When, upon application for a preliminary injunction, the
district court not only refuses the injunction but dismisses the
bill, appeal to this Court should be under Jud.Code, § 238,
from the final decree, and not under § 266. P.
252 U. S.
44.
Equity may be resorted to for relief against an unconstitutional
tax lien, clouding the title to real property, if there be no
complete remedy at law. P.
252 U. S. 46.
Quaere whether the Oklahoma laws afford an adequate
legal remedy in a case where the constitutionality of the state
income tax law is in question.
Id.
The Oklahoma taxing laws afford no legal remedy for removing a
cloud caused by an invalid lien for an income tax. P.
252 U. S.
48.
Having acquired jurisdiction, equity affords complete relief.
Id.
Governmental jurisdiction in matters of taxation depends upon
the power to enforce the mandate of the state by action taken
within its borders either
in personam or
in rem.
P.
252 U. S.
49.
Page 252 U. S. 38
A state may tax income derived from local property and business
owned and managed from without by a citizen and resident of another
state (pp.
252 U. S.
49-55); such power is consistent with Const., Art. IV,
§ 2, guaranteeing privileges and immunities and the equal
protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
252 U. S.
53-56.
The constitutionality of such a tax depends on its practical
operation and effect, and not on mere definitions or theoretical
distinctions respecting its nature and quality. P.
252 U. S.
54.
The fact that the Oklahoma income tax law permits residents to
deduct from their gross income losses sustained without as well as
those sustained within the state, while nonresidents may deduct
only those occurring within it, does not make the law obnoxious to
the privileges and immunities clause,
supra, or the equal
protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. P.
252 U. S.
56.
Net income derived from interstate commerce is taxable under a
state law providing for a general income tax. P.
252 U. S.
57.
The Oklahoma gross production tax, imposed on oil and gas
producing companies, was intended as a substitute for the
ad
valorem property tax, and payment of it does not relieve the
producer from taxation under the state income tax law.
Id.
The Constitution, including the Fourteenth Amendment, does not
forbid double taxation by the states. P.
252 U. S.
58.
Without deciding whether it would be consistent with due process
to enforce a tax on the income derived by a nonresident from part
of his property within a state by imposing a lien on all his
property, real and personal, there situate,
held that, in
this case, the state was justified in treating the various
properties and business of a producer of oil and natural gas, who
went on with their operation after the income tax law was enacted,
as an entity, producing the income and subject to the lien.
Id.
No. 531, appeal dismissed.
No. 580, decree affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 252 U. S. 43
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are two appeals, taken under circumstances that will be
explained, from a single decree in a suit in equity brought by
appellant to restrain the enforcement of a tax assessed against him
for the year 1916 under the Income Tax Law of the State of Oklahoma
on the ground of the unconstitutionality of the statute.
A previous suit having the same object was brought by him in the
same court against the officials then in office, in which an
application for an interlocutory injunction heard before three
judges pursuant to § 266, Judicial Code, was denied, one Judge
dissenting.
Shaffer v. Howard, 250 F. 873. An appeal was
taken to this Court, but, pending its determination, the terms of
office of the defendants expired, and, there being no law of
the
Page 252 U. S. 44
state authorizing a revival or continuance of the action against
their successors, we reversed the decree and remanded the cause
with directions to dismiss the bill for want of proper parties.
249 U. S. 249 U.S.
200.
After such dismissal, the present defendant Carter, as State
Auditor, issued another tax warrant and delivered it to defendant
Bruce, Sheriff of Creek County, with instructions to levy upon and
sell plaintiff's property in that county in order to collect the
tax in question, and, the sheriff having threatened to proceed,
this suit was commenced. An application for an interlocutory
injunction, heard before three judges, was denied upon the
authority of the decision in 250 F. and of certain recent decisions
of this Court. The decree as entered not only disposed of the
application, but dismissed the action. Plaintiff, apparently
unaware of this, appealed to this Court under § 266, Judicial
Code, from the refusal of the temporary injunction. Shortly
afterwards, he took an appeal under § 238, Judicial Code from
the same decree as a final decree dismissing the action. The latter
appeal is in accord with correct practice, since the denial of the
interlocutory application was merged in the final decree. The first
appeal (No. 531) will be dismissed.
The Constitution of Oklahoma, besides providing for the annual
taxation of all property in the state upon an
ad valorem
basis, authorizes (Article 10, § 12) the employment of a
variety of other means for raising revenue, among them income
taxes.
The act in question is c. 164 of the Laws of 1915. Its first
section reads as follows:
"Each and every person in this state shall be liable to an
annual tax upon the entire net income of such person arising or
accruing from all sources during the preceding calendar year, and a
like tax shall be levied, assessed, collected, and paid annually
upon the entire net income from all property owned, and of every
business, trade, or profession carried on in this
Page 252 U. S. 45
state by persons residing elsewhere."
