A statute of Kansas provided among other things, that, before a
corporation of another state, even one engaged in interstate
business, should have authority to do local business in Kansas, it
should pay
"to the state Treasurer, for the benefit of the permanent school
fund, a charter fee of one-tenth of one percent of its authorized
capital, upon the first $100,000 of its capital stock, or any part
thereof, and upon the next four hundred thousand dollars or any
part thereof, one-twentieth of one percent, and for each million or
major part thereof over and above the sum of five hundred thousand
dollars, $200."
The Western Union Telegraph Company, a New York corporation,
engaged in commerce among the states and with foreign countries,
and seeking to do local business in Kansas, had a capital stock of
$100,000,000. The fee demanded of it as a condition of its right to
do local business in Kansas, was $20,100. It refused to pay the
required fee, and continued, as it had done for many years before
to do local or intrastate business in Kansas. Thereupon, the state
brought a suit in one of its own courts against the Telegraph
Company and sought a decree ousting and restraining the company
from doing any local business in Kansas. The state court gave the
relief asked.
Held that:
The right to carry on interstate commerce is not a privilege
granted
Page 216 U. S. 2
by the states, but a constitutional right of every citizen of
the United States, and Congress alone can limit the right of
corporations to engage therein.
Crutcher v. Kentucky,
141 U. S. 47.
The power of Congress over interstate commerce is as absolute as
it is over foreign commerce.
The rule that a state may exclude foreign corporations from its
limits or impose such terms and conditions on their doing business
therein as it deems consistent with its public policy does not
apply to foreign corporations engaged in interstate commerce, and
the requirement that the Telegraph Company pay a given percent of
all its capital, representing all its business, interests and
property everywhere, within and outside of the state, operated as a
burden and tax on the interstate business of the company in
violation of the commerce clause of the Constitution, as well as a
tax on its property beyond the limits of the state, which it could
not tax consistently with the due process of law enjoined by the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Such a requirement imposed a condition on the Telegraph Company
forbidden by the Constitution of the United States and violative of
the constitutional rights of the company.
The Telegraph Company was no more bound to assent to the
condition required of it in order that it might do local business
in Kansas than to a condition requiring it to waive its right to
invoke the benefit of the constitutional provision forbidding the
denial of the equal protection of the laws or of the provision
forbidding the deprivation of property without due process of
law.
The disavowal by a state enacting a regulation of intent to
burden or regulate interstate commerce cannot conclude the question
of fact of whether a burden is actually imposed thereby, and
whatever the purpose of a statute, it is unconstitutional if, when
reasonably interpreted, it does, directly or by necessary
operation, burden interstate commerce.
In determining whether a statute does or does not burden
interstate commerce, the Court will look beyond mere form and
consider the substance of things.
Consistently with the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, a state cannot tax property located or existing
permanently beyond its limits.
A court could not give the relief asked by the state without
recognizing or giving effect to a condition that was in violation
of the federal Constitution.
75 Kan. 609 reversed.
Page 216 U. S. 3
This action was brought by the State of Kansas in one of its
courts against the Western Union Telegraph Company, a New York
corporation, to obtain a decree ousting and restraining that
corporation from doing, in Kansas, any telegraphic business that
was wholly internal to that state, and not pursuant to some
arrangement, or to meet its contracts with, or obligations to, the
government of the United States. Upon the petition of the telegraph
company, the case was removed to the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Kansas. But it was thereafter remanded
to the state court, where, upon a demurrer to the answer, a final
decree was rendered, prohibiting and enjoining the telegraph
company from transacting intrastate business in Kansas as a
corporation, the decree, however, not to affect the company's
duties to or contracts with the United States. From that decree the
present writ of error was prosecuted.
The state contends that the decree is in exact conformity with
certain provisions of the Kansas statutes to be found in the
General Statutes of that State of 1901, Title, "Corporations," p.
280, and the General Statutes of 1905, p. 284. Those provisions, or
the ones directly involved here, originated in an act known as the
Bush Act, passed at a special session of the legislature in 1898.
Laws of Kansas, Special Session, p. 27.
The issues raised by the pleadings arise out of the above
statutes. Under those statutes, a state Charter Board was organized
and its powers defined. That Board was authorized to receive
applications from corporations of other states, territories, or
countries seeking permission to engage in business as foreign
corporations in Kansas. Any such corporation was required in its
application to set forth a certified copy of its charter or
articles of incorporation, the place where its principal office or
place of business was to be located, the full nature and character
of the business in which it proposed to engage, the names and
addresses of its officers, trustees, or directors and stockholders,
with a detailed statement of its assets and liabilities, and such
other information as the Board might require in
Page 216 U. S. 4
order to determine the solvency of the corporation. The statute
further provided that the application should be accompanied by a
fee of twenty-five dollars, to be known as an application fee, and
that it should be a condition precedent to obtaining authority to
transact business in the state that the corporation should file in
the office of the Secretary of State its written consent,
irrevocable, that actions might be brought against it in the proper
court of any county in the state (in which the cause of action
arose, or in which the plaintiff resided) by service of process on
the Secretary of State, and stipulating that such service should be
valid and binding as if due service had been made upon the
president or chief officer of the corporation. Every foreign
corporation then doing business in the state was required, within
thirty days from the taking effect of the act, to file with the
Secretary of State the specified written consent. Kan.Gen.Stat.
1901, § 1261. If the Charter Board determined that the foreign
company seeking to do business in the state was organized in
accordance with the laws under which it was created, that its
capital was unimpaired, and that it was organized for a purpose for
which a domestic corporation might be organized in Kansas, then the
Board was directed to grant the application, and by its secretary
issue a certificate, setting forth the granting of the application
to engage in business in the state, as provided in the statute.
Id., § 1263.
Then come these important sections:
"Each corporation which has received authority from the Charter
Board to organize shall, before filing its charter with the
Secretary of State, as provided by law, pay to the State Treasurer
of Kansas,
for the benefit of the permanent school fund, a
charter fee of
one-tenth of one percent of its authorized
capital, upon the first one hundred thousand dollars
of
its capital stock, or any part thereof, and upon the next four
hundred thousand dollars, or any part thereof,
one-twentieth of
one percent, and for each million or major part thereof over
and above the sum of five hundred thousand dollars,
two
hundred dollars. . . . In addition
Page 216 U. S. 5
to the charter fee herein provided, the Secretary of State shall
collect a fee of two dollars and fifty cents for filing and
recording each charter containing not to exceed ten folios, and an
additional fee of twenty-five cents for each folio in excess of ten
contained in any charter. The fee for filing and recording a
charter shall also entitle the corporation to a certified copy of
its charter. All the provisions of this act, including the payment
of the fees herein provided, shall apply to
foreign
corporations
seeking to do business in this state, except
that, in lieu of their charter, they shall file with the Secretary
of State a certified copy of their charter, executed by the proper
officer of the state, territory, or foreign country under whose
laws they are incorporated, and any corporation applying for a
renewal of its charter shall comply with all the provisions of this
act in like manner, and to the same extent, as is herein provided
for the chartering and organizing of new corporations. . . . Any
corporation organized under the laws of another state, territory,
or foreign country, and authorized to do business in this state,
shall be subject to the same provisions, judicial control,
restrictions, and penalties, except as herein provided, as
corporations organized under the laws of this state."
Id., §§ 1264, 1267.
By another section, it is made the duty of each corporation
doing business for profit in Kansas, except banking, insurance, and
railroad corporations, annually, on or before August 1st,
"to prepare and deliver to the Secretary of State a complete
detailed statement of the condition of such corporation on the 30th
day of June next preceding. Such statement shall set forth and
exhibit the following, namely: 1st., the authorized capital stock;
2d., the paid-up capital stock; 3d., the par value and the market
value per share of said stock; 4th, a complete and detailed
statement of the assets and liabilities of the corporation; 5th, a
full and complete list of the stockholders, with the post office
address of each, and the number of shares held and paid for by
each; 6th, the names and post office addresses of the officers,
trustees, or directors and manager
Page 216 U. S. 6
elected for the ensuing year, together with a certificate of the
time and manner in which such election was held. . . . And such
failure to file such statement by any corporation doing business in
this state, and not organized under the laws of this state, shall
work a forfeiture of its right or authority to do business in this
state, and the Charter Board may at any time, declare such
forfeiture, and shall forthwith publish such declaration in the
official state paper. . . . No action shall be maintained or
recovery had in any of the courts of this state by any corporation
doing business in this state without first obtaining the
certificate of the Secretary of State that statements provided for
in this section have been properly made."
Section 1283 (L. 1898, c. 10, § 12, as amended by L. 1901,
c. 125, § 3).
Under this statute, the Western Union Telegraph Company made
application to the Charter Board for permission to engage in
business in Kansas as a foreign corporation, stating that the
amount of its capital stock, fully paid up in cash, was
$100,000,000. With that application, the company deposited with the
Secretary of State the specified fee of $25, and also its written
consent, irrevocable, in the prescribed form, as to suits brought
against it, in the courts of the state, by service of process on
that officer. In reference to that consent, the company, in its
answer, said:
"It made such written submission to service and paid such
application fee voluntarily, and
ex gratia, and out of a
desire to avoid the appearance of not complying with the reasonable
regulations of the State of Kansas, made with reference to its own
corporations, but denies that said payment and that said written
submission were obligatory upon it, or were necessary or essential
as a condition precedent to its continuing to transact business
within the State of Kansas, both state and interstate."
The Charter Board granted the application of the telegraph
company, but its order to that effect, made April 5th, 1905,
recited that the application be granted and the applicant
authorized
Page 216 U. S. 7
and empowered to transact the business of receiving and
transmitting messages by telegraph within the State of Kansas, and
transacting within the said state its business of a telegraph
company, provided that the order should not take effect and no
certificate of authority should issue or be delivered to the
company
"
until such applicant shall have paid to the State
Treasurer of Kansas,
for the benefit of the permanent school
fund, the sum of twenty thousand one hundred dollars
($20,100),
being the charter fee provided by law necessary to
be paid by a foreign corporation having a capital of
$100,000,000. It is further understood, ordered, and provided
that nothing herein contained shall apply to nor be construed as
restricting in any wise the transaction by the said applicant of
its interstate business nor its business for the federal
government, but that this grant of authority and requirement as to
payment relate only to the business transacted wholly within the
State of Kansas."
