MOBIL OIL CORP. v. COMMISSIONER OF TAXES OF VERMONT
No. 78-1201
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued November 7, 1979—Decided March 19, 1980
445 U.S. 425
Jerome R. Hellerstein argued the cause for appellant. With him on the briefs were John Dwight Evans, Jr., and William B. Randolph.
Richard Johnston King argued the cause for appellee. With him on the brief was Gregory A. McKenzie, Deputy Attorney General of Vermont.
William D. Dexter argued the cause for the Multistate Tax Commission et al. as amici curiae urging affirmance. With him on the brief were the Attorneys General and other officials for their respective States as follows: J. D. McFarlane, Attorney General of Colorado; James Redden, Attorney General of Oregon; Jeff Bingaman, Attorney General of New Mexico; Carl R. Ajello, Attorney General of Connecticut; Albert R. Hausauer, Special Assistant Attorney General of
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case we are called upon to consider constitutional limits on a nondomiciliary State‘s taxation of income received by a domestic corporation in the form of dividends from subsidiaries and affiliates doing business abroad. The State of Vermont imposed a tax, calculated by means of an apportionment formula, upon appellant‘s so-called “foreign source” dividend income for the taxable years 1970, 1971, and 1972. The Supreme Court of Vermont sustained that tax.
I
A
Appellant Mobil Oil Corporation is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York. It has its principal place of business and its “commercial domicile” in New York City. It is authorized to do business in Vermont.
Much of appellant‘s business abroad is conducted through wholly and partly owned subsidiaries and affiliates. Many of these are corporations organized under the laws of foreign nations; a number, however, are domestically incorporated in States other than Vermont.1 None of appellant‘s subsidiaries or affiliates conducts business in Vermont, and appellant‘s shareholdings in those corporations are controlled and managed elsewhere, presumably from the headquarters in New York City.
In Vermont, appellant‘s business activities are confined to wholesale and retail marketing of petroleum and related products. Mobil has no oil or gas production or refineries within the State. Although appellant‘s business activity in Vermont is by no means insignificant, it forms but a small part of the corporation‘s worldwide enterprise. According to the Vermont corporate income tax returns Mobil filed for the three taxable years in issue, appellant‘s Vermont sales were $8,554,200, $9,175,931, and $9,589,447, respectively; its payroll in the State was $236,553, $244,577, and $254,938, respectively; and the
Vermont imposes an annual net income tax on every corporation doing business within the State. Under its scheme, net income is definеd as the taxable income of the taxpayer “under the laws of the United States.”
| Year 1970 | ||
| Federal Taxable Income | $220,035,244.23 | |
| Less: | ||
| Nonapportionable Income | ||
| Dividends | $174,211,073.60 | |
| Interest | 10,520,792.51 | |
| Foreign Taxes | 12,221,476.88 | |
| Total | 196,953,342.99 | |
| Apportionable Income | $23,081,901.24 | |
| Net Income Allocable to Vermont | 30,361.11 | |
| Total Vermont Tax | $1,821.67 | |
| Year 1971 | ||
| Federal Taxable Income | $308,253,570.02 | |
| Less: | ||
| Nonapportionable Income | ||
| Dividends | $282,817,008.65 | |
| Interest | 12,609,826.23 | |
| Foreign Taxes | 34,659,576.05 | |
| Total | 330,086,410.93 | |
| Apportionable Income | ($21,832,840.91) | |
| Net Income Allocable to Vermont | 0.00 | |
| Total Vermont Tax (minimum tax) | $25.00 | |
| Year 1972 | ||
| Federal Taxable Income | $232,825,728.27 | |
| Less: | ||
| Nonapportionable Income | ||
| Dividends | $280,623,403.93 | |
| Interest | 3,905,208.04 | |
| Foreign Taxes | 38,260,249.40 | |
| Total | $322,788,861.37 | |
| Apportionable Income | ($89,963,133.20) | |
| Net Income Allocable to Vermont | 0.00 | |
| Total Vermont Tax (minimum tax) | $25.00 | |
App. 37, 34; 51, 48; 65, 62.
