An ordinance passed by the board of aldermen of the City of
Greensboro, North Carolina, in pursuance of powers conferred by the
legislature of the state, that every person engaged in the business
of selling or delivering picture frames, pictures, photographs or
likenesses of the human face in the City of Greensboro, whether an
order for the same shall have been previously taken or not, shall
pay a license tax of ten dollars for each year, is an attempt to
interfere with, and to regulate commerce, and as such is invalid as
to an agent of a corporation residing out of the state. Where a
portrait company carrying on business in one state obtains orders
through an agent in another state for pictures and frames, the fact
that, in filling the orders, it ships the pictures and frames in
separate packages, for convenience in packing and handling, to its
own agent, who places the pictures in their proper places or frames
and delivers them to the persons ordering them, does not deprive
the transaction of its character of interstate commerce, or take it
out of the salutary protection of the commerce clause of the
federal Constitution.
AT June term, 1900, of the Superior Court of Guilford County,
North Carolina, E. M. Caldwell was tried before a court and jury
for an alleged offense in having engaged in the business of
delivering pictures without having first obtained a license so to
do. The jury found a special verdict as follows:
"The business mentioned in the ordinance. following is not"
named in the charter of the city, other than in the above
section.
"That the following is an ordinance duly passed by the Board of
Aldermen of the City of Greensboro under and by virtue of the
foregoing section of said charter, and prior to any of the orders
being taken:"
" Be it ordained by the Board of Aldermen of the City of
Greensboro, North Carolina:"
" That every person engaged in the business of selling or
delivering picture frames, pictures, photographs or likenesses of
the human face in the City of Greensboro, whether an order
Page 187 U. S. 623
for the same shall have been previously taken or not, unless the
said business is carried on by the same person in connection with
some other business for which a license has already been paid to
the city, shall pay a license tax of ten dollars for each
year."
" Any person engaging in said business without having paid the
license tax required herein shall be fined twenty dollars, and each
and every sale or delivery shall constitute a separate and distinct
offense."
"That neither the defendant, the Chicago Portrait Company, nor
any of the employees of the Chicago Portrait Company, have paid the
city any license tax."
"If, upon the foregoing facts, the court shall be of opinion
that the defendant is guilty, the jury say that he is guilty;
otherwise they say that he is not guilty."
"That on the ___ day of _____, 1900, the defendant, being
employed by the Chicago Portrait Company, a foreign corporation, of
Chicago, Illinois, came to Greensboro for the purpose of delivering
certain pictures and frames for which contracts of sale had
previously been made by other employees of the Chicago Portrait
Company, who had preceded the defendant in Greensboro;"
"That the defendant went to the Southern Railway freight station
and took therefrom large packages of pictures and frames which had
been shipped to Greensboro, North Carolina, addressed to the
Chicago Portrait Company, carried these packages to the rooms of
the defendant in the Woods House, a hotel in the City of
Greensboro, and there broke the bulk, placing said pictures in
their proper frames, and from this point delivered the pictures one
at a time to the purchasers in the City of Greensboro;"
"The defendant had been engaged in this work two days when
arrested;"
"That section 57 of the Charter of the City of Greensboro, North
Carolina, is as follows:"
" That, in addition to the subjects listed for taxation, the
aldermen may levy a tax on the following subjects, the amount of
which taxed, when fixed, shall be collected by the collector of
taxes, and if it be not paid on demand, the same may be
recovered
Page 187 U. S. 624
by suit, or the articles upon which the tax is imposed, or any
other property of the owner made by forthwith distrained and sold
to satisfy the same, namely:"
" 21. Upon all subjects taxed under Schedule B, chapter one
hundred and thirty six, Laws of North Carolina, session of one
thousand eight hundred and eighty-three, not heretofore provided
for, shall pay a license or privilege tax of ten dollars. And the
board of aldermen shall have power to impose a license tax on any
business carried on in the City of Greensboro not before enumerated
herein, not to exceed ten dollars a year."
