delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme' Court, of the State of Minnesota, bringing in review- a judgment of that court sustaining a tax assessed against the XTnited States Express Company. 114 Minnesota, 346.
The Express Company is an unincorporated association, with its principal office in the State of New York, engaged in' the express business in the XTnited States. The business is carried on under contracts between the Company and railroads for the transportation by the railroad companies of goods forwarded by the Express Company, upon the payment by the Express. Company, as compensation for such service, of a certain percentage of the gross receipts of the Express Company derived from the business carried over the lines of the railroads. Under such contracts the Company is engaged in carrying on express business over many lines of railroads in the United States, amounting in the aggregate to some 30,000 . miles of road. It carries on express business in this manner .in the State of Minnesota upon the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway, Duluth’& Iron Range Railroad and, for a time, the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. The Company has offices ,in many States, the District of Columbia and Canada 'and in various European countries. ;It has about fifty offices in the State of Minnesota.
The. law in question (Revised Laws ofi Minnesota, 1905, Chapter 11), provides for the taxation of express companies. Section 1013 of the act requires every ex *339 press company doing business in the State, between January 1 and February 1, to file with the state auditor, in such form as he may prescribe, a statement, duly verified, showing the entire' receipts, including all sums earned or charged, whether deceived or not, for business done within the State, including its proportion of gross receipts for business done in the State by such company in eonnec-. tion with other companies. The statement must further show the amount actually paid by such express company to the railroads within the State for the transportation of its freight for the year, giving the amount paid to' each railroad company; and also show the entire receipts of the company for business done within the State, including its proportion of gross, receipts for business done within the State in connection with other companies, after deducting the amounts paid for transportation to railroads within the State. Section 1015 provides that the auditor shall annually, between March 1 and April 1, .ascertain the gross receipts of such company by deducting the sums thus annually paid by it for the transportation of freight within the State from its entire receipts for business done in the State, including its proportion for business done within the State in connection, with other companies.
-Section. 1019 provides that annually, on or before March 15, the auditor shall assess upon each company a tax of six per cent, upon its gross receipts for business done in the State for the preceding calendar year, as determined by the auditor, which shall be in lieu of all taxes- upon its property, and shall deliver to the state treasurer for collection a draft upon the company for such sum.
The action was brought"-by-the State of Minnesota to recover certain, items which it was claimed were omitted from the returns of the Express Company, and which were properly the subject-of taxation under the statute. Under "the stipulated facts these items'embraced in paragraph III of complaint, Schedule No. 1> consist.of:
*340 "Earnings of $54,209.1-9 constituting earnings, on express business for the years 1899 to 1908, inclusive, which express business was made up entirely of shipments delivered by the shipper to an express company in the State of Minnesota, consigned to an ultimate consignee at a second point in the state of Minnesota, which shipments were forwarded by express between the point of origin and point of destination over lines of railroad, which lines were partly within and partly without the state of Minnesota. That is to say; all of these shipments necessarily passed put of the state of Minnesota in transit. Said amount, namely, $54,209.19, is based upon the total earnings on said shipments and is not that part of said earnings apportionable to the transportation which was performed within the state of Minnesota. In arriving at said amount the total earnings received by the Express Company upon, said shipments have been taken regardless of what proportion of the through carry was- performed within the state of Minnesota. . About 91 per cent of the mileage under this item is within Minnesota.”
