The State Board of Equalization, which is charged with the administration of the California Sales and Use Tax Law (Rev. & Tax. Code, div. 2, pt. 1, §§ 6001-7176, particularly §§ 7051-7057, and see §20) has appealed from a judgment which awarded plaintiff retailer a refund of $21,251.61 with interest, representing payment made in satisfaction of an assessment for use taxes which it is claimed the retailer should have collected for the State of California during the period from April 1, 1957 to January 1, 1961 on sales of goods delivered on credit at its Klamath Falls, Oregon, and Reno, Nevada stores to customers who hold charge accounts bearing an address in California.
*733 The parties stipulated to the facts concerning the sales, and the nature of the business activities conducted by plaintiff in California, in Klamath Falls, and in Reno, respectively. These facts are alluded to as they bear upon the various contentions of the parties.
In support of the judgment the retailer contends that the exaction levied, whether a tax or a debt (see Rev. & Tax. Code, §§6203 and 6204;
1
and
Bank of America
v.
State Board of Equalization
(1962)
“Since the issues here involve the applicability of taxing statutes to uneontradieted facts, we are confronted purely with a question of law and are not bound by the findings of the trial court [footnotes and citations omitted].”
(Automatic Canteen Co.
v.
State Board of Equalization
(1965)
Statutory Provisions
The California use tax is an excise tax 11 on the storage, use, or other consumption in this State of tangible personal property purchased from any retailer . . . for storage, use, or other consumption in this State. ...” (§6201.) “Every person storing, using, or otherwise consuming in this State tangible personal property purchased from a retailer is liable for the tax. His liability is not extinguished until the tax has been paid to this State except that a receipt from a retailer engaged in business in this State or from a retailer who is authorized by the board, under such rules and regulations as it may prescribe, to collect the tax and who is, for the purposes of this part relating to the use tax, regarded as a retailer engaged in business in this State, given to the purchaser pursuant to Section 6203, is sufficient to relieve the purchaser from further liability for the tax to which the receipt refers.” (§6202 (italics added), as amended Stats. 1957, eh. 807, § 1, p. 2019; ef. Stats. 1941, ch. 36, § 1, p. 538; and see § 6203, fn. 1, supra.)
Section 6203 (fn. 1, supra), which lies at the heart of this controversy, imposes on the retailer the duty to collect the tax; and section 6204 (fn. 1, supra) makes the tax required to be collected a debt due to the state. Failure to collect the tax is a misdemeanor (§6207). Retailers who sell tangible per *735 sonal property for storage, use, or consumption within the state are required to register and give the board such information as it may require (§ 6226; and see §§ 6453, 7053, 7054 and 7055). “. . . for purposes of the use tax a return shall be filed by every retailer maintaining a place of business in the State and by every person purchasing tangible personal property, the store, use, storage, use or other consumption of which is subject to the use tax, who has not paid the use tax due to a retailer required to collect the tax. . . .” (§ 6452, as amended Stats. 1946, eh. 567, § 2, p. 1557. The words “engaged in lousiness in this State” were not substituted until 1963 by Stats. 1963, ch. 612, § 1, p. 1491.) 11. . . For purposes of the use tax, in case of a return filed by a retailer, the return shall show the total sales price of the property sold by him, the storage, use, or consumption of which property became subject to the use tax during the preceding reporting period; . . . [and] the amount of the taxes for the period. . . .” (§ 6453.) The retailer is required to “deliver the return together with a remittance of the amount of the tax due to the office of the board.” (§ 6454.) Failure to make a return is a misdemeanor (§ 7151).
“There are exempted from the taxes imposed by this part the gross receipts from the sale of and the storage, use, or other consumption in this State of tangible personal property the gross receipts from the sale of which, or the storage, use, or other consumption of which, this State is prohibited from taxing under the Constitution or laws of the United States or under the Constitution of this State.” (§6352.) “The storage, use, or other consumption in this State of property, the gross receipts from the sale of which are required to be included in the measure of the sales tax, is exempted from the use tax.” ( § 6401, prior to its amendment by Stats. 1965, First Ex. Sess. 1965, eh. 2, § 23, p. 5451 which concerns interests created by a lease.) During the years in question no provision was made for credit or apportionment with respect to retail sales taxes or use taxes paid to another state, political subdivision thereof or the District of Columbia. (Cf. § 6406, as added Stats. 1966, ch. 2, § 4, p. 176, as amended.) There is no provision for compensating the retailer for his services in collecting the tax. (See §7101.)