Upon this special verdict, the court adjudged that defendant was
guilty and sentenced him to pay a fine of twenty dollars and costs
of the action. From this judgment the defendant appealed to the
Supreme Court of North Carolina. That court, Faircloth, C.J., and
Clark, J., dissenting, on November 7, 1900, affirmed the judgment
of the superior court, and thereupon the cause was brought to this
Court by a writ of error allowed by the chief justice of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
It might fairly be contended that, upon the facts found by the
special verdict, the defendant was not guilty of engaging in the
business of delivering pictures without a license within the
purview of the ordinance in question. But, as the Supreme Court of
North Carolina has held otherwise, we must accept that conclusion
as a question of construction belonging to that court. Our task is
to determine whether the ordinance, as so construed, is invalid as
an attempt to interfere with and to regulate interstate commerce,
and can be speedily performed, for
Page 187 U. S. 625
we think the case falls within previous decisions of this Court
on this subject.
Such decisions are numerous, but we do not deem it necessary to
refer to but a few of them.
The subject was elaborately considered in
Robbins v. Shelby
County Taxing District, 120 U. S. 489. The
case was brought here on a writ of error to the Supreme Court of
Tennessee, which had held valid a statute of that state, by which
it was enacted that
"all drummers and all persons not having a regular licensed
house of business in the taxing district, offering for sale or
selling goods, wares, or merchandise therein by sample, shall be
required to pay to the county trustee the sum of $10 per week or
$25 per month for such privilege, and no license shall be issued
for a longer period of three months."
Robbins, the plaintiff in error, was a citizen and resident of
the City of Cincinnati, Ohio, and was convicted of having offered
for sale articles of merchandise belonging to a firm in Cincinnati
without having procured a license. In his discussion of the case,
Mr. Justice Bradley stated the following principles, as already
established by this Court: the Constitution of the United States
having given to Congress the power to regulate commerce not only
with foreign nations, but among the several states, that power is
necessarily exclusive whenever the subjects of it are national in
their character or admit only of one uniform system or plan of
regulation; that, where the power of Congress to regulate is
exclusive, the failure of Congress to make express regulations
indicates its will that the subject shall be left free from any
restrictions or impositions, and any regulation of the subject by
the states, except in matters of local concern only, is repugnant
to such freedom; that the only way in which commerce between the
states can be legitimately affected by state laws is when, by
virtue of its police power, and its jurisdiction over persons and
property within its limits, a state provides for the security of
the lives, health, and comfort of persons and the protection of
property, and imposes taxes upon persons residing within the state
or belonging to its population, and upon vocations and employments
pursued therein not directly connected with foreign or interstate
commerce or with some other
Page 187 U. S. 626
employment or business exercised under authority of the
Constitution and laws of the United States, and imposes taxes upon
all property within the state, mingled with and forming part of the
great mass of property therein, but that, in making such internal
regulations, a state cannot impose taxes upon persons passing
through the state, or coming into it merely for a temporary
purpose, especially if connected with interstate or foreign
commerce; nor can it impose such taxes upon property imported into
the state from abroad, or from another state, and not become part
of the common mass of property therein, and no discrimination can
be made, by such regulations, adversely to the persons or property
of other states, and no regulations can be made directly affecting
interstate commerce.
