters and, consequently, make rental payments that take the local real property taxes into account. 5 Thus, payment of property taxes is not a valid factor for differentiating between fixed-site merchants and transient retailers, and, accordingly, that factor cannot be cited as justification for the imposition of a special tax on the latter’s gross receipts.
In sum, the challenged tax cannot be tolerated under the Constitution because it impedes free and equal access to local demand and thus strikes at the heart of the fundamental values that the Commerce Clause was designed to protect (see, C & A Carbone v Clarkstown, supra). Inasmuch as the City of Albany’s transient-retailer tax is discriminatory and cannot be rationalized as a compensatory tax that operates to equalize the tax burdens that local retailers must bear, it is invalid, and the contrary ruling of the courts below dismissing plaintiff’s Commerce Clause cause of action must be reversed. *165 Further, since the dismissal of plaintiffs third cause of action for relief under 42 USC §§ 1983 and 1988 was predicated on the lower courts’ erroneous assumption that the Commerce Clause had not been violated, our determination here requires that claim’s reinstatement.
Accordingly, the judgment appealed from and the order of the Appellate Division brought up for review should be reversed, with costs, plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment granted, judgment granted declaring the subject ordinance unconstitutional in violation of the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution and directing the City of Albany to refund to plaintiff any taxes paid under protest, plaintiffs third cause of action reinstated, and the case remitted to Supreme Court for further proceedings on the third cause of action.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Bellacosa, Smith, Levine, Ciparick and Wesley concur.
Judgment appealed from and order of the Appellate Division brought up for review reversed, etc.
Notes
. The ordinance is designed to tax a transient retailer’s gross sales receipts "at the same rate as other property is taxed for the year in [the] city” (Albany City Code § 7-238). In other words, the transient retailer’s gross receipts are treated as if they were real property and taxed accordingly.
. A "transient retail business” is defined in the ordinance as "one conducted in a store, hotel, house, building or structure for the sale and retail of goods, wares or merchandise * * * and which is intended to be conducted for a temporary period of time and not permanently. If the place in which a business is conducted and is rented or leased for a period of six (6) months or less, such fact shall be presumptive evidence that the business carried on therein is a transient business” (Albany City Code § 7-243).
. The
C & A Carbone
Court left room for upholding a facially discriminatory law "in a narrow class of cases in which the municipality can demonstrate, under rigorous scrutiny, that it has no other means to advance a legitimate local interest”
(supra,
. The only suggestion in
Dunbar-Stanley
that the Court considered the proposition the Attorney-General now advances appears in a brief footnote: "Even assuming that” the transient photographer’s assessed taxes "were almost twice what a fixed-location photographer would have had to pay for the same period * * * we are not prepared to say that this relative burden is improper, given the differences between the two ways of carrying on the business” (
Whatever else this rather cryptic statement may mean, it cannot sensibly be understood to mean that differentiating between transients and fixed-location merchants is a constitutionally accepted practice, since such a holding would have entailed overruling a substantial body of well-established case law (see,
e.g., Memphis Steam Laundry v Stone,
. The fact that this plaintiff operated from a site that happens to be tax exempt is a fortuity that does not affect the analysis.