The Legislature has adopted presumptions to aid in the proper administration of the Sales and Use Tax Act and to prevent evasion. (See §§6091-6095, and 6241-6249.) Section *736 6241 provides: “For the purpose of the proper administration of this part and to prevent evasion of the use tax and the duty to collect the use tax, it shall be presumed that tangible personal property sold by any person for delivery in this State is sold for storage, use, or other consumption in this State until the contrary is established. The burden of proving the contrary is upon the person who makes the sale unless he takes from the purchaser a certificate to the effect that the property is purchased for resale.” Section 6246 provides : “It shall be further presumed that tangible personal property shipped or brought to this State by the purchaser was purchased from a retailer on or after July 1, 1935, for storage, use, or other consumption in this State.” Section 6247 provides : “On and after the effective date of this section, it shall be further presumed that tangible personal property delivered outside this State to a purchaser known by the retailer to be a resident of this State was purchased from a retailer for storage, use or other consumption in this State and stored, used or otherwise consumed in this State.
‘1 This presumption may be controverted by a statement in writing, signed by the purchaser or his authorized representative, and retained by the vendor, that the property was purchased for use at a designated point or points outside this State. This presumption may also be controverted by other evidence satisfactory to the board that the property was not purchased for storage, use, or other consumption in this State. ’ ’
The retailer is an Illinois corporation with its head office and principal place of business in Chicago, Illinois. It conducts a nationwide retail sales business, maintaining places of business in this State and many others, including the states of Oregon and Nevada. It sells its merchandise both by mail order and by direct sale from retail stores which it owns and manages in various towns and cities. For the years involved in this litigation, 1957 through 1960, the retailer had national sales in excess of one billion dollars per year.
It is qualified to conduct intrastate business within the State of California as a foreign corporation, under the authority of sections 6400-6408 of the California Corporations Code. During the period involved it increased its retail stores in California from 17 to 21. It maintained and maintains one of its four regional administrative offices at Oakland, California, for a region which encompasses the stores in Beño and *737 Klamath Falls. During the four years involved its sales in California rose from $64,300,000 to $85,744,000.
The store in Reno, Nevada, is the retailer’s only store in that state. It had sales ranging from $1,871,947 to $2,127,822 during the years in question. The Klamath Falls store is one of 13 stores in Oregon. It had sales ranging from $1,406,446 to $1,631,556 during the same period. Reno, Nevada, is 17 miles from the California border and Klamath Falls, Oregon, is 15 miles from the California border. These communities serve as the principal centers of commerce for the rural areas within a 100-mile radius of each community, including areas in California. Because of the proximity of these commercial centers to the California border some residents of California customarily shop in Reno and Klamath Falls. The retailer’s stores located in these commercial centers therefore make sales to California residents.
In addition, Reno is also a major tourist center which draws many California residents, many of whom incidentally shop there. Retailer’s stores located in those cities therefore make cash and credit sales to California residents.
When merchandise is delivered from the Reno store, or the Klamath Falls store, into the State of California the retailer collects and remits to California use taxes on those sales. (See §6241, supra.) The propriety of the collection of California use taxes on those sales is not in issue in this action. When delivery is made to the customer at the Reno or Klamath Falls store of merchandise purchased on credit no use tax is collected or remitted even though the credit flies of the retailer indicate that the customer has an address in California. The latter sales totaled $509,789 for both stores during the period in question and formed the basis for the board’s determination of alleged additional use taxes due. (See § 6481.) Following denial of a petition for redetermination (see §§6561-6564), the retailer paid the tax found to be due with interest (see § 6565), and thereafter filed its claim for refund (§6902), the denial of which resulted in the present action (§6933).
The board contends that since the retailer at all times maintained a place of business in, and was engaged in business in the State of California, it is clearly within the class of retailers obligated to collect and remit the use tax under the provisions of section 6203 (see fn. 1,
supra).
The retailer seeks a narrower construction of the statute, and urges that
*738
before a border store can be deemed to be a retailer as defined by section 6203, it must be shown that the store itself maintained a place of business or engaged in business in California. This construction is too narrow. It is established that under appropriate circumstances, the seller’s presence within the taxing state will warrant the imposition of an obligation to collect and remit use taxes on goods sold elsewhere but delivered within the state.
(Scripto
v.
Carson
(1960)
A more perplexing problem is presented by the retailer’s contention that the statute (§ 6203) does not provide for the collection of the tax until the storage, use, or other consumption of the property purchased and delivered becomes taxable. The code section reads, “Every retailer . . . shall, at the time of making the sales or, if the storage, use, or other consumption of the tangible personal property is not then taxable hereunder, at the time the storage, use, or other consumption becomes taxable, collect the tax. . . . ’ ’ The retailer points out that until the purchaser brings the property purchased within the territorial confines of the State of" California there is no liability for the tax (§ 6201, and see §6017), and therefore nothing can be collected at the antecedent sale. In other words, if the property is used, stored or consumed outside of this state, or if it is lost, stolen or destroyed before it is brought within the confines of this state, no liability for a use tax would ever arise. The mere fact credit is extended to a resident of this state has not been, if it could be, made an incident giving rise to an excise tax.
The retailer finds some support for its view in
Chicago Bridge & Iron Co.
v.
