Where there is nothing in the record on which to base them, this
Court cannot indulge in presumptions as to which of several
possible forms a transaction may have taken.
Where goods are exempt from the taxing power of the state under
the Constitution of the United States because not within the state,
the protection of the Constitution extends to warehouse receipts
for those goods locally present within the state, and this rule
applied to whiskey in a foreign country, warehouse receipts for
which were held by a person in Kentucky and sought to be taxed as
personal property at owner's domicil.
A tax upon warehouse receipts for goods amounts in substance and
effect to a tax upon the goods themselves.
Fairbank v. United
States, 181 U. S. 283.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 213 U. S. 203
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a proceeding to recover back taxes on personal property
of the plaintiff in error, hereafter called the defendant. He
pleaded that he did own certain barrels of whisky which he did not
list for the years in question, but that he had exported them to
Bremen and Hamburg, in Germany, for sale abroad, and that the state
was forbidden to tax them both because they were exports,
U.S.Const., Art. I, § 10, and because their permanent situs
was outside the state. Fourteenth Amendment.
Delaware,
Lackawanna & Western R. Co. v. Pennsylvania, 198 U.
S. 341;
Union Refrigerator Transit Co. v.
Kentucky, 199 U. S. 194. The
plaintiff replied, denying that the export was for sale and that
the situs of the whisky was abroad. It alleged that the defendant
was a citizen and resident of Kentucky, engaged there in the
wholesale whisky business, and that he shipped the whisky to
Germany merely to evade revenue and
ad valorem taxes on
the same. It alleged further that the defendant remained the owner
and in possession of the whisky, except such portion as he
reshipped to himself or to purchasers in the United States; that,
while the whisky remained in the German warehouses he held the
warehouse receipts, used them as collaterals and traded in them,
and that the barrels of whisky sold by him were mostly returned to
the State of Kentucky, and all to the United States. The court of
first instance held that the whisky was exempt on both the grounds
taken by the defendant. On appeal to the state circuit court for
the county, the judgment was affirmed
Page 213 U. S. 204
on the ground that the situs of the whisky was outside the
state. A further appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals, and that
court, accepting the fact that the whisky was beyond the taxing
power of Kentucky, nevertheless sustained the tax as a tax on the
warehouse receipts. The case then was brought by writ of error to
this Court.
We think that we have stated the effect of the pleadings fairly,
and it will be observed that the plaintiff's claim was of a right
to tax the whisky, the warehouse receipts being mentioned only to
corroborate the plaintiff's contention as to the true domicil of
the goods. After the decision, the amount of whisky for which the
defendant held German warehouse receipts at the material times and
the value of the whisky were agreed, and thereupon the court,
reciting the agreement, directed a judgment for taxes due upon the
warehouse receipts, valuing them at the agreed value "per barrel of
whisky embraced in them." So that it will be seen that the effect
is the same as if the whisky itself had been taxed, and the
question is whether, by such a dislocation of the documents from
the things they represent, a second property of equal value is
created for taxing purposes, which can be reached although the
first could not. Possibilities similar in economic principle
sometimes have to be, or at least have been, recognized, but, of
course, economically speaking, they are absurd.
We are dealing with German receipts, and therefore we are not
called upon to consider the effect of statutes purporting to make
such instruments negotiable. Bonds can be taxed where they are
permanently kept, because, by a notion going back to very early
law, the obligation is, or originally was, inseparable from the
paper or parchment which expressed it.
Buck v. Beach,
206 U. S. 392,
206 U. S. 403,
206 U. S. 413.
That case and the authorities cited by it show how far a similar
notion has been applied to negotiable bills and notes. But a
warehouse receipt does not depend upon any peculiar doctrine for
its effect. A simple receipt merely imports that goods are in the
hands of a certain kind of bailee. But if a bailee assents to
becoming
Page 213 U. S. 205
bailee for another to whom the owner has sold or pledged the
goods, the change satisfies the requirement of a change of
possession so far as to validate the sale or pledge. Therefore it
is common for certain classes of bailees to give receipts to the
order of the bailor, and so to assent in advance to becoming bailee
for anyone which is brought within the terms of the receipt by an
indorsement of the same. But this does not give the instrument the
character of a symbol; it simply makes it the means of bringing
about what is somewhat inaccurately termed a change of possession,
upon ordinary legal principles, just as if the goods had been
transported to another warehouse.