The above fee of $20, 100 was the specified percent of the
authorized capital of the company which the statute
required it to pay before doing or continuing to do any local
business in Kansas.
The company refused to pay the fee thus required, and continued,
as before, to do telegraph business of all kinds in Kansas.
Thereupon the present action was brought, the sole ground of
complaint being that, in consequence of the failure of the
telegraph company to pay the charter fee of $20,100, it was without
authority to continue doing any intrastate or local business in
Kansas. The relief sought by the state, as shown by the prayer of
its petition, was that the defendant be required to show by what
authority it exercised within Kansas the corporate right and power
of receiving, transmitting, and delivering telegraphic messages
within its limits and receiving compensation therefor; that it be
adjudged by the court that the defendant had no authority of law
for the performance of such corporate acts, and the exercise of
such corporate powers and franchises, and the carrying on of said
corporate business within the state, and that it be decreed and
adjudged that the
Page 216 U. S. 8
defendant
"be ousted of and from the exercise within the State of Kansas
of the said corporate rights and franchises of receiving,
transmitting, and delivering within the State of Kansas of
telegraphic messages and communications and of receiving
compensation therefor."
The reasons given by the telegraph company for its refusal to
pay the required fee are set forth in its answer, to which a
demurrer was sustained, and may be summarized as follows: 1. that
the company had the right to transact both interstate and local
business in Kansas without paying the fee of $20,100; 2. that, by
the laws of Kansas, enacted while it was a territory and after it
became a state, telegraph companies were invited to come into it
and do both domestic and interstate business there, and in
consequence of such invitation, the company had established between
eight hundred and nine hundred offices in Kansas at great expense,
all of which was done in the full faith that it would receive the
equal protection of the laws under the Constitution of the United
States; 3. that it had been doing a general telegraph business in
Kansas ever since its organization as a territory; 4. that on the
seventh day of June, 1867, it duly accepted the conditions of the
Act of Congress of July 24th, 1866, 14 Stat. 221, c. 230, entitled,
"An Act to Aid in the Construction of Telegraph Lines, and to
Secure to the Government the Use of the Same for Postal, Military,
and Other Purposes" (Rev.Stat. §§ 5263
et seq.),
whereby it became and is now an instrument of interstate commerce
and an agency of the United States for the transaction of public
business, and subject to all the duties imposed, and entitled to
all the rights, benefits, and privileges conferred, by said act of
Congress; 5. that its lines were originally constructed in the
Territory of Kansas by the authority of an arrangement made with
the Secretary of the Treasury in conformity with certain acts of
Congress, one of which was enacted June 16th, 1860, and was
entitled "An Act to Facilitate Communication Between the Atlantic
and Pacific States by Electric Telegraph," the other, enacted July
2d 1864, entitled,
Page 216 U. S. 9
"An Act for Increased Facilities of Telegraph Communication
Between the Atlantic and Pacific States and the Territory of
Idaho," and the Telegraph Company therefore "has always been in the
State of Kansas rightfully for the purpose of the transaction of
governmental business and for the public generally, and that it
cannot be now excluded therefrom;" 6. that the company's lines of
telegraph within Kansas are upon the public domain and upon
military and post roads of the United States, and are part of the
postal system of the United States, and that the defendant has
therefore, under the Constitution and laws of the United States,
the power, and is under the duty and obligation, to transmit all
messages for the government and for the public generally just as
much and as fully with respect to messages between points within
Kansas as to interstate messages; 7. that the enforcement of the
statute of Kansas would seriously affect and cripple the company's
efficiency as an instrument of interstate commerce and as an agency
of the government for transacting both interstate and domestic
business in that state, because the receipts derived from
interstate and governmental business alone would, in many offices
in Kansas, not be equal to the expense of keeping such offices
open, and that the closing of them on that account would be
detrimental to the governmental service, as well as to interstate
commerce; 8. that, by the statutes in question, "any corporation,
including telegraph companies, organized in the state, is
authorized to do business in Kansas upon paying a charter fee based
on the actual capital of such corporation
employed in the State
of Kansas, whereas, in respect to the defendant company, the
Charter Board requires and is attempting to exact from the
defendant company, by this proceeding, a charter fee based upon the
defendant's
entire capitalization, to-wit, $100,000,000
which $100,000,000
represents the property and lines of
telegraph of the defendant company in the forty-five states of the
American Union, in the Dominion of Canada, and lines under the
Atlantic and Pacific oceans and in foreign countries;" 9. that
such tax is
Page 216 U. S. 10
upon property and rights outside of Kansas, and therefore
beyond its jurisdiction for purposes of taxation; 10.
that, "by laws passed relating to private corporations, and
especially by laws having reference to telegraph companies, some
enacted by the legislature of the Territory of Kansas and many
since the creation and organization of the State of Kansas,
telegraph companies, including the Western Union, were invited to
come into the State of Kansas, and build and construct their lines
therein, and to connect said lines with other telegraph liens then
or thereafter constructed, and to do a general telegraph business,
both domestic and interstate, throughout the State of Kansas, and
to thereby place the citizens of the State of Kansas, wherever the
lines reached, in direct telegraphic communication with all parts
of the United States; that said telegraph companies, including the
Western Union Telegraph Company, were, by the laws of the State of
Kansas, authorized to go upon the public highways of the state, and
thereon place their poles and wires; that, in pursuance of such
invitation, and before the admission of the State of Kansas to the
Union, the Western Union Telegraph Company entered the State of
Kansas and extended its lines to all points where the same might be
needed, and subsequent to the admission of the state, by
construction and purchase, lines of the Western Union Telegraph
Company were extended to all parts of the State of Kansas, and
between eight hundred and nine hundred offices established for the
use and convenience of the public; that there had been expended by
the defendant at the time of the enactment of the so-called Bush
Corporation Act, under which the present proceeding is brought,
many thousands of dollars in the construction of lines and wires
and in the other appurtenances of the telegraphic business and in
the establishment of offices; that all of this money was expended
in full faith and confidence in the laws already enacted by the
State of Kansas for the furtherance and encouragement of
telegraphic business, and also in the full faith that said company
would have the equal protection of the laws of the State of Kansas,
and the fair,
Page 216 U. S. 11
equitable, and equal treatment required by the Constitution of
the State of Kansas in the matter of taxes and other public charges
imposed upon it;" 11. that the statute in question, so far as it
prevents the company from using its property in the state for all
purposes of its business, would operate as a taking of such
property without due process of law; 12. that the statute is in
contravention of the power of Congress to regulate commerce among
the several states and with foreign countries, with its power to
establish post offices and post roads, and with its authority to
pass all laws necessary and proper to carry into execution the
powers vested in the government of the United States.
Page 216 U. S. 18
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after making the above statement, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The above extended statement would seem to be justified by the
importance of this case.
The contentions of the company, to which particular attention
will be directed, are, in substance, that the requirement that it
pay, for the benefit of the permanent school fund of the state,
a given percent of its authorized capital, wherever and
however employed, as a
condition of its right to continue
to do domestic business in Kansas, is a regulation which, by its
necessary operation, directly burdens or embarrasses interstate
commerce, and therefore is illegal under the commerce clause of the
Constitution; further, that such a requirement involves the
taxation not only of the company's interstate business everywhere,
but equally the property employed by it beyond the limits of the
state -- a thing which could not be done consistently with the due
process of law enjoined by the Fourteenth Amendment.
It will be well to inquire at the outset, as to the state of the
law in respect of local regulations that materially burden and
interfere with the freedom of commerce among the states. A review
of some of the cases will throw light on the questions now before
us, and enable us the better to ascertain the scope and effect of
the statute.
In
McCall v. California, 136 U.
S. 104,
136 U. S. 109,
a municipal ordinance of San Francisco imposing a license tax of a
specified amount upon "every railroad agency" was held to be
violative of the commerce clause of the Constitution
Page 216 U. S. 19
when applied to an agent in San Francisco of a railroad company
which had its principal place of business in Chicago, and operated
a continuous line between Chicago and New York. That agent,
conducting his business in San Francisco, city and county,
solicited there passengers who proposed to travel from Chicago to
New York to use the railroad he represented. The Court said:
"The object and effect of his soliciting agency were to swell
the volume of the business of the road. It was one of the
'
means' by which the company sought to increase, and
doubtless did increase, its interstate passenger traffic. It was
not incidentally or remotely connected with the business of the
road, but was a direct method of increasing that business. The tax
upon it therefore was, according to the principles established by
the decisions of this Court, a tax upon a means or an occupation of
carrying on interstate commerce, pure and simple."
At the same time, in
Norfolk & Western R. Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 136 U. S. 114, the
Court held that a license tax exacted by Pennsylvania upon a
railroad corporation of another state, engaged in interstate
commerce, for keeping an office in Philadelphia was a tax on such
commerce, and invalid.
A leading authority on the general subject, and which has an
important bearing on more than one question in the present case, is
that of
Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U. S.
47,
141 U. S. 51,
141 U. S. 57-59,
141 U. S. 62. That
case involved the constitutional validity of a statute of Kentucky
regulating the agencies of foreign express companies. The statute
made it unlawful for the agent of a foreign express company to set
up, establish, or carry on the business of transportation in
Kentucky without first obtaining a license from the Auditor of
Public Accounts to carry on such business, and that officer was
forbidden to issue the license until the copy of the express
company's charter was filed with him, and a statement, verified by
oath, showing its assets and liabilities, the amount of its capital
stock and how paid, of what its assets consisted, the amount of its
losses due and unpaid, and that the company was possessed of an
actual capital of at least $150,000, either in cash or safe
investments, exclusive of stock
Page 216 U. S. 20
notes. Any person carrying on any business in the state for a
transportation or express company,
not incorporated in
Kentucky, without having obtained the required license, was
subject to be fined not less than $100 nor more than $500 at the
discretion of the jury. The statute specified the fee to be paid
for the license, also a certain fee for filing a copy of the
company's charter, and still another fee for filing an original or
annual statement. The fees prescribed were on account of the
company's business in Kentucky,
no discrimination being made
between interstate and domestic business done there. Without
obtaining the required license, Crutcher acted as agent in Kentucky
of the United States Express Company, which was organized under the
laws of New York and was engaged in both interstate and domestic
commerce. For acting as such agent without the required license
from the state, he was indicted, convicted, and fined $100. The
highest court of Kentucky sustained the conviction and held the
statute to be constitutional. Among other things, it said:
"There is no discrimination made between corporations doing a
like business, and the state, although the appellant's company is a
foreign corporation, has the right to license the business and
calling of this agent as it would that of the lawyer or merchant
whose business is confined to the state alone."