Johnson
(1941)
The same case, however, sets forth the following principles, applicable to any consideration of the scope of the Use Tax Act: “In approaching this problem it is first necessary to consider the purpose and object of the use tax. It cannot be doubted that the purpose sought to be accomplished by a statute relating to taxation is important in construing such statute and in determining the scope of its application. [Citation.] One of these purposes is to make the coverage of the tax complete to the end that the retail sales tax [citation] will not result in an unfair burden being placed upon the local retailer engaged solely in intrastate commerce as compared with the case where the property is purchased for use or storage in California and is used or stored in this state. The two taxes are complemental to each other with the aim of placing the local retailers and their out-of-state competitors on an equal footing. The fundamental principles to be considered in applying such an act are expressed in the case of
Southern Pacific Company
v. Gallagher,
*740 The legislative purpose to impose and collect the use tax on property to be stored, used, or consumed in this state is manifested and implemented by the presumptions which have been referred to above. The provisions of section 6247 purport to establish that if the retailer knows that the purchaser is a resident of this state, it then will be presumed that the requisite purpose existed at the time of the purchase and delivery outside of this state, and that the requisite storage, use, or consumption within this state in fact ensued. It is concluded from the foregoing that the Legislature intended insofar as it had power to do so, that the out-of-state retailer should collect the California use tax from purchasers known to be residents of this state at the time of the out-of-state sale.
In this ease the record does not directly show that the purchasers were residents of this state. The stipulation refers to “customers who held charge accounts, bearing an address in California” and to “customers . . . whose billing address in plaintiff’s credit files was a California address.” Reference to the form which the retailer requires for an application for credit indicates a request for the applicant’s “address” separately from the name and address of his employer. It is acknowledged that cash 2 and credit sales are made from the Reno and Klamath Falls stores to California residents. It may be inferred in the absence of other evidence that each customer with a billing address in California is in fact a customer who resides in California; that the retailer is therefore charged with knowledge of that fact; that each purchase made by such a customer ‘ ‘ on credit and delivered outside of California” falls within the type of transaction contemplated by the provisions of sections 6203 and 6247; and that the Legislature intended that the retailer collect a use tax on such sales. The code authorizes the action of the board in redetermining and assessing the tax on those sales. There remains for consideration the validity of the legislation as so administered in the light of established constitutional principles.
*741 Due Process
“ The due process clause requires ‘some definite link, some minimum connection, between a state and the person, property or transaction it seeks to tax.’
(Miller Bros. Co.
v.
Maryland
(1954)
In attempting to extract a controlling principle from the existing precedents one enters an area which has been described in similar context as “Fraught with complexities and inconsistencies.” (Mr. Justice Goldberg, dissenting in
General Motors
v.
Washington, supra,
Preliminarily it should be noted that there are two aspects to the exaction involved: First, the right of the State of California to require a resident to pay a use tax to certain out-of-state merchants who also do business in California, if the resident elects to purchase and take delivery of the goods on credit; and second, the right of the State of' California' to require those merchants to collect a use tax on such sales, or, on failure to do so, to pay the state the amount of the tax.
The right of a state to tax the storage, use, or consumption of tangible personal property brought within the state for any such purpose is not subject to question. (See cases last cited,
passim,
particularly
Union Oil Co.
v.
State Board of Equalization, supra,
“The liability of the retailer is not . . . for the use tax itself but for an amount equivalent to it because of his default in his duty as collection agent. The taxpayer is the person ultimately liable for the tax itself, and not the person who pays the tax liability. [Citation omitted.] . . . the retailer is merely paying the debt of another when he pays the purchaser’s tax, and as such stands in a position analogous to that of a surety for the purchaser so as to entitle him to reimbursement. Accordingly, the liability of the retailer under section 6204, by virtue of its wording and as construed by the eases, is for a debt rather than for taxes.” (Bank of America v. State Board of Equalization, supra, 209 Cal.App.2d at pp. 799-800.) Nevertheless, in apprais-
ing the power of a state to impose liability on an out-of-state seller to collect a local use tax, that liability has been equated with the power to tax transactions which are related to out-of-state activities. In
Miller Bros. Co.
v.
Maryland, supra,
the court states: ‘ ‘ The practical and legal effect of the Maryland statute as it has been applied to this Delaware vendor is to make the vendor liable for a use tax due from the purchaser. In economic consequence, it is identical with making him pay a sales tax. The liability arises only because of a Delaware sale and is measured by its proceeds. But at the time of the sale, no one is liable for a Maryland use tax. That liability arises only upon importation of the merchandise to the taxing state, an event which occurs after the sale is complete and one as to which the vendor may have no control or even knowledge, at least as to merchandise carried away by the buyer. The consequence is that liability against the Delaware vendor is predicated upon use of the goods in another state and by another person. We do not understand the State to contend that it could lay a use tax upon mere possession of goods in transit by a carrier or vendor upon entering the State, nor do we see how such a tax could be consistent with the Commerce Clause.” (
The scope of the constitutional principles first referred to is most recently summarized as follows in
National Bellas Hess
v.
