Opinion by
This is an appeal from a decree of the court below enjoining defendant-borough from enforcement of an ordinance under which it taxed gross receipts of individuals or corporations offering service to the general public within the borough of Sliarpsburg.
The apрellee is a Pennsylvania corporation engaged in building construction and general contracting, and has its principal office within the borough. Some of its work is done in the borough, but its operations are principally carried out on the site of its jobs, many of which are outside the state. ' The ordinance imposed, inter alia, “on all . . . contractors . . . and on all other persons offering any service ... to the general public '. i. from places . '. . within the Borough ... a business privilege tax. . on the-gross receipts'derived from-all *244 services.” (Italics supplied). The ordinance also includеd a saving clause that nothing contained therein should be construed to empower the borough to levy and collect taxes not within its pоwer under the Federal or State Constitutions. Appellee attacked the ordinance, contending that: (1) It fails to distinguish between interstate and intrastate commerce, and that this defect is not cured by the saving clause; (2) it contains no formula for apportionment between receipts from interstate and intrastate commerce; (3) it unlawfully delegates to the tax collector the authority to determine who shаll be required to pay the tax. The last contention arises from the fact that the ordinance empowers the tax collector “tо prescribe . . . and enforce rules and regulations relating to . . . administration and enforcement.” Under this the tax collector issued regulations providing that the ordinance did not apply to that “portion of . . . gross receipts which the Borough ... is prohibited from taxing by reason of the Cоnstitution of the United States . . . Receipts . . . from interstate commerce transactions [will be excluded] only if these transactions involve the рerformance of services out of the State for a client . . . out of the State.” The forms for tax returns also provided for exclusion оf receipts from interstate commerce. The court below held that the ordinance was invalid because there was no formula fоr apportionment of receipts, and that it unlawfully delegated to the tax collector authority to decide who. the taxables would be.
It is true that “a direct State tax upon the privilege of conducting interstate commerce is invalid.”:
Keystone Metal Co. v. Pittsburgh,
The instant ordinanсe provides that the tax is upon “contractors . . . offering any service . . . from places . . . within the Borough.” The borough is seeking to impose the tax upon one admittedly engaged in the contracting business in the borough, and only upon these gross receipts derived from intrastate business. These receipts are readily separable from its interstate receipts, and as in the cited case, the omission from the ordinance of a formula for apportionment does not render it invalid. In the present ordinance there is no intention to tax receipts from interstate commerce, and the items being easily susceptible of separation, the borough may impose and collect the tax upon the receipts from intrastate business without the ordinance providing particular formulae of apportionment. See also
Bowman v. Continental Oil Co.,
The ordinance is not invalid as an improper delegation of legislative authority to the tax collector who was charged with its enfоrcement and administration. On the contrary the ordinance is complete in itself. The regulations issued by the tax collector are merely in aid and explanation of the ordinance, and do not supply any deficiency in the ordinance, as was the case in
Murray v. Philadelphia,
*247
The result here is not affected by
J. D. Adams Manufacturing Co. v. Storen,
Decree reversed and bill dismissed at cost of appellee.
