87 F. 408 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee | 1898
The application for a temporary restraining order until the motion for a preliminary injunction can be heard must be-
Section 1 of the assessment act declares that all property, real, personal, and mixed, shall be assessed for taxation. Section 2 declares exemptions, and section 3 provides that the assessment for all purposes, of personal property, privileges, and polls, shall be assessed annually, and real estate every four years. Section 7 provides that personal property shall be assessed under enumerated heads, including “(2) stocks of merchandise, wares, goods, and chattels, kept on hand, or in store, for sale, trade or traffic; but the value of the same shall not be included in the tax values,” etc. The act then proceeds to direct how assessments shall be made, seriatim, under these various heads, numbering 11. It reaches “merchants” at section 18, thus:
“Tliat merchants shall pay an ad valorem tax upon the capital invested in their business, equal to that levied upon taxable-property; and the term ‘merchant’ as used in this act includes all persons, copartnerships or corporations engaged in trading or dealing in any kind of goods, wares, merchandise, either on land or in steamboats, wharf-boats or other craft, stationed or plying in the waters of the state, and confectioners, and whether such goods, wares, and merchandise be kept on hand for sale or the same be purchased and delivered for profit, as ordered; but nothing in this act contained shall in any way affect the collection .of privilege taxes upon the avocations declared by this act to be privileges.”
Then follow sections 19 et seq., as quoted in the bill, and they need not be quoted here. Section 19 and those following are designed to regulate the assessment and collection of license and privilege taxes, but they include also a regulation for the assessment and collection of the “merchant’s capital tax” provided for in section 18, as above quoted; plainly because the merchant is paying both a capital tax and a privilege tax, each being ascertained by the same method of procedure. This bill gratuitously assumes that it is all a privilege or license tax. The scheme seems to be that the merchant’s capital tax assessed shall be levied upon his-own return by a true statement under oath “of the amount of capital invested in such business, during said twelve months” (section ■ 20); and “levied the amount of capital invested in his business to be assessed for taxation” (section 22, subsec. 1).
It is to be noted that.this is not at all a tax upon the goods or their value, but upon the amount of the capital, as shown by the merchant under .oath. It is entirely true that subsection 1 of section 22, in order to checkmate any underassessment by the merchants under their statement of the amount of capital invested in the business,
That this is a proper construction of the act, and that (his method of a special assessment upon merchants by segregating their mer
It would not be improper, however, to say a word as to the argument made upon the adjudications of the supreme court of the United Hiates which are supposed to avoid this tax if it could be construed lo be a tax upon imported goods from foreign countries and other states, directly or indirectly, as a license or privilege lax. The argument made in the brief of counsel assumes that the case of Woodruff v. Parham, 8 Wall. 123, has been overruled by the case of Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100, 10 Sup. Ct. 681. This latter case was not one involving the question of taxation at all, and, even in its relation to the exercise of the police power of a state over articles of interstate commerce, it has been said in the subsequent case of Blumlev v. Massachusetts, 155 U. S. 461, 474, 15 Sup. Ct. 154, that that case must 1m; restrained in its application to the case actually presented for determination; and it is very doubtful if it may be used, as is sought to be done in this case, to maintain the broad position that all articles of imported goods, while remaining in the original packages, are exempt from taxation, direct or indirect, for that is what this bill means in its contentions. It is still more doubtful if that principle can be held to have been established by that case in the light of the subsequent eases of Emert v. Missouri, 156 U. S. 296, 15 Sup. Ct. 867, Coal Co. v. Bates, 156 U. S. 577, 15 Sup. Ct. 415, and Coal Co. v. Louisiana, 156 U. S. 590, 15 Sup. Cl. 459, in which the cases of Leisy v. Hardin, supra, Woodruff v. Parham, supra, Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 622, 5 Sup. Ct. 1091, Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, and many of the other cases relied upon by plaintiff’s counsel in this case, are cited by the court; and there is no intimation that the case of Woodruff v. Parham, supra, is regarded by that court as having been overruled. In Emert v. Missouri, supra, it was distinctly held that a statute of a state by which peddlers were required, under a penalty, to take out and pay for licenses, making no discrimination between residents or products of the taxing state and those of other states, is not repugnant to the constitution of the United States. And in Coal Co. v. Bates, supra, it was held that a tax upon coal in the original barges, in which it was shipped from one state to another, was subject to local taxation in the state where it was found; and in neither of these' last-cited cases was there any dissent among ¡he judges who differed so widely in Leisy v. Hardin, supra, and Plumley v. Massachusetts, supra, showing that it was not considered by the court that Leisy v. Hardin applied to the cases of taxation of imported goods held in their original packages unsold. In the cases involving the power of taxation, the determination of the question of legality, or illegality as affected by the interstate commerce clause of the fed-" eral constitution seems to depend largely upon the-question of unjust discrimination between the products of the taxing state and the products of other states introduced by importation; and it is conceded by the brief of counsel In this case that no such discrimination has been made by the acts of the Tennessee legislature we have now under consideration. It is not necessary, in my judgment, to give any technical attention to any of these decisions, for the reason that it ap
Addendum.
