245 N.W. 612 | Minn. | 1932
The defendant is a trader registered under the federal packers and stockyards act, dealing in the buying and selling of cattle at the South St. Paul yards. The cattle in question came to the yards and were there present and owned by defendant on the first day of May, 1929. Part of them were sold on that day and part on the following day and were immediately shipped to their purchasers at points outside the state. The defendant contends that these cattle when in the yards on May 1 were in the flow or current of interstate commerce, and that consequently a personal property tax levied on them as of the first day of May is a burden upon interstate commerce and that the state taxing power must yield to the paramount interests of that commerce. He also contends that the membership in the exchange is not taxable property.
The first branch of the case dealing with the taxability of the cattle presents the more difficult problem and one not free from doubt. The crucial question to be settled in determining whether personal property moving in interstate commerce is subject to local taxation is that of its continuity of transit. Carson Petroleum Co. v. Vial,
In Bacon v. Illinois,
In the American S. W. Co. case,
The Crain case,
"Commerce among the States is not a technical legal conception, but a practical one, drawn from the course of business. When cattle are sent for sale from a place in one State, with the expectation that they will end their transit, after purchase, in another, *424 and when in effect they do so, with only the interruption necessary to find a purchaser at the stockyards, and when this is a typical, constantly recurring course, the current thus existing is a current of commerce among the States, and the purchase of the cattle is a part and incident of such commerce."
This case was followed by Stafford v. Wallace,
"The stockyards are not a place of rest or final destination. Thousands of head of livestock arrive daily by carload and train-load lots, and must be promptly sold and disposed of and moved out to give place to the constantly flowing traffic that presses behind. The stockyards are but a throat through which the current flows, and the transactions which occur therein are only incident to this current from the West to the East, and from one State to another. Such transactions cannot be separated from the movement to which they contribute and necessarily take on its character. The commission men are essential in making the sales without which the flow of the current would be obstructed, and this, whether they are made to packers or dealers. The dealers are essential to the sales to the stock farmers and feeders. The sales are not in this aspect merely local transactions. They create a local change of title, it is true, but they do not stop the flow; they merely change the private interests in the subject of the current, not interfering with, but, on the contrary, being indispensable to its continuity. The origin of the livestock is in the West, its ultimate destination known to, and intended by, all engaged in the business is in the Middle West and East either as meat products or stock for feeding and fattening. This is the definite and well-understood course of business. The stockyards and the sales are necessary factors in the middle of this current of commerce."
See also the case of Eureka Pipe Line Co. v. Hallanan,
It is quite true that the interstate commerce clause of the constitution does not give immunity to movable property from local taxation which is not discriminative unless it is in actual continuous transit in interstate commerce. Champlain Realty Co. v. Town of Brattleboro,
"In short, the great body of the gas starts for points outside the State and goes to them. That the necessities of business require a much smaller amount destined to points within the State to be carried undistinguished in the same pipes does not affect the character of the major transportation. Neither is the case as to the gas sold to the three companies changed by the fact that the plaintiff, as owner of the gas, and the purchasers after they receive it might change their minds before the gas leaves the State and that the precise proportions between local and outside deliveries may not have been fixed, although they seem to have been. The typical and actual course of events marks the carriage of the greater part as commerce among the States and theoretical possibilities may be left *426 out of account. There is no break, no period of deliberation, but a steady flow ending as contemplated from the beginning beyond the state line." Citing cases.
See also Eureka Pipe Line Co. v. Hallallan,
"As has been repeated many times, interstate commerce is a practical conception, and, as remarked by the court of first instance, a tax to be valid 'must not in its practical effect and operation burden interstate commerce.' It appears to us as a practical matter that the transmission of this stream of oil was interstate commerce from the beginning of the flow, and that it was none the less so that if different orders had been received by the pipe line it would have changed the destination upon which the oil was started and at which it in fact arrived."
In the light of the views expressed by the Supreme Court in Stafford v. Wallace,
2. The second question is whether or not the membership in the Traders Livestock Exchange is personal property and taxable. Though the membership in the traders exchange is not so valuable and does not confer so many privileges as did the membership of the Duluth Board of Trade involved in the case of State v. McPhail,
Judgment modified. *427