The Commissioner held that inclusion of dividend income
Mobil sought review by the Superior Court of Washington County. That court reversed the Commissioner‘s ruling. It held that inclusion of dividend income in the tax base unconstitutionally subjected appellant to prohibitive multiple taxation because New York, the State of appellant‘s commercial domicile, had the authority to tax the dividends in their entirety. Since New York could tax without apportionment, the court concluded, Vermont‘s use of an apportionment formula would not be an adequate safeguard against multiple taxation. It agreed with appellant that subtraction of dividend income from the Vermont tax base was the only acceptable approach. App. to Juris. Statement 14a.
The Commissioner, in his turn, appealed to the Supreme Court of Vermont. That court reversed the judgment of the Superior Court. 136 Vt. 545, 394 A. 2d 1147 (1978). The court noted that appellant‘s quarrel was with the calculation of the tax base and not with the method or accuracy of the statutory apportionment formula. Id., at 547, 394 A. 2d, at 1148. It found a sufficient “nexus” between the corporation and the State to justify an apportioned tax on both appel-
The substantial federal question involved prompted us to note probable jurisdiction. 441 U. S. 941 (1979).
B
In keeping with its litigation strategy, appellant has disclaimed any dispute with the accuracy or fairness of Vermont‘s apportionment formula. See Juris. Statement 10; Brief for Appellant 11. Instead, it claims that dividends from a “foreign source” by their very nature are not apportionable income.11 This election to attack the tax base rather than the formula substantially narrows the issues before us. In deciding this appeal, we do not consider whether application of Vermont‘s formula produced a fair attribution of appellant‘s dividend income to that State. Our inquiry is confined
In addressing this question, moreover, it is necessary to bear in mind that Mobil‘s “foreign source” dividend income is of two distinct types. The first consists of dividends from domestic corporations, organized under the laws of States other than Vermont, that conduct all their operations, and hence earn their income, outside the United States.12 The second type consists of dividends from corporations both organized and operating abroad. The record in this case fails to supply much detail concerning the activities of the corporations whose dividends allegedly fall into these two categories, but it is apparent, from perusal of such documents in the record as appellant‘s corporate reports for the years in question, that many of these subsidiaries and affiliates, including the principal contributors to appellant‘s dividend income, engage in business activities that form part of Mobil‘s integrated petroleum enterprise. Indeed, although appellant is unwilling to concede the legal conclusion that these activities form part of a “unitary business,” see Reply Brief for Appellant 2, n. 1, it has offered no evidence that would undermine the conclusion that most, if not all, of its subsidiaries and affiliates contribute to appellant‘s worldwide petroleum enterprise.
II
It long has been established that the income of a business operating in interstate commerce is not immune from fairly apportioned state taxation. Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Minnesota, 358 U. S. 450, 458-462 (1959); Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Chamberlain, 254 U. S. 113, 120 (1920); United States Glue Co. v. Oak Creek, 247 U. S. 321, 328-329 (1918). “[T]he entire net income of a corporation, generated by interstate as well as intrastate activities, may be fairly apportioned among the States for tax purposes by formulas utilizing in-state aspеcts of interstate affairs.” Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Minnesota, 358 U. S., at 460. For a State to tax income generated in interstate commerce, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes two requirements: a “minimal connection” be-
We do not understand appellant to contest these general principles. Indeed, in its Vermont tax returns for the years in question, Mobil included all its operating income in apportionable net income, without regard to the locality in which it was earned. Nor has appellant undertaken to prove that the amount of its tax liability as determined by Vermont is “out of all appropriate proportion to the business transacted by the appellant in that State.” Hans Rees’ Sons v. North Carolina ex rel. Maxwell, 283 U. S. 123, 135 (1931).13 What appellant does seek to establish, in the due process phase of its argument, is that its dividend income must be excepted from the general principle of apportionability because it lacks a satisfactory nexus with appellant‘s business activities in Vermont. To carve that out as an exception, appellant must demonstrate something about the nature of this income that distinguishes it from operating income, a
The argument that the source of the income precludes its taxability runs contrary to precedent. In the past, apportionability often has been challenged by the contention that income earned in one State may not be taxed in another if the source of the income may be ascertained by separate geographical accounting. The Court has rejected that contention so long as the intrastate and extrastate activities formed part of a single unitary business. See Butler Bros. v. McColgan, 315 U. S. 501, 506-508 (1942); Ford Motor Co. v. Beauchamp, 308 U. S. 331, 336 (1939); cf. Moorman Mfg. Co. v. Bair, 437 U. S., at 272. In these circumstances, the Court has noted that separate accounting, while it purports to isolate portions of income received in various States, may fail to account for contributions to income resulting from functional integration, centralization of management, and economies of scale. Butler Bros. v. McColgan, 315 U. S., at 508-509. Because these factors of profitability arise from the operation of the business as a whole, it becomes misleading to characterize the income of the business as having a single identifiable “source.” Although separate geographical accounting may be useful for internal auditing, for purposes of state taxation it is not constitutionally required.
