May & Co., merchants at New Orleans, were engaged in the
business of importing goods from abroad and selling them. In each
box or case in which they were brought into this country, there
would be many packages, each of which was separately marked and
wrapped. The importer sold each package separately. The City of New
Orleans taxed the goods after they reached the hands of the
importer (the duties having been paid) and were ready for sale.
Held:
(1) That the box, case, or bale in which the separate parcels or
bundles were placed by the foreign seller, manufacturer, or packer
was to be regarded as the original package, and when it reached its
destination for trade or sale and was opened for the purpose of
using or exposing to sale the separate parcels or bundles, the
goods lost their distinctive character as imports and each parcel
or bundle became a part of the general mass of property in the
state, and subject to local taxation.
(2) That
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, established these
propositions: 1. That the payment of duties to the United States
gives the right to sell the things imported, and that such right to
sell cannot be forbidden or impaired by a state; 2. That while the
things imported retain their character as imports, and remain the
property of the importer, "in his warehouse, in the original form
or package in which it was imported," a tax upon it is a duty on
imports within the meaning of the Constitution; 3. That a state
cannot, in the form of a license or otherwise, tax the right of the
importer to sell, but when the importer has so acted upon the goods
imported that they have been incorporated or mixed with the general
mass of property in the state, such goods have then lost their
distinctive character as imports and have become from that time
subject to state taxation, not because they are the products of
other countries, but because they are property within the state in
like condition with other property that should contribute, in the
way of taxation, to the support of the government which protects
the owner in his person and estate.
Page 178 U. S. 497
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs in error, a commercial firm in New Orleans,
brought this action in the Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans,
to prevent the enforcement of certain tax assessments made by the
City of New Orleans in the year 1897.
The petition alleged that, during the whole of the year 1897,
the plaintiffs were engaged in importing for sale foreign goods,
upon all of which they paid the duties and imposts levied by the
United States;
That the Board of Assessors for the Parish of Orleans assessed
them for that year $2,500 on "merchandise and stock in trade," and
$1,000 under the head of "money loaned on interest, all credits and
all bills receivable, money loaned and advanced or for goods sold,
all credits of any and every description," and
That such assessments were void for the following reasons: 1.
All merchandise and stock in trade had and carried by the
plaintiffs during 1897 consisted of dry goods imported by them from
foreign countries upon which duties, imposts, and import taxes were
levied by the United States and paid by them, and which were sold
only in unbroken original packages as imported, and the assessment
thereon was in violation of Article I, Section 10, Paragraph 2, of
the Constitution of the United States. 2. All the credits and bills
receivable of the firm during that year consisted wholly of sums
due on the purchase price of the above merchandise sold in unbroken
and original packages as imported, and the assessment thereon was
in violation of the same constitutional provision. 3. The
assessment of $1,000 upon "money loaned on interest" was
unconstitutional,
Page 178 U. S. 498
because the plaintiffs at no time during 1897 had any money
loaned on interest.
A temporary injunction having been granted against any sale of
the plaintiff's property for the taxes in question, the city
answered, denying each allegation of the petition.
The only evidence in the case was the testimony of one of the
plaintiffs as to the manner in which the company conducted its
business. That testimony, using substantially the words of the
witness, may be thus summarized:
Representatives of the firm went to Europe and obtained from
different manufacturers samples of goods, which were sent to New
Orleans and were used by plaintiffs in obtaining what were known as
import orders. Besides that method, if any article was thought
good, they placed what were known as stock orders -- that is, they
ordered the goods on their own account. But in most cases, the firm
sold the goods, and did not keep a stock on hand. All their goods
were imported, and customs duties were paid on them. They did not
handle domestic goods.