The bill as amended sets out section 3 of the act of 1897 (chapter 2, known as the “Kevenue Act,”) levying a privilege tax on merchants of 15 cents “on each one hundred dollars worth of taxable property,” etc. And it claims that, at least as to this “privilege tax,” the act is obnoxious to the federal constitution, as a tax or restriction on interstate commerce. But I do not think so. There is in the act no possible discrimination as against that kind of commerce. The computation for the privilege tax is not made on the values of interstate articles of commerce more than on the values of domestic articles of commerce, nor on the capital invested in one more than on the capital invested in the other. In my judgment, it is not levied on either, as goods or as commerce, but, like a poll tax, is levied on the persons engaged in the business of merchandising for the privilege of exercising the vocation of a merchant, not that of an importer or dealer in interstate or foreign merchandise, but upon all domestic dealers as well. Section 18 of the assessment act declares in terms that it is a tax on the vocation. The amount assessed for this privilege varies according to the amount of the dealings as shown by the “worth of taxable property”; whether of all the merchant’s taxable property, real, personal, and mixed, or only that known in the act as “merchant’s capital,” we need not say. Certainly, it is not levied alone on interstate commerce articles or dealers, and, as before suggested, is not more a tax on interstate commerce than a poll tax on the merchant might be.
In the case of Robbins v. Taxing Dist., 120 U. S. 496, 7 Sup. Ct. 592, it is remarked that the mere calling the business of a drummer a “privilege” cannot make it so. So, the mere calling a tax a “privilege tax,” or declaring an occupation a privilege, cannot make it an unlawful tax on interstate commerce, if in fact that kizzd of commerce be not especially burdened or injured or restricted by it in favor of domestic commerce, where it has no unfavorably discriminating quality against the citizens or products of other states. As said in Freight Tax Case, 15 Wall. 232, the constitutionality or un- . constitutionality of a state tax is to be determined, not by the form or agency through which it is to be collected, but by the subject upon which the burden is laid, — the ultimate burden. Here it is not laid on the importations of the plaintiff, but upon all its property, of every kind, possibly if we look only to the mere form of words in making the levy, and certainly so if we look only to ultimate results; for it is an amount to be paid out of its general funds, and surely not out of the proceeds of importations more than out of any other class of merchandise or other property whatever. If we look only at the
In Emert v. Missouri, supra, this construction of the Robbins Caso' is denied, and upon (he force of language quoted from that case itself, as follows:
“When goods are sent from one state to another for sale, or in consequence of a sale, they become part of the general property, and amenable to its laws: provided that no discrimination be made against them as goods ffom another state, and that they be not taxed by reason of being brought from another state, but only taxed in The usual way as other goods are.”
Here they are taxed in the remotest way, incidentally, if at all, and not in the least unlike all other goods are taxed belonging to the merchant, nor indeed not unlike all his other taxable property, of whatever kind, for that seems to he the burden of the statute. And it is said in Coal Co. v. Bates, supra, that it cannot be seriously contended, at least in ihe absence of congressional legislation to the contrary, that goods which are the products of other states are to be free from taxation in the state to which they might be carried for use or sale; provided, always, that the assessment does not discriminate between the products of different slates. The application for a temporary restraining order and for a preliminary injunction are denied, both upon the original and the amended bill. Ordered accordingly.