INDIAN MOTOCYCLE CO. v. UNITED STATES.
No. 5
Supreme Court of the United States
May 25, 1931
Reargued October 24, 27, 1930
283 U.S. 570
Argued April 25, 1929
Decree affirmed.
Solicitor General Thacher, with whom Assistant Attorney General Rugg and Messrs. Fred K. Dyar and H. Brian Holland were on the brief, for the United States.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a certificate from the Court of Claims. At a prior term the certificate was dismissed as not in accord with applicable rules and then reinstated, as in Wheeler Lumber Bridge & Supply Co. v. United States, 281 U. S. 572. It since has been аmended, and further argument has been heard.
The facts disclosed in the certificate are: In 1925 the plaintiff, a corporate manufacturer of motorcycles in Massachusetts, sold a motorcycle of its manufacture to the City of Westfield, a municipal corporation of that Commonwealth, for use by the city in its police service. A tax in respect of the sale was assessed and collected from the plaintiff under
Our jurisdiction to entertain certificates from the Court of Claims, and the limitations on that jurisdiction, are explained in Wheeler Lumber Bridge & Supply Co. v. United States, supra. The present certificate when tested by the rules there stated is unobjectionable. It presents a question of law suitably distinct and definite. And while, with the facts settled by an agreed statement accepted below, it is apparent that a decision of the question either way will be decisive of the case, this affords no ground for declining to entertain the certificate. United States v. Mayer, 235 U. S. 55, 66, and cases cited.
This taxing provision is a reënactment, with minor changes not material here, of a provision which was included in the
Both parties rightly regard the tax as an excise, and not a direct tax on the articles named. But they differ as
This view of the tax is not new. The administrative bureau adopted it at the outset and has adhered to it up to the prеsent time. The regulations issued under the Revenue Act of 1917 said on this point: “The tax is on the sale of the articles mentioned,” 20 Tr. Dec. Int. Rev. 365; and this is repeated in the later regulations. 21 Tr. Dec. Int. Rev. 412; 23 Tr. Dec. Int. Rev. 68; 24 Tr. Dec. Int. Rev. 56; 26 Tr. Dec. Int. Rev. 592. Indeed, the tax is frequently spoken of in the regulations as a sales tax. And it is so described in reports of congressional committees dealing with revenue bills in which it was retained. Sen. Rep. No. 398, p. 40, 68th Cong., 1st Sess.; House Rep. No. 1, p. 16, 69th Cong., 1st Sess. While not controlling, this administrative and legislative action
The cases of Cornell v. Coyne, 192 U. S. 418, and American Mfg. Co. v. St. Louis, 250 U. S. 459, cited by counsel for the Government, are not pertinent; for both related to taxes distinctly imposed on manufacturing.
With this understanding of the nature of the tax, we comе to the question propounded in the certificate.
It is an established principle of our constitutional system of dual government that the instrumentalities, means and operations whereby the United States exercises its governmental powers are exempt from taxation by the States, and that the instrumentalities, means and operations whereby the States exert the governmental рowers belonging to them are equally exempt from taxation by the United States. This principle is implied from the independence of the national and state governments within their respective spheres and from the provisions of the Constitution which look to the maintenance of the dual system. Collector v. Day, 11 Wall. 113, 125, 127; Willcuts v. Bunn, 282 U. S. 216, 224-225. Where the principle applies it is not affected by the amount of the particulаr tax or the extent of the resulting interference, but is absolute. McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 430; United States v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 17 Wall. 322, 327; Johnson v. Maryland, 254 U. S. 51, 55-56;1
Of course, the reasons underlying the principle mark the limits of its range. Thus, as to persons or corporations which serve as agencies of government, national or state, and also have private property or engage on their own account in business for gain, it is well settled that the principle does not extend to their private property or private business, but only to their operations or acts as such agencies;2 and, in harmony with this view, it also has been held where a State departs from her usual governmental functions and “engages in a business which is of a private nature,” no immunity arises in respect of her own or her agents’ operations in that business.3 While these decisions show that the immunity doеs not extend to anything lying outside or beyond governmental functions and their exertion, other decisions to which we now shall refer show that it does extend to all that lies within that field.
It has been adjudged that bonds of the United States issued to raise money for governmental purposes, and the interest thereon, are immune from state taxation, because such a tax, even though inconsiderable in amount and imposed only on holders of the bonds, would burden the exercise by the United States of its power to borrow money. Weston v. Charleston, 2 Pet. 449, 468;4 The Banks v. The Mayor, 7 Wall. 16; Home Savings Bank v. Des Moines, 205 U. S. 503, 513; Northwestern Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 275 U. S. 136, 140. And this immunity has been held to
It has been further adjudged that the salary of an officer of the United States is immune from state taxation because the salary is the “means by which his services are proсured and retained” and its taxation by a State would burden the exertion by the United States of powers belonging to the latter. Dobbins v. Commissioner of Erie County, 16 Pet. 435, 448, 449. And “for like reasons” it has been held that the salary of a state officer is immune from federal taxation. Collector v. Day, 11 Wall. 113, 124.