They sold the goods in the packages in which they were received,
because the bulk of their business was jobbing trade. Two, three,
or five hundred packages might be ordered. If the order were for
five hundred dozen towels, they might come packed two, three, or
five dozen in a package. Such a package was never broken. If a
small customer came in, they might sell him one package. It had
often happened that customers desired only a sample, in which case
a package might be broken to get it. Upon these samples the
importers obtained orders. If an order was given for five hundred
dozen towels, put up in packages of five dozen each when shipped to
the firm by the manufacturer in Europe, they would be enclosed in a
wooden case. Cases containing such orders might not come to the
firm's store at all, but would go directly to the customer
unopened. But if there were two or three orders in a case, it would
be brought to the store, opened, and the different orders taken
out. But they never opened any of the packages in the case.
An import order was one placed on samples to be manufactured,
and about sixty-five percent of the firm's business was
Page 178 U. S. 499
done by import orders. They would submit to the buyer a line of
samples, and he would give an import order, with the understanding
that the goods ordered were to be manufactured, and the delivery of
them not made for three or four months. If he placed a stock order,
it was for goods that were in the store ready for delivery.
Goods were always ordered on the firm's own account. They might
receive an order for two hundred dozen towels, but give an order on
the manufacturer for five hundred dozen, for three hundred of which
they had no order, but which they might sell while in process of
manufacture. They were the owners of all goods that came to them
upon those orders.
The lace handled by them was put up in cartons or pasteboard
boxes, each box containing twelve pieces of lace, each piece twelve
yards long. In filling orders, a number of these cartons or boxes
were put in another box or case by the manufacturer, and so
received by the firm. If a case contained only one order, it was
sent directly to the customer. If the case happened to contain two
or more orders, it went to the store, where it was opened and the
orders separated.
Bobbinet was received in cases containing thirty, forty, or
fifty packages of two, three, or four pieces each. If a customer
wished to buy bobbinet, he was told that he would have to buy at
least one package; that they did not sell one piece only, but in
packages. The bulk of the business in bobbinet was directly on
import orders. At times six, seven, or eight cases which did not
come to the store were sold to one firm. Bobbinet was not sold by
the case. If more than one order came in a case, it was broken open
and the orders separated.
The stock of the firm consisted mostly of bobbinet and household
lines. They also kept a number of samples of dolls and toys,
household linens, towels, sheets, embroideries, and laces.
We here give a part of the examination of the witness:
"Q. Some of which goods were sold in these cartons as you
describe, and not in the original packages?"
"A. Some of which were sold out of stock and some on import
orders."
"Q. Let us make that clear. I understand you to say -- let us
take this case of cartons of laces. You may order such a quantity
of
Page 178 U. S. 500
laces as would consist of, say fifty cartons, and the factory
ships them to you in a large wooden box?"
"A. The packer does that. The manufacturer does not even put
them in a case himself, but gets the packer to do that, and there
are certain goods not in the lace line, but in the household linen
line, which do not come in cases; they come in bales."
"Q. I want to get a thorough explanation of the way you get at
these goods. Say a dozen or more packages of goods are shipped by
the manufacturer in a wooden box for convenience, as I understand
many of those cases go direct to your customers?"
"A. A great many."
"Q. And in other cases, where they contain more than one order,
the cases are opened by you and the orders separated?"
"A. Yes; but the order is generally sent in the case itself. The
goods may be shipped in a wrapper by express. The case does not
signify that this is the original package. The original package is
the one in which the goods are put up at the factory. If a
manufacturer puts up five dozen towels in a package, that package
is the original package, and if I open that package, I break the
original package; but whether he puts those packages in a case or
not, it remains in the original package. The original package is
the original wrapper put around the goods at the factory, and is
known as such in the trade."
In reference to "money loaned on interest, all credits and all
bills receivable, money loaned and advanced or for goods sold, all
credits of any and every description" in the assessment, the
witness said that the only property possessed by the firm in 1897
of the kind mentioned in those items were bills receivable. Those
bills consisted of money due them on sales of imported goods by
customers who had given orders which had been filled, but for which
they had not paid. Some of these goods were sold out of stock and
some on import orders. They had no money loaned on interest in
1897. The firm was continuing to do business in 1898 in the same
way as in the previous year.
Upon final hearing, the civil district court adjudged that the
assessment in question was unconstitutional and void, and the
injunction against the city was made perpetual. That judgment
having been reversed upon appeal, with directions to dissolve the
injunction and dismiss the petition, the contention
Page 178 U. S. 501
here is that the plaintiffs in error have been denied rights and
immunities secured to them by the Constitution of the United
States.