The Court has applied the same rationale to businesses operating both here and abroad. Bass, Ratcliff & Gretton, Ltd. v. State Tax Comm‘n, 266 U. S. 271 (1924), is the leading example. A British corporation manufactured ale in Great Britain and sold some of it in New York. The corporation objected on due process grounds to New York‘s imposition of an apportioned franchise tax on the corporation‘s net income. The Court sustained the tax on the strength of its earlier decision in Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Chamberlain, supra,
As these cases indicate, the linchpin of apportionability in the field of state income taxation is the unitary-business principle.14 In accord with this principle, what appellant must show, in order to establish that its dividend income is not subject to an apportioned tax in Vermont, is that the income was earned in the course of activities unrelated to the sale of petroleum products in that State. Bass, Ratcliff & Gretton forecloses the contention that the foreign source of the dividend income alone suffices for this purpose. Moreover, appellant has made no effort to demonstrate that the foreign operations of its subsidiaries and affiliates are distinct in any business or economic sense from its petroleum sales activities in Vermont. Indeed, all indications in the record are to the contrary, since it appears that these foreign activities are part of appellant‘s integrated petroleum enterprise. In the absence of any proof of discrete business enterprise, Vermont was entitled to conclude that the dividend income‘s
It remains to be considered whether the form in which the income was received serves to drive a wedge between Mobil‘s foreign enterprise and its activities in Vermont. In support of the contention that dividend income ought to be excluded from apportionment, Mobil has attempted to characterize its ownership and management of subsidiaries and affiliates as a business distinct from its sale of petroleum products in this country. Various amici also have suggested that the division between parent and subsidiary should be treated as a break in the scope of unitary business, and that the receipt of dividends is a discrete “taxable event” bearing no relation to Vermont.
At the outset, we reject the suggestion that anything is to be gained by characterizing receipt of the dividends as a separate “taxable event.” In Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co., supra, the Court observed that “tags” of this kind “are not instruments of adjudication but statements of result,” and that they add little to analysis. 311 U. S., at 444. Mobil‘s business entails numerous “taxable events” that occur outside Vermont. That fact alone does not prevent the State from including income earned from those events in the preapportionment tax base.
Nor do we find particularly persuasive Mobil‘s attempt to identify a separate business in its holding company function. So long as dividends from subsidiaries and affiliates reflect profits derived from a functionally integrated enterprise, those dividends are income to the parent earned in a unitary business. One must look principally at the underlying activity, not at the form of investment, to determine the propriety of apportionability.
Superficially, intercorporate division might appear to be a more attractive basis for limiting apportionability. But the form of business organization may have nothing to do with the underlying unity or diversity of business enterprise. Had
We do not mean to suggest that all dividend income received by corporations operating in interstate commerce is necessarily taxable in each State where that corporation does
III
In addition to its due process challenge, appellant contends that Vermont‘s tax imposes a burden on interstate and foreign commerce by subjecting aрpellant‘s dividend income to a substantial risk of multiple taxation. We approach this argument in two steps. First, we consider whether there was a burden on interstate commerce by virtue of the effect of the Vermont tax relative to appellant‘s income tax liability in
A
The effect of the Commerce Clause on state taxation of interstate commerce is a frequently litigated subject that appears to be undergoing a revival of sorts.17 In several recent cases, this Court has addressed the issue and has attempted to clarify the apparently conflicting precedents it has spawned. See, e. g., Moorman Mfg. Co. v. Bair, 437 U. S., at 276-281; Washington Revenue Dept. v. Association of Wash. Stevedoring Cos., 435 U. S. 734, 743-751 (1978); Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady, 430 U. S. 274 (1977). In an endeavor to establish a consistent and rational method of inquiry, we have examined the practical effect of a challenged tax to determine whether it “is applied to an activity with a substantial nexus with the taxing State, is fairly apportioned, does not discriminate against interstate commerce, and is fairly related to the services provided by the State.” Id., at 279.
