WEST INDIA OIL CO. (PUERTO RICO) v. DOMENECH, TREASURER OF PUERTO RICO
No. 26
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued October 23, 24, 1940. Decided November 12, 1940.
311 U.S. 20
The question is whether a Puerto Rico sales tax imposed by §§ 16 (a), 62 of the Internal Revenue Act of Puerto Rico, (as amended by Act No. 17 of June 3, 1927, Laws of 1927, Special Session, pp. 458-486), is invalid because as applied it infringes Congressional regulations of foreign and domestic commerce effected by the tariff laws and customs regulations of the United States. The tax is challenged so far as it is laid on the delivery, in consummation of sales, of fuel oil which has previously been imported in bond and then withdrawn, duty free, for delivery to vessels in Puerto Rican ports for use as fuel upon their voyages to ports of the United States or foreign countries. The Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has affirmed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico sustaining the tax, 54 P. R. Dec. 732 (Spanish edition). 108 F. 2d 144. We granted certiorari, 309 U. S. 652, because the question presented is of importance in the administration of the customs, laws of the United States and of the revenue laws of Puerto Rico, and because of an asserted conflict with our decision in McGoldrick v. Gulf Oil Corp., 309 U. S. 414.
Petitioner brings fuel oil from a foreign country, where it is produced and refined, to Puerto Rico, where it is stored in bonded warehouses in the joint custody of peti
Section 309 authorizes withdrawal from bonded warehouse, duty free under treasury regulations, of articles of foreign manufacture or production for use as ships’ supplies, and §§ 601 (b), 630 of the Revenue Act of 1932 extend the benefit of those provisions to fuel oil imported in bond and withdrawn and “sold for use as fuel . . . on vessels . . . engaged in foreign trade or trade . . . between the United States and any of its possessions.” See McGoldrick v. Gulf Oil Corp., supra, 423 et seq.
It is true, as petitioner urges, that in McGoldrick v. Gulf Oil Corp., supra, we held that the provisions of the
Before the amendment, § 3 had prohibited duties “on exports from Puerto Rico,” but had provided that “taxes and assessments on property, internal revenue” etc., “may be imposed for the purposes of the insular and municipal governments, respectively, as may be provided and defined by the Legislature of Puerto Rico . . . .” Congress, by the amendment, added to § 3 a proviso “that the internal-revenue taxes levied by the Legislature of Puerto Rico in pursuance of the authority granted by this Act on articles, goods, wares or merchandise may be levied and collected as such legislature may direct, on the articles subject to said tax, as soon as the same are manufactured, sold, used, or brought into the island: Provided, That no discrimination be made between the articles imported
The plain purport of the words of this proviso is that any tax authorized by the Organic Act with respect to articles of domestic production may likewise be levied with respect to imported articles “as soon as . . . [they] . . . are manufactured, sold, used, or brought into the island” provided only that there be no tax discrimination between articles brought from the United States and foreign countries and domestic articles. The amendment seems to have been occasioned by doubts which had arisen whether merchandise brought to the Island from the United States was subject to local taxation while in the original package and also whether the merchandise has, while in the control of the customs authorities, the same status as respects local taxation as goods similarly controlled which have been imported from foreign countries and whether the power of the insular legislature to tax imports from foreign countries was any greater than that of the states which are forbidden, by Clause 2, of § 10 of Art. I of the Constitution, to tax imports and exports without the consent of Congress. S. Rept. No. 1011, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2. Cf. Sonneborn Bros. v. Cureton, 262 U. S. 506, with Baldwin v. Seelig, 294 U. S. 511, 526. These questions were involved in Puerto Rico Tax Appeals, 16 F. 2d 545, decided January 7, 1927, shortly before the amendment of § 3 of the Organic Act. The judgments in that case were reversed and the suits ordered dismissed by this Court for want of jurisdiction, October 24, 1927 (275 U. S. 56), after the amendment to the Organic Act of March 4, 1927, which deprived the federal courts of jurisdiction in the pending and other like suits to restrain the assessment and collection of Puerto Rico taxes.
The procedure for segregating imported merchandise in bond, without payment of customs duties pending its
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE REED, dissenting.
This judgment should be reversed on the authority of McGoldrick v. Gulf Oil Corp., 309 U. S. 414. That case has just established the superiority of a federal statute for the protection of commerce over a state‘s right to levy a sales tax. In it we pointed out that it was inconsistent with the plenary power of Congress over commerce to permit local exactions to cut into the competitive advantages provided through the remission of customs duties to suppliers and exporters by the ship stores and fuel oil provisions of
Fuel oil imports into Puerto Rico are governed by the same tariff provisions, regulations for bonded warehouses and deliveries in bond to purchasers for use in overseas voyages as are those into the continental United States. The language of the Butler Act is held by the Court to require different treatment in New York or Puerto Rico of the same situation, despite the tax inequality produced between the respective taxing units. One would expect that Puerto Rico would have no more authority than a state to levy a sales tax on bonded fuel oil; but this Court‘s ruling permits it to tax where New York failed.
The authority is said to lie in the grant by Congress to Puerto Rico of the right to tax “as soon as the same [articles subject to tax] are manufactured, sold, used, or brought into the Island.” As the fuel oil is brought into the Island, this Court‘s opinion concludes, it is taxable. The report upon the Butler Act points out the reason for its enactment.1 It was to enable Puerto Rico to tax
The decree below should be reversed.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS joins in this opinion.
Notes
“This condition of affairs has practically nullified the power of the insular government to levy internal-revenue taxes, and therefore the efficacy of this source of revenue has been seriously impaired.
“For the purpose of righting this situation, a new provision is added to section 3, which states as follows:
“And it is further provided, That the internal-revenue taxes levied by the Legislature of Porto Rico in pursuance of the authority granted by this act on articles, goods, wares, or merchandise may be levied and collected as such legislature may direct, on the articles subject to said tax, as soon as the same are manufactured, sold, used, or brought into the island: Provided, That no discrimination in rates be made between the articles imported from the United States or foreign countries and similar articles produced or manufactured in Porto Rico. The officials of the Customs and Postal Services of the United States are hereby directed to assist the appropriate officials of the Porto Rican government in the collection of these taxes.
“It is expected that the government of Porto Rico will so make use of this power as not to unnecessarily place any barriers in the way of the free-trade conditions now existing between [Porto Rico] and the mainland, which is the principal factor in the progress and prosperity of Porto Rico.” (Senate Rep. No. 1011, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2.)