The Supreme Court of Louisiana, speaking by Mr. Justice
Blanchard, said, among other things:
"The question, then, which the case really presents is what is
the 'original package'? Is it the package in which the goods are
put up for convenience by the foreign manufacturer, or is it the
case, the box, the covering in which the goods so put up by the
manufacturer are packed for shipment? Is the manufacturer's package
the original package in the legal interpretation, or must that be
held to be the original package which is delivered to the carrier
for transportation to the desired destination? If the package put
up by the manufacturer be the original package, then plaintiffs'
objection to the assessment complained of is well taken. If the
case or box in which the goods are placed for shipment be the
original package, then their case falls."
After referring to some of the adjudged cases, the court said
that the authorities supported the contention of the city that the
"original package" in this case must be held to be that in which
the goods were shipped to and received by the plaintiffs, and not
the smaller packages put up by the manufacturer and packed in the
box delivered to the carrier.
If the goods of the plaintiffs were assessed for taxation before
they had ceased to be imports -- that is, while in the original
packages and before they had, by the act of the importer, become
incorporated into the mass of property of the state and were held
for use or sale, then the assessment was void under the provision
of the Constitution of the United States declaring that no state
shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any imposts or duties
on imports or exports except those absolutely necessary for
executing its inspection laws, as well as under the provision
giving Congress power to regulate commerce with foreign nations.
Art. I, §§ 8, 10. Of the correctness of this general
proposition, as sustained by the adjudged cases, no doubt is
entertained.
Two views of the general question are presented for our
consideration.
Page 178 U. S. 502
One is that the box, case, or bale in which the plaintiff's
goods were brought from Europe was not the original package; that
each separate parcel or bundle placed in such box, case, or bale
was itself an original package, and that within the meaning of the
Constitution, no one of such separate parcels or bundles lost its
distinctive character as an import and became part of the mass of
property in the state, liable to local taxation, until after that
separate parcel or bundle had been sold by the importers. This is
substantially the proposition pressed upon our attention by the
plaintiffs.
The other view is that the box, case, or bale in which the
separate parcels or bundles were placed by the foreign seller,
manufacturer, or packer was to be regarded as the original package,
and that, upon the opening of such box, bale, or case for the
purpose of using or exposing to sale such separate parcels or
bundles, each parcel or bundle lost its distinctive character as an
import and became a part of the general mass of property in the
state subject to local taxation. This is the proposition advanced
on behalf of the defendant.
Let us first inquire as to the consequences that may follow from
the interpretation of the clause of the Constitution relating to
state taxation of imports, upon which the plaintiffs rest their
case. In the view taken by them, it would seem to be immaterial
whether the separate parcels or packages brought from Europe were
left in the shipping box, case, or bale after it was opened, or
were taken out and placed on the shelves or counters in the store
of the importer for delivery or sale along with goods manufactured
or made in this country. In other words, they argue that the
importer may sell each separate package either from the box in
which it was transported, after it is opened, or from the shelves
or counters in his store, without being subjected to local taxation
in respect of any package so brought into the country, provided
such separate package be sold or offered for sale in the form in
which it was when placed in the box, case, or bale by the European
manufacturer or packer. This means that the power of the state to
tax goods, the product of other countries, depends upon the
particular form in which the European manufacturer or packer, of
his own accord
Page 178 U. S. 503
or by direction of the importer, has put them up in order to be
sent to this country. The necessary result of this position is that
every merchant selling only goods of foreign manufacture, in
separate packages, although enjoying the protection of the local
government acting under its police powers, may conduct his
business, however large, without any liability whatever to state or
local taxation in respect of such goods, provided he takes care to
have the articles imported separately wrapped and placed in that
form in a box, case, or bale for transportation to and sale in this
country. In this view, if a jeweller desires to buy fifty Geneva
watches for the purpose of selling them here without paying taxes
upon them
as property, he need only direct them to be
placed in separate cases, however small, and then put them all
together in one box. After paying the import duties on all the
watches in the box, and receiving the box at his store, he may open
the box, and the watches, each one being in its own separate case,
may then be exposed for sale. According to the contention of the
plaintiffs, each watch, in its own separate case, would be an
original package, and could not be regarded as part of the mass of
property of the state and subject to local taxation so long as it
remained in that form and unsold in the hands of the importer.