The judgment of the Kentucky court was reversed by this
Court.
Speaking by Mr. Justice Bradley, this Court, among other things,
said (p.
141 U. S.
56):
"The law of Kentucky which is brought in question by the case
requires from the agent of every express company not incorporated
by the laws of Kentucky a license from the auditor of public
accounts, before he can carry on any business for said company in
the state. This, of course, embraces interstate business as well as
business confined wholly within the state. It is a prohibition
against the carrying on of such business without a compliance with
the state law. . . . If a partnership firm of individuals should
undertake to carry on the business of interstate commerce between
Kentucky and other states, it would not be within the
Page 216 U. S. 21
province of the state legislature to exact conditions on which
they should carry on their business, nor to require to take out a
license therefor. To carry on interstate commerce is not a
franchise or a privilege granted by the state; it is a right which
every citizen of the United States is entitled to exercise under
the Constitution and laws of the United States, and the accession
of mere corporate facilities, as a matter of convenience in
carrying on their business, cannot have the effect of depriving
them of such right, unless Congress should see fit to interpose
some contrary regulation on the subject. It has frequently been
laid down by this Court that the power of Congress over interstate
commerce is as absolute as it is over foreign commerce. Would
anyone pretend that a state legislature could prohibit a foreign
corporation -- an English or a French transportation company, for
example -- from coming into its borders and landing goods and
passengers at its wharves, and soliciting goods and passengers for
a return voyage, without first obtaining a license from some state
officer, and filing a sworn statement as to the amount of its
capital stock paid in? And why not? Evidently because the matter is
not within the province of state legislation, but within that of
national legislation.
Inman Steamship Co. v. Tinker,
94 U. S.
238,,"
citing
Telegraph Co. v. Texas, 105 U.
S. 460;
Gloucester Ferry Co. v. Pennsylvania,
114 U. S. 196,
114 U. S. 205,
114 U. S. 211;
Phila. Steamship Co. v. Pennsylvania, 122 U.
S. 326,
122 U. S. 342;
McCall v. California, 136 U. S. 104,
136 U. S. 110;
Norfolk & Western Railroad v. Pennsylvania,
136 U. S. 114,
136 U. S. 118.
Again:
"As was said by Mr. Justice Lamar in the case last cited:"
"It is well settled by numerous decisions of this Court that a
state cannot, under the guise of a license tax, exclude from its
jurisdiction a foreign corporation engaged in interstate commerce,
or impose any burdens upon such commerce within its
limits."
"We have repeatedly decided that a state law is unconstitutional
and void which requires a party to take out a license for carrying
on interstate commerce, no matter how specious the pretext may be
for imposing it,"
citing
Pickard v.
Pullman
Page 216 U. S. 22
Southern Car Co., 117 U. S. 34;
Robbins v. Shelby County Taxing District, 120 U.
S. 489;
Leloup v. Mobile, 127 U.
S. 640;
Asher v. Texas, 128 U.
S. 129;
Stoutenburgh v. Hennick, 129 U.
S. 141;
McCall v. California, 136 U.
S. 104;
Norfolk & Western Railroad Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 136 U. S. 114.
Further, in the
Crutcher case:
"We do not think that the difficulty is at all obviated by the
fact that the express company, as incidental to its main business
(which is to carry goods between different states), does also some
local business by carrying goods from one point to another within
the State of Kentucky. This is, probably, quite as much for the
accommodation of the people of that state as for the advantage of
the company. But whether so or not, it does not obviate the
objection that the regulations as to license and capital stock are
imposed as conditions on the company's carrying on the business of
interstate commerce, which was manifestly the principal object of
its organization. These regulations are clearly a burden and a
restriction upon that commerce. Whether intended as such or not,
they operate as such. But taxes or license fees in good faith
imposed exclusively on express business carried on wholly within
the state would be open to no such objection."
The decisions, the Court said,
"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. And as, in our judgment, the law
of Kentucky now under consideration, as applied to the case of the
plaintiff in error, is open to this objection, it necessarily
follows that the judgment of the Court of Appeals must be
reversed."
The Court had previously adjudged in
Gloucester Ferry Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 114 U. S. 196,
114 U. S. 204,
114 U. S. 211,
that a statute of Pennsylvania requiring both domestic and foreign
corporations doing business in that commonwealth to pay an annual
tax rated by the dividends declared and imposed upon
the
capital stock of the corporation at a named rate for every dollar
of
Page 216 U. S. 23
such stock, was invalid so far as corporations engaged
in interstate commerce were concerned. In that case, the Court,
speaking by Mr. Justice Field, said:
"Nor does it make any difference whether such commerce is
carried on by individuals or by corporations.
Welton v.
Missouri, 91 U. S. 275;
Mobile County
v. Kimball, 102 U. S. 691."
Again, in the
Gloucester Ferry case:
"While it is conceded that the property in a state belonging to
a foreign corporation engaged in foreign or interstate commerce may
be taxed equally with like property of a domestic corporation
engaged in that business, we are clear that a tax or other burden
imposed on the property of either corporation because it is used to
carry on that commerce, or upon the transportation of persons or
property, or for the navigation of the public waters over which the
transportation is made, is invalid and void as an interference
with, and an obstruction of, the power of Congress in the
regulation of such commerce."
This language was quoted approvingly in
Phila. Steamship Co.
v. Pennsylvania, 122 U. S. 326,
122 U. S.
343-344, which held that a tax by Pennsylvania upon the
gross receipts of one of
its own corporations derived from
interstate and foreign commerce was a regulation of interstate and
foreign commerce that was inconsistent with the power of Congress
under the Constitution. In
Phila. Steamship Co. v.
Pennsylvania, the Court, referring to the
Gloucester
Ferry case, said:
"It is hardly necessary to add that the tax on the capital stock
of the New Jersey company in that case was decided to be
unconstitutional because, as the corporation was a foreign one, the
tax could only be construed as a tax for the privilege or franchise
of carrying on its business, and that business was interstate
commerce."
In
Leloup v. Port of Mobile, 127 U.
S. 640,
127 U. S. 645,
the Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Bradley, said:
"The question is squarely presented to us, therefore, whether a
state, as a condition of doing business within its jurisdiction,
may exact a license tax from a telegraph company a large part of
whose business is the transmission of messages from one state to
another
Page 216 U. S. 24
and between the United States and foreign countries, and which
is invested with the powers and privileges conferred by the Act of
Congress passed July 24th, 1866, and other acts incorporated in
Title LXV of the Revised Statutes. Can a state prohibit such a
company from doing such a business within its jurisdiction, unless
it will pay a tax and procure a license for the privilege? If it
can, it can exclude such companies, and prohibit the transaction of
such business altogether. We are not prepared to say that this can
be done. Ordinary occupations are taxed in various ways, and in
most cases legitimately taxed. But we fail to see how a state can
tax a business occupation when it cannot tax the business itself.
Of course, the exaction of a license tax as a condition of doing
any particular business is a tax on the occupation, and a tax on
the occupation of doing a business is surely a tax on the
business."
In the recent case of
Galveston, Harrisburg &c. Ry. Co.
v. Texas, 210 U. S. 217,
210 U. S. 227,
which involved the validity of a Texas statute imposing an annual
tax "
equal to one percent of its gross receipts" on each
railroad
lying wholly within that state. The railroads
there concerned lay wholly within Texas, but, this Court said, they
connected with other lines, and a part, and in some instances much
the larger part, of their gross receipts were derived from the
carriage of passengers and freight coming from or destined to
points without the state. The contention by the railroad company
was that the tax was a burden on interstate commerce, and invalid
so far as it was based on or was measured by receipts derived from
interstate transportation. That view was sustained. The Court
said:
"Neither the state courts nor the legislatures, by giving the
tax a particular name or by the use of some form of words, can take
away our duty to consider its nature and effect. If it bears upon
commerce among the states so directly as to amount to a regulation
in a relatively immediate way, it will not be saved by name or
form.
Stockard v. Morgan, 185 U. S.
27,
185 U. S. 37;
Asbell v.
Kansas, 209 U. S. 251,
209 U. S.
254-256. "
Page 216 U. S. 25
"We are of opinion that the statute levying this tax does amount
to an attempt to regulate commerce among the states. The
distinction between a tax 'equal to' one percent of gross receipts
and a tax of one percent of the same seems to us nothing, except
where the former phrase is the index of an actual attempt to reach
the property, and to let the interstate traffic and the receipts
from it alone. We find no such attempt or anything to qualify the
plain inference from the statute, taken by itself. On the contrary,
we rather infer, from the judgment of the state court and from the
argument on behalf of the state, that another tax on the property
of the railroad is upon a valuation of that property, taken as a
going concern. This is merely an effort to reach the gross
receipts, not even disguised by the name of an occupation tax, and
in no way helped by the words 'equal to.'"
"Of course, it does not matter that the plaintiffs in error are
domestic corporations,
or that the tax embraces
indiscriminately gross receipts from commerce within as well as
outside of the state."
So, in
Brennan v. Titusville, 153 U.
S. 289,
153 U. S. 303,
which involved the validity of an ordinance imposing a license tax
on those engaged in the business of soliciting orders on behalf of
manufacturers of goods, the Court said:
"It is clear, therefore, that this license tax is not a mere
police regulation, simply inconveniencing one engaged in interstate
commerce, and so only indirectly affecting the business, but is a
direct charge and burden upon that business, and if a state may
lawfully exact it, it may increase the amount of the exaction until
all interstate commerce in this mode ceases to be possible. And,
notwithstanding the fact that the regulation of interstate commerce
is committed by the Constitution to the United States, the state is
enabled to say that it shall not be carried on in this way, and to
that extent to regulate it."
Again, in
Ashley v. Ryan, 153 U.
S. 436,
153 U. S. 440,
the Court said:
"Whether this charge by viewed as a tax, a license, or a fee, if
its exaction violated the interstate commerce
Page 216 U. S. 26
clause of the Constitution of the United States, or involved the
assertion of the right of a state to exercise its powers of
taxation beyond its geographical limits, it was void, whatever
might be the technical character affixed to the exaction."
