A city ordinance, made under power conferred by a state statute,
imposing a license of five hundred dollars upon a telegraph company
which had accepted the provisions of the Act of July 24, 1866, c.
230, 14 Stat. 221, upon business done exclusively within the city
and not including any business done to or from points without the
state, and not including any business done for the government of
the United States, its officers or agents, is an exercise of the
police power, and is not an interference with interstate
commerce.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the first day of July, 1892, the Postal Telegraph Cable
Company, a corporation of the State of New York, filed in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South
Carolina a bill of complaint against the City of Charleston, a
municipal corporation of the State of South Carolina, and William
L. Campbell and Glenn E. Davis, citizens of the State of South
Carolina, and, respectively, sheriff and treasurer of said city,
seeking to restrain the collection of a license imposed upon the
said Postal Telegraph Cable Company by an ordinance of the city
council of Charleston. A preliminary injunction was granted
enjoining the defendants from proceeding to collect said license
until the hearing of the cause on its merits. Answers were filed by
the city and by the city treasurer and city sheriff, and issue was
joined by replications.
Page 153 U. S. 693
The complainant put in evidence tending to sustain the
allegations of the bill.
The facts, as disclosed by the bill, answers, and evidence, were
substantially these:
The Postal Telegraph Cable Company, a corporation of the State
of New York, has an office in the City of Charleston, is engaged in
sending and receiving messages by wire to and from points inside
and outside of the State of South Carolina, and has its lines over
the post roads, highways, and railroads in the City of Charleston,
and in several of the states. The company has accepted the
provisions of the act of Congress approved July 24, 1866, whereby
it has put its lines at the service of the United States for
postal, military, and other purposes, and given precedence to its
business. The company has offices in other cities and towns in
South Carolina, several of which have adopted ordinances exacting
licenses from the company. During the year commencing January 1,
1892, and for several years prior to that time, the company has
been engaged in the business of receiving and sending telegrams for
private persons and for the public between the City of Charleston
and other places within the State of South Carolina, and also in
sending telegraphic communications between the governmental
departments of the United States, and was and is engaged in the
telegraph business for the purpose of interstate commerce. By an
Act approved December 17, 1881, the General Assembly of the State
of South Carolina authorized the city council of Charleston to
impose a license tax, not exceeding $500, on all persons engaged in
any business, trade, or profession in the City of Charleston. By an
ordinance entitled "An ordinance to regulate licenses for the year
1892," the city council enacted that every person, firm, company,
or corporation engaged in any trade, business, or profession within
the City of Charleston should obtain, on or before the 20th day of
January, 1892, a license therefor. The provision relating to
telegraph companies is as follows:
"Telegraph companies or agencies, each, for business done
exclusively within the City of Charleston, and not including
Page 153 U. S. 694
any business done to or from points without the state, and not
including any business done for the government of the United
States, its officers or agents, $500."
A penalty, for failure to take out the license, of 50 percent of
the amount of the tax was provided for, and a continuing penalty of
fifty percent for each day's business done without taking out such
license. The Postal Telegraph Cable Company, after notification,
declined and failed to take out and pay for such license, and, on
May 28, 1892, in pursuance of the terms of the ordinance, the
license tax of $500, with penalty of fifty percent, was assessed
against the company, and put in the hands of the city treasurer for
collection, who issued execution therefor, addressed to the city
sheriff, requiring him to proceed to collect said license tax and
penalty by distress and sale.
At the final hearing, on June 21, 1893, the temporary injunction
was dissolved and the bill dismissed with costs. From this decree
the present appeal was taken.
We do not deem it necessary to discuss the contention that the
ordinance imposing the license tax in question is invalid by reason
of its disregard of provisions of the Constitution of South
Carolina. The supreme court of that state has in several cases
judicially settled that the power to raise revenue by a license tax
on business, given by statute to the city council of Charleston,
does not violate any provision of the state constitution.
State
v. Hayne, 4 S.C. 413;
In re Jager, 29 S.C. 443.
It is claimed that the license required by the ordinance is a
tax upon the telegraph company for the privilege of exercising its
franchise within the City of Charleston, and not an exercise of the
police power granted to the city by the state; that the Postal
Telegraph Cable Company having constructed its lines along post
roads in the City of Charleston and elsewhere, no state or
municipal authority can exact a license for the privilege of
conducting its business, thus restraining the powers possessed by
it under its franchises and under the acts of Congress, and that
the ordinance in question is an interference with interstate
commerce, and therefore void.
Page 153 U. S. 695
The questions thus suggested have been so frequently and so
recently considered and decided by this Court in well known cases
that our duty will be sufficiently performed by briefly citing and
applying those cases.