Upon these established principles, the conclusion was reached
that the state statute in question was invalid, and the following
observations are pertinent to the question before us:
"It would not be difficult, however, to show that the tax
authorized by the State of Tennessee in the present case is
discriminative against the merchants and manufacturers of other
states. They can only sell their goods in Memphis by the employment
of drummers and by means of samples, whilst the merchants and
manufacturers of Memphis, having regular licensed houses of
business there, have no occasion for such agents, and, if they had,
they are not subject to any tax therefor. They are taxed for their
licensed houses, it is true, but so, it is presumable, are the
merchants and manufacturers of other states in the places where
they reside, and the tax on drummers operates greatly to their
disadvantage in comparison with the merchants and manufacturers of
Memphis. And such was undoubtedly one of its objects. This kind of
taxation is usually imposed at the instance and solicitation of
domestic dealers as a means of protecting them from foreign
competition. And in many cases, there may be some reason in their
desire for such protection. But this shows in a still stronger
light the unconstitutionality of the tax. It shows that it not only
operates as a restriction upon interstate commerce, but that it is
intended to have that effect as one of its principal objects. And
if a state can, in this way, impose restrictions upon interstate
commerce for the benefit and
Page 187 U. S. 627
protection of its own citizens, we are brought back to the
condition of things which existed before the adoption of the
Constitution, and which was one of the principal causes that led to
it. If the selling of goods by sample and the employment of
drummers for that purpose injuriously affect the local interest of
the states, Congress, if applied to, will undoubtedly make such
reasonable regulations as the case may demand. And Congress alone
can do it, for it is obvious that such regulations should be based
on a uniform system applicable to the whole country, and not left
to the varied, discordant, or retaliatory enactments of forty
different states. The confusion into which the commerce of the
country would be thrown by being subject to state legislating on
this subject would be but a repetition of the disorder which
prevailed under the articles of confederation."
Asher v. Texas, 128 U. S. 129, was
a case where a state statute required from "every commercial
traveler, drummer, salesman, or solicitor of trade, by sample or
otherwise, an annual occupation tax," and such legislation was
declared inoperative so far as it affected one soliciting orders
for a business house in another state. The same doctrine was held
in
Stoutenburgh v. Hennick, 129 U.
S. 141, in the case of an agent of a Maryland business
house soliciting orders in the District of Columbia without having
taken out a license as required by an act of the Legislative
Assembly of the District of Columbia.
In
Lyng v. Michigan, 135 U. S. 161, the
general proposition was repeated:
"We have repeatedly held that no state has the right to lay a
tax on interstate commerce in any form, whether by way of duties
laid on the transportation of the subjects of that commerce, or on
the receipts derived from that transportation, or on the occupation
or business of carrying it on, for the reason that such taxation is
a burden on that commerce, and amounts to a regulation of it, which
belongs solely to Congress."
In
Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U. S.
47, an act of the State of Kentucky which forbade the
agent of an express company, not incorporated by the laws of that
state, from carrying on business
Page 187 U. S. 628
without first obtaining a license from the state, was held to be
a regulation of commerce and invalid. Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking
for the Court, said:
"The character of police regulation, claimed for the
requirements of the statute in question, is certainly not such as
to give them a controlling force over the regulations of interstate
commerce which may have been expressly or impliedly adopted by
Congress, or such as to exempt them from nullity when repugnant to
the exclusive power given to Congress in relation to that commerce.
This is abundantly shown by the decisions to which we have already
referred, which are clear to the effect that neither licenses nor
indirect taxation of any kind, nor any system of state regulation,
can be imposed upon interstate, any more than upon foreign,
commerce, and that all acts of legislation producing any such
result are, to that extent, unconstitutional and void."
In
Brennan v. Titusville, 152
U. S. 289, was again presented the question of the
validity of an ordinance providing
"that all persons canvassing or soliciting, within said city [of
Titusville], orders for goods, books, paintings, wares, or
merchandise of any kind, or persons delivering such articles under
orders so obtained or solicited, shall be required to procure from
the mayor a license to transact said business, and shall pay the
said treasurer therefor the following sums, according to the time
for which said licenses shall be granted,"
and also prescribing a penalty for failing to procure such
license. An agreed statement of facts showed that Shepard was a
manufacturer of picture frames and maker of portraits, residing in
Chicago in the State of Illinois, of which state he was a citizen,
and in which state he had his manufactory and place of business;
that in the prosecution of his business he employed agents, who,
under his directions, solicited orders for pictures and picture
frames in the State of Pennsylvania and in other states of the
union, by going personally to residents and citizens of said State
of Pennsylvania and other states, and exhibiting samples of his
pictures and frames, going when necessary, from house to house;
that Brennan was an agent of the said Shepard, employed by him to
travel and solicit orders for pictures and
Page 187 U. S. 629
frames, upon a salary; that, upon receiving orders for pictures
and picture frames, the agents of Shepard forwarded the same to him
at Chicago, where the goods were made, and from there shipped to
the purchasers in Titusville by railroad freight and express, and
the price of said goods was collected and forwarded by the express
companies and sometimes by the agents to said Shepard at Chicago;
that Brennan, the agent employed by Shepard, was engaged in
conducting the business in the manner stated at the time of his
arrest, and acting solely for Shepard.