To the same effect is
Caldwell v. North Carolina,
187 U. S. 622.
The authorities cited show that this Court has guarded with both
diligence and firmness the freedom of interstate commerce against
hostile state or local action, as such action has been manifested
by regulations operating, in some instances, directly, in others
indirectly, upon the means or instruments employed in that
commerce. This has been done without violating the principle that
an interstate carrier, entering a state for purposes of its
business, is subject to local regulations that, in their essence
and purpose, only incidentally affect interstate commerce, but are
established in good faith for the protection, safety, comfort, and
convenience of the people, are not in themselves in any real, just
sense an obstruction to or in conflict with the substantial rights
of those engaged in interstate commerce, but are referable to the
police powers of the state, and to be respected until Congress
covers the subject by legislation.
Cooley v.
Port Wardens, 12 How. 299,
53 U. S. 320;
Sherlock v. Alling, 93 U. S. 99,
93 U. S. 104;
Morgan's Louisiana & T. R. & S.S. Co. v. Board of
Health, 118 U. S. 455,
118 U. S. 463;
Smith v. Alabama, 124 U. S. 465;
Nashville, C. & St.L. R. Co. v. Alabama, 128 U. S.
96,
128 U. S. 100;
New York, N.H. & H. R. Co. v. New York, 165 U.
S. 628,
165 U. S.
631-632;
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. Co. v.
Haber, 169 U. S. 613,
169 U. S. 626;
Lake Shore & M.S. R. Co. v. Ohio, 173 U.
S. 285,
173 U. S. 297.
We are aware of no decision by this Court holding that a state may,
by any device or in any way, whether by a license tax in the form
of a "fee" or otherwise, burden the interstate business of a
corporation of another state, although the state may tax the
corporation's property regularly or permanently located within its
limits, where the ascertainment of the amount assessed is made
"dependent
Page 216 U. S. 27
in fact on the value of its property
situated
within the state."
Postal Telegraph Co. v. Adams,
155 U. S. 688,
155 U. S. 696;
Leloup v. Mobile, 127 U. S. 640,
127 U. S. 649. On
the contrary, it is to be deduced from the adjudged cases that a
corporation of one state, authorized by its charter to engage in
lawful commerce among the state, may not be prevented by another
state from coming into its limits for all the legitimate purposes
of such commerce. It may go into the state without obtaining a
license from it for the purposes of its interstate business, and
without liability to taxation there on account of such
business.
But it is said that none of the authorities cited are pertinent
to the present case, because the state expressly disclaims any
purpose by the statute in question to obstruct or embarrass
interstate commerce, but seeks only to prevent the telegraph
company from entering the field of domestic business in Kansas
without its consent and without conforming to the requirements of
its statute. But the disavowal by the state of any purpose to
burden interstate commerce cannot conclude the question as to the
fact of such a burden's being imposed, or as to the
unconstitutionality of the statute, as shown by its necessary
operation upon interstate commerce. If the statute, reasonably
interpreted, either directly or by its necessary operation burdens
interstate commerce, it must be adjudged to be invalid, whatever
may have been the purpose for which it was enacted, and although
the company may do both interstate and local business. This Court
has repeatedly adjudged that, in all such matters, the judiciary
will not regard mere forms, but will look through forms to the
substance of things. Such is an established rule of constitutional
construction, as the adjudged cases abundantly show.
In
Henderson &c. v. Mayor, 92 U. S.
259,
92 U. S. 268,
which involved the question whether a statute of New York was, in
any real sense, a regulation of commerce with foreign nations, the
Court said that, in whatever language a statute may be framed, its
purpose must be determined by its natural and
Page 216 U. S. 28
reasonable effect. In
Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.
S. 623,
123 U. S. 661,
it was said that the courts, when determining whether a statute is
consistent with the fundamental law, must not deem themselves
"bound by mere forms, nor are they to be misled by mere
pretenses. They are at liberty -- indeed, are under a solemn duty
-- to look at the substance of things whenever they enter upon the
inquiry whether the legislature has transcended the limits of its
authority."
In
Lyng v. Michigan, 135 U. S. 161,
135 U. S. 166,
it was adjudged that a state could not 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
Robbins v. Shelby Taxing District, 120 U.
S. 489,
120 U. S. 497,
it was attempted to support a local regulation about drummers upon
the ground that no discrimination was made between domestic and
foreign drummers -- that they were all taxed alike. But that device
or form of taxation did not prevail, the Court saying:
"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."
In
Minnesota v. Barber, 136 U.
S. 313,
136 U. S. 319,
136 U. S. 326,
the particular statute there assailed as repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States was not saved by the fact that it
was applicable to citizens of all the states, including citizens of
the state which enacted it. This Court said (p.
136 U. S.
319):
"There may be no purpose upon the part of a legislature to
violate the provisions of that instrument, and yet a statute
enacted by it, under the forms of law, may, by its necessary
operation, be destructive of rights granted or secured by the
Constitution. In such cases, the courts must sustain the supreme
law of the land by declaring the statute unconstitutional and
void."
It was further said in that case (p.
136 U. S.
326)
Page 216 U. S. 29
"that a statute may, upon its face, apply equally to the people
of all the states, and yet be a regulation of interstate commerce
which a state may not establish. A burden imposed by a state upon
interstate commerce is not to be sustained simply because the
statute imposing it applies alike to the people of all the states,
including the people of the state enacting such statute."
In
Brimmer v. Rebman, 138 U. S. 78,
138 U. S. 81,
the question arose as to the validity of a Virginia statute making
it unlawful to offer for sale, within the limits of that state (p.
138 U. S.
80),
"any fresh meats (beef, veal, or mutton) which shall have been
slaughtered one hundred miles or over from the place at which it is
offered for sale until and except it has been inspected and
approved"
as provided in the statute. The preamble of the statute recited
that unwholesome meats were being offered for sale in Virginia.
Such recital was held not to conclude the question as to the
conformity of the statute with the Constitution. Despite the avowal
by the state that its object, by the statute, was to prevent the
offering of unwholesome meats for sale in Virginia, this Court
adjudged it to be unconstitutional, saying (p.
138 U. S.
81):
"Is the statute now before us liable to the objection that, by
its necessary operation, it interferes with the enjoyment of rights
granted or secured by the Constitution? This question admits of but
one answer. . . . The fees exacted under the Virginia statute for
the inspection of beef, veal, and mutton, the product of animals
slaughtered one hundred miles or more from the place of sale are,
in reality, a tax, and"
"a discriminating tax, imposed by a state, operating to the
disadvantage of the products of other states when introduced into
the first-mentioned state, is, in effect, a regulation in restraint
of commerce among the states, and as such is a usurpation of the
powers conferred by the Constitution upon the Congress of the
United States."
"
Walling v. Michigan, 116 U. S. 446,
116 U. S.
455. Nor can this statute be brought into harmony with
the Constitution by the circumstances that it purports to apply
alike to the citizens of
Page 216 U. S. 30
all the states, including Virginia, for"
"a burden imposed by a state upon interstate commerce is not to
be sustained simply because the statute imposing it applies alike
to the people of all the states, including the people of the states
enacting such statutes."
"
Minnesota v. Barber, 136 U. S. 313,
136 U. S.
319;
Robbins v. Shelby County Taxing District,
120 U. S.
489,
120 U. S. 497. If the object
of Virginia had been to obstruct the bringing into that state, for
use as human food, of all beef, veal, and mutton, however
wholesome, from animals slaughtered in distant states, that object
will be accomplished if the statute before us be enforced."
Looking, then, at the natural and reasonable effect of the
statute, disregarding mere forms of expression, it is clear that
the making of the payment by the telegraph company, as a charter
fee, of a given percent
of its authorized capital,
representing, as that capital clearly does,
all of its
business and property, both within and
outside of the
state, a condition of its right to do local business in Kansas
is, in its essence, not simply a tax for the privilege of doing
local business in the state, but a burden and tax on the company's
interstate business and on its property located or used outside of
the state. The express words of the statute leave no doubt as to
what is the
basis on which the fee specified in the state
statute rests. That fee plainly is not based on such of the
company's capital stock as represented in its local business and
property in Kansas. The requirement is a given percent of the
company's authorized capital -- that is, all its capital, wherever
or however employed, whether, in the United States or in foreign
countries, and whatever may be the extent of its lines in Kansas as
compared with its lines outside of that state. What part of the fee
exacted is to be attributed to the company's domestic business in
Kansas and what part to interstate business the state has not
chosen to ascertain and declare in the statute. It strikes at the
company's entire business, wherever conducted, and its property,
wherever located, and, in terms, makes it a
condition of
the telegraph
Page 216 U. S. 31
company's right to transact purely local business in Kansas that
it shall contribute, for the benefit of the state school fund, a
given percent of its whole authorized capital, representing all of
its property and all its business and interests everywhere.
In
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Massachusetts,
125 U. S. 549,
125 U. S.
550-552, a tax nominally upon the shares of the capital
stock of the company was held to be in effect a tax only on
property owned and used by the company in Massachusetts because and
only because the basis established for the ascertainment
of the value of such property was
the proportion of the
company's lines in the state to their entire length throughout the
whole country. Such a tax was held not to be forbidden by the
Constitution because
based on the company's stock
representing only its business and its property inside the state.
In
Ratterman v. Western Union Tel. Co., 127 U.
S. 411, it was held that a single tax on the receipts of
a telegraph company, some of which were derived from interstate
commerce and some from
intrastate commerce, but capable of
separation, was invalid to
the extent that the receipts were
derived from interstate commerce. The Court was confronted
with the same situation in
Leloup v. Port of Mobile,
127 U. S. 640,
127 U. S. 647,
which case involved the validity of a city ordinance imposing,
generally, a specified license tax, "on telegraph companies." The
ordinance was held invalid because the tax had reference to the
entire business of the telegraph company, interstate and domestic,
without any distinction's being made between the different kinds of
business. It was urged in that case that a portion of the telegraph
company's business was wholly internal to the state, and therefore
was taxable by the state. To this view, the response of the Court
was:
"But that fact does not remove the difficulty. The 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."