Other illustrations arising out of the business of American
merchants will readily occur to everyone. The result would be that
there might be upon the shelves of a merchant in this country,
ready to be used and openly exposed for sale, commodities or
merchandise consisting of articles separately wrapped and of
enormous value that could not be reached for local taxation until
after he had sold them, no matter how long they had been kept by
the importer before selling them. It cannot be overlooked that the
interpretation of the Constitution for which plaintiffs contend
would encourage American merchants and traders seeking to avoid
state and local taxation to import from abroad all the merchandise
and commodities which they would need in their business.
There are other considerations that cannot be ignored in
determining the time at which goods imported from foreign countries
lose their character as imports and may be properly regarded as
part of the general mass of property in the state,
Page 178 U. S. 504
subject to local taxation. If, as plaintiffs insist, each parcel
separately wrapped and marked and put in the shipping box, case, or
bale is an original package which, until sold, no matter when,
would retain its distinctive character as an import, although the
box, case, or bale containing them had been opened and the separate
parcels all exposed for sale, what stands in the way of European
manufacturers' opening branch houses in this country and selling
all their goods put up in the form of separate parcels and
packages, without paying anything whatever by way of taxation on
their goods
as property protected by the laws of the state in
which they do business? Indeed, under plaintiffs' view, the
Constitution secures to the manufacturers of foreign goods imported
into this country an immunity from taxation that is denied to
manufacturers of domestic goods. An interpretation attended with
such consequences ought not to be adopted if it can be avoided
without doing violence to the words of the Constitution.
Undoubtedly the payment of duties imposed by the United States on
imports gives the importer the right to bring his goods into this
country for sale, but he does not, simply by paying the duties,
escape taxation upon such goods as property after they have reached
their destination for use or trade, and the box, case, or bale
containing them has been opened and the goods exposed to sale.
Let us see what this Court has said when it has had occasion to
determine the meaning and scope of the constitutional provision
relating to imports.
The leading case is
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 436,
25 U. S.
441-444. Brown was indicted under an act of the
Legislature of Maryland supplementary to an act relating to duties
on licenses to retailers of dry goods and for other purposes. The
second section of the supplementary act provided
"that all importers of foreign articles or commodities of dry
goods, wares, or merchandise, by bale or package, or of wine, rum,
brandy, whisky, and other distilled spirituous liquors, etc., and
other persons selling the same by wholesale, bale or package,
hogshead, barrel, or tierce, shall, before they are authorized
to sell, take out a license as by the original act is
directed, for which they shall pay fifty dollars, and, in case of
neglect or refusal to
Page 178 U. S. 505
take out such license, shall be subject to the same penalties
and forfeitures as are prescribed by the original act to which this
is a supplement."
Laws, Maryland, 1821-22, p. 168. The indictment having been
sustained, the case was brought to this Court and was argued with
great ability.
It is important to observe that the question presented was not
one of ordinary taxation upon property, but it was -- to use the
words of Chief Justice Marshall --
"whether the legislature of a state can constitutionally require
the importer of foreign articles to take out a
license
from the state before he shall be
permitted to sell a bale
or package so imported."
That question was considered with reference to the clause
forbidding the states from laying imposts or duties on imports or
exports, except such as were absolutely necessary for executing
their inspection laws, and also with reference to the commerce
clause of the Constitution. Declining to lay down any rule as
universal in its application, the Court said:
"It is sufficient for the present to say generally that when the
importer has
so acted upon the thing imported that it has
become incorporated and mixed up with the mass of property in the
country, it has perhaps lost its distinctive character as an import
and has become subject to the taxing power of the state, but while
remaining the property of the importer
in his warehouse in the
original form or package in which it was imported, a tax upon
it is too plainly a duty on imports to escape the prohibition in
the Constitution."