Union Trust Co. v.
Wilson, 198 U. S. 530,
198 U. S. 536.
If the receipt contains no clause of assent to a transfer, it has
been held that an indorsement goes no further than a transfer and
unaccepted order on any other piece of paper.
Hallgarten v.
Oldham, 135 Mass. 1.
The form of the receipts given in Germany does not appear. It
does not appear that they contained any assent to transfer, unless
by conjecture from the defendant's testimony that he pledged them
for loans. Even that conjecture is made more doubtful, if not
excluded, by the findings of the lower courts. It does not appear
that the Court of Appeals made a different finding, if it had the
power to do so. This Court can make none. There is no presumption
that we know of, that the transactions took one form or had one
effect, rather than another.
We can think of but two ways in which the receipts could amount
to more than a mere convenience for getting
quasi-possession of the goods. In the first place, they
might express or imply a promise to be answerable, or carry a
statutory liability, for a corresponding amount in case the
property referred to was delivered to another without a surrender
of the receipts.
See Mechanics' & Traders' Ins. Co. v.
Kiger, 103 U. S. 352.
Such a promise might have a distinct value if the promisor had
credit. But it cannot be assumed on this record that the receipts
contained it, and, if they did, even then the value of the
instrument would be due rather to the assumption that the
Page 213 U. S. 206
bailee would not give up the goods without a return of it than
to the promise. The value of the promise would vary with the
promisor. As a key to the goods, a receipt no more can be called a
second property of equal value than could a key to an adamantine
safe that could not be opened without it be called a second
property of a value distinct from but equal to that of the money
that the safe contained. The receipt, like the key, would be
property of some small value distinct from that to which it gave
access. But it would not be a counterpart, doubling the riches of
the owner of the goods.
In the second place, the receipt might be made the
representative of the goods in a practical sense. A statute might
ordain that a sale and delivery of the goods to a purchaser without
notice should be invalid as against a subsequent
bona fide
purchaser of the receipt. We need not speculate as to how the law
would deal with it in that event, as we have no warrant for
assuming that the German law gives it such effect. On the facts
before us, and on any facts that the Court of Appeals can have had
before it, the receipts cannot be taken to have been more than one
of several keys to the goods. It cannot be assumed that a good
title to the whisky could not have been given while the receipts
were outstanding. We assume that they made it very unlikely that it
would be, but the practical probability does not make the
instrument the legal equivalent of the goods. We take it to be
almost undisputed that, if the warehouses were in Kentucky, the
state would not and could not tax both the whisky and the receipts,
even when issued in Kentucky form, and that it would recognize that
the only taxable object was the whisky. The relation of the paper
to the goods is not changed by their being abroad, and the only
question in the case is whether the paper can be treated as
property equivalent in value to the goods, because in some way it
represents them.
We state the question as we have stated it because that is the
one that is raised by the decision under review. It would be a mere
quibble to say that the receipts, as paper, had an
infinitesimal
Page 213 U. S. 207
value, that they acquired a substantial one, although much less
than that of the whisky because of their practical use, and that
this Court is not concerned with a mere overvaluation. The tax is
imposed on the theory that the receipts are the equivalents of the
goods, and are taxable on that footing, although the goods cannot
be taxed. Assuming, as the Court of Appeals assumed, that the
whisky is exempt under the Constitution of the United States, we
are of opinion that the protection of the Constitution extends to
warehouse receipts locally present within the state. What was said
by Chief Justice Taney about bills of lading applies to them,
mutatis mutandis: "A duty upon that is, in substance and
effect, a duty on the article exported."
Almy v.
California, 24 How. 169;
Fairbank v. United
States, 181 U. S. 283,
181 U. S. 294.
We discuss the case on the facts assumed by the Court of Appeals.
Whether a finding would have been warranted that the whisky still
was domiciled in Kentucky, or, for any other reason, was not
exempt, is a matter upon which we do not pass.
See New York
Central & Hudson River R. Co. v. Miller, 202 U.
S. 584,
202 U. S.
597.
Judgment reversed.