Subsequent sections define what the term "income" shall include;
prescribe how net income shall be computed; provide for certain
deductions; prescribe varying rates of tax for all taxable incomes
in excess of $3,000, this amount being deducted (by way of
exemption) from the income of each individual, and for one living
with spouse an additional $1,000, with further deductions where
there are children or dependents, exemptions being the same for
residents and nonresidents; require (§ 2) a return on or
before March first from each person liable for an income tax under
the provisions of the act for the preceding calendar year; provide
(§ 9) that the State Auditor shall revise returns and hear and
determine complaints, with power to correct and adjust the
assessment of income; that (§ 10) taxes shall become
delinquent if not paid on or before the first day of July, and the
State Auditor shall have power to issue to any sheriff of the state
a warrant commanding him to levy the amount upon the personal
property of the delinquent party, and (by § 11):
"If any of the taxes herein levied become delinquent, they shall
become a lien on all the property, personal and real, of the
delinquent person, and shall be subject to the same penalties and
provisions are are all
ad valorem taxes."
Plaintiff, a nonresident of Oklahoma, being a citizen of
Illinois and a resident of Chicago in that state, was at the time
of the commencement of the suit and for several years theretofore
(including the years 1915 and 1916) engaged in the oil business in
Oklahoma, having purchased, owned, developed and operated a number
of oil and gas mining leases, and being the owner in fee of certain
oil-producing land in that state. From properties thus owned and
operated during the year 1916, he received a net income exceeding
$1,500,000, and of this he made, under protest, a return which
showed that,
Page 252 U. S. 46
at the rates fixed by the act, there was due to the state an
income tax in excess of $76,000. The then State Auditor overruled
the protest and assessed a tax in accordance with the return; the
present auditor has put it in due course of collection, and
plaintiff resists its enforcement upon the ground that the act,
insofar as it subjects the incomes of nonresidents to the payment
of such a tax, takes their property without due process of law and
denies to them the equal protection of the laws in contravention of
§ 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, burdens interstate commerce,
in contravention of the commerce clause of § 8 of Article I of
the Constitution, and discriminates against nonresidents in favor
of residents, and thus deprives plaintiff and other nonresidents of
the privileges and immunities of citizens and residents of the
State of Oklahoma, in violation of § 2 of Article IV. He also
insists that the lien attempted to be imposed upon his property
pursuant to § 11 for taxes assessed upon income not arising
out of the same property would deprive him of property without due
process of law.
As ground for resorting to equity, the bill alleges that
plaintiff is the owner of various oil and gas mining leases
covering lands in Creek County, Oklahoma, and that the lien
asserted thereon by virtue of the levy and tax warrant creates a
cloud upon his title. This entitles him to bring suit in equity
(
Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. Cheyenne, 113 U.
S. 516,
113 U. S. 525;
Pacific Express Co. v. Seibert, 142 U.
S. 339,
142 U. S. 348;
Ogden City v. Armstrong, 168 U. S. 224,
168 U. S. 237;
Ohio Tax Cases, 232 U. S. 576,
232 U. S. 587;
Greene v. Louisville & Interurban R. Co., 244 U.
S. 499,
244 U. S.
506), unless the contention that he has a plain,
adequate, and complete remedy at law be well founded.
This contention is based, first, upon the provision of § 9
of c. 164, giving to the State Auditor the same power to correct
and adjust an assessment of income that is given to the county
board of equalization in cases of
ad
Page 252 U. S. 47
valorem assessments, taken in connection with c. 107 of
the Laws of 1915, which provides (Article 1, Subd. B, § 2) for
an appeal from that board to the district court of the county. In a
recent decision (
Berryhill v. Carter, 185 P. 93), the
supreme court of the state held that an aggrieved income taxpayer
may have an appeal under this section, and that thus "all matters
complained of may be reviewed and adjusted to the extent that
justice may demand." But the case related to "correcting and
adjusting an income tax return," and the decision merely
established the appeal to the district court as the appropriate
remedy, rather than an application to the Supreme Court for a writ
of certiorari. It falls short of indicating -- to say nothing of
plainly showing -- that this procedure would afford an adequate
remedy to a party contending that the income tax law itself was
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States.
Secondly, reference is made to § 7 of Subd., Art. 1, c.