Again:
"The object of importation is sale; it constitutes the motive
for paying the duties, and if the United States possess the power
of conferring the right to sell, as the consideration for which the
duty is paid, every principle of fair dealing requires that they
should be understood to confer it. . . . The whole course of
legislation on the subject shows that, in the opinion of the
legislature, the right to sell is connected with the payment of
duties."
On behalf of the State of Maryland, it was contended that if the
importer acquired the right to sell by the payment of duties he
might exert that right when, where, and as he pleased, and that the
state could not regulate it; that he might sell by retail, by
auction, or as an itinerant peddler; that he might
Page 178 U. S. 506
introduce articles, such as gunpowder, which would endanger the
city, into the midst of its population, as well as articles which
would endanger the public health, and thus the power of
self-preservation would be denied, and that an importer might bring
in goods, as plate, for his own use, and thus retain much valuable
property exempt from taxation.
To these objections the Court, speaking by the Chief Justice,
responded:
"These objections to the principle, if well founded, would
certainly be entitled to serious consideration. But we think they
will be found on examination not to belong necessarily to the
principle, and consequently not to prove that it may not be
resorted to with safety as a criterion by which to measure the
extent of the prohibition. This indictment is against the importer
for selling a package of dry goods in the form in which it was
imported, without a license. This state of things is changed if he
sells them, or otherwise mixes them with the general property of
the state, by breaking up his packages and traveling with them as
an itinerant peddler. In the first case, the tax intercepts the
import, as an import, in its way to become incorporated with the
general mass of property, and denies it the privilege of becoming
so incorporated until it shall have contributed to the revenue of
the state. It denies to the importer the right of using the
privilege which he has purchased from the United States until he
shall have also purchased it from the state. In the last cases, the
tax finds the article already incorporated with the mass of
property by the act of the importer. He has used the privilege he
had purchased, and has himself mixed them up with the common mass,
and the law may treat them as it finds them. The same observations
apply to plate or other furniture used by the importer. So if he
sells by auction. Auctioneers are persons licensed by the state,
and if the importer chooses to employ them, he can as little object
to paying for this service as for any other for which he may apply
to an officer of the state. The right of sale may very well be
annexed to importation without annexing to it also the privilege of
using the officers licensed by the state to make sales in a
peculiar way. The power to direct the removal of gunpowder is a
branch of the police
Page 178 U. S. 507
power, which unquestionably remains, and ought to remain, with
the states. If the possessor stores it himself out of town, the
removal cannot be a duty on imports, because it contributes nothing
to the revenue. If he prefers placing it in a public magazine, it
is because he stores it there, in his own opinion, more
advantageously than elsewhere. We are not sure that this may not be
classed among inspection laws. The removal or destruction of
infectious or unsound articles is undoubtedly an exercise of that
power, and forms an express exception to the prohibition we are
considering. Indeed, the laws of the United States expressly
sanction the health laws of a state. The principle, then, for which
the plaintiffs in error contend -- that the importer acquires a
right not only to bring the articles into the country, but to mix
them with the common mass of property -- does not interfere with
the necessary power of taxation which is acknowledged to reside in
the states, to that dangerous extent which the counsel for the
defendants in error seem to apprehend. It carries the prohibition
in the Constitution no farther than to prevent the states from
doing that which it was the great object of the Constitution to
prevent."
These extracts from the opinion in
Brown v. Maryland
establish the following propositions:
1. That the payment of duties to the United States gives the
right to sell the thing imported, and that such right
to
sell cannot be forbidden or impaired by a state.
2. That a tax upon the thing imported during the time it retains
its character as an import and remains the property of the
importer, "in his warehouse, in the original form or package in
which it was imported," is a duty on imports within the meaning of
the Constitution, and
3. That a state cannot, in the form of a license or otherwise,
tax the right of the importer
to sell, but when the
importer has
so acted upon the goods imported that they
have become incorporated or mixed with the general mass of property
in the state, such goods have then lost their distinctive character
as imports and have become from that time subject to state
taxation not because they are the products of other countries, but
because they are property within the state in like condition
Page 178 U. S. 508
with other property that should contribute, in the way of
taxation, to the support of the government which protects the owner
in his person and estate.
