195 A.D. 635 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The taxpayer, George A. Stafford, is a citizen of Connecticut, living in Stamford in that State, where he votes. He has no home, permanent or temporary, in the State of New York. He is a cotton goods merchant; his office and place of business is in the city of- New York. He has no business office in Connecticut. Traveling salesmen, living in Constantinople,
There is another class of business. These foreign agents sometimes take orders, which they deliver to commission merchants in New York, other than Stafford. These orders, having been transferred to him by a commission merchant, he fills as in the former class of business. When the goods are delivered to him in New York, he in turn delivers them,, with the accompanying papers, to the commission merchant, receives his pay for the goods and has nothing further to do. with the transaction. Of this class of business Mr. Stafford sometimes has direct reports from his salesmen, sometimes not.
The business belongs to Mr. Stafford personally, but he is doing business under the name of “ G. A. Stafford & Company.” In the foreign cities Mr. Stafford says: “In some instances” the business is not “ conducted in the name of G. A. Stafford & Company. * * * I think probably our name is on the door in most of them.” But these foreign offices and agents do not sell exclusively for Mr. Stafford, some of the orders, as above stated, being sent to commission merchants. Sometimes the rent of foreign offices is paid directly by Mr. Stafford and sometimes it is a part of the compensation of the salesmen,
The taxpayer contends first that the business is not carried on within the State of New York, so as to subject the income derived therefrom to taxation by the State of New York; and urges that the first class of business is entirely an export business. The tax is imposed upon the income of a non-resident “ from all property owned and from every business, trade, profession or occupation carried on in this State. ’ ’ (Tax Law, § 351, as added by Laws of 1919, chap. 627.) The taxpayer has no other place . of business. He personally takes no part in any transaction, except in New York. The orders for. goods to be shipped come to him at his New York office and are accepted there. All of the orders which he sends for goods are sent from his New York office. The goods are paid for in or from New York and he is paid for goods sold in New York. He is not a commission merchant, who earns his income by a charge for business transacted for .others, but he purchases goods outright and they become his in New York and he sells them outright from New York. The goods are not goods passing through the State as a part of a movement in interstate or foreign commerce. His income is made by the difference between the price paid for the goods and the price at which they are sold. He employs no capital abroad and has no investments abroad. The business is solely his. All of his activities, his banking and capital are in New York. If he earns his income, he earns it in New York and nowhere else. He has the protection of the laws and police power in New York in his person, his property and his business; and he derives benefit therefrom; else, why does he conduct his business in New York? If he is not doing his business in New York, where is he doing it? Certainly not where he purchases his goods, for those who sell to him are protected by the laws of the State in which they five, and it is their protection, not has. His income is no part of the profits of manufacture. He has nothing to do with manufacturing the goods. He pays the full price for the goods after manufacture. The income from manufacturing is taxable (but not against
We conclude then that the taxpayer’s business was carried on within the State of New York.
It was 'held in Travis v. Yale & Towne Mfg. Co. (252 U. S. 60) that the tax does not violate the due process of law provision of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.
With reference to the direct export business, so called, the taxpayer contends that it is a tax upon exports, and, therefore, in violation of the Federal Constitution, article 1, section 10, subdivision 2. It is hardly conceivable in what respect this tax could be called a tax upon exports. The tax is upon the net income and profits of the taxpayer’s business and not upon the business itself, and certainly not upon the goods. If the taxpayer were a real estate dealer, the tax upon his income would not be a tax upon real estate. The source of his income is not the goods that he buys and sells, but the skill and ability that he exercises in conducting his business, in buying at a given price and selling the same goods at a higher price. (Peck & Co. v. Lowe, 247 U. S. 165; United States Glue Co. v. Oak Creek, Id. 321; Shaffer v. Carter, supra, 57.)
The State has jurisdiction over the source of this taxpayer’s income. (Shaffer v. Carter, supra, 57.)
The next criticism is that, in this particular case, the tax is retroactive. The statute imposing the tax first was section 351 of the Tax Law (as added by Laws of 1919, chap. 627). In the act (§ 362, as added by Laws of 1919, chap. 627) exemptions were given to resident taxpayers which were not given to non-resident taxpayers. In 1920 (Laws of 1920, chap. 191) the Legislature struck out. the word “ resident ” from the provision as to exemptions so that the same exemptions were allowed to non-residents as to residents. (See, also, Laws of 1920, chap. 58, repealing § 362, subd. 3.) This
In Stockdale v. Insurance Companies (20 Wall. 323) the court was considering an income tax under the act of July 14, 1870. Section 17 of that act (16 U. S. Stat. at Large, 261) provided that certain sections of the Internal Revenue Act of 1864 (13 id. 283, § 120 et seq.), relating to taxes upon dividends of banks, insurance companies, etc., as amended by subsequent statutes, “ shall be construed to impose the taxes therein mentioned to the first day of August, eighteen hundred and seventy, but after that date no further taxes shall be levied or assessed under said sections; and all acts and parts of acts relating to the taxes herein repealed, and * * * all the provisions of said acts, shall continue in full force for levying and collecting all taxes properly assessed or hable to be assessed or accruing under the provisions of former acts,” etc. The court said (on p. 331): " The right of Congress to have imposed this tax by a new. statute, although the measure of it was governed by the income of the past year, cannot be doubted; much less can it be doubted that it could impose such a tax on the income of the current year, though part of that year had elapsed when the statute was passed. The joint resolution of July 4th, 1864,
In Brushaber v. Union Pacific R. R. (240 U. S. 1) the nature and quality.of income taxes were fully discussed, and the case of Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. (157 U. S.
The determination of the Comptroller should be affirmed.
Determination unanimously confirmed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.
See 13 U. S. Stat. at Large, 417, Res. No. 77.— [Rep.