Other applications of the principle are shown in cases where it has been ruled that a state excise on the transmission of telegrams is void as to mеssages sent by officers of the United States on public business, because the excise,
In Panhandle Oil Co. v. Knox, 277 U. S. 218, this Court was called upon to determine whether a state excise laid on the sale of gasoline, and collected only from the dealer making the sale, could be applied to sales to the United States for the use of its coast guard fleet and its veterans’ hospital, and the ruling, made after much consideration, was that the excise could not be so applied consistently with the constitutional principle. The Court therе held that while a State may impose a tax on a dealer “for the privilege of carrying on trade that is subject to the power of the State,” she may not lay any tax on sales to the United States by which it “secures the things desired for its governmental purposes,” and further [p. 222]:
“It is immaterial that the seller and not the purchaser is required to report and make payment to the State. Sаle and purchase constitute a transaction by which the tax is measured and on which the burden rests. . . . To use the number of gallons sold the United States as a measure of the privilege tax is in substance and legal effect to tax the sale. [Citing cases.] And that is to tax the United States—to exact tribute on its transactions and apply the same to the support of the State.”
The decisions in Metcalf & Eddy v. Mitchell, 269 U. S. 514, 526; Wheeler Lumber Bridge & Supply Co. v. United States, 281 U. S. 572, 579; and Willcuts v. Bunn, 282 U. S. 216, 225 et seq., cited by counsel for the Government, are all distinguishable, for the taxes there in question were not laid on transactions involving an exertion of governmental functions and their bearing on governmental operations was so indirect or remote as to placе them outside the principle which is applicable here.
The question propounded in the certificate is answered in the negative.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES regards Panhandle Oil Co. v. Knox as controlling in principle and upon that ground acquiesces in this decision.
I think the question should be answered in the affirmative. The implied immunity of one government, either national or state, from taxation by the other should not be enlarged. Immunity of the оne necessarily involves curtailment of the other‘s sovereign power to tax. The practical effect of enlargement is commonly to relieve individuals from a tax, at the expense of the government imposing it, without substantial benefit to the government for whose theoretical advantage the immunity is invoked. Compare Metcalf & Eddy v. Mitchell, 269 U. S. 514, 522-4; South Carolina v. United States, 199 U. S. 437, 455; Railroad Co. v. Peniston, 18 Wall. 5, 30-31; see also Missouri v. Gehner, 281 U. S. 313, 323; Macallen Co. v. Massachusetts, 279 U. S. 620, 637.
This is especially the case where, as here, thе sole ground of the immunity is that, although the tax is an excise collected by one government from an individual normally subject to it, the incidence of the tax may conceivably be shifted to the other government. In such a case it is not clear how a recovery by the taxpayer would benefit directly the government supposed to be burdened; and the assumption of indirect benefit in the case of a tax of this type necessarily rests upon speculation rather than reality. See Lash‘s Products Co. v. United States, 278 U. S. 175. It is significant that neither the federal nor any state government has appeared by intervention or otherwise to support this claim of immunity in cases in which the taxpayer has urged it upon us.
The court has many times held, and as recently as in Educational Films Corp. v. Ward, 282 U. S. 379, that an excise tax, imposed directly on the individual, is not invalid because indirectly it may burden either thе state or the national government. See also Willcuts v. Bunn, 282 U. S. 216, 225; Denman v. Slayton, 282 U. S. 514. A bequest
In the Panhandle Oil case, it was held that this shifting of the burden of a state tax from the seller to the buyer was sufficient to render the tax invalid where the buyer was an agency of the United States, and it was assumed that the burden of the sales tax involved was so inevitably pаssed on to the buyer as to require this result. With this assumption economists would not, I believe, generally agree. Many hold that whether the burden of any tax paid by the seller is actually passed on to the buyer depends upon considerations so various and complex as to preclude the assumption a priori that any particular tax at any particular time is passed on.5 In some conditions of the market, the burden remains with the seller, or even may be shifted back from the seller to the producer by the reduction of the producer‘s price, rather than forward to the consumer by an increase of the seller‘s price.6
These considerations are, to me, persuasive that the broad rule announced in the Panhandle Oil case ought not to be extended, even if we were not required by our own decisions to limit it; and that we ought not to strain the words of the statute to bring this case within the authority of that one. It seems to be conceded that if the tax in the present case were levied on manufacture alone, we would be bound to hold it valid, Cornell v. Coyne, supra; see Lash‘s Products Co. v. United States, supra.
The rule of the Panhandle Oil case has been limited in Wheeler Lumber Bridge & Supply Co. v. United States, supra, holding that a tax on transportation, which in that case was necessary to effect delivery by the seller, was valid because not in terms a tax on the sale, as it was in the former. Even if verbal distinction, unfounded in economic realities, must be made between the two cases so that both may stand as authoritative expositions of the Constitution, consid-
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS concurs in this opinion.