Department of Revenue,
as follows: “In applying these principles the Court has upheld the power of a State to impose liability upon an out-of-state seller to collect a local use tax in a variety of circumstances. Where the sales were arranged by local agents in the taxing State, we have upheld such power.
Felt & Tarrant Co.
v.
Gallagher,
“But the Court has never held that a State may impose the duty of use tax collection and payment upon a seller whose only connection with customers in the State is by common carrier or the United States mail. Indeed, in the
Sears, Roebuck
case the Court sharply differentiated such a situation from one where the seller had local retail outlets, pointing out that ‘those other concerns . . . are not receiving benefits from Iowa for which it has the power to exact a price. ’
The board contends that Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Go., supra, and Nelson v. Montgomery Ward, supra, are decisive of this case because it is stipulated that the retailer is doing business in this state. Analysis demonstrates the facts of this case do not permit such a ready solution. The decisions reflect that where the tax collecting burden has been imposed on the multi-state operating retailer, it has only been authorized for transactions which have involved delivery within the taxing state, and has not been extended to transactions which are completed extraterritorially. California may not burden a foreign corporation’s out-of-state business as a condition of permitting it to do business within the state. The protection afforded and the benefits conferred must have some relationship to the transaction which the state seeks to burden.
In the chain store eases, the Iowa Supreme Court had upheld contentions similar to those advanced by the retailer here. It “held that if respondent had limited its activities to a mail order business of the kind here involved, it would not be doing business in Iowa; that, although technically the tax may be on the purchaser, it must be collected when the sale is made, at which time the property is outside the state; that these sales are separate and distinct from respondent’s activities in Iowa. It therefore concluded that the tax as applied was unconstitutional since Iowa has no power to regulate respondent’s activities outside the state or to regulate such activities as a condition to respondent’s right to continue to do business in the state.” (312 IJ.S. at pp. 362-363, and see pp. 374-375 [85 L.Ed. at pp. 891-892, and see pp. 898-899].) The United States Supreme Court pointed out, “Use in Iowa is what is taxed regardless of the time and place of passing title and regardless of the time the tax is required to be paid.”
(Id.
p. 363 [
The broad language set forth above was applied to uphold the collection of a use tax “on mail orders sent by Iowa purchasers to [the retailer’s] out of state branches and filled by direct shipments through the mails or a common carrier from those branches to the purchasers.”
{Id.,
p. 362, and see p. 374 [
In
General Trading Co.
v.
Tax Com., supra,
the collection of use taxes from an out-of-state mail order retailer, on sale of property shipped into the taxing state by mail or common carrier, as the result of orders solicited by salesmen sent into the taxing state from their out-of-state headquarters, was sustained despite the fact that the retailer had never qualified to do business in the taxing state nor did it maintain there any office, branch or warehouse. The opinion of the court ruled: “We agree with the Iowa Supreme Court that
Felt & Tarrant Co.
v.
Gallagher,
In Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, supra, the court in a five-to-four decision, ruled that the out-of-state retailer had not subjected itself to the taxing power of the neighboring state, nor had it afforded that state a jurisdiction or power to create a collector’s liability. The chain store cases here were distinguished on what previously had been stated to be a “ constitutionally irrelevant” ground. The court said, “The decisions relied upon by Maryland do not, in our view, support her.
*748
This is not the ease of a merchant entering a state to maintain a branch and engaging in admittedly taxable retail business but trying to allocate some part of his total sales to nontaxable interstate commerce. Under these circumstances, the State has jurisdiction to tax the taxpayer, and all that he can question on Due Process or Commerce Clause grounds is the validity of the allocation. Cf.
Nelson
v.
Montgomery Ward & Co.,
In Scripto v. Carson, supra, the court applied the principles of the General Trading Go. case to uphold the imposition of liability for failure to collect a use tax on goods sold and shipped from out-of-state to fill orders secured by independent brokers. The court held that there was no constitutional significance in the fact that those soliciting the orders were independent brokers only expending part of their efforts as agents of the retailer, rather than full time regularly employed salesmen. (362 U.S. at pp. 211-212 [4 L.Ed.2d at pp. 663-664].) No mention was made of the chain store eases.
In
People
v.
West Publishing Co., supra,
this state followed the theory that the chain store cases were predicated on the theory that the mail order sales ‘1 could not be divorced from the integrated local activities of the company.” (
Finally, it may be noted in the quotation from
National Bellas Hess, supra,
that the maintenance of local retail stores was considered as the distinguishing factor in the chain store
*749
cases. (
Of the foregoing cases only
Miller Bros. Co.
involves sales in which delivery was made at the out-of-state store for cash or credit.
