88 So. 397 | La. | 1921
This is an action to annul an assessment for ad valorem taxes levied upon credits and bills receivable. The suit is against the board of assessors for the parish of Orleans and the board of state affairs. Prom a judgment rejecting the demand and declaring the assessment valid, plaintiff has appealed.
Appellant is a domestic corporation having its domicile and main office in the city of New Orleans. The company is engaged in the business of buying and selling lumber ip large quantities. The annual purchases and sales amount to about $3,500,000. The company does not have a stock of lumber on hand in Louisiana or elsewhere. No purchases or sales are made in less than carload lots. The lumber bought is applied to contracts of sale already made or is sold by reconsignment of the' cars in transit. The lumber is all bought direct from the mills or manufacturers. Only a comparatively small part of the lumber is bought or sold in Louisiana. It is bought mainly from mills or manufacturers in Texas, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida and Georgia, -and is shipped to other states. In the year for which the assessment was made, the amount of credits and bills receivable due the company for business thus transacted in other states, being therefore Interstate business, amounted to $345,855. ’ The credits and bills receivable due for business done in Louisiana, the intrastate business, amounted to $7,930. The amount of debts and bills payable due by the company in Louisiana amounted to $99,860.40, and the amount of debts and bills payable due by the company in other states amounted to $96,635.-37. The board of assessors and the board of state affairs assessed the company’s credits and bills receivable at $157,000. This valuation was made by subtracting the total amount of debts and bills payable, $196,495.-77, from the total amount of credits and bills receivable, $353,785, and by giving the company credit, arbitrarily, for the $289.23, merely to reduce the valuation to even thousands of dollars.
Plaintiff contends that the credits and bills receivable that resulted from its interstate business are not subject to taxation by the state. As the amount of debts and bills payable in Louisiana amount to far more than the credits and bills receivable resulting from the business done in Louisiana, it follows that, if the credits and bills receivable resulting from the interstate business are not subject to taxation by the state, the entire assessment must be annulled. It must be and is conceded that the interstate business, from which the major part of the credits and bills receivable arose, has no local or intrastate aspect whatever. In other words, there is no dispute that the credits and bills receivable assessed for state and municipal taxes represent a part of the gross prices or proceeds of sales made in interstate commerce.
The only question presented, therefore, is whether credits and bills receivable representing the prices or proceeds of sales made in interstate commerce are subject to the ad valorem taxes levied by the state, generally, upon all credits and bills receiváble having their situs within the state.
Plaintiff contended, primarily, that the language of the statute levying the tax was not
The contention with regard to the language of the statute, though made in plaintiff’s petition, has not been referred to in the oral arguments or in the printed briefs filed by counsel for appellant. It has reference to an expression in section 7 of the Revenuei Law (Act 170 of 1898), a part of which is quoted in plaintiff’s petition thus: “All bills receivable, obligations or credits arising frony the business done in this state are hereby declared assessable within this state.” J
“And this shall apply with equal force to any person or persons representing in this state business interests that may claim domicile elsewhere, the intent and purpose being that no nonresident, either by himself or through any agent shall transact business here without paying to the state a corresponding tax with that exacted of its own citizens; and all hills receivable, obligations or credits arising from 1;he business done in this state are hereby declared assessable within this state, and at the business domicile of said nonresident, his agent or representative.”
It is plain, therefore, that the limitation upon the right to assess credits and bills receivable, to those arising from business done in the state, applies only to credits and bills receivable belonging to nonresidents. The statute plainly levies the tax upon all credits and bills receivable due to residents, of the state or to corporations or associations domiciled in the state, whether such credits arise from business done within or outside of the state.
The only remaining question is whether the credits and bills receivable belonging to the corporation domiciled in this state, and having been acquired as the gross price or proceeds of sales made in interstate commerce, can be subjected to taxation by the state without violating the commerce clause of the federal Constitution, reserving to the Congress of the United States exclusive authority to regulate interstate commerce.
Appellant relies upon the decision of this court in Gelpi & Bro. v. Schenck, Treasurer, 48 La. Ann. 1535, 21 South. 115, declaring that credits and bills receivable arising from sales made in this state of goods imported from, foreign countries are' not subject to taxation by the state. Appellant relies also upon the decisions of the United States Supreme Court maintaining the general doctrine that a state tax which, in effect, regulates or interferes with interstate commerce is a violation of the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States, no matter what name the tax may bear or what was the purpose of its being imposed. In support of the doctrine last stated, appellant relies particularly upon the rulings in Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Kansas, 216 U. S. 1,
“The difference in effect between a tax measured by gross receipts and one measured by net income, recognized by our decisions, is manifest and substantial, and it affords a convenient and workable basis of distinction between a direct and immediate burden upon the business affected and a charge that is only indirect and incidental. A tax upon gross receipts affects each transaction in proportion to its magnitude and irrespective of whether it is profitable or otherwise. Conceivably it may be sufficient to make the difference between profit and loss, or to so diminish the profit as to impede or discourage the conduct of the commerce. A tax upon the net profits has not the same deterrent effect, since it does not arise at all unless a gain is shown over and above expenses and losses, and the tax cannot be heavy unless the profits are large. Such a tax, when imposed upon net incomes from whatever source arising, is but a method of distributing the cost of government, like a tax upon property, or upon franchises treated as property; and if there be no discrimination against interstate commerce, either in the admeasurement of the tax or in the means adopted for enforcing it, it constitutes one of the ordinary and general burdens of government, from which persons and corporations otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of the states are not exempted by the federal Constitution because they happen’ to be engaged in commerce among the states.”
“In this view, if a jeweler desires to buy 50 Geneva watches for the purpose of selling them here without paying taxes upon them as property, he need only direct them to be placed in separate cases, however small, and then put them all together in one box. After paying the import duties on all the watches in the box and receiving the box at his store, he may open the box, and the watches, each one being in its own separate case, may then be exposed for sale. According to the contention of the plaintiffs, each watch, in its own separate case, would be an original package, and could not be regarded as part of the mass of property of the state and subject to local taxation, so long as it remained in that form and unsold in the hands of the importer.”
The court then denied the correctness of the proposition. The decision in Henderson, Tax Collector, v. Ortte, is therefore not well founded, is not consistent with the. jurisprudence of the United States Supreme Court or of this court, and must be overruled.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed, at appellant’s cost.