That this license is not a condition upon which the right to do
business depends, but is a tax is shown by the case of
Home
Insurance Company v. City Council, 93 U.
S. 122. There, the City Council of the City of Augusta
passed an ordinance which imposed a license tax of $250 "on each
and every fire, marine, or accidental insurance company located,
having an office, or doing business within the City of Augusta."
The Home Insurance Company, a corporation of the State of New York,
and having an agency in the City of Augusta, refused to recognize
the obligation of the ordinance, and filed a bill in the Superior
Court of Richmond county in the State of Georgia to enjoin the city
council from collecting the license tax. That court, having refused
the injunction prayed for and having dismissed the bill, the case
went to the Supreme Court of Georgia, which affirmed the decree of
the superior court, and the case was then brought to this
Court.
It was argued on behalf of the insurance company that as it had
complied with the provisions of the laws of Georgia which
authorized foreign insurance companies to do business in that
state, it was not competent for a municipal corporation of the
state to impose an additional condition on the right of the company
to do business. But it was held, citing
License
Tax Cases, 5 Wall. 462, that the license in
question must be regarded as nothing more than a tax; that the
penalty provided was a mode of enforcing its payment, and that the
license, when issued, was only a receipt for the tax, and not a
grant of an authority to conduct business on condition of paying
the license.
In
Wiggins Ferry Co. v. East St. Louis, 107
U. S. 376, where a ferry company, authorized by an act
of assembly of the State of Illinois to carry on its business, and
paying state taxes prescribed in its charter, was called upon by a
city ordinance to pay a license tax, it was held by this Court that
the exaction of a license fee is an ordinary exercise of police
Page 153 U. S. 696
power by municipal corporations; that the power of the state to
authorize any city within its limits to enforce a license tax on
trades or callings generally, especially those which are
quasi-public, cannot be disputed, and that whether a
license fee is exacted under the power to regulate or the power to
tax is a matter of indifference if the power to do either
exists.
It was held in
West. Union Tel. Co. v. Massachusetts,
125 U. S. 540,
that a tax imposed by the laws of Massachusetts upon the Western
Union Telegraph Company, a corporation of the State of New York, on
account of the property owned and used by it within Massachusetts
was valid.
But it is contended that while a state can prohibit a foreign
corporation from doing business within its territory, or can impose
conditions upon the exercise of its franchises, such power does not
exist when such corporations are engaged in interstate commerce or
are agents of the United States government, and reliance is placed
on the case of
Leloup v. Port of Mobile, 127 U.
S. 640. There it was held that where a telegraph company
is doing the business of transmitting messages between different
states, and has accepted and is acting under the telegraph law
passed by Congress July 24, 1866, no state within which it sees fit
to establish an office can impose upon it a license tax, or require
it to take out a license for the transaction of such business; that
telegraphic communications are commerce, as well as in the nature
of postal service, and, if carried on between different states,
they are interstate commerce, and within the power of regulation
conferred upon Congress, free from the control of state regulations
except such as are strictly of a police character, and that any
state regulations by way of tax on the occupation or business, or
requiring a license to transact such business, are unconstitutional
and void. Accordingly, a judgment of the Supreme Court of Alabama
which sustained the validity of an ordinance of a municipal
corporation of that state imposing a license tax upon the Western
Union Telegraph Company, engaged in the business of transmitting
telegrams from and to points within the State of Alabama and
between
Page 153 U. S. 697
private individuals of the State of Alabama, as well as between
citizens of said state and citizens of other states, was reversed.
But it was said in the course of the discussion in that case
that
"it is urged that a portion of the telegraph company's business
is internal to the State of Alabama, and therefore taxable by the
state. But that fact does not remove the difficulty. This tax
affects the whole business without discrimination. There are
sufficient modes in which the internal business, if not already
taxed in some other way, may be subjected to taxation without the
imposition of a tax which covers the entire operations of the
company."
In
Telegraph Company v. Texas, 105 U.
S. 460, in error to the Supreme Court of Texas, it was
held that, in respect to its foreign and interstate business, a
telegraph company is, as an instrument of commerce, subject to the
regulating power of Congress, and if it accepts the provisions of
Act of July 24, 1866 (Revised Statutes §§ 5263, 5268), it
becomes an agent of the United States so far as the business of the
government is concerned, and that the state laws, so far as they
impose upon such company a specific tax on each message which it
transmits beyond the state or which an officer of the United States
sends over its lines on public business, are unconstitutional; but
it was said that
"any tax which the state may put on messages by private parties,
and not by agents of the United States, from one place to another,
exclusively within its own jurisdiction, will not be repugnant to
the Constitution of the United States."