Alleged omitted earnings on which back taxes were claimed under paragraph III of complaint, Schedule No. 2, such omitted earnings amounting to $9,702.89, on which back taxes were claimed of $504.47, were made up as •fdllows: ,
"Earnings derived by the company, from the following express shipments: (a) Shipments received by an express company from a shipper at a point of origin outside of the state of Minnesota addressed to and destined to a consignee within the state of Minnesota; or (b) shipments delivered to an express company by a shipper in the state of Minnesota and addressed to and destined to a consignee, without the state of Minnesota; or (c) shipments delivered to an express company by a shipper without the state df Minnesota and addressed to and destined to a consignee without the state of Minnesota, passing through the *341 state of Minnesota in transit, as to all of which said shipments, either in class a, class b, or. class c, the defendant received said shipments at a point in the state of Minnesota and forwarded them over its lines to a second point within the- state of Minnesota, the transportation while in the hands of the defendant being performed wholly within the state of Minnesota. The transportation in connection with, such shipments outside of the state of Minnesota was performed by connecting, companies other than the. defendant. ' Each of said shipments which constituted said amount of. $9,702.89 in Schedule No. 2 of paragraph III of complaint was made upon a through rate and a through waybill and bill of-lading showing the origin and ultimate destination thereof, and consisted of a single transportation transaction commencing with the delivery by the shipper to an express company and continuing until and not ending before the delivery of the shipment to the consignee at the point of ultimate destination to which the shipment was addressed,”
Taxes are not. claimed or collected upon shipments of express matter in the classes named where the same express company performs the transportation service both within and without the State of Minnesota.
A question was also made as to'the constitutional validity of the tax upon money orders issued by the express company, but that objection has not been pressed in argument here.
The plaintiff in error contends that the assessment of the tax upon its earnings from shipments by a consignor in the State of Minnesota, to an ultimate consignee within the State, .which shipments were forwarded by express between the points of origin and destination over railroads partly within and partly without the State of Minnesota (paragraph III, Schedule No. 1), is an unconstitutional exaction, in that it is an attempt of the State to regjilate interstate commerce, and is without due "process of law.
*342
As to such shipments, the Supreme Court held that nine per cent. of. the taxes claimed on this class of earnings should be deducted from the amount of the recovery allowed in the court of original jurisdiction, since it was disclosed that only 91 per cent, of the mileage was within the State. For this part of the decision the Minnesota court relied upon
Lehigh Valley R. R. Co.
v. Pennsylvania,
As to the transportation described in paragraph III, Schedule-No. 2, from points within the State to points without the State, from points without/the State to points within the State, and from points without the State to ‘■'points without' the State, passing through the State, the transportation outside of the State being performed by connecting companies, the Supreme Court of Minnesota held that it was the intention of the legislature, .in the statute .under consideration, to include the earnings from these classes within the State in the gross receipts upon' which- the tax is based. This construction of the statute is binding upon us. • '
The transportation was made upon a through rate and through bill of lading, aiid, it is stipulated; consisted of a single transportation transaction, commencing with the delivery by the shipper to the Express Company and continuing until the delivery of the shipment to the consignee, at the ultimáte destination: This was clearly interstate commerce,, and the Federal question made in this .connection -is: Is this tax a burden upon interstate' commerce, and, therefore, an infraction of the exclusive power of Congress, under the Constitution, to regulate commerce among' the States? ' ' . .
If is thoroughly well settled in this court that state laws may not burden interstate commerce. As one form of burden , may exist in taxing the' conduct of interstate
*343
commerce, such taxation has been uniformly condemned. Examples of cases of that character may be found in
Fargo
v.
Michigan,
While we have no disposition to detract from the authority of these decisions, this court has had also to consider and determine the effect of statutes which undertake to measure a tax within the' legitimate power of the State by receipts which came in patt from business of nn interstate character. In that class of cases a distinction was drawn between laws burdening interstate commerce, and laws where the measure of a legitimate tax consists in part of the avails or income from the conduct of such commerce.
In
Maine
v.
Grand Trunk Ry. Co.,
In
Wisconsin & Michigan Railway Co.
v.
Powers,
*344
“In form the tax is a tax on ‘the property and business of such railroad corporation operated within the State/ computed upon certain percentages of gross income. The
prima facie
measure of the plaintiff’s gross, income is substantially that-which was approved in
Maine
v.
Grand Trunk Railway Co.,
A question, in principle, not unlike the one here presented, came'before this court in
Flint
v.
Stone Tracy Co.,
The right of the State to tax property, although it is used in interstate commerce, is thoroughly well settled.
Postal Telegraph Co.
v.
Adams,
“‘By whatever name the exaction may be called, if it amounts to no more than the ordinary tax upon property or a just equivalent therefor, ascertained by reference thereto, it is not open to attack as inconsistent with the Constitution.’
Postal Telegraph Cable Co.
v.
