These cases present for determination the question of the validity of privilege taxes imposed by the State of New Mexico upon private companies, measured by receipts from the Atomic Energy Commission, hereinafter referred to as the Commission, in payment for uranium concentrate.
The United States is one of the plaintiffs in all of these six cases. Phillips Petroleum is a co-plaintiff in one; The Anaconda Company in one; HomestakeNew Mexico Partners in one; Home-stake-Sapin Partners in one; Kermac Nuclear Fuels Corporation in one; and Kerr-McGee Industries in one. The Bureau of Revenue of New Mexico, the Commissioner of Revenue, and the Director, School Tax Division, of the Bureau
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are defendants in all of them. For convenience, reference will be made to the several co-plaintiffs joining the United States as the Companies. The purposes of the actions are to obtain an adjudication that the provisions of the Emergency School Tax Act of New Mexico, as amended, N.M.S.A.1953, §§ 72-16-1 to 72-16-47, hereinafter referred to as the act, be construed as not to apply to sales of uranium made to the Commission; that if the provisions of the act do apply to such sales, it be adjudicated as unconstitutional and void for the reason that it discriminates against the United States; to recover judgment for sums paid for sales of uranium previously made to the Commission; and to restrain further exactions under the act. The first action was dismissed. The judgment was reversed and the cause was remanded for further proceedings. United States et al. v. Bureau of Revenue et al., 10 Cir.,
The Companies were separately engaged in the business of processing uranium-bearing ore at their plants in New Mexico for the production of uranium concentrate for sale to the Commission. The Companies each entered into a contract with the Commission for the sale of uranium concentrate which it processed. Each contract required the Company to pay under protest the taxes exacted under the act; provided that the price of the uranium concentrate should reflect the burden of the taxes; and provided that the portion of the price attributable to the taxes should be refunded to the United States by the Company if it was successful in obtaining refunds, rebates, or credits of the taxes. Each contract required the Company to institute suit if necessary at the direction of the United States to obtain the refund of protested tax payments. Taxes were assessed under the act. In determining the amount of such taxes, the defendants included in the taxable gross receipts of the business of the Company the proceeds received from the sales of their products to the Commission. The Companies paid under protest taxes exacted under the act attributable to revenue derived from sales to the Commission. The taxes thus paid were in the aggregate amount of $1,063,571.56, most of which was paid in 1957, 1958, and 1959. Only $87,667.59 was paid after February 29, 1960. The actions were instituted on June 29, 1960.
The major ground urged by the United States for recovery is that during the period involved in these actions the act was unconstitutional in its application to purchases of uranium concentrate which the Commission made from the Companies for the reason that by its terms the act expressly exempted from its provisions sales of tangible personal property, other than metaliferous mineral ores, whether refined or unrefined, made to the State or any of its political subdivisions but failed to grant a like exemption to sales made to the United States, or its agencies. The act was originally enacted in 1935. Chapter 73, article 1, Laws of 1935. By section 2 of the act, sales to the State or its political subdivisions and those made to the United States or its agencies or departments were expressly exempted from
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the tax. By chapter 187, Laws of 1957, the exemption in favor of the State and its political subdivision was retained, but that in favor of the United States and its agencies and departments was dropped. And by chapter 195, Laws of 1961, the exemption in favor of the United States and its agencies and departments was again enacted into law in language identical in effect to that relating to the State and its subdivisions. It is the well settled rule that a state cannot constitutionally levy a tax directly against the Government of the United States or its property without the consent of Congress. It is equally well settled that a state in the exercise of its power of taxation may not constitutionally levy a tax which is discriminatory against the United States or those with whom it deals. United States v. City of Detroit,
The tax imposed under the act is a privilege tax, measured by the gross receipts of the one engaged in the business. It is imposed for the privilege of engaging in business in the state. Bradbury & Stamm Construction Co. v. Bureau of Revenue,
Upon reimbursing the Companies for the amounts previously paid as taxes under the act, the United States became subrogated to the rights of the Companies to refund for such sums. Ordinarily, the rights of a subrogee do not rise above their source in the hands of the subrogor. Beecher v. Leavenworth State Bank, 9 Cir.,
Moreover, for an additional reason plaintiffs are not entitled to recover for the taxes paid prior to February 29, 1960. Section 2 of the act, N.M.S.A.1953, § 72-16-28, authorizes a
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suit against the bureau of revenue for the recovery of any tax paid under protest. But the section also expressly provides that no such action shall be instituted more than four months after .such payment under protest. And it further provides that failure to bring suit within such period shall constitute a waiver of the protest and of all claims •against the state on account of any illegality in the tax so paid. All of the taxes involved here except $87,667.59, were paid more than four months prior to the institution of these actions. The statute creates the substantive right to sue the state for a refund and it fixes the time within which suit for the enforcement of the right must be instituted. It is a statute of creation; and linked immediately with the creation of the right is an express provision fixing the time within which an action for the enforcement of the right shall be instituted. The enactment of a statute of that kind does not constitute an impermissible exercise of legislative power of a state. And it is the general rule that when a statute creates a substantive right and in connection therewith specifies the time within which an action for the enforcement thereof must be instituted, upon failure to institute the action within the specified period, the right and corresponding liability end. Not only the remedy is no longer available, but the right of action itself is extinguished. Matheny v. Porter, 10 Cir.,
The United States seeks to avoid the impact of the statute in respect to the recovery of taxes paid more than four months prior to the institution of the suits on the ground that illegally exacted taxes may be, recovered under federal common law. It is the general rule that federal law fashions the remedies available to the United States to recover funds disbursed by it in the exercise of its functions or powers. And that general rule has application in actions to recover taxes illegally exacted and paid. Board of County Commissioners v. United States,
Judgment will be entered in each case for the defendants.