So the question in the present case is whether the plaintiffs,
prior to the assessment complained of, had
so acted upon
the goods imported by them as to incorporate them with the mass of
the property in the state, and bring them, while in their
possession, within the range of local taxation.
We have seen that the plaintiffs in effect contend that, having
paid the duties imposed by the United States, they were entitled,
without liability to taxation upon the goods as property, to open
the boxes in which the separate parcels of goods were transported,
and put such separate parcels in the hands of agents to be sold
wherever, in the state or in the country, customers could be found.
The separate parcels -- such is the effect of the argument -- are
not to be deemed incorporated into the mass of the property of the
state while thus being carried around the country by the importer's
agent -- no separate parcel, so long as it remained in the
particular form in which it was packed in a box or case with other
parcels, ceasing to have the character of an import until after it
was sold by such agents. This proposition cannot be sustained. We
cannot doubt that the goods, when placed in the hands of agents for
sale in separate parcels, have been so acted upon by the importer
that they have ceased to be imports and have become part of the
mass of the property of the state, liable to local taxation. But
what is the difference in principle between the case of sales by an
importer through traveling agents and the case of an importer who
opens the box or case in which his goods, wrapped in separate
parcels, were imported, and by employees sells or offers to sell
the separate parcels, either from the opened box or case in his
store or from shelves or counters upon which such parcels have been
placed for examination and sale?
In our judgment, the "original package" in the present case was
the box or case in which the goods imported were shipped, and when
the box or case was opened for the sale or delivery of the separate
parcels contained in it, each parcel of the goods lost its
distinctive character as an import and became property
Page 178 U. S. 509
subject to taxation by the state as other like property situated
within its limits. The tax here in question was not in any sense a
tax on imports, nor a tax for the privilege of bringing the things
imported into the state. It was not a tax on the plaintiffs' goods
because they were imported from another country, but because, at
the time of the assessment, they were in the market for sale in
separate parcels, and therefore subject to be taxed as like
property, in the same condition, that had its origin in this
country. We cannot impute to the framers of the Constitution a
purpose to make such a discrimination in favor of property imported
from other countries as would result if we approved the views
pressed upon us by the plaintiffs. When their goods had been so
acted upon as to become a part of the general mass of property in
the state, the plaintiffs stood, with respect to liability to state
taxation, upon the same basis of equality as the owners of like
property, the product of this country; the only difference being
that the importers paid a duty to the United States for the
privilege of importing their goods into this country and of selling
them in the original packages -- a duty imposed for the purpose of
raising money to carry on the operations of the government, and in
many instances with the intent to protect the industries of this
country against foreign competition. A different view is not
justified by anything said in
Brown v. Maryland. It was
there held that the importer, by paying duties, acquired the right
to sell in the original packages the goods imported -- the Maryland
statute requiring
a license from the state before anyone
could
sell, "by wholesale, bale or package, hogshead,
barrel, or tierce," goods imported from other countries. But it was
not held that the right to sell was attended with an immunity from
all taxation upon the goods
as property, after they had
ceased to be imports and had become by the act of the importer a
part of the general mass of property in the state. The contrary was
adjudged.
Without further reference to authorities, we state our
conclusion to be that, within the decision in
Brown v.
Maryland, the boxes, cases, or bales in which plaintiffs'
goods were shipped were the original packages, and the goods
imported by them
Page 178 U. S. 510
lost their distinctive character as imports and became a part of
the general mass of the property of Louisiana, and subject to local
taxation as other property in that state, the moment the boxes,
cases, or bales in which they were shipped reached their
destination for use or trade and were opened and the separate
packages therein exposed or offered for sale; consequently, the
assessment in question was not in violation of the Constitution of
the United States.
This disposes of the only federal question arising on this
appeal.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana is
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS
and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM dissent.