MARTIN SHIP SERVICE CO. (a Corporation), Respondent,
v.
CITY OF LOS ANGELES et al., Appellants.
Supreme Court of California. In Bank.
Ray L. Chesebro, City Attorney, Bourke Jones, Assistant City Attorney, and Lester L. Lev, Deputy City Attorney, for Appellants.
Ball, Hunt & Hart and Joseph A. Ball for Respondents.
TRAYNOR, J.
Section 21.190 of the Municipal Code of the City of Los Angeles provides that "Every person engaged in any trade, calling, occupation, vocation, profession or other means of livelihood, as an independent contractor and not as an employee of another, and not specifically licensed by other provisions of this Article, shall pay a license fee in the sum of $12.00 per calendar year or fractional part thereof for the first $12,000 or less of gross receipts, and in addition thereto, the sum of $1.00 per year for each $1,000 or fractional part thereof, of gross receipts in excess of $12,000." [1] Payment of the license tax is a condition precedent to engaging in the enumerated occupations. [fn. *] It is therefore exacted for the privilege of carrying on an occupation, and is measured by *795 the gross receipts derived therefrom. (Union Pac. R. R. Co. v. City of Los Angeles,
Plaintiffs are independent contractors engaged exclusively in furnishing maintenance and repair services to ships employed only in interstate and foreign commerce while those ships are tied to docks or anchored in the harbors of Los Angeles, Newport-Balboa, Long Beach, San Diego, and Port Hueneme. The services consist of painting the ships, removing scale, cleaning tanks, chain lockers and boilers, removing ballast, sandblasting ships' sides, and handling ships' stores by taking them from trucks of provision merchants at the dock, trucking them from the dock onto the ships and placing them in storerooms on board. Only gross receipts from these services on ships anchored or docked in Los Angeles harbor are included in the measure of the tax.
Plaintiffs brought these actions for declaratory relief, contending that the license tax as applied to them is unconstitutional on the ground that it unduly burdens interstate and foreign commerce and is therefore prohibited by the commerce clause of the United States Constitution. From a judgment declaring the tax as applied to plaintiffs unconstitutional and permanently enjoining its collection, defendant city appeals.
[2] It is undisputed that plaintiffs are engaged in local activities essential to interstate commerce. These activities are subject to regulation by Congress under the power granted to it by the commerce clause of the United States Constitution. (National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.,
[4] In view of the recent decisions of the United States Supreme Court in Memphis Natural Gas Co. v. Stone,
"We have upheld a franchise tax on a foreign corporation authorized to do business and making sales in a state other than its actual or business domicile, Ford v. Beauchamp,
The local activities of the taxpayers in maintaining and keeping in repair ships that deliver cargo interstate are *799 no more immune from state and local taxation than local activities in maintaining and keeping in repair pipe lines that deliver gas interstate. (See Ott v. Mississippi Barge Lines,
The present case cannot be distinguished on the ground that the tax is measured by gross receipts rather than by capital employed in the state, as in the Memphis Natural Gas case, for the United States Supreme Court has recently held that a state tax may be imposed on gross receipts from interstate transportation when apportioned to mileage within the taxing state. (Central Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Mealey,
"All of these taxes in one way or another add to the expense of carrying on interstate commerce, and in that sense burden it; but they are not for that reason prohibited. On the other hand, local taxes, measured by gross receipts from interstate commerce, have often been pronounced unconstitutional. The vice characteristic of those which have been held invalid is that they have placed on the commerce burdens of such a nature as to be capable, in point of substance, of being imposed [citations] or added to [citations] with equal right by every state which the commerce touches, merely because interstate commerce is being done, so that without the protection of the commerce clause it would bear cumulative burdens not imposed on local commerce ..."