Adams,
In that case the statute of Texas was condemned, because it appeared to the court to be an attempt to reach the receipts from interstate commerce by a tax of one per cent., or what was equal to the same thing, on gross receipts arising from such commerce, when it appeared from the judgment of the state court and the argument on behalf of the State that another tax on the property had already been levied, covering its full value as a going concern. The tax under consideration was held to be merely an effort to. reach the gross receipts, not disguised by the name of an occupation tax or in any way helped by the words “equal to.”
Upon like reasoning the statute of Oklahoma was con *346 demned in the case of Oklahoma v. Wells, Fargo & Co., decided to-day, ante,' p. 298.
Appreciating the difficulty emphasized in ,thé Galveston Case of drawing the line between taxes that burden interstate commerce and those whereby the legislature is simply undertaking to impose a' property tax within its legitimate power, measured in part by the income from interstate commerce transactions, how does the present case stand? The Supreme Court of Minnesota construed the tax to be a property tax, measured by the gross earnings withip the State, which, under their construction of the tax, included the earnings here in question; That court held that the statute :was part of a system long in force in Minnesota, passed under the authority of. the state constitution, and was intended to afford a means of valuing the property of express companies within- the State. While the determination that the tax is a property tax measured by gross receipts is not binding upon this-court, wé are' not prepared to say' that this conclusion is not well founded, in view of the provisions'and purposes of .the law.
■' The statute itself provides that, the- assessments-under. it “shall be in lieu of all taxes upon its property.” ,In .other words, this, is the only mode prescribed in Minnesota for. exercising the recognized authority .of the State to'tax the property of express companies as going concerns within' its jurisdiction. If not taxed by this method, the property is not taxed at all." In this connection, the language of Mr: Justice Peckham in
McHenry
v.
Alford,
“When it is said, as -it is in this act, that the tax collected by this method shall be in lieu of all other taxes whatever, it would seem that- it'might be claimed with great plausibility that a tax levied under such circumstances and. by such methods was not in-reality a tax upon *347 the gross earnings, but was a tax upon the lands and, other property of the company, and that the method adopted of arriving at the sum which the company should pay as .taxes upon its property was. by taking a percentage of its gross earnings.”
The tax in the p'reseiit case is not like those held invalid in the
Galveston Case
and the.
Oklahoma Case,
being in addition to other state taxation reaching the property of all kinds of the express company. The tax to be collected in part from the earnings of. interstate commerce was part of a scheme of taxation, seeking to reach the value of the property of such companies in the State, measured by the receipts from business done within the State. • The statute was not aimed exclusively at the. avails of interstate commerce
(Philadelphia Steamship Co.
v.
Pennsylvania, supra),
but, as in the
Maine Case,
was an attempt to measure the amount of tax within the admitted power of the State by income derived, in part, from the conduct of’ interstate commerce. .The property of express companies, being much of it of an intangible character, is difficult - to reach and properly assess for taxation. This difficulty led this court in
Adams Express Co.
v.
Ohio,
As this court said in
Postal Tel. Co.
v.
Adams,
"'“Doubtless, no State could add to the taxation of property according to the rule of ordinary property taxation, the burden of a license or other tax on the privilege’ of using, constructing, or operating an instrumentality of interstate or international commerce or for the carrying on’of .such commerce; but the value of property results from the usé to which it is put and varies .with the profitableness of that use, and by whatever name the exaction *348 may be called, if it amounts to no more than the ordinary tax upon property or a just equivalent therefor, ascertained by reference thereto, it is not open to attack as inconsistent with the Constitution.”
We think the tax here in'question comes within this principle. There is no suggestion ip. the present record, as was shown in
Fargo
v.
Hart,
Upon-the whole, we think-the statute falls within that class where there has .been an.exercise in good faith .of a legitimate taxing power;- the measure of which taxation is in part the proceeds of interstate commerce, which could not, in itself, be taxed,. and does not fall within that class of statutes uniformly condemned in this, court, which show a naanifest attempt to burden the conduct of interstate commerce, such power, of course, being beyond the authority of the State.
We find no error in the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of Minnesota, and it is
Affirmed.