So, in the case now before us, the exaction,
Page 216 U. S. 32
as a condition of the privilege of continuing to do or doing
local business in Kansas, that the telegraph company shall pay
a given percent of its authorized capital stock, is, for
every practical purpose, a tax both on the company's local business
in Kansas, and on its interstate business, or on the privilege of
doing interstate business; for the statute, by its necessary
operation, will accomplish precisely the result that would have
been accomplished had it been made,
in express words, a
condition of doing local business that the telegraph company should
submit to taxation upon both its interstate and intrastate business
and upon its interests and property everywhere, as represented by
its capital stock. The exaction made by the Kansas statute is as
much a tax on the interstate business of the company and on its
property outside of the state as a fee or tax on the sale of an
article imported only for sale, or as a tax on the occupation of an
importer would be a tax on the property imported (
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 444);
or that a tax on the stock of the United States is a tax on the
contract under which it was issued, and a tax on the power to
borrow money on the credit of the United States (
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449,
27 U. S.
467-468); or that a tax on the salary of an officer of
the United States would be a tax on the means employed by the
government of the Union to execute its constitutional powers
(
Dobbins v. Erie
County, 16 Pet. 435,
41 U. S. 449);
or that a tax on an ordinary bill of lading for property taken out
of a state would be a tax on the property covered by that
instrument (
Almy v.
California, 24 How. 169); or that a tax on the
amount of sales made by an auctioneer would be a tax on the goods
sold (
Cook v. Pennsylvania, 97 U. S.
566,
97 U. S. 573).
But, as already said, what part of the fee exacted by Kansas is to
be attributed to intrastate business and what part to interstate
business the state has not chosen to ascertain and declare. It has
seen proper to exact a specified percent
of the authorized
capital of the telegraph company, representing, necessarily, all
its business, interstate and intrastate, and all
Page 216 U. S. 33
its property interests in and out of the state. It is important
here to observe -- indeed, the contrary could not be asserted --
that the telegraph company lawfully entered Kansas, with the
consent of both the territory and state, for the purposes of its
business of every kind, long before, and was legally there when,
the Bush Act was passed. The state concedes its right to continue
in such business in Kansas if it will comply with the statute in
question and pay the fee demanded, and only because of such refusal
it seeks the aid of the court to oust the company from the state,
so far as local business is concerned, unless it shall, by paying
such fee, contribute -- that is the proper word -- a given percent
of all its capital for the support of the schools of the state. The
state knows that the telegraph company, in order to accommodate the
general public and make its telegraphic system effective, must do
all kinds of telegraphic business. Yet, it seeks to enforce a
regulation requiring the company by paying the "fee" in question to
assent to its interstate business being burdened and its property
outside of Kansas being taxed in order that it may continue to
conduct a business concededly beneficial to the public -- a right
lawfully acquired from the United States when Kansas was a
territory, and exercised consistently with the statutes of the
state for many years after Kansas was admitted as a State of the
Union.
But it is said to be well settled that a state, in the exercise
of its reserved powers, may prescribe the
terms on which a
foreign corporation, whatever the nature of its business, may enter
and do business within its limits.
It is true that, in many cases, the
general rule has
been laid down that a state may, if it chooses to do so, exclude
foreign corporations from its limits, or impose such terms and
conditions on their doing business in the state as, in its
judgment, may be consistent with the interests of the people. But
those were cases in which the particular foreign corporation before
the court was engaged in ordinary business, and not directly or
regularly in interstate or foreign commerce. In
Paul
v.
Page 216 U. S. 34
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, which sustained the power of the
state to exclude foreign insurance companies from its limits or to
impose conditions upon their entering the state for purposes of its
business, the Court said (p.
75 U. S.
182):
"It is undoubtedly true, as stated by counsel, that the power
conferred upon Congress to regulate commerce includes as well
commerce carried on by corporations as commerce carried on by
individuals. . . . This state of facts forbids the supposition that
it was intended in the grant of power to Congress to exclude from
its control the commerce of corporations. The language of the grant
makes no reference to the instrumentalities by which commerce may
be carried on; it is general, and includes alike commerce by
individuals, partnerships, associations, and corporations. . . .
The defect of the argument lies in the character of their business.
Issuing a policy of insurance is not a transaction of
commerce. . . . Such contracts are not interstate
transactions, though the parties may be domiciled in different
states."
In
Pensacola Tel. Co. v. Western Union Tel. Co.,
96 U. S. 1,
96 U. S. 12-13,
the case of
Paul v. Virginia was referred to and the above
extract made from its opinion. And the Court, speaking by Chief
Justice Waite in the
Pensacola case, said (p.
96 U. S. 12):
"We are aware that, in
Paul v. Virginia, supra, this
Court decided that a state might exclude a corporation of another
state from its jurisdiction, and that corporations are not within
the clause of the Constitution which declares that 'the citizens of
each state shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of
citizens in the several states.' Art. IV, § 2.
That was
not, however, the case of a corporation engaged in interstate
commerce, and enough was said by the Court to show that, if it
had been,
very different questions would have been
presented."
Whatever may be the extent of the state's authority over
intrastate business, was it competent for the state to require that
the telegraph company, which surely had the right to enter and
remain in the state for interstate business, as a
condition of its right to continue doing domestic business
in
Page 216 U. S. 35
Kansas, should pay, in the form of a fee, a specified percent
of its capital stock representing the interests, property,
and operations of the company not only in Kansas, but throughout
the United States and foreign countries? Is such a regulation
consistent with the power of Congress to regulate commerce among
the states, or with rights growing out of such commerce, and
secured by the Constitution of the United States? Can the state in
this way relieve its own treasury from the burden of supporting its
public schools and put that burden in whole or in part upon the
interstate business and property of foreign corporations? Can such
a regulation be deemed constitutional any more than one requiring
the company, as a condition of its doing intrastate business, that
it should surrender its right, for instance, to invoke the
protection of the Constitution when it is proposed to deprive it of
its property without due process of law, or to deny it the equal
protection of the laws? In
Lafayette Ins. Co. v.
French, 18 How. 404,
59 U. S. 407,
the Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Curtis, said (p.
59 U. S.
407):
"A corporation created by Indiana can transact business in Ohio
only with the consent, express or implied, of the latter state, 13
Pet.
38 U. S. 519. This consent may be
accompanied by such conditions as Ohio may think fit to impose, and
these conditions must be deemed valid and effectual by other states
and by this Court,
provided they are not repugnant to the
Constitution or laws of the United States."
In
Southern Pacific Railway Company v. Denton,
146 U. S. 202,
146 U. S. 207,
the Court considered the question of the validity of a Texas
statute relating to foreign corporations desiring to transact
business in that state. That statute provided that the application
of the corporation to do business in the state should contain a
stipulation that the permit be subject to certain provisions of the
statute, one of which was that the permit shall become null and
void if the corporation, being sued in a state court, should remove
the case into a court of the United States upon the ground of the
diverse citizenship of the parties or of local prejudice against
such corporation. Dealing
Page 216 U. S. 36
with that point, this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Gray, said
(p.
146 U. S.
207):
"But that statute, requiring the corporation, as a condition
precedent to obtaining a permit to do business within the state,
to surrender a right and privilege secured to it by the
Constitution and laws of the United States, was
unconstitutional and void, and could give no validity or effect to
any agreement or action of the corporation in obedience to its
provisions,"
citing
Insurance Co. v.
Morse, 20 Wall. 445;
Barron v. Burnside,
121 U. S. 186;
Texas Land Co. v. Worsham, 76 Tex. 556.
See also,
to the same effect,
Martin v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co.,
151 U. S. 673,
151 U. S. 684;
St. Clair v. Cox, 106 U. S. 350,
106 U. S. 356;
Barrow Steamship Co. v. Kane, 170 U.
S. 100,
170 U. S.
110-111. In the above case of
Barron v.
Burnside (which was cited with approval in the
Denton
case), this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Blatchford, unanimously
held (p.
121 U. S.
200):
"As the Iowa statute makes the right to a permit
dependent
upon the surrender by the foreign corporation of a privilege
secured to it by the Constitution and laws of the United States,
the statute requiring the permit must to held to be void. . .
. In all the cases in which this Court has considered the subject
of the granting by a state to a foreign corporation of its consent
to the transaction of business in the state, it has uniformly
asserted
that no conditions can be imposed by the state which
are repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the United
States."
So, in
Barrow Steamship Co. v. Kane, 170 U.S., above
cited, Mr. Justice Gray, delivering the unanimous judgment of the
Court, said (p.
170 U. S.
111):
"Statutes requiring foreign corporations, as a condition of
being permitted to do business within the state, to stipulate not
to remove into the courts of the United States suits brought
against them in the courts of the state have been adjudged to be
unconstitutional and void."
If a domestic corporation engaged in the business of soliciting
orders for goods manufactured, sold, and delivered in a state
should, in addition, solicit orders for goods manufactured in and
to be brought from another state for delivery, could the former
state make it a
condition of the right to engage in
local
Page 216 U. S. 37
business within its limits that the corporation pay a given
percent of
all fees or commissions received by it in its
business, interstate and domestic? There can be but one answer to
this question -- namely that such a condition would operate as a
direct burden on interstate commerce, and therefore would be
unconstitutional and void. Consistently with the Constitution, no
court could, by any form of decree, recognize or give effect to or
enforce such a condition.
We repeat that the statutory requirement that the telegraph
company shall, as a condition of its right to engage in local
business in Kansas, first pay into the state school fund a given
percent of its authorized capital, representing all its business
and property everywhere, is a burden on the company's interstate
commerce and its privilege to engage in that commerce in that it
makes both such commerce, as conducted by the company, and its
property outside of the state, contribute to the support of the
state's schools. Such is the necessary effect of the statute, and
that result cannot be avoided or concealed by calling the exaction
of such a percent of its capital stock a "fee" for the privilege of
doing local business. To hold otherwise is to allow form to control
substance. It is easy to be seen that if every state should pass a
statute similar to that enacted by Kansas, not only the freedom of
interstate commerce would be destroyed, the decisions of this Court
nullified, and the business of the country thrown into confusion,
but each state would continue to meet its own local expenses not
only by exactions that directly burdened such commerce, but by
taxation upon property situated beyond its limits. We cannot fail
to recognize the intimate connection which at this day exists
between the interstate business done by interstate companies and
the local business which, for the convenience of the people, must
be done, or can generally be better and more economically done, by
such interstate companies rather than by domestic companies
organized to conduct only local business. It is of the last
importance that the freedom of interstate commerce shall
Page 216 U. S. 38
not be trammeled or burdened by local regulations which, under
the guise of regulating local affairs, really burden rights secured
by the Constitution and laws of the United States. While the
general right of the states to regulate their strictly domestic
affairs is fundamental in our constitutional system and vital to
the integrity and permanence of that system, that right must always
be exerted in subordination to the granted or enumerated powers of
the general government, and not in hostility to rights secured by
the supreme law of the land.