5
The out-of-state retailer’s activities within the taxing state are set forth as follows: 1 ‘ The grounds advanced by Maryland for holding the Delaware vendor liable come to this: (1) the vendor’s advertising with Delaware papers and radio stations, though not especially directed to Maryland inhabitants, reached, and was known to reach, their notice; (2) its occasional sales circulars mailed to all former customers included customers in Maryland; (3) it delivered some purchases to common carriers consigned to Maryland addresses; (4) it delivered other purchases by its own vehicles to Maryland locations. The question is whether these factors, separately or in the aggregate, in each or all of the above types of sales, establish a state’s power to impose a duty upon such an out-of-state merchant to collect and remit a purchaser’s use tax.” (347 U.S. at pp. 341-342 [98 L.Ed. at pp. 746-747].) The court observed, “We are unable to find in "any of our cases a precedent for sustaining the liability asserted by Maryland here. In accordance with the principles of earlier cases, it was recently settled that Maryland could not have reached this Delaware vendor with a sales tax on these sales.
McLeod
v.
Bilworfh Co.,
On the state of the law as outlined above, resolution of the due process question in this case must depend on a determination to extend the principle of the chain store cases to sales made and delivered without the taxing state, as well as to sales made without the state for delivery within the state; or, alternatively, to apply the principle of the Miller Bros. Co. case to a multi-state retailer even though it conducts some activities in the state seeking to impose the burden. Before further examining the principles involved it is necessary to consider the facts concerning the retailers’ activities within California, and the impact of the activities of the border stores within this state.
The board states, “It would appear to be most naive to suppose that Montgomery Ward’s California business activities, including those of its regional headquarters in Oakland, California, were totally unrelated to the activities of the border stores in dealing with California residents.” It has failed to point out what intrastate activities contribute to the sales made by the border stores to residents of California. The existence of a regional headquarters in Oakland, with administrative jurisdiction over the border stores, among others, is not determinative. There is nothing to show any particular contribution to the sales in question here. Certainly the existence of this headquarters could not give California the right to tax or impose burdens on all sales in all states throughout the region.
The retailer carries on a continual advertising program throughout the States of California, Oregon and Nevada by use of direct mail, television, radio, newspapers and magazines. The scope of this advertising campaign is commensurate with the number of stores and volume of sales it has in these states. The border stores engage in radio, television and news *751 paper adveriLing through local media which impinge on the neighboring California counties. The retailer’s store manual provides for the distribution of circulars by mail within the trading area served by the store. Whenever there is a mailing to credit customers of the respective stores, all credit customers of the stores whose billing address is in California receive direct mail circulars. The content of the advertising which California residents are exposed to and receive is no different than the advertising reaching Oregon and Nevada residents who are also located within the trading areas of the respective stores.
Each of the border stores makes sales in which delivery is made to a California address. On these sales the retailer has collected the California use tax, and in Nevada it has claimed an exemption from the state sales tax. The merchandise so delivered is ordinarily bulky or heavy and not of the sort that can be easily transported from the store by a customer. Appliances, carpets, drapes, and similar articles of merchandise which require installation are delivered in trucks belonging to the retailer or its agents, and are installed by its trained personnel. Salesmen occasionally solicit sales of this type of merchandise within the State of California as a result of invitations to do so from the California residents who make appointments with the salesmen at the stores.
Both stores render warranty service in California on merchandise delivered into California, and on the small percentage, two percent of the sales delivered out-of-state, constituting bulky merchandise, ordinarily delivered, but in fact picked up by the customer. The remaining merchandise delivered out-of-state is ordinarily small, such as dry goods, small appliances, and sports equipment which can be easily transported from the store by customers. Any warranty service on this merchandise would be performed at the store, and the customer would have to return it to obtain service.
The Reno store has used legal process in California to repossess or to collect payment due on merchandise sold and delivered in California. The Klamath Palls store has never used the California courts to collect payment due it. Each store would, if necessary, use the California courts to effect repossession of bulky merchandise, ordinarily delivered, even if it had been taken by the California customer directly from the store. The retailer does not, however, attempt to repossess *752 the other merchandise delivered at the store through the California courts in the event of a default in payment.
Since there is no relationship between the retailer’s general activities in California, and the generation of sales by its border stores, the suggestion that mere presence in California is sufficient to authorize a burden on the out-of-state delivered sales is rejected. The court in
Nelson
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Go., supra,
stated: “Respondent cannot avoid that burden though its business is departmentalized.” (
This conclusion is strengthened by the principles set forth in
Connecticut General Go.
v.
Johnson, supra,
A similar selectivity is suggested by
Norton Co.
v.
Department of Revenue
(1951)
‘ ‘
But when, as here, the corporation has gone into the State to do local business by state permission and has submitted
*754
itself to the taxing power of the State, it can avoid taxation on some Illinois sales only by showing that particular transactions are dissociated from the local business and interstate in nature. The general rule, applicable here, is that a taxpayer claiming immunity from a tax has the burden of establishing his exemption. [Pn. omitted.] ” (
The foregoing principles were given vitality in
American Oil Co.
v.
Neill, supra,
“These cases have also firmly established the doctrine that when a tax is imposed on an out-of-state vendor, ‘nexus’ between the taxing State and the taxpayer is the outstanding prerequisite on state power to tax. Consistent with this requirement there must be ‘ some definite link, some minimum connection, between a state and the person, property or transaction it seeks to tax.’