Appellant asserts that Vermont‘s tax is discriminatory because it subjects interstate business to a burden of duplicative taxation that an intrastate taxpayer would not bear. Mobil does not base this claim on a comparison of Vermont‘s apportionment formula with those used in other States where appellant pays income taxes. Cf. Moorman Mfg. Co. v. Bair, supra; Western Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue, 303 U. S. 250, 255-256 (1938). Rather, it contends that any appor-
Inasmuch as New York does not presently tax the dividends in question, actual multiple taxation is not demonstrated on this record. The Vermont courts placed some reliance on this fact, see, e. g., 136 Vt., at 548, 394 A. 2d, at 1149, and much of the debate in this Court has aired the question whether an actual burden need be shown. Compare Standard Pressed Steel Co. v. Department of Revenue, 419 U. S. 560, 563-564 (1975), and Freeman v. Hewit, 329 U. S. 249, 256 (1946), with Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Minnesota, 358 U. S., at 462-463, and Northwest Airlines, Inc. v. Minnesota, 322 U. S. 292 (1944). See also Japan Line, Ltd. v. County of Los Angeles, 441 U. S. 434, 452, n. 17 (1979). We agree with Mobil that the constitutionality of a Vermont tax should not depend on the vagaries of New York tax policy. But the absence of any existing duplicative tax does alter the nature of appellant‘s claim. Instead of seeking relief from a present tax burden, appellant seeks to establish a theoretical constitutional preference for one method of taxation over another. In appellant‘s view, the Commerce Clause requires allocation of dividend income to a single situs rather than apportionment among the States.
Taxation by apportionment and taxation by allocation to a single situs are theoretically incommensurate, and if the latter method is constitutionally preferred, a tax based on the former
cannot be sustained. See Standard Oil Co. v. Peck, 342 U. S. 382, 384 (1952). We find no adequate justification, however, for such a preference. Although a fictionalized situs for intangible property sometimes has been invoked to avoid multiple taxation of ownership, there is nothing talismanic about the concepts of “business situs” or “commercial domicile” that automatically renders those concepts applicable when taxation of income from intangibles is at issue. The Court has observed that the maxim mobilia sequuntur personam, upon which these fictions of situs are based, “states a rule without disclosing the reasons for it.” First Bank Stock Corp. v. Minnesota, 301 U. S., at 241. The Court also has recognized that “the reason for a single place of taxation no longer obtains” when the taxpayer‘s activities with respect to the intangible property involve relations with more than one jurisdiction. Curry v. McCanless, 307 U. S. 357, 367 (1939). Even for property or franchise taxes, apportionment of intangible values is not unknown. See Ford Motor Co. v. Beauchamp, 308 U. S., at 335-336; Adams Express Co. v. Ohio State Auditor, 166 U. S. 185, 222 (1897). Moreover, cases upholding allocation to a single situs for property tax purposes have distinguished income tax situations where the apportionment principle prevails. See Wheeling Steel Corp. v. Fox, 298 U. S., at 212.