107, Laws Okl. 1915, wherein it is provided that, where illegality
of a tax is alleged to arise by reason of some action from which
the laws provide no appeal, the aggrieved person, on paying the
tax, may give notice to the officer collecting it, stating the
grounds of complaint and that suit will be brought against him,
whereupon it is made the duty of such officer to hold the tax until
the final determination of such suit, if brought within 30 days,
and if it be determined that the tax was illegally collected, the
officer is to repay the amount found to be in excess of the legal
and correct amount. But this section is one of several that have
particular reference to the procedure for collecting
ad
valorem taxes, and they are prefaced by this statement (p.
147): "Subdivision B. To the existing provisions of law relating to
the
ad valorem or direct system of taxation the following
provisions are added." Upon this ground, in
Gipsy
Page 252 U. S. 48
Oil Co. v. Howard and companion suits brought by
certain oil-producing companies to restrain enforcement of taxes
authorized by the gross production tax law (Sess.Laws 1916, p.
102), upon the ground that they were an unlawful imposition upon
federal instrumentalities, the United States District Court for the
Western District of Oklahoma held that the legal remedy provided in
§ 7 of c. 107 applied only to
ad valorem taxes, and
did not constitute a bar to equitable relief against the production
taxes. Defendants appealed to this Court and assigned this ruling
for error,
inter alia, but they did not press the point,
and the decrees were affirmed upon the merits of the federal
question.
Howard v. Gipsy Oil Co., 247 U.S. 503.
We deem it unnecessary to pursue further the question whether
either of the statutory provisions referred to furnishes an
adequate legal remedy against income taxes assessed under an
unconstitutional law, since one of the grounds of complaint in the
present case is that, even if the tax itself be valid, the
procedure prescribed by § 11 of the Income Tax Law for
enforcing such a tax by imposing a lien upon the taxpayer's entire
property, as threatened to be put into effect against plaintiff's
property for taxes not assessed against the property itself and not
confined to the income that proceeded from the same property, is
not "due process of law," within the requirement of the Fourteenth
Amendment. For removal of a cloud upon title caused by an invalid
lien imposed for a tax valid in itself, there appears to be no
legal remedy. Hence, on this ground, at least, resort was properly
had to equity for relief, and since a court of equity does not "do
justice by halves," and will prevent, if possible, a multiplicity
of suits, the jurisdiction extends to the disposition of all
questions raised by the bill.
Camp v. Boyd, 229 U.
S. 530,
229 U. S.
551-552;
McGowan v. Parish, 237 U.
S. 285,
237 U. S.
296.
Page 252 U. S. 49
This brings us to the merits.
Under the "due process of law" provision, appellant makes two
contentions: first, that the state is without jurisdiction to levy
a tax upon the income of nonresidents, and secondly that the lien
is invalid because imposed upon all his property real and personal,
without regard to its relation to the production of his income.
These are separate questions, and will be so treated. The tax
might be valid although the measures adopted for enforcing it were
not. Governmental jurisdiction in matters of taxation, as in the
exercise of the judicial function, depends upon the power to
enforce the mandate of the state by action taken within its
borders, either
in personam or
in rem, according
to the circumstances of the case, as by arrest of the person,
seizure of goods or lands, garnishment of credits, sequestration of
rents and profits, forfeiture of franchise, or the like, and the
jurisdiction to act remains even though all permissible measures be
not resorted to.
Michigan Trust Co. v. Ferry, 228 U.
S. 346,
228 U. S. 353;
Ex parte Indiana Transportation Co., 244 U.
S. 456,
244 U. S.
457.
It will be convenient to postpone the question of the lien until
all questions as to the validity of the tax have been disposed
of.
The contention that a state is without jurisdiction to impose a
tax upon the income of nonresidents, while raised in the present
case, was more emphasized in
Travis v. Yale & Towne Mfg.
Co., ante, 252 U. S. 60,
involving the Income Tax Law of the State of New York (Laws 1919,
c. 627). There it was contended, in substance, that, while a state
may tax the property of a nonresident situate within its borders,
or may tax the incomes of its own citizens and residents because of
the privileges they enjoy under its Constitution and laws and the
protection they receive from the state, yet a nonresident, although
conducting a business or carrying on an occupation there,
cannot
Page 252 U. S. 50
be required through income taxation to contribute to the
governmental expenses of the state whence his income is derived;
that an income tax, as against nonresidents, is not only not a
property tax, but is not an excise or privilege tax, since no
privilege is granted, the right of the noncitizen to carry on his
business or occupation in the taxing state being derived, it is
said, from the provisions of the federal Constitution.
