The rule of interpretation that, where there are two possible
constructions of a statute, one of which will give rise to grave
doubts of its constitutionality and the other avoids such question,
the latter will be adopted is based on the existence of both
conditions as to more than one construction and doubt and is not
applicable where neither of those conditions exists.
The limitations of due process of law which prevent states from
taxing property in another state do not apply to the United States,
the admitted taxing power of which is coextensive with the limits
of the United States and knows no restriction save as expressed in
or arising from the Constitution itself.
The government of the United States as a nation, by its very
nature, benefits the citizen and his property wherever found, and
no imaginary barrier shuts that government off from exerting the
powers which inherently belong to it by virtue of its
sovereignty.
The tax imposed by § 37 of the Tariff Act of 1909 applies
to the use of a foreign-built yacht owned by a citizen of the
United States, although such yacht, for a period of more than one
year prior to September 1, 1909, and to the levy of such tax, was
used wholly outside of the limits and territorial jurisdiction of
the United States.
The tax imposed by said act operated retrospectively, so as to
be payable on September 1, 1909, in respect of the year then ended,
and not only prospectively so as to become first due and payable on
September 1, 1910.
The whole amount of the tax imposed by said act became due and
payable on September 1, 1909, and not only such proportion thereof
as the time during which the act was in force at that date bore to
the whole year.
Congress has the power to levy a tax upon the use by a citizen
of the United States of a yacht which is not actually, and since a
time preceding the passage of the act was not at any time, used
within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, and which
has its permanent situs in a foreign country.
Page 232 U. S. 300
Said act of Congress, imposing a tax upon the use of
foreign-built yachts alone, provides a valid tax, and a valid
classification for purposes of taxation, within the power to lay
and collect taxes delegated to Congress by the Constitution of the
United States.
The tax imposed by said act is not in conflict with the
requirement of due process of law contained in the Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution of the United States.
The United States is entitled to recover interest upon the tax
imposed upon the use of foreign-built yacht under § 37 of the
Tariff Act of August 5, 1909.
This Court answer the question certified in this case according
to the facts stated in the certificate, and nothing in the replies
should be so construed as to deprive the court below of the power
to take such steps as it may deem necessary to avoid injustice by
reason of any mistake of fact that may be corrected.
The facts, which involve the construction and constitutionality
of § 37 of the Tariff Act of 1909 imposing a tax on
foreign-built yachts and its application to a yacht owned by an
American citizen but which had not been within the jurisdiction of
the United States during any part of the period for which the tax
as levied, are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
So far as we deem it material to the question we are called upon
to answer, the certificate in this case is as follows:
Page 232 U. S. 301
"The United States, plaintiff below, sued out a writ of error to
this Court to review a judgment of the United States Circuit Court
for the Southern District of New York in the above-entitled cause,
entered on July 6, 1911, dismissing the amended complaint of the
United States in an action brought against the defendant below to
recover the tax imposed by § 37 of the Tariff Act of August 5,
1909, c. 6, 36 Stat. 112, for the year ended September 1, 1909,
upon the use of the foreign-built yacht
Lysistrata, owned
by the defendant."
After reciting the averment as to the assessment of the tax by
the collector, amounting to $13,601, and the failure of the
defendant to pay, his citizenship and ownership of the yacht, and
the conformity of the assessment to the statute, the certificate
states that there was a prayer for the recovery of the amount with
interest. It then proceeds to state the answer of the defendant,
setting up the nonregistry and nonenrollment of the yacht, that she
enjoyed no protection or privileges of any kind under the laws of
the United States, and that the yacht, since 1904, "had not been
within the jurisdiction of the United States, but had had a
permanent situs within the jurisdiction of the Republic of France."
The certificate then proceeds to state the facts as to ownership of
other yachts in the United States in the exact words used in the
answers in previous cases which we have this day decided, and upon
which the want of due process of law was set up. Then the
certificate declares the United States demurred to this answer, and
that this demurrer was overruled, and the United States electing to
plead no further, there was judgment rejecting its claim, and that
error was then prosecuted to the circuit court of appeals by the
United States. The seven questions propounded are the equivalent of
the questions in the
Goelet cases, just decided, except
there is no question asked concerning the power to tax under the
statute in case of the permanent domicil of
Page 232 U. S. 302
the owner in a foreign country, which was the basis of the
decision in the
Goelet cases because, as is shown by the
certificate, there was no assertion or proof that there was a
permanent foreign domicil of the owner in this case. So that the
first question in this case concerns the liability of a citizen of
the United States having a domicil therein, for a tax on a yacht
owned and used during the taxing period outside of the United
States, and is as follows:
"I. Does the tax purporting to be imposed by § 37 of the
Act of Congress, approved August 5, 1909, apply to the use of a
foreign-built yacht owned by a citizen of the United States, when
such yacht, for a period of more than one year prior to September
1, 1909, and to the levy of such tax, was used wholly outside of
the limits and territorial jurisdiction of the United States?"