The case in
Ratterman v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
127 U. S. 411, was
one where the telegraph company, a corporation of the State of New
York, filed a bill in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Southern District of Ohio against Ratterman, Treasurer of
Hamilton County, Ohio, seeking to restrain the collection of a tax
on the gross receipts of the company, which were principally, but
not wholly, derived from business between points within and points
without the State of Ohio. The complainant, in its bill, expressed
its willingness to pay and offered to pay taxes chargeable against
its property and business within the state, but alleged that
Page 153 U. S. 698
the defendant refused to accept such partial payment and
demanded payment for the total assessment on all the gross
receipts. The district and circuit judges certified a division of
opinion to this Court as to whether a single tax upon the receipts
of a telegraph company, which receipts were derived partly from
interstate commerce and partly from commerce within the state, but
which were returned and assessed in gross and without separation or
apportionment, was wholly invalid, or invalid only in proportion
and to the extent that said receipts were derived from interstate
commerce. Mr. Justice Miller delivered the unanimous opinion of
this Court. The case of
The State Freight
Tax, 15 Wall. 232, was cited as ruling that where
the subjects of taxation can be separated so that that which arises
from interstate commerce can be distinguished from that which
arises from commerce wholly within the state, the court will act
upon this distinction and will restrain the tax on interstate
commerce, while permitting the state to collect that arising upon
commerce wholly within its own territory. Accordingly, the decree
of the court below, following the opinion of the circuit judge
enjoining the collection of the taxes on that portion of the
receipts derived from interstate commerce, and permitting the
treasurer to collect the other tax upon property of the company and
upon receipts derived from commerce entirely within the limits of
the state, was affirmed.
The question arose and was determined in the same way in the
case of
West. Union Tel. Co. v. Alabama, 132 U.
S. 472. It there appeared that a statute of Alabama
imposed a tax "on the gross amount of the receipts by any and every
telegraph company derived from the business done by it in this
state." The Western Union Telegraph Company reported to the board
of assessors only its gross receipts received from business wholly
transacted within the state. The board required of the company a
further return of its gross receipts from messages carried partly
within and partly without the state. The company made such further
return, and the tax was imposed on the gross receipts as shown by
the two returns. This mode of assessment was sustained by the
Supreme Court of Alabama,
Page 153 U. S. 699
but this Court held that the statute of Alabama, thus construed,
was a regulation of commerce, and that the tax imposed upon the
messages comprised in the second return was unconstitutional. In
the discussion of the case, Mr. Justice Miller expressed himself as
follows:
"The principle of our cases is, in respect to telegraph
companies which have accepted the provisions of the Act of Congress
of July 24, 1866, Rev.Stat. §§ 5263-5268, that they shall
not be taxed by the authorities of a state for any messages, or
receipts arising from messages, from points within the state to
points without, or from points without to points within the state,
but that such taxes may be levied upon all messages carried and
delivered exclusively within the state. The foundation of this
principle is that messages of the former class are elements of
commerce between the states, and not subject to legislative control
of the states, while the latter class are elements of internal
commerce solely within the limits and jurisdiction of the state,
and therefore subject to its taxing power."
See likewise Pacific Express Co. v. Seibert,
142 U. S. 339.
The reasoning of these cases needs no reinforcement, and their
conclusions are readily applied to the case in hand.
The express terms of the ordinance restrict the tax to
"business done exclusively within the City of Charleston, and
not including any business done to or from points without the
state, and not including any business done for the government of
the United States, its officers or agents."
It is claimed that the Postal Telegraph Cable Company is not
within the terms of this ordinance, because it does not do any
business exclusively within the City of Charleston; that its city
offices are merely initial points for sending and receiving
messages, and that, irrespective of the messages sent or received
outside of the state, the interstate messages are not between
points within the city, and that, if license exactions were allowed
to and made by the various cities in the state, great injury and
wrong would be done to the telegraph company.
But this is a hardship, if such exists, that is not within our
province to redress. If business done wholly within a state is
Page 153 U. S. 700
within the taxing power of the state, the courts of the United
States cannot review or correct the action of the state in the
exercise of that power.
It is further contended that the ruling of the cited cases does
not cover the case of telegraph company which has constructed its
lines along the post roads in the City of Charleston and elsewhere,
and which is exercising its functions under the act of Congress as
an agency of the government of the United States. It is obvious
that the advantages or privileges that are conferred upon the
company by the Act of July 24, 1866, Rev.Stat. §§
5263-5268, are in the line of authority to construct and maintain
its lines as a means or instrument of interstate commerce, and are
not necessarily inconsistent with a right on the part of the state
in which business is done and property acquired, to tax the same,
within the limitations pointed out in the cases heretofore
cited.
It was upon the doctrine of these cases that the court below
acted in refusing the injunction and dismissing the bill, and its
decree is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BROWN, and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON,
dissented.