Miller Bros. Co.
v.
Maryland, supra,
at 344-345. Granted that when a corporation, pursuant to permission given, enters a State and proceeds to do local business the ‘link’ is strong. In such instances there is a strong inference that it exists between the State and transae
*755
tions which result in economic benefits obtained from a source within the State's territorial limits. The corporation can, however, exempt itself by a clear showing that there are no instate activities connected with out-of-state sales. In such instances, the transactions are said to be ‘ disassociated from the local business,’
Norton Co.
v.
Department of Revenue, supra,
at 537, and therefore may not, consistent with due process, be taxed.” (
The court observed, “There is no reason to suppose, nor does the record in any way indicate, that Utah Oil’s activities in Idaho contributed in any way to the procurement or performances of the contract. . . . Under the circumstances we hold the fact that Utah Oil was the holder of an Idaho dealer’s permit to be purely fortuitous.”
(Id.,
at pp. 458 and 459 [
The question remains, do the border stores receive such opportunities, protection or benefits from California that California may burden the sales to its residents which are completed outside of its territorial jurisdiction? Comparison of the activities considered in Miller Bros. Co. (see 347 U.S. at pp. 341-342 [98 L.Ed. at pp. 746-747] as set forth, supra) with the facts related above demonstrate a striking similarity. In each instance there is advertising by radio, television, newspapers and circulars which carries the retailer’s sales messages into the taxing state, and in addition there are deliveries of some merchandise into that state. (In Miller Bros. Co., unlike this ease, no use tax was collected on the sales represented by such deliveries.)
The board justifiably points out that the degree of such activity is much greater in this case. It also attempts to show, beyond the scope of the stipulation, that the sales efforts in connection with merchandise to be installed within the taxing state, constituted general solicitation. The difference in degree is not constitutionally significant. (Cf.
General Trading Co.
v.
Tax Com., supra,
The board also would limit the application of
Miller Bros. Co.
to the situation where the out-of-state retailer has no knowledge of the identity or address of the purchaser, such as is admittedly the case in over-the-counter cash sales by the out-of-state stores. (See
Scripto
v.
Carson, supra,
Finally, the board seizes on the sentence in
Miller Bros. Co.
reading, “Here was no invasion or exploitation of the consumer market in Maryland.” (
The board can find some support in the dissenting opinion in
Miller Bros. Go.
where four members of the court, of whom three are presently sitting, observed: ‘ ‘ This is not a ease of a minimal contact between a vendor and the collecting State. Appellant did not sell cash-and-carry without knowledge of the destination of the goods; and its delivery truck was not in Maryland upon a casual, nonrecurring visit. Rather there has been a course of conduct in which the appellant has regularly injected advertising into media reaching Maryland consumers and regularly effected deliveries within Maryland by its own delivery trucks and by common carriers. [Fn. omitted.]” (
It is concluded that existing precedents under the due process clause preclude California from burdening the retailer’s Nevada or Oregon business with the collection of use taxes on over-the-counter sales, whether for cash or on credit, to California residents. The foregoing should dispose of the case, but two factors impel a consideration of other principles. In the first place, the vigorous dissent, of Mr. Justice Fortas in
National Bellas Hess
suggests that constitutional due process may in the future be satisfied by the mere extension of credit to a purchaser in the taxing state. (Cf. fn. 6,
supra.)
Secondly,, the growth of a credit card-computer economy suggests that the burden of accounting for and col
*758
leeting the use tax, regardless of where the resident of the state in which the merchandise is to be stored, used, or consumed may purchase it, is not substantial. (Cf. in
National Bellas Hess
v.
Department of Revenue, supra,
Mr. Justice Stewart speaking for the court, 386 U.S. at pp. 759, 760 [18 L.Ed.2d at pp. 510, 511], with Mr. Justice Fortas, speaking for the dissenters at p. 766 [
Commerce Clause
In
People
v.
West Publishing Co., supra,
the court stated, ‘ ‘ There is no violation of the commerce clause involved in the requirement that an out-of-state seller of goods collect a use tax on goods sold for use within the state
(Nelson
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
(1941)
National Bellas Hess, supra,
suggests that “the test whether a particular state exaction is such as to invade the exclusive authority of Congress to regulate trade between the States, and the test for a State’s compliance with the requirements of due process in this area are similar.” (
The collection of the tax by the out-of-state retailer will affect interstate commerce in the sense that residents of California will be discouraged from shopping in the border stores for the sole purpose of saving the California sales tax. As pointed out in connection with “due process,” California may properly impose a use tax for that very purpose, and neither the purchaser, nor the retailer on his behalf, can complain because the resident purchaser’s opportunity to evade the payment of the use tax is curtailed.