And if this question is answered in the affirmative, then the
duty will arise of deciding whether, because of that aspect, the
act is repugnant to the due process clause of the Constitution,
since, in determining the constitutionality of the act in the
previous cases, we were not called upon to decide whether the due
process clause of the Fifth Amendment operates to prevent the levy
of such a tax.
The statute applies, since, under the construction we have given
it, it clearly establishes three standards as the basis of the
excise duty which it imposes; citizenship and domicil within the
United States, control by ownership or charter of a foreign-built
yacht within the terms of the statute, and its use by the owner
during the taxing period. But it said that as, in any event, the
use which the statute taxes is solely a use within the United
States, therefore the statute does not embrace this case, since the
finding establishes that the yacht whose use is here taxed was
wholly used and located outside of the territorial limits of the
United States. We fail, however, to find in the provisions of the
statute any language which would justify our affixing to the word
"use" the restricted sense upon which
Page 232 U. S. 303
the proposition is based. On the contrary, the use provided for
in the statute is unqualified, is generic, and must be enforced in
that sense if the statute is to be given its plain meaning. It is
true that, in deciding a previous case, we held that the statute
would not be construed without clear intendment manifested to that
effect as including a tax on a citizen permanently domiciled
outside of the geographical limits of the United States. But that
ruling was based upon the proposition that, as a taxing statute was
usually confined to persons within the territorial jurisdiction of
a taxing authority, and to do otherwise would be exceptional,
unless such view was compelled by its terms, the statute here
involved ought not to be construed as having been adopted to
accomplish such unusual and strange result. The directly opposite
is here applicable, since it is usual, where the taxing power is
called into play as to an individual domiciled within the
territorial limits of the taxing authority, to cause the
manifestation of taxing power to be coterminous with the taxing
authority of the government levying the tax. Therefore it follows
that the principle of interpretation previously applied has no
possible application to the construction of the word "use," which
we are now considering. The difference between the two rules is
that which must exist between not assuming in the one case that
something exceptional has been done, and taking for granted in the
other that a power expressed embraces that which is usual and
incidental to its exertion. The argument that the statute should
not be construed as applying to the use of a yacht wholly beyond
the territorial limits of the United States, since, if so
interpreted it would be repugnant to the Constitution, rests upon
what in effect is a misconception of the elementary rule of
interpretation that, where there are two possible constructions of
a statute, one of which will give rise to grave doubt as to its
constitutionality and the other avoids such question, the latter
will be adopted.
Page 232 U. S. 304
The foundation of this is the possibility of two constructions,
and the existence of the grave doubt as to constitutionality. To
apply the rule in a case like this, where neither of such
conditions exists, would be to cause an imaginary doubt as to the
constitutionality of a statute to render it necessary to give to
the statute a wholly fictitious and unauthorized meaning -- that is
to say, the effect of adopting the contention would be but to
declare that in every case where the construction of a statute was
in issue, its misconstruction would become necessary if only it was
asserted that, if rightly construed, repugnancy to the Constitution
would result. We come, then, to consider the contention that, when
the statute is correctly interpreted, there will arise a conflict
between its provisions and the safeguards of the Constitution, not
only for the purpose of demonstrating the unsoundness of the
assertion of constitutional right, but also with the object of
making it clear that, even if the statute were susceptible of a
different construction by resort to subtlety of reasoning or
refinement of distinction, there is nothing of such gravity in the
asserted constitutional question as to lead us to resort to such
means in order to avoid giving to the statute the meaning which we
have affixed to it, resulting from its unambiguous text.
As not even an intimation is made in the argument that any
limitation on the taxing power of Congress in this regard can be
deduced from the provisions of the Constitution concerning the
taxing authority, and as the only limiting provision relied upon is
the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, it follows in this
case, as it did in the
Billings case, that, after all, the
assertion of want of power must rest upon the assumption that an
attempt by the United States to tax the property of a citizen
residing within its jurisdiction, where such property is beyond the
territorial limits of the United States, is so in conflict with
obvious principles of justice, and so inconsistent with
Page 232 U. S. 305
every conception of representative and free government as to
cause the exertion of power to come within the limitations of the
due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. We might well leave the
answer to the contention, when it is thus rightly understood, to
result from its mere statement, from the obvious misconceptions as
to the nature and extent of the authority of a sovereign, although
it be a representative, government, and from a true appreciation of
the privileges as well as the duties arising from citizenship, and
the past and recent exertions by Congress of the very taxing
authority which is now challenged. (
See Act of June 30,
1864, 13 Stat. 281, c. 173.) We do not, however, leave the
contentions to be destroyed by their own weakness, but come briefly
to consider the authorities which it is insisted maintain their
correctness, and to point out the error of the reasoning upon which
their asserted applicability is based. We do not cite or review the
cases relied on because we concede that the doctrine which it is
asserted they decided is elementary, and in fact is the settled
rule in this Court. The principle of the cases is thus stated in
the argument:
"It is a settled rule of constitutional law that the power to
tax depends upon jurisdiction of the subject matter of the tax. A
long line of unbroken authority illustrates this firmly established
doctrine in its various aspects, and although the cases have all
arisen under state tax laws, their reasoning is applicable to and
controlling in the case of a federal tax act."