The reasons for allocation to a single situs that often apply in the case of property taxation carry little force in the present context. Mobil no doubt enjoys privileges and protections conferred by New York law with respect to ownership of its stock holdings, and its activities in that State no doubt supply some nexus for jurisdiction to tax. Cf. First Bank Stock Corp. v. Minnesota, 301 U. S., at 240-241. Although we do not now presume to pass on the constitutionality of a hypothetical New York tax, we may assume, for present purposes, that the State of commercial domicile has the authority to lay some tax on appellant‘s dividend income as well as on the value of its stock. But there is no reason in theory why
B
What has been said thus far does not fully dispose of appellant‘s additional contention that the Vermont tax imposes a burden on foreign commerce. Relying upon the Court‘s decision last Term in Japan Line, Ltd. v. County of Los Angeles, 441 U. S. 434 (1979), Mobil suggests that dividends from foreign sources must be allocated to the State of commercial domicile, even if dividends from subsidiaries and affiliates operating domestically are not. By accepting the power of the State of commercial domicile to tax foreign-source dividend income, appellant eschews the broad proposition that foreign-source dividends are immune from state taxation. It presses the narrower contention that, because of the risk of multiple taxation abroad, allocation of foreign-source income to a single situs is required at home. Appellant‘s reasoning tracks the rationale of Japan Line, that is, that allocation is required because apportionment necessarily entails some inaccuracy and duplication. This inaccuracy may be tolerable for businesses operating solely within the United States, it is said, because this Court has power to correct any gross overreaching. The same inaccuracy, however, becomes intolerable when it is added to the risk of duplicative taxation abroad, which this Court is powerless to control. Accordingly, the only means of alleviating the burden of overlapping taxes is to adopt an allocation rule.
This argument is unpersuasive in the present context for
Second, nothing about the logic of Mobil‘s position is limited to dividend income. The same contention could be advanced about any income arguably earned from foreign commerce. If appellant‘s argument were accepted, state taxing commissions would face substantial difficulties in attempting to determine what income does or does not have a foreign source.
Third, appellant‘s argument underestimates the power of this Court to correct excessive taxation on the field where appellant has chosen to pitch its battle. A discriminatory effect on foreign commerce as a result of multiple state taxation is just as detectable and corrigible as a similar effect on commerce among the States. Accordingly, we see no reason why the standard for identifying impermissible discrimination should differ in the two instances.
Finally, acceptanсe of appellant‘s argument would provide no guarantee that allocation will result in a lesser domestic tax burden on dividend income from foreign sources. By appellant‘s own admission, allocation would give the State of commercial domicile the power to tax that income in full, without regard to the extent of taxation abroad. Unless we indulge in the speculation that a State will volunteer to become a tax haven for multinational enterprises, there is no reason to suspect that a State of commercial domicile will be any less vigorous in taxing the whole of the dividend income
Appellant‘s attempted analogy between this case and Japan Line strikes us as forced. That case involved ad valorem property taxes assessed directly upon instrumentalities of foreign commerce. As has been noted, the factors favoring use of the allocation method in property taxation have no immediate applicability to an income tax. Japan Line, moreover, focused on problems of duplicative taxation at the international level, while appellant here has confined its argument to the wholly different sphere of multiple taxation among our States. Finally, in Japan Line the Court was confronted with actual multiple taxation that could be remedied only by adoption of an allocation approach. As has already been explained, in the present case we are not similarly impelled.
Nor does federal tax policy lend additional weight to appellant‘s arguments. The federal statutes and treaties that Mobil cites, Brief for Appellant 38-43, concern problems of multiple taxation at the international level and simply are not germane to the issue of multiple state taxation that appellant has framed. Concurrent federal and state taxation of income, of course, is a well-established norm. Absent some explicit directive from Congress, we cannot infer that treatment of foreign income at the federal level mandates identical treatment by the States. The absence of any explicit directive to that effect is attested by the fact that Congress has long debated, but has not enacted, legislation designed to regulate state taxation of income. See H. R. Rep. No. 1480, 88th Cong., 2d Sess. (1964); H. R. Rep. No. 565, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. (1965); H. R. Rep. No. 952, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. (1965); Hearings on State Taxation of Interstate Commerce before the Subcommittee on State Taxation of Interstate Commerce of the Senate Committee on Finance, 93d Cong., 1st Sess. (1973); cf. United States Steel Corp. v. Multistate Tax Comm‘n, 434 U. S. 452, 456, n. 4 (1978). Legislative proposals have provoked debate over issues closely related to the
IV
In sum, appellant has failed to demonstrate any sound basis, under either the Due Process Clause or the Commerce Clause, for establishing a constitutional preference for allocation of its foreign-source dividend income to the State of commercial domicile. Because the issue has not been presented, we need not, and do not, decide what the constituent elements of a fair apportionment formula applicable to such income would be. We do hold, however, that Vermont is not precluded from taxing its proportionate share.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Vermont is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, dissenting.