A further burden is imposed, however, because the California use tax as it existed during the years in question failed to *760 allow any credit for a sales tax properly imposed by the state in which the property was sold and delivered. With respect to the Nevada store the use tax would be added to a two percent Nevada state sales tax, which, as has been demonstrated, properly may be imposed and collected by that state. (See fn. 4, supra.) The net result is to create a deterrence to out-of-state purchases by California residents which is predicated upon a discrimination, not on equalization, for the benefit of local merchants. 7
Separate excise taxes may be measured by the same sales price where they are exacted for different privileges. “The sales tax and the trucking tax are excise and not property taxes. Each is a well-defined privilege tax: one for the privilege of selling tangible personal property at retail and the other for the privilege of using the public highways for hauling services. Though each tax is measured by gross receipts, separate and distinct privileges are involved. The imposition of such taxes therefore presents no problem of double taxation. (Cf.
Douglas Aircraft Co., Inc.
v.
Johnson,
*761
In
Henneford
v.
Silas Mason Co.
(1937)
In
Southern Pac. Co.
v.
Gallagher, supra,
the court noted, “Under the Washington statute . . . discrimination against interstate commerce, arising from a second exaction for use after a foreign tax on sale, could not exist as provision was made for a credit against the local tax of any such foreign levy. No such problem arises here by evidence, finding or assignment of error even though the California Act does not have this provision. It will be time enough to resolve that argument ‘when a taxpayer paying in the state of origin is compelled to pay again in the state of destination.’ ” (
The retailer relies upon the principle that the foundation of the nondiseriminatory nature of the use tax is the concept that it equalizes the discrimination in favor of interstate commerce which arises when a state imposes a sales tax on intrastate sales.
(Halliburton Oil Well Co.
v.
Reily, supra,
General Motors
v.
Washington, supra,
does not authorize the collection of a use tax in addition to an out-of-state sales tax so as to create a discrimination in favor of local intrastate
*763
sales. It merely establishes that the local activities subjected the corporation to a tax measured by its local sales. The court concluded, “Although mere entry into a State does not take from a corporation the right to continue to do an interstate business with tax immunity, it does not follow that the corporation can channel its operations through such a maze of local connections as does General Motors, and take advantage of its gain on domesticity, and still maintain that same degree of immunity. ’' (
Since there was no sales or use tax in Oregon during the period in question, the retailer relies on the hazard of multiple taxation as constituting a burden on or discrimination against the Oregon sales. In
Gwin, etc. Inc.
v.
Henneford, supra,
the court was concerned with a tax measured by gross receipts from interstate commerce. The court stated, “The present tax, though nominally local, thus in its practical operation discriminates against interstate commerce, since it imposes upon it, merely because interstate commerce is being done, the risk of a multiple burden to which local commerce is not exposed. [Citations.]” (305 U.S. at pp. 439-440 [83 L.Ed. at pp. 276-277], See also
Adams Mfg. Co.
v.
Storen, supra,
Generally, however, the courts have refused to recognize the possibility, as distinguished from the actuality, of multiple taxation. In
General Motors Gorp.
v.
Washington, supra,
the court stated, “A more difficult question might arise from appellant's claim of multiple taxation.
Gwin, White & Prince, Inc.,
v.
Henneford,
On analysis it is concluded that the California purchaser, and the retailer required to collect the tax due from him, can properly object that the use tax as administered violates the commerce clause with respect to the out-of-state sales in Nevada, because the exaction of the tax in conjunction with the Nevada sales tux discriminates in favor of California intrastate commerce, and imposes an unwarranted burden on the right of the retailer to do business on at least an equal basis with California residents. With respect to Oregon, the failure to show that there is any multiple taxation prevents the purchaser, or the retailer on his behalf, from objecting to the collection of the tax.
The foregoing considerations relate to the imposition of the use tax itself. The retailer further contends that the collection duty interposes a discriminatory burden on its right to conduct intrastate commerce in Nevada, because its local competitors are not required to collect such taxes. A similar confrontation was made and disposed of as follows in the chain store cases: “Bespondent [retailer], however, insists
*765
that the duty of tax collection placed on it constitutes a regulation of and substantial burden upon interstate commerce and results in an impairment of the free flow of such commerce. It points to the fact that in its mail order business it is in competition with out-of-state mail order houses which need not and do not collect the tax on their Iowa sales. But those other concerns are not doing business in the state as foreign corporations. Hence, unlike respondent, they are not receiving benefits from Iowa for which it has the power to exact a price.”
(Nelson
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co., supra,
This analogy breaks down, when it is considered that in that case Iowa was the state from which the orders emanated and in which the goods were delivered. In this case California, as has been shown, contributed nothing to the sale but the home residence of the purchaser, and a future haven for the goods he purchased out-of-state. The purchaser’s right “to move freely from state to state is an incident of national citizenship protected by the privileges and immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment against state interference.” (Douglas, J., concurring,
Edwards
v.
California
(1941)
It is concluded that the discriminatory imposition of a liability to collect the California use tax unwarrantedly burdens the right of the out-of-state retailer to do business with residents of California.
