Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Chapter 116 of the Laws of Mississippi of 1922 provided that “ any person engaged in the business of distributing gasoline, or retail dealer in gasoline, shall pay for the privilege of engaging in such business, an excise tax of 14 [one cent] per gallon upon the sale of gasoline . . . ,” except that sold in interstate commerce or purchased outside the State and brought in by the consumer for his own use. Chapter 115, Laws of 1924, increased the tax to three cents and c. 119, Laws of 1926, made it four, cents per gallon. Since some time in 1925 petitioner has been engaged in that business. The State sued to recover taxes claimed on account of sales made by petitioner to •the United States for the use of its Coast Guard Fleet in service in the Gulf of Mexico and its Veterans’ Hospital at Gulfport. Some of the sales were made while the Act of 1924 was in force and some after the rate had been increased by the Act of 1926. Accordingly the demand was for three cents a gallon on some and four cents on the rest. Petitioner defended on the ground that these sthtutes, if construed to impose taxes on such sales, are
The United States is empowered by the Constitution to maintain, and operate the fleet and hospital. Art. I, § 8. That authorization and laws enacted pursuant thereto are supreme (Art. VI); and, in case of conflict, they control state enactments. The Státes may not burden or interfere with the exertion of national power or make it a source of revenue or take the funds raised or tax the means used for the performance of federal functions. McCulloch v. Maryland,
The exactions demanded from petitioner infringe its right to have the constitutional independence of the United States in respept of such purchases remain untrammeled. Osborn v. United States Bank,
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
The State of Mississippi in 1924 and 1926 imposed upon distributors and retail dealers of gasoline, for the
It seems to me that the State Court was right. I should say plainly right, but for the effect of certain dicta of Chief Justice Marshall which culminated in or rather were founded upon his often quoted proposition that the power to tax is the power to destroy. Ip those days it was not recognized as it is today that most of the distinctions of the law are distinctions of degree. If the States had any power it was assumed that they had all power, and that the necessary alternative was to deny it altogethér. But this Court which so often has defeated the attempt to tax in certain ways can defeat an attempt to discriminate or otherwise go too far without wholly abolishing the power to. tax. The power to tax is not the power to destroy while this Court sits. The power to fix rates is the power to destroy if unlimited, but this Court while, it endeavors to prevent confiscation does not prevent the fixing of fates. A tax is not an unconstitutional regulation in every case where an absolute prohibition of sales would be . one. Hatch v. Reardon,
An imperfect analogy with taxation that affects interstate commerce is relied upon. Even the law on that subject has been liberalized since the decision of most of the cases cited. Sonneborn Brothers v. Cureton,
Dissenting Opinion
I am unable to think that every man who sells a gallon of gasoline to be used by the United States thereby becomes a federal instrumentality, with the privilege of claiming freedom from’ taxation by the State.
The doctrine of immunity is well established, but it ought not to be extended beyond the reasons which underlie it. Its limitations were well pointed out fifty years ago in Railroad Company v. Peniston,