Upon such a state of facts, and upon a review of the cases, this
Court held it was not bound by the decision of the highest court of
the state in which such a tax was authorized and imposed that such
a tax was an exercise of the police power, and not of the taxing
power, and that the ordinance in question imposed a tax upon
interstate commerce, and was therefore void. To the argument that
no discrimination was made in the ordinance between domestic and
foreign drummers, the Court said:
"It is strongly urged, as if it were a material point in the
case, that no discrimination is made between domestic and foreign
drummers -- those of Tennessee and those of other states; that all
are taxed alike. But that does not meet the difficulty. Interstate
commerce cannot be taxed at all, even though the same amount of tax
should be laid on domestic commerce, or that which is carried on
solely within the state. This was decided in the case of
State
Freight Tax, 15 Wall. 232. The negotiation of sales
of goods which are in another state, for the purpose of introducing
them into the state in which the negotiation is made, is interstate
commerce. A New Orleans merchant cannot be taxed there for ordering
goods in London or New York because, in the one case it is an act
of foreign, and in the other of interstate commerce, both of which
are subject to regulation by Congress alone."
The last case we shall cite is the recent one of
Stockard v.
Morgan, 185 U. S. 27, where
was considered the validity of a statute of the State of Tennessee
providing for the collection of a privilege tax on the occupation
of merchandise brokers.
Page 187 U. S. 630
By agreement of the parties, two questions only were argued in
the state court: (1) whether or not the complainants, who had filed
a bill to restrain the collection of the tax, were merchandise
brokers and subject by the statute to tax as such; (2) whether or
not their business constituted interstate commerce, and therefore
was beyond the reach of the state's taxing power. The state supreme
court held that the complainants, as merchandise brokers, were
within the meaning of the statute, and that the tax was a valid one
under the Constitution of the United States.
This Court, though recognizing that it was obliged to accept the
construction put upon the statute by the state court, reversed the
judgment of that court in respect to the nature of the commerce as
interstate. In the opinion of the court, delivered by MR. JUSTICE
PECKHAM, the principal cases, beginning with
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, and ending with
Brennan v. Titusville, were again reviewed, and the
conclusions there reached were affirmed.
The state supreme court endeavored to distinguish the present
case from that of
Brennan v. Titusville in the following
observations:
"The defendant insists that
Brennan v. Titusville,
153 U. S.
289, is directly in point -- is, in every essential
fact, this case -- and should control the opinion of the Court on
this appeal. And it is in many respects like this case, but there
is one material difference between that case and this which marks
the distinction. In that case, the goods were shipped directly to
the purchaser. In this case, they were shipped by the Chicago
company to itself in the City of Greensboro, and when they reached
Greensboro, the defendant, as the agent of the Chicago company,
received them from the railroad at its depot, carried them to its
room in Greensboro, opened the boxes in which they were shipped,
took out the pictures and picture frames, assorted them and put
them together, and delivered them to the purchasers in the City of
Greensboro, and had been engaged in this work two days when
arrested. If they had been completed and shipped directly to the
parties for whom they were intended, this case would have fallen
within the decision of
Brennan v. Titusville, and we
Page 187 U. S. 631
should hold, as it was held there, that it was an interference
with interstate commerce, and that the defendant was not guilty.