We need not stop to discuss at length the specific question
whether the state can by any regulation make the property of the
company outside of Kansas contribute directly to the support of its
schools, such being the effect of the requirement that it pay into
the state treasury, for the benefit of the state school fund, a
given percent of all its capital stock as a condition of its doing
local business in Kansas. It is firmly established that,
consistently with the due process clause of the Constitution of the
United States, a state cannot tax property located or existing
permanently beyond its limits.
Louisville &c. v.
Kentucky, 188 U. S. 385,
188 U. S. 398;
Union Transit Co. v. Kentucky, 199 U.
S. 194,
199 U. S.
209.
It is said that the conclusions here announced are not in
harmony with some cases heretofore decided by this Court. This
suggestion is one of serious import, and cannot be passed without
consideration, although the careful examination of the cases may
greatly extend this opinion. In support of the view just stated,
reliance is placed particularly on
Osborne v. Florida,
164 U. S. 650;
Pullman Co. v. Adams, 189 U. S. 420;
Allen v. Pullman's Palace Car Co., 191 U.
S. 171, and
Security Mutual Life Ins. Co. v.
Prewitt, 202 U. S. 246,
202 U. S.
248.
What was the case of
Osborne v. Florida? A certain
statute of that state made it a misdemeanor for one to act as agent
in the state of an express company doing business there without the
payment of a license tax,
the amount of which depended upon the
number of inhabitants in the city, town, or village where
the
Page 216 U. S. 39
business was
conducted. Osborne, without obtaining such
a license, and having acted as agent, in Florida, of a Georgia
corporation engaged in interstate as well as intrastate business,
was proceeded against criminally under the statute. He contended
that the statute was invalid in that it assumed to regulate
interstate commerce. The Supreme Court of Florida held that the
statute had no application to interstate commerce, and affected
only the business done in the state that was "local" in its
character. And this Court, upon writ of error to the Supreme Court
of Florida, held that the company could
"conduct its interstate business without paying the slightest
heed to the act, because it does not apply to or in any degree
affect the company in regard to that portion of its business which
it has the right to conduct without regulation from the state."
As thus construed, the statute was held not to be a regulation
of interstate commerce. This Court, recognizing the principle
announced in
Crutcher v. Kentucky, said that
"so long as the regulation as to the license or taxation
does not refer to and
is not imposed upon the business
of the company which is interstate, there is no interference
with that commerce by the state statute."
Let it be observed that the license taxes prescribed by Florida
were such as to make it clear that its statute applied, and was
intended to be applied, only to domestic business within Florida,
as measured by
the number of inhabitants of the city or town
where the business was conducted. It was not imposed on any
basis that had reference either to the interstate business or to
the property of the company outside of the state. It imposed no
burden whatever on interstate business, nor put any obstacle in the
way of doing such business, whereas the statute here involved
prohibits a foreign corporation from doing any local business in
Kansas unless such corporation first pays into the state's school
fund a tax, or, which is the same thing, a fee, in the form of a
given
percent of all its capital, representing all of its
business, property, and interests everywhere. The Florida case
is somewhat similar in principle to that of
Western Union Tel.
Co. v. Massachusetts,
Page 216 U. S. 40
above cited, in which it was held that a state tax on the
capital stock of the telegraph company was valid when measured, as
it was in that case, not by its entire capital, but by the
proportion of the company's lines in the state to their entire
length throughout the entire country. So, in
Osborne v.
Florida, the tax was not imposed on the basis of the business
of the company, interstate and intrastate, or either separately,
but was made to depend alone on the number of inhabitants in the
particular city or town where its agency was established. It is
manifest that what has been said in the present case is in perfect
harmony with the decision in the
Osborne case.
As to
Pullman Co. v. Adams, 189 U.
S. 420,
189 U. S. 421,
we perceive nothing in the judgment in that case that conflicts
with what is herein said. That case involved the validity of a tax
of a certain amount imposed by Mississippi on
each
sleeping and palace car company carrying passengers "from one point
to another
within the state," and so many cents per mile
"for each mile of railroad track over which the company runs its
cars
in this state." It was contended that this tax was an
interference with commerce among the states. It is stated in the
opinion that the sleeping cars of the Pullman Company, an Illinois
corporation,
"were carried by various railroad companies, and all of them
were carried into the state from another state, or out of the state
to another state, or both. But such cars in their passage also
carried passengers from point to point within the state, and a
specific fare was collected by the servants of the Pullman
Company."
It was contended by the company that the state constitution made
it a common carrier, and, in effect, compelled it to assume the
burden of carrying local passengers, although its receipts from
purely local business were less than the expense incurred in
carrying it on. But the state supreme court held that view of the
state constitution to be fallacious. And this Court said:
"If the clause of the state constitution referred to were held
to impose the obligation supposed and to be valid, we assume,
without discussion, that the tax would be invalid.
For then
it
Page 216 U. S. 41
would seem to be true that the state constitution and the
statute combined would impose a burden on commerce between the
states analogous to that which was held bad in Crutcher v.
Kentucky, 141 U. S. 47. On the other hand,
if the Pullman Company, whether called a common carrier or not, had
the right to choose between what points it would carry, and
therefore to give up the carriage of passengers from one point to
another within the state, the case is governed by
Osborne v.
Florida, supra. The company cannot complain of being taxed for
the privilege of doing local business which it is free to renounce.
Both parties agree that the tax is a privilege tax. As the validity
of the tax is thus bound up with the effect of the section of the
state constitution, we think that the Pullman Company was entitled
to know how it stood under the latter, and that a judgment against
it could not be justified by reasoning which leaves that point
obscure . We are somewhat embarrassed in dealing with the case,
because we are not quite certain whether we rightly interpret the
intimations upon the subject in the judgment under review. If the
Constitution of Mississippi should be read as imposing an
obligation to take local passengers, the question for us might be
which, if not both, the clause of the Constitution or the tax act,
is invalid. But we assume that the opinion of the Supreme Court of
Mississippi intends to meet the difficulty frankly, and when it
says that the argument against the tax drawn from the above
interpretation of the Constitution is fallacious, we take it as
meaning that no such interpretation will be attempted in the
future, and we take it so the more readily that we can see no
ground for a different view. If we are right in our understanding,
the judgment of the supreme court was correct for the reason
sufficiently stated above."
So that what was actually decided in the
Adams case was
that the company was under no obligation to take local passengers,
but, if it chose to do that kind of business, the privilege for
doing it could be taxed by the state. The Court did not hold that
the state could, in any form, directly burden interstate commerce.
It really held to the contrary.
Page 216 U. S. 42
The
Adams case differs from the present one in this:
that while the Mississippi Code imposed no other condition upon the
Pullman Company doing local business in that state than that it
should pay a certain license tax on that account -- which tax, it
may be observed, is not at all disproportioned to such local
business, and therefore not to be regarded as a mere device to
reach or burden the interstate commerce of the company -- the
statute of Kansas forbids the doing of local business within its
limits by a corporation of another state or foreign country except
subject to the condition that such corporation first pay to the
state a given percent of its entire capitalization representing the
value of all its business, property, and interests within and
without the state, thereby placing a direct burden on the privilege
or franchise of transacting interstate commerce and taxing property
rights beyond the jurisdiction of the state for purposes of
taxation. That the Western Union Telegraph Company is engaged in
both interstate and intrastate commerce is no reason, in itself,
why Kansas may not, in good faith, require it to pay a license tax
strictly on account of local business done by it in that state. But
it is altogether a different thing for Kansas to deny it the
privilege of doing such local business, beneficial to the public,
except on condition that it shall
first pay to the state a
given percent of all its capital stock, representing all of its
property, wherever situated, and all its business in and outside of
the state.
Nor is there any conflict between the views we have expressed
and the decision in
Allen v. Pullman's Palace Car Co.,
191 U. S. 171,
191 U. S.
178-179. One of the questions in that case was as to the
constitutional validity of a Tennessee statute, passed in 1887,
which required every company operating sleeping cars and doing
business in that state to pay, as a privilege tax, "on each car,
per annum, $500." The Pullman Car Company operated sleeping cars in
Tennessee under a contract with railroad companies traversing the
state. The gross receipts of the companies from lines running into
the state were annually about $500,000, and only about $25,000
annually from passengers
Page 216 U. S. 43
carried locally in Tennessee. The cars actually used on these
lines during each year numbered over one hundred. The Court in that
case referred to
Pickard v. Pullman Southern Car Co.,
117 U. S. 34, which
involved the validity of a Tennessee Act of 1877, imposing a
license tax privilege of $50 annually for each sleeping car or
coach used on railroads in the state, and said (p.
191 U. S.
178):
"It was held [in the
Pickard case] that the tax was a
burden upon interstate commerce, and void because of the exclusive
power of Congress to regulate commerce between the states. Unless
the statute now under consideration can be distinguished from the
one then construed, the Pickard case is decisive of the present
case. Both taxes were imposed under the power granted by the
Constitution of Tennessee to lay a privilege tax. This power is
held by the supreme court of the state to give a wide range of
legislative discretion. Any occupation, business, employment, or
the like affecting the public may be classed and taxed as a
privilege.
K. & O. Railroad v. Harris, 99 Tenn. 684.
In the act of 1877, the running and using of sleeping cars on
railroads in the state, when the cars are not owned by the
railroads upon which they are run, is declared to be a privilege.
Under the act of 1887, the tax is specifically imposed upon a
privilege. Under the act of 1877, the tax imposed was $50 for each
car or coach used or run over the road. Under the act of 1887, each
company doing business in the state is required to pay $500 per
annum for the same privilege. The distinction, except in the amount
of annual tax exacted, is without substantial difference. Under the
earlier act, the tax is required for the privilege of running and
using sleeping cars on railroads not owning the cars. In the later
act, it is exacted for the privilege of doing business in the
state. This business consists of running sleeping cars upon
railroads not owning the cars, and is precisely the privilege to be
paid for under the first act, neither more nor less.