Equal Protection
There is an inherent discrimination in a system which imposes a duty to collect on out-of-state stores of multistate retailers, but not on out-of-state stores of local merchants.
9
The board attempts to justify this discrimination on
*766
the ground that the Legislature has power to make reasonable classifications. (See
Allied Stores of Ohio
v.
Bowers
(1959)
The board acknowledges that it cannot reach the solely local out-of-state merchants who sell on credit to California residents, and it urges that this fact—“the impotence of state power” (see
Wisconsin
v.
J. C. Penney Co.,
supra,
From
the viewpoint of the purchasers there is a definite lack of uniformity because, according to the stipulation, no use tax is ever collected from residents of California who purchase for cash in border towns, or who purchase for credit from merchants who have no business location in California. It is not enough to say that the tax is uniformly administered because a tax is collected on all credit sales to California residents by any out-of-state merchant with a business location in California, if such a classification is unwarranted. Here again, neither the credit customer who actually imports the goods acquired out-of-state to his California resi
*767
dence, nor the retailer on his behalf, may be in a position to object to the administration of the use tax because there is no vested interest in evading it. (Cf., however,
Yick Wo
v.
Hopkins
(1886)
That the tax has a discriminatory effect on the out-of-state business of the retailer, or of any other multiple-state merchant under a similar burden, is clear. In
Gowens
v.
City of Bakersfield
(1960)
No approval is expressed of the findings of ultimate fact and the conclusions of law insofar as they transcend the *768 principles set forth in this opinion. Those which are consistent are adequate to sustain the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Molinari, P. J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 29, 1969, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 6, 1969. Peters, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
On the same day the same author filed a second opinion in which the court denied the right of the state of consumption to levy a sales, as distinguished from a use, tax on sales made under similar circumstances.
(McLeod
v.
Dilworth Co.
(1944)
A third opinion filed the same day affirms the unquestioned right of the States of Nevada and Oregon to subject the sales within their respective borders to sales tax even though the purchaser intended from the beginning to remove the goods to his place of residence and that fact may have been known to the seller.
(Harvester Co.
v.
Department of Treasury
(1944)
According to the stipulated facts, $2,500 of the $12,000 in total sales, for cash and on credit, involved in the four and one-half years raider review, represented the sales price of articles taken away from the out-of-state store by the purchasers. Of goods delivered in the taxing state, $8,000 were delivered by the retailer’s truck, and $1,."00 by common carrier. (See 347 U.S. at pp. 350-352, Appendix to Opinion of the Court, fn. 4, pars. 5 and 6 [98 L.Ed. at pp. 751-752].)
The record reveals that company policy directs the retailer’s credit department and selling personnel to promote credit sales in the interests of increasing the overall sales. No opinion is expressed as to the power of a state to impose a tax measured hy the credit extended to its residents. The hoard does not rely on any such tax in these proceedings. In any event, its discriminatory application to credit advanced on out-of-state purchases suggests constitutional infirmities. (Cf.
Wheeling Steel Corp.
v.
Glander
(1949)
See Report of the Special Subcommittee on State Taxation of the Interstate Commerce of the House Committee on the Judiciary (H.R. Rep. No. 565, 89th Congress, 1st Sess. (1965) pp. 819, 824, and 833-835, pp. 819, 824 and 833-835. See generally for a discussion of the due process and commerce clause problems the following: H.R. Rep. No. 565, supra, ch. 20, p. 625, and particularly pp. 626-627; Note (1968) 29 Ohio St. L.J. 520; The Supreme Court, 1966 Term (1967) 81 Harv. L.Rev. 69, 213-217; Note (1966) 51 Cornell L.Q. 346; Note (1966) 20 Vanderbilt L.Rev. 192; Federal Limitations on State Taxation of Interstate Business (1962) 75 Harv. L.Rev. 953, 994-1000; Kust & Sale, State Taxation of Interstate Sales (1960) 46 Va. L.Rev. 1290; The Supreme Court, 1953 Term (1954) 68 Harv. L.Rev. 96, 129-132; Note, Enforcing State Consumption Taxes on Out-of-State Purchases (195l) 65 Harv. L.Rev. 301; Comment, General Sales and Use Taxes and the Commerce Clause (1944) 32 Cal. L.Rev. 281; Note, Sales and Use Taxes: Collection from Absentee Vendors (1944) 57 Harv. L.Rev. 1086; Warren & Sehlesinger, Sales and Use Taxes (1938) 38 Colum. L.Rev. 49; and Traynor, The California Use Tax (1936) 24 Cal. L.Rev. 175.)
Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co.
v.
Gallagher, supra,
The stipulation reads: “Some of plaintiff’s competitors in Reno and Klamath Palls have no business location in California. Defendant does not require these stores to collect the use tax from California residents making purchases in these stores, nor does it attempt to collect the use tax from the residents themselves when they reenter California . . . . Defendant docs not require plaintiff or any of its competitors to collect a use tax on cash sales made to California residents.’’