This radical contention is easily answered by reference to
fundamental principles. In our system of government, the states
have general dominion, and, saving as restricted by particular
provisions of the federal Constitution, complete dominion over all
persons, property, and business transaction within their borders;
they assume and perform the duty of preserving and protecting all
such persons, property, and business, and, in consequence, have the
power normally pertaining to governments to resort to all
reasonable forms of taxation in order to defray the governmental
expenses. Certainly they are not restricted to property taxation,
nor to any particular form of excises. In well ordered society,
property has value chiefly for what it is capable of producing, and
the activities of mankind are devoted largely to making recurrent
gains from the use and development of property, from tillage,
mining, manufacture, from the employment of human skill and labor,
or from a combination of some of these, gains capable of being
devoted to their own support, and the surplus accumulated as an
increase of capital. That the state, from whose laws property and
business and industry derive the protection and security without
which production and gainful occupation would be impossible, is
debarred from exacting a share of those gains in the form of income
taxes for the support of the government is a proposition so wholly
inconsistent with fundamental principles as to be refuted by its
mere statement. That it may tax the land but not the crop, the tree
but not the
Page 252 U. S. 51
fruit, the mine or well but not the product, the business but
not the profit derived from it, is wholly inadmissible.
Income taxes are a recognized method of distributing the burdens
of government, favored because requiring contributions from those
who realize current pecuniary benefits under the protection of the
government, and because the tax may be readily proportioned to
their ability to pay. Taxes of this character were imposed by
several of the states at or shortly after the adoption of the
federal Constitution. Laws N.Y. 1778, c. 17; Report of Oliver
Wolcott, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, to 4th Cong.2d Sess.
(1796), concerning Direct Taxes; American state Papers, 1 Finance,
423, 427, 429, 437, 439.
The rights of the several states to exercise the widest liberty
with respect to the imposition of internal taxes always has been
recognized in the decisions of this Court. In
McCulloch
v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, while denying their
power to impose a tax upon any of the operations of the federal
government, Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for the Court,
conceded (pp.
17 U. S.
428-429) that the states have full power to tax their
own people and their own property, and also that the power is not
confined to the people and property of a state, but may be
exercised upon every object brought within its jurisdiction,
saying:
"It is obvious that it is an incident of sovereignty, and is
coextensive with that to which it is an incident. All subjects over
which the sovereign power of a state extends are objects of
taxation,"
etc. In
Michigan Central Railroad v. Powers,
201 U. S. 245,
201 U. S.
292-293, the Court, by Mr. Justice Brewer, said:
"We have had frequent occasion to consider questions of state
taxation in the light of the federal Constitution, and the scope
and limits of national interference are well settled. There is no
general supervision on the part of the nation over state taxation,
and in respect to the latter the state has, speaking generally, the
freedom of a sovereign both as to objects
Page 252 U. S. 52
and methods. That a state may tax callings and occupations as
well as persons and property has long been recognized."
"The power of taxation, however vast in its character and
searching in its extent, is necessarily limited to subjects within
the jurisdiction of the state. These subjects are persons,
property, and business. . . . It [taxation] may touch business in
the almost infinite forms in which it is conducted, in professions,
in commerce, in manufactures, and in transportation. Unless
restrained by provisions of the federal Constitution, the power of
the state as to the mode, form, and extent of taxation is unlimited
where the subjects to which it applies are within her
jurisdiction."
State Tax on Foreign-Held
Bonds, 15 Wall. 300,
82 U. S. 319.
See also Welton v. Missouri, 91 U. S.
275,
91 U. S. 278;
Armour & Co. v. Virginia, 246 U. S.
1,
246 U. S. 6;
American Mfg. Co. v. St. Louis, 250 U.
S. 459,
250 U. S.
463.
And we deem it clear, upon principle as well as authority, that
just as a state may impose general income taxes upon its own
citizens and residents whose persons are subject to its control, it
may, as a necessary consequence, levy a duty of like character, and
not more onerous in its effect, upon incomes accruing to
nonresidents from their property or business within the state, or
their occupations carried on therein, enforcing payment, so far as
it can, by the exercise of a just control over persons and property
within its borders. This is consonant with numerous decisions of
this Court sustaining state taxation of credits due to
nonresidents,
New Orleans v. Stempel, 175 U.
S. 309,
175 U. S. 320
et seq.; Bristol v. Washington County, 177 U.
S. 133,
177 U. S. 145;
Liverpool, etc., Ins. Co. v. Orleans Assessors,
221 U. S. 346,
221 U. S. 354,
and sustaining federal taxation of the income of an alien
nonresident derived from securities held in this country,
De
Ganay v. Lederer, 250 U. S. 376.
That a state, consistently with the federal Constitution, may
not prohibit the citizens of other states from carrying on
legitimate business within its borders like its own
Page 252 U. S. 53
citizens, of course, is granted, but it does not follow that the
business of nonresidents may not be required to make a ratable
contribution in taxes for the support of the government. On the
contrary, the very fact that a citizen of one state has the right
to hold property or carry on an occupation or business in another
is a