In neither
act is any distinction attempted between local or through cars of
carriers of passengers. The railroads upon which the cars are
run are lines traversing
Page 216 U. S. 44
the state, but not confined to its limits. The cars of the
Pullman Company run into and beyond the state as well as between
points within the state. The act in its terms applies to cars
running through the state as well as those whose operation is
wholly
intrastate. It applies to all alike, and requires
payment for the privilege of running the cars of the company,
regardless of the fact whether used in interstate traffic or in
that which is wholly within the borders of the state. . . . The
statute now under consideration requires payment of the sum exacted
for the privilege of doing any business, when the principal thing
to be done is interstate traffic. We are not at liberty to read
into the statute terms not found therein or necessarily implied,
with a view to limiting the tax to local business, which the
legislature, in the terms of the act, impose upon the entire
business of the company. We are of opinion that taxes exacted under
the act of 1887 are void as an attempt by the state to impose a
burden upon interstate commerce."
Again, in the same case, the Court sustained the validity of a
Tennessee act of 1889 which applied
"strictly to business done [by sleeping car companies] in the
transportation of passengers taken up at one point in the state and
transported wholly within the state to another point therein."
This Court, while recognizing, as former cases had done, the
exclusive right of Congress to regulate interstate traffic, said
that
"the corresponding right of the state to tax and control the
internal business of the state, although thereby foreign or
interstate commerce may be indirectly affected has been recognized
with equal clearness,"
citing
Osborne v. Florida, 164 U.
S. 650. It would seem to be too clear to admit of doubt
that the principles in the
Allen case are substantially
those herein announced. Indeed, we could not hold otherwise than we
do in the present case without overruling or materially modifying
the principles announced in the
Allen case. In the
Allen case, the license tax there in question under the
Tennessee act of 1887 was imposed generally on account of each
sleeping car used on railroads traversing the state,
without
any discrimination's being made between
Page 216 U. S. 45
cars transporting interstate passengers and those
transporting local passengers. On that ground, the tax was
held to be void. In the present case, the State of Kansas demands,
in the form of a fee, a given percent of all the capital of the
foreign corporation, without any discrimination between the capital
representing the business and property of the telegraph company
outside of the state and the capital representing such of its
business and property as are wholly local to the state. And it
seeks the aid of the court to oust the telegraph company from
continuing to do business in the state, so far as local business is
concerned, because and only because it will not surrender its
immunity from state taxation in reference to its interstate
business and its property outside of Kansas.
We come now to the case of
Security Mutual Life Insurance
Co. v. Prewitt, 202 U. S. 246,
202 U. S. 257,
which case, it is contended, necessarily determines the present
question in favor of the State of Kansas. In the
Prewitt
case, this Court sustained the constitutional validity of a
Kentucky statute providing, among other things, that if a foreign
insurance company should bring a suit in a federal court against a
citizen of Kentucky, or, being itself sued in a state court, should
remove the suit to the federal court, without the consent of the
other party, any permit previously granted by it to do business in
Kentucky should be forthwith revoked by the state insurance
commissioner, and the fact of such revocation published in some
newspaper of general circulation in the state. No other question
was determined. The Court regarded the question as concluded in
favor of the state by the decision in
Insurance
Company v. Morse, 20 Wall. 445. It said (p.
202 U. S.
257):
"As a state has power to refuse permission to a foreign
insurance company to do business at all within its confines, and as
it has power to withdraw that permission when once given, without
stating any reason for its action, the fact that it may give what
some may think a poor reason or none for a valid act is
immaterial."
The vital difference between the
Prewitt case and the
one now before us is that the business of the
Page 216 U. S. 46
insurance company, involved in the former case, was not, as this
Court has often adjudged, interstate commerce, while the business
of the telegraph company was primarily and mainly that of
interstate commerce. A decision, such as was rendered in the
Prewitt case, that a state could, with or without reason
and without violating the Constitution, revoke its permit to a
foreign
insurance company to do business of a domestic
character within its limits cannot be cited as authority for the
proposition, upon which the Kansas statute rests, that a state may
prescribe such regulations as to corporations of other states
engaged in both interstate and local business as will require them,
as a condition of their doing local business, that they shall
contribute a given amount out of their capital stock representing
all their business, interstate and domestic, wherever done, and all
their property, wherever located, in or outside of the state, for
the support of the state's schools. The
Prewitt case by no
means recognized any uncontrollable power in a state to prohibit
all foreign corporations, in whatever business engaged, from doing
business within its limits. On the contrary, this Court said in
that very case that
"a state has the right to prohibit a foreign corporation from
doing business within its borders
unless such prohibition is so
conditioned as to violate some provision of the federal
Constitution,"
citing various adjudged authorities, among them the case of
Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 648,
155 U. S.
652-653. In the latter case, the court recognized as
long settled the general principle that the right of a foreign
corporation to engage in business within the state depended solely
on the will of such state. But it took especial care to say that
the interstate business of a foreign corporation was a business of
an exceptional character, and was protected by the Constitution
against interference by state authority. The cases referred to in
support of that view are the same as those hereinbefore cited in
this opinion. If it be true that the statute of Kansas, by its
necessary operation, imposes a burden on the interstate business of
the telegraph
Page 216 U. S. 47
company, and subjects its property and business outside of that
state to taxation, then the constitutional validity of the statute,
in the particulars adverted to, may be here adjudged without any
reference whatever to the judgment in the
Prewitt case,
and without reexamining the grounds upon which that judgment
rested. The Court did not intend by its judgment in the
Prewitt
case to recognize the right of Kentucky, by any regulation as
to foreign insurance companies, to burden interstate commerce or to
tax property located and used without its limits. It could not have
done so without overruling numerous decisions of this Court on that
subject. On the contrary, as we have seen, the Court in that case
distinctly recognized the principle that a state could not make any
prohibition whatever as to a corporation doing business within its
limits that would be in violation of the federal Constitution. In
respect of the point actually decided in it, we leave the
Prewitt case and the objections urged against the doctrine
it announces wholly on one side, and go no further now than is
indicated in this opinion.
It results that a decree of ouster, such as the state asks,
could not be granted without recognizing the validity of and the
giving effect to the unconstitutional requirement that the
telegraph company, as a
condition of its being allowed to
do intrastate business in Kansas, should pay into the state school
fund a given percent of its authorized capital in the form of a
fee, based, as in effect it is, on all its property, business, and
interests everywhere, including both its interstate and intrastate
business and property. Such a decree is asked on the ground that
the company has refused to pay such fee. The state court ought to
have refused the affirmative relief asked, and dismissed the
petition upon the ground that the condition sought to be enforced
by a decree of ouster was in violation of the commerce and due
process clauses of the Constitution and of the company's rights
under that instrument. The right of the telegraph company to
continue the transaction of local business in Kansas could not be
made to
Page 216 U. S. 48
depend upon its submission to a condition prescribed by that
state, which was hostile both to the letter and spirit of the
Constitution. The company was not bound under any circumstances to
surrender its constitutional exemption from state taxation, direct
or indirect, in respect of its interstate business and its property
outside of the state, any more than it would have been bound to
surrender any other right secured by the national Constitution.
There are other aspects of the case involving constitutional
questions that might be considered, and which, it is contended,
would lead to the same conclusion as is herein indicated. But it is
unnecessary to pass on any of the grounds urged by the telegraph
company in its defense other than those made the basis of the
decision now rendered. In order to dispose of this case, we need
not now go further than to hold, as we do, that, for the reasons
stated, the state was not entitled to the aid of the court in this
case; that the affirmative relief asked by it could not have been
granted without practically compelling the telegraph company, as a
condition of its doing local business in Kansas, that it should
surrender rights belonging to it under the Constitution of the
United States and secured by that instrument against hostile state
action; that any such condition was unconstitutional and void, and
that the right of the telegraph company to continue doing business
in Kansas is not, and cannot be, affected by that condition.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY heard the argument in this case, participated
in its decision, and approves the opinion of the Court.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Kansas is reversed, and the
cause remanded for such proceedings as may be consistent with this
opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE White, concurring:
It is shown that the telegraph company, many years ago, went
into the State of Kansas, constructed its lines, established
Page 216 U. S. 49
its offices, etc., and has since been engaged in business both
interstate and local. It is not disputed that there was no law in
the state forbidding the company from doing as it did. From this it
results that the corporation went into the state, constructed its
plant, and carried on its business on the implied invitation -- or
at least with the tacit consent -- of the state. No one questions
that the tax which is here in dispute, imposed by the law of Kansas
upon the corporation, is repugnant to the Constitution of the
United States because wanting in due process, and that it is
therefore confiscatory in character. The tax being thus conceded to
be inherently vicious, there is, of course, no attempt to sustain
its validity on its intrinsic merits. The sole contention is that,
although the tax is void, the telegraph company may not invoke the
protection of the Constitution of the United States, because it is
in a position where it is not entitled to avail itself of the
fundamental safeguards which it was the purpose of the Constitution
to secure to all. The reasoning by which it is thus sought to
sustain the right of the state to exert a power prohibited by the
Constitution of the United States, and to outlaw the corporation by
depriving it of the protection afforded by that instrument, is
this: the state, it is insisted, has the right to prevent a foreign
corporation from coming into its jurisdiction and engaging there in
local business, and this power, in the nature of things, must
include the right to affix such conditions to the privilege of
coming in as the state chooses to impose. Under these
circumstances, the argument proceeds, it becomes immaterial to
consider the character of the condition annexed by the state to the
enjoyment of the right to come in, since, although such conditions
be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States and
destructive of the most obvious and sacred rights, as the condition
only becomes operative provided the corporation elects to come in,
therefore the condition is not obligatory, but is voluntarily
assented to by the corporation, and hence may not be by it
questioned. But even if, for the sake of the argument only,
Page 216 U. S. 50
the general correctness of the proposition be conceded, it has
no application to the case here presented. Such is the case since
this cause is concerned not with the power of the state to prevent
a corporation from coming in for the purpose of doing local
business, and to attach conditions to the privilege of so coming
in, but involves the right of the state to confiscate the property
of the corporation already within the state, and which has been
there for years, devoted to the doing of local business, as the
result of the implied invitation or tacit consent of the state
arising from its failure to forbid or to regulate the coming in. In
other words, this case involves determining not how far a state may
arbitrarily exclude, but to what extent, after allowing a
corporation to come in and acquire property, a state may take its
property within the state without compensation upon the theory that
the corporation is not in the state, and has no property right
therein which is not subject to confiscation. The difference
between the premise upon which the proposition contended for rests
and the situation here presented seems to me self-evident. I say
this because my mind fails to perceive how the doctrine of election
or voluntary assumption of an unconstitutional burden can have any
possible application to a case like this. Let me illustrate. The
telegraph company has expended in the state large sums of money,
adequate for the purpose of enabling it to do both local and
interstate business. The investment is there, and its magnitude, it
is fair to assume, is in part a resultant of the requirements of
the local business. The continued beneficial existence of the
investment depends upon the right to use the property for the
purpose for which it was acquired -- that is, for both interstate
and local business. The state law takes the property, or what is
equivalent thereto, imposes an unconstitutional and confiscatory
burden, upon the condition that such burden be discharged or the
local business be abandoned. What possible election can there be?