The Court today decides one substantive question and two procedural questions. Because of the way in which it resolves the procedural issues, the Court‘s substantive holding is extremely narrow. It is carefully “confined to the question whether there is something about the character of income earned from investments in affiliates and subsidiaries operating abroad that precludes, as a constitutional matter, state taxation of that income by the apportionment method.” Ante, at 434-435.1 Since that question has long since been
The Court‘s substantive holding rests on the assumed premises (1) that Mobil‘s investment income and its income from operations in Vermont are inseparable parts of one unitary business and (2) that the entire incоme of that unitary business has been accurately and fairly apportioned between Vermont and the rest of the world—assuming the constitutional validity of including any foreign income in the allocation formula. The Court holds—as I understand its opinion—that Mobil “offered no evidence” challenging the first premise,2 and that it expressly disclaimed any attack on the second.3
I
It is fundamental that a State has no power to impose a tax on income earned outside оf the State.4 The out-of-state
In the absence of any decision by Congress to prescribe uniform rules for allocating the income of interstate businesses to the appropriate geographical source, the Court has construed the Constitution as allowing the States wide latitude in the selection and application of apportionment formulas. See, e. g., id., at 278-280. Thus an acceptable formula may allocate income on the basis of the location of tangible assets,
“We cannot say that property, pay roll, and sales are inappropriate ingredients of an apportionment formula. We agree with the Supreme Court of California that these factors may properly be deemed to reflect ‘the relative contribution of the activities in the various states to the production of the total unitary income,’ so as to allocate to California its just proportion of the profits earned by appellant from this unitary business. And no showing has been made that income unconnected with the unitary business has been used in the formula.” Id., at 509.
The justification for using an apportionment formula to measure the in-state earnings of a unitary business is inapplicable to out-of-state earnings from a source that is unconnected to the business conducted within the State. This rather obvious proposition is recognized by the commentators5 and is noted in our opinions.6 If a taxpayer proves by
As Mr. Justice Holmes wrote, with respect to an Indiana property tax on the unitary business conducted by an express company:
“It is obvious however that this notion of organic unity may be made a means of unlawfully taxing the privilege [of carrying on commerce among the States], or property outside the State, under the name of enhanced value or good will, if it is not closely confined to its true mеaning. So long as it fairly may be assumed that the different parts of a line are about equal in value a division by mileage is justifiable. But it is recognized in the cases that if for instance a railroad company had terminals in one State equal in value to all the rest of the line through another, the latter State could not make use of the unity of the road to equalize the value of every mile. That would be taxing property outside of the State under a pretense.” Fargo v. Hart, 193 U. S. 490, 499-500 (1904).
In this case the “notion of organic unity” of Mobil‘s far-flung operations is applied solely for the purpose of making a fair determination of its Vermont earnings. Mobil does not dispute Vermont‘s right to treat its operations in Vermont as part of a unitary business and to measure the income attribut
II
Mobil‘s operations in Vermont consist solely of wholesale and retail marketing of petroleum products. Those operations are a tiny part of a huge unitary business that might be defined in at least three differеnt ways.
First, as Mobil contends, the business might be defined to include all of its operations, but to exclude the income derived from dividends paid by legally separate entities.7
Second, as the Supreme Court of Vermont seems to have done,8 the unitary business might be defined to include not only all of Mobil‘s operations, but also the income received from all of its investments in other corporations, regardless
Mobil does not contend that it would be unfair for Vermont to apply its three-factor formula to the first definition of its unitary business. It has no quarrel with apportionment formulas generally, not even Vermont‘s. But by consistently arguing that its income from dividends should be entirely excluded from the apportionment calculation, Mobil has directly challenged any application of Vermont‘s formula based on either the second or the third definition of its unitary business. I shall briefly explain why the record is sufficient to support that challenge.