"... Taxation measured by gross receipts from interstate commerce has been sustained when fairly apportioned to the commerce carried on within the taxing state [citations], and in other cases has been rejected only because the apportionment *800 was found to be inadequate or unfair ... it is a practical way of laying upon the commerce its share of the local tax burden without subjecting it to multiple taxation not borne by local commerce and to which it would be subject if gross receipts, unapportioned, could be made the measure of a tax laid in every state where the commerce is carried on ... In the one case the tax reaches only that part of the commerce carried on within the taxing state; in the other it extends to the commerce carried on without the state boundaries, and, if valid, could be similarly laid in every other state in which the business is conducted." (Western Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue,
Freeman v. Hewit,
The vice of the tax in Freeman v. Hewitt was not the taxation of interstate commerce, but the danger that such commerce might be doubly taxed. The state of the purchaser could properly impose a tax upon the sale (McGoldrick v. Berwind-White *801 Co.,
[6] The activities in the present case "are events apart from the flow of commerce." (Memphis Natural Gas Co. v. Stone, supra, 96.) They are carried on entirely within the harbor of Los Angeles, and a tax thereon is therefore self-apportioning. The fact that the ships might require similar service in the harbors of Seattle, Honolulu or New Orleans does not make taxation by each jurisdiction a multiple tax burden. "Like a property tax on the pipes or equipment in different states, [each tax] would be a different tax, on a different and wholly separate subject-matter, with no cumulative effect caused by the interstate character of the business." (Coverdale v. Arkansas-Louisiana Pipe Line Co.,
The cases of Puget Sound Stevedoring Co. v. Tax Commission,
That part of plaintiffs' service that consists of loading ships' stores aboard the vessels serviced cannot be likened to the stevedoring business held immune from state taxation in the *802 Puget Sound and Carter & Weekes cases. There is a clear distinction between the loading and transportation of commodities for shipment in interstate commerce and the loading of food and supplies to be consumed in the course of the journey. The loading of ships' stores, of food, fuel, and supplies, is comparable to the business of a ships' chandler (Puget Sound Stevedoring Co. v. Tax Commission,
The decisions of the court since the Carter & Weekes case indicate no intention to extend its application. Indeed, insofar as the Carter & Weekes decision invalidates a tax on interstate transportation even though it is fairly apportioned to activity within the taxing state, its authority is questionable in view of the subsequent decision in Central Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Mealey,
It is clear, however, that whatever vitality the immunity of interstate transportation from state taxation may still retain, it is not the intention of the court to extend it to local activities and services in aid of that transportation, in view of the decision in the Memphis Natural Gas case, supra. *803
[7] Even under the broadest interpretation, plaintiffs' business is not interstate transportation. Their service does not begin until that transportation has ended and the transported cargo has been removed from the ships. Their aid to the instrumentalities of that transportation is no more a part of the interstate flow of commerce than the cab service held taxable in Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. Knight,
[8] If plaintiffs' activities or the gross receipts therefrom were the subject of the tax rather than its measure, there could be no doubt as to the validity of the tax, in view of Memphis Natural Gas Co. v. Stone, supra,
The disposition of the present case does not require a resolution of these conflicting views. Even if the proposition stated by the dissenting justices in the Interstate Oil case still has any vitality, it is not controlling here. The United States Supreme Court has long distinguished between a tax imposed on "the very processes of interstate commerce" (Freeman v. Hewit,
The judgments are reversed.
Gibson, C.J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
NOTES
[fn. *] *. " 21.10. No person shall engage in any business, profession, trade or occupation, or perform any act, required to be licensed under the provisions of this Article until such license is first obtained."
[fn. *] *. Miss. Code 9314: "For the year 1940 and annually thereafter, there shall be and is hereby imposed, levied and assessed upon every corporation, association or joint stock company, as hereinbefore defined, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of some other state, territory or country, or organized and existing without any specific statutory authority, now, or hereafter doing business within this state, as hereinbefore defined, a franchise or excise tax equal to $1.50 of each $1,000.00 or fraction thereof of the value of the capital used, invested or employed within this state, except as hereinafter provided. It being the purpose of this section to require the payment of a tax by all organizations not organized under the laws of this state, measured by the amount of capital or its equivalent, for which such organization receives the benefit and protection of the government and laws of the state."
Notes
[fn. *] *. "To call commerce in fact interstate 'local commerce' because under a given set of circumstances, as in the Lehigh Valley case [
[fn. ] . The quotation later in the opinion from Ozark Pipe Line Corp. v. Monier,