The property is in the state. It has been invested therein for the
very purpose of doing local as
Page 216 U. S. 51
well as other business. If the unconstitutional burden be not
assumed, local business must cease, and hence the property
established for the purpose of doing the local business becomes
worthless and is in effect confiscated. If, on the other hand, the
unconstitutional burden be borne, a like result takes place.
Nor, I submit, it there force in the suggestion that, under the
facts here disclosed, the company cannot be heard to complain,
because, as it was in the state without express authority, it must
be assumed to have gone into the state and made its investment
subject to the exertion by the state of its authority. I concede
the proposition to be sound insofar as it includes the right of the
state to exert its lawful powers. That is to say, I concede that
the corporation, in going in and investing its property within the
state, did so subject to the right of the state to exert, as to the
property thus in the state, all lawful powers which might be called
into play as to property so situated of the character of that under
consideration. But I cannot assent to the correctness of the
contention insofar as it asserts that the state may suffer a
corporation to come into its borders, invest in property therein,
and then, after having allowed, by acquiescence or implied
invitation, such a situation to arise, the state may treat the
corporation as if it had never come in and its property within the
state as if it were wholly out of the state, and despoil the
corporation of its rights and property upon such false
assumption.
It is to be observed that the view taken by me does not deprive
the state of power to exert its authority over the corporation and
its property in the amplest way, subject to constitutional
limitations. It simply prevents the state from driving out the
corporation which is in the state by imposing upon it arbitrary and
unconstitutional conditions when upon no possible theory could the
right to exact them exist except upon the assumption that the
corporation is not in the state, and that the illegal exactions are
the price of the privilege of allowing it to come in.
Page 216 U. S. 52
Resting, as I do, my concurrence in the decree in this case upon
the grounds just previously stated, it becomes unnecessary for me
to say anything concerning the wider ground upon which the opinion
of the Court proceeds, but I do not wish to be understood as
dissenting in any respect from the fundamental principle which the
opinion of the Court embodies and applies.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, dissenting:
I think that the judgment of the Supreme Court of Kansas was
right, and it will not take me long to give my reasons. I assume
that a state cannot tax a corporation on commerce carried on by it
with another state, or on property outside the jurisdiction of the
taxing state, and I assume further that, for that reason, a tax on
or measured by the value of the total stock of a corporation like
the Western Union Telegraph Company is void. But I also assume that
it is not intended to deny or overrule what has been regarded as
unquestionable since
Bank of Augusta v.
Earle, 13 Pet. 519, that, as to foreign
corporations seeking to do business wholly within a state, that
state is the master, and may prohibit or tax such business at will.
Security Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Prewitt, 202 U.
S. 246,
202 U. S. 249;
Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas, 177 U. S.
28;
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168. I make the same assumption
as to what has been decided twice, at least, since I have sat on
this bench -- that the right to prohibit, regulate, or tax foreign
corporations in respect of business done wholly within a state is
not taken away by the fact that they also are engaged there in
commerce among the states.
Pullman Co. v. Adams,
189 U. S. 420;
Allen v. Pullman's Palace Car Co., 191 U.
S. 171.
If it should be said that the corporation had a right to enter
the state for commerce with other states, and, being there, had the
same right to use its property as others, I reply that this begs
the question, if the premises be granted. If the corporation has
the right to enter for one purpose, and the state has
Page 216 U. S. 53
a right to exclude its entry for another, the two rights can
coexist. To say that the disappearance of the latter is an incident
of the ownership of property there is to declare that what is
allowed only for a limited purpose must have general results. I
think it more logical and more true to the scheme of the Union to
recognize that what comes in only for a special purpose can claim
constitutional protection only in its use for that purpose, and for
nothing else. That, at all events, has been decided in the cases to
which I have referred.
Now what has Kansas done? She has not undertaken to tax the
Western Union. She has not attempted to impose an absolute
liability for a single dollar. She simply has said to the company
that, if it wants to do local business, it must pay a certain sum
of money, just as Mississippi said to the Pullman Company that, if
it wanted to carry on local traffic, it must pay a certain sum. It
does not matter if the sum is extravagant. Even in the law, the
whole generally includes its parts. If the state may prohibit, it
may prohibit with the privilege of avoiding the prohibition in a
certain way. I hardly can suppose that the provision is made any
the worse by giving a bad reason for it or by calling it by a bad
name. I quite agree that we must look through form to substance.
The whole matter is left in the Western Union's hands. If the
license fee is more than the local business will bear, it can stop
that business and avoid the fee. Whether economically wise or not,
I am far from thinking that the charge is inherently vicious or
bad. If the imposition were absolute, or if the attempt were to
oust the corporation from the state if it did not pay, the
arguments that prevail would be apposite. But the state seeks only
to oust the corporation from that part of its business that the
corporation has no right to do unless the state gives leave.
Of course, the suggestion on the other side is that this is an
attempt by indirection to break the taboo on the telegraph
company's business with other states. The local and the interstate
business may be necessary each to the other to make the whole pay.
Or the telegraph company might carry on the
Page 216 U. S. 54
local business at a loss, for the sake of popularity or other
indirect sources of gain. In the last case, the fee would come out
of earnings that the state has no right to touch. But these
considerations do not reach their aim. To deny the right of Kansas
to do as it chooses with the local business is to require the local
business to help to sustain that between the states. If the latter
does not pay alone, that is no reason for cutting down powers that,
up to this time, the states always have possessed. If the telegraph
company chooses to pay the fee out of its other earnings, that is
its affair. It is master of the situation, and can stop if it sees
fit. Exactly this argument was pressed in
Pullman Co. v.
Adams, 189 U. S. 420,
189 U. S. 421,
and was rejected without dissent.
See Ashley v. Ryan,
153 U. S. 436,
153 U. S.
444.
What I have said shows, I think, the fallacy involved in talking
about unconstitutional conditions. Of course, if the condition was
the making of a contract contrary to the policy of the Constitution
of the United States, the contract would be void. That was all that
was decided in
Southern Pacific Co. v. Denton,
146 U. S. 202. But
it does not follow that, if keeping the contract was made a
condition of staying in the state, the condition would be void. I
confess my inability to understand how a condition can be
unconstitutional when attached to a matter over which a state has
absolute arbitrary power. This Court was equally unable to
understand it in
Horn Silver Mining Co. v. New York,
143 U. S. 305,
143 U. S. 315.
In that case, it was said:
"Having the absolute power of excluding the foreign corporation,
the state may, of course, impose such conditions upon permitting
the corporation to do business within its limits as it may judge
expedient, and it may make the grant or privilege dependent upon
the payment of a specific license tax, or a sum proportioned to the
amount of its capital."
The consequence is the measure of the condition. When the only
consequence of a breach is a result that the state may bring about
directly in the first place, the condition cannot be
unconstitutional. If, after this decision, the State of Kansas,
Page 216 U. S. 55
without giving any reason, sees fit simply to prohibit the
Western Union Telegraph Company from doing any more local business
there, or from doing local business until it has paid $20,100, I
shall be curious to see upon what ground that legislation will be
assailed. I am aware that the battle has raged with varying
fortunes over this matter of unconstitutional conditions, but it
appears to me ground for regret that the Court so soon should
abandon its latest decision (
Security Mut. Life Ins. Co. v.
Prewitt, 202 U. S.
246).
Finally, in the absence of contract, the power of the state is
not affected by the fact that the corporation concerned already is
in the state, or even has been there for some time.
Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas, 177 U. S.
28;
National Council of the Junior Order of United
American Mechanics v. State Council of Virginia, 203 U.
S. 151,
203 U. S. 163.
Whatever the corporation may do or acquire, there is infected with
the original weakness of dependence upon the will of the state.
This is a general principle, illustrated by many cases. Thus, a
water company cannot take away the power of a city to establish
rates by making contracts with its customers.
Knoxville Water
Co. v. Knoxville, 189 U. S. 434,
189 U. S. 438.
Private individuals cannot cut down the police power by their
arrangements together.
Manigault v. Springs, 199 U.
S. 473,
199 U. S. 480.
A city cannot limit the power of the legislature over property by
making a lease.
Browne v. Turner, 176 Mass. 9, 15. Or, to
pass at once to the most recent and most conspicuous example, the
power of Congress to regulate commerce among the states cannot be
affected by the acquisition of property or growth of values
dependent upon the continuance of its assent.
United States v.
Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U. S. 366,
213 U. S.
405-406. In that case, an enormous amount of property
had been built up under direct encouragement from the states in
which it was situated, and was saved from destruction only by the
restricted meaning given to the act of Congress. The unrestricted
power of Congress was affirmed in strong terms.
See also Union Bridge Co. v. United
States,
Page 216 U. S. 56
204 U. S. 364,
204 U. S. 394.
In
Horn Silver Mining Co. v. New York, 143 U.
S. 305, the corporation showed by its answer that it had
employed part of its capital in manufacturing in New York. It had
got into the state and was at work there, yet it was held liable to
pay a percentage of its entire capital, although the greater part
was outside the state. But furthermore, it is a short answer to
this part of the argument that, in the present case, according to
decisions relied upon by the majority, the state could not have
prevented the entry of the corporation, because it entered for the
purpose of commerce with other states.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE McKENNA concur in this
dissent.
The late Mr. Justice Peckham took part in the consideration of
the case and agreed with the minority.