But, to our minds, there is a decided difference between this case
and that. The contract to make and deliver these pictures was an
executory contract, and no title passed by this contract. . . . If
they had been completed in Chicago, and under contract shipped to
the purchaser, the title would have passed to the consignee upon
delivery to the railroad in Chicago, the railroad being deemed to
be the agent of the consignee, . . . and
Brennan v.
Titusville would have applied, as the tax would have been upon
the commerce. But, instead of completing the pictures in Chicago
and shipping them to the parties who had contracted for them, they
were shipped to itself (the Chicago Portrait Company) in
Greensboro. This being so, no title ever passed from the Chicago
Portrait Company, until the pictures were put in the frames and
delivered by the defendant. These pictures belonged to the Chicago
company when they were shipped from Chicago, and belonged to it
when they got to Greensboro. And the question is could the Chicago
Portrait Company, because it was a foreign corporation, engage in
the business of completing these pictures, and in selling and
delivering them in Greensboro, without becoming liable to a city
tax, for which its own citizens would be liable? It seems to us
that it could not."
We are not persuaded by this reasoning. It seems to proceed upon
two propositions: first, that the pictures in question were not
completed before they were brought to Greensboro; and, second, that
the articles were not shipped directly to the purchasers, but to an
agent of the senders in Greensboro.
But it certainly cannot be pretended that, if the pictures and
the disconnected frames had been directly shipped to the
purchasers, the license tax could have been imposed, either on the
vendor out of the state, or on the purchaser within the state. If
the pictures and the frames intended for them had been shipped
directly to the purchasers, whether, in the same or separate
packages, such a transaction would, beyond question, be interstate
commerce beyond the reach of the taxing power of the state. It is
too plain for argument that the supposed incomplete
Page 187 U. S. 632
condition of articles of commerce, if shipped directly to the
purchasers, cannot subject them to the license tax.
But we are not disposed to concede that, under the facts of this
case, the pictures were, in any proper sense, incomplete when
received in Greensboro. That the frames and the pictures were in
separate packages, if such was the case, was merely for convenience
in packing and handling, and "placing the pictures in their proper
places" (the language of the verdict), meant that each picture was
placed in the frame designed for it. The selection of the frame was
as much a part of the purchase and sale as the selection of the
picture.
Nor does the fact that these articles were not shipped
separately and directly to each individual purchaser, but were sent
to an agent of the vendor at Greensboro, who delivered them to the
purchasers, deprive the transaction of its character as interstate
commerce. It was only that the vendor used two instead of one
agency in the delivery. It would seem evident that, if the vendor
had sent the articles by an express company, which should collect
on delivery, such a mode of delivery would not have subjected the
transaction to state taxation. The same could be said if the vendor
himself, or by a personal agent, had carried and delivered the
goods to the purchaser. That the articles were sent as freight by
rail, and were received at the railroad station by an agent who
delivered them to the respective purchasers, in nowise changes the
character of the commerce as interstate.
Transactions between manufacturing companies in one state,
through agents, with citizens of another, constitute a large part
of interstate commerce, and for us to hold, with the court below,
that the same articles, if sent by rail directly to the purchaser,
are free from state taxation, but, if sent to an agent to deliver,
are taxable through a license tax upon the agent, would evidently
take a considerable portion of such traffic out of the salutary
protection of the interstate commerce clause of the
Constitution.
It cannot escape observation that efforts to control commerce of
this kind, in the interest of the states where the purchasers
reside, have been frequently made in the form of statutes and
Page 187 U. S. 633
municipal ordinances, but that such efforts have been heretofore
rendered fruitless by the supervising action of this Court. The
cases hereinbefore cited disclose the truth of this
observation.
Upon principle and authority, therefore, we conclude that the
judgment of the Supreme Court of North Carolina should be and
is
Reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court to take
further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.