III
Under the Supreme Court of Vermont‘s conception of the relevant unitary business—the second of the three altеrnative definitions just posited—there is no need to consider the character of the operations of the corporations that have paid dividends to Mobil. For Vermont automatically included all of the taxpaying entity‘s investment income in the tax base. Such an approach simply ignores the raison d‘etre for apportionment formulas.
The Court appears to rely squarely on the third alternative approach to defining a unitary business. It assumes that Vermont‘s inclusion of the dividends in Mobil‘s apportionable tax base is predicated on the notion that the dividеnds represent the income of what would be the operating divisions of the Mobil Oil Corporation if Mobil and its affiliates were a single, legally integrated enterprise, rather than a corporation with numerous interests in other, separate corporations that pay it dividends. Ante, at 440-441.15 Theoretically, that sort
First, notwithstanding the Court‘s characterization of the record, it is readily apparent that a large number of the corporations in which Mobil has small minority interests and from which it derived significant dividend income would seem neither to be engaged in the petroleum business nor to have any connection whatsoever with Mobil‘s marketing business in Vermont.17 Second, the record does not disclose whether the earnings of the companies that pay dividends to Mobil are even approximately equal to the amount of the dividends.18
But of greatest importance, the record contains no information about the payrolls, sales or property values of any of those corporations, and Vermont has made no attempt to incorporate them into the apportionment formula computa-
Either Mobil‘s worldwide “petroleum enterprise,” ante, at 435, is all part of one unitary business, or it is not; if it is, Vermont must evaluate the entire enterprise in a consistent manner. As it is, it has indefensibly used its apportionment methodology artificially to multiply its share of Mobil‘s 1970 taxable income perhaps as much as tenfold.20 In my judgment, the record is clearly sufficient to establish the validity of Mobil‘s objections to what Vermont has done here.
IV
The Court does not confront these problems because it concludes that Mobil has in effect waived any objections with respect to them. Although the Court‘s effort to avoid constitutional issues by narrowly constricting its holding is commendable, I believe it has seriously erred in its assessment of the procedural posture of this case.
It is true that appellant has disclaimed any dispute with “Vermont‘s method of apportionment.” Brief for Appellant 11. And, admittedly, appellant has confused its cause by variously characterizing its attack in its main brief and reply brief. But contrary to the Court‘s assertions, see nn. 1, 3, supra, appellant did not disclaim any dispute with the accuracy or fairness of the application of the formula in this case. Mobil merely disclaimed any attack on Vermont‘s
The question whether Vermont may include investment income in the apportionable tax base should not be answered in the abstract without consideration of the other factors in the allocation formula. The apportionable tax base is but one multiplicand in the formula. Appellant‘s challenge to the inclusion of investment income in that component necessarily carries with it a challenge to the product.
Because of the inherent interdependence of the issues in a case of this kind, it seems clear to me that Mobil has not waived its due process objections to Vermont‘s assessment. Appellant‘s disclaimer of a Moorman style attack cannot fairly be interpreted as a concession that makes its entire appeal a project without a purpose. On the contrary, its argument convincingly demonstrates that the inclusion of its dividend income in the apportionable tax base has produced a palpably arbitrary measure of its Vermont income.
In sum, if Vermont is to reject Mobil‘s calculation of its tax liability, two courses are open to it: (1) it may exclude Mobil‘s investment income from the apportionable tax base and also exclude the payroll and property used in managing the investments from the denominator of the apportionment factor; or (2) it may undertake the more difficult and risky task of trying to create a consolidated income statement of Mobil‘s entire unitary business, properly defined. The latter alternative is permissible only if the statement fairly summarizes consolidated earnings, and takes the payroll, sales, and property of the payor corporations into account. Because Vermont has employed neither of these alternatives, but has used a method that inevitably overstates Mobil‘s earnings in the State, I would reverse the judgment of the Supreme Court of Vermont.
Notes
| 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | |
| Foreign Subsidiary Corporations | 203 | 208 | 216 |
| Foreign Nonsubsidiary Corporations | 185 | 189 | 197 |
| Domestic Nonsubsidiary Corporations | 26 | 27 | 27 |
| 1970 | 0.146032% |
| 1971 | 0.173647% |
| 1972 | 0.182151% |