But the misapprehension consists not in a misconception as to
what the cases relied on decided, but in taking for granted that,
because the doctrine stated has been applied and enforced in many
decisions with respect to the taxing power of the states, that the
same principle is applicable to and controlling as to the United
States in the exercise of its powers. The confusion results from
not observing that the rule applied in the cases relied upon to
many forms of exertion of state taxing power is based on
Page 232 U. S. 306
the limitations on state authority to tax resulting from the
distribution of powers ordained by the Constitution. In other
words, the whole argument proceeds upon the mistaken supposition,
which is sometimes indulged in, that the calling into being of the
government under the Constitution had the effect of destroying
obvious powers of government, instead of preserving and
distributing such powers. The application to the states of the rule
of due process relied upon comes from the fact that their spheres
of activity are enforced and protected by the Constitution, and
therefore it is impossible for one state to reach out and tax
property in another without violating the Constitution, for where
the power of the one ends, the authority of the other begins. But
this has no application to the government of the United States so
far as its admitted taxing power is concerned. It is coextensive
with the limits of the United States; it knows no restriction
except where one is expressed in or arises from the Constitution,
and therefore embraces all the attributes which appertain to
sovereignty in the fullest sense. Indeed, the existence of such a
wide power is the essential resultant of the limitation restricting
the states within their allotted spheres, for if it were not so,
then government in the plenary and usual acceptation of that word
would have no existence. Because the limitations of the
Constitution are barriers bordering the states and preventing them
from transcending the limits of their authority, and thus
destroying the rights of other states, and at the same time saving
their rights from destruction by the other states, in other words,
of maintaining and preserving the rights of all the states, affords
no ground for constructing an imaginary constitutional barrier
around the exterior confines of the United States for the purpose
of shutting that government off from the exertion of powers which
inherently belong to it by virtue of its sovereignty. But it is
said in the decided cases relied upon, the principle which was
announced
Page 232 U. S. 307
was that the power to tax was limited by the capacity of the
taxing government to afford that benefit and protection which is
the true basis of the right to tax, and which causes therefore
taxation, where such capacity to confer benefit and afford
protection does not exist, to be a mere arbitrary and unwarranted
burden. But, here again, the confusion of thought consists in
mistaking the scope and extent of the sovereign power of the United
States as a nation, and its relation to its citizens, and their
relations to it. It presumes that government does not, by its very
nature, benefit the citizen and his property wherever found.
Indeed, the argument, while holding on to citizenship, belittles
and destroys its advantages and blessings by denying the possession
by government of an essential power required to make citizenship
completely beneficial.
Concluding from what we have just said that the first question
must be answered in the affirmative, it follows from the
considerations just stated and the views which we have expressed in
the previous cases as to the operation and constitutionality of the
act in other respects, that the remaining questions must be
answered as follows: The second, Yes; the third, Yes, the whole
tax; the fourth, Yes; the fifth, Yes; the sixth, No; the seventh,
relating to interest, Yes.
*
Page 232 U. S. 308
As by these answers the right to impose and collect the tax
under the facts stated will be established, in view of what we
shall say in a case between the same parties which follows this, we
think it proper to observe that nothing in our reply to these
questions is to be so construed as to deprive the court below of
the power to take such steps as it may deem necessary to avoid
injustice if it should be deemed that, by some mistake of fact such
a result might occur. The answers to the questions will be
certified in accordance with the directions above given.
And it is so ordered.
* The questions propounded were as follows:
"I. Does the tax purporting to be imposed by § 37 of the
Act of Congress, approved August 5, 1909, apply to the use of a
foreign-built yacht owned by a citizen of the United States, when
such yacht, for a period of more than one year prior to September
1, 1909, and to the levy of such tax, was used wholly outside of
the limits and territorial jurisdiction of the United States?"
"II. Did the tax purporting to be imposed by said act of
Congress operate retrospectively, so as to be payable on September
1, 1909, in respect of the year then ended, or only prospectively,
so as to become first due and payable on September 1, 1910?"
"III. Did the whole amount of the tax purporting to be imposed
by said act of Congress become due and payable on September 1,
1909, or only such proportion thereof as the time during which the
act was in force at that date bears to the whole year?"
"IV. Has Congress the power to levy a tax upon the use by a
citizen of the United States of a yacht which is not actually, and
since the year 1904 was not at any time, used within the
territorial jurisdiction of the United States, and which has its
permanent situs in a foreign country?"
"V. Does said act of Congress, by purporting to impose a tax
upon the use of foreign-built yachts alone, provide a valid tax, or
a valid classification for purposes of taxation, within the power
to lay and collect taxes delegated to Congress by the Constitution
of the United States?"
"VI. Is the tax purporting to be imposed by said act of Congress
in conflict with the requirement of due process of law contained in
the Fifth Article of Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States?"
"VII. Is the United States entitled to recover interest upon the
tax imposed upon the use of foreign-built yachts in and by §
37 of the Tariff Act of August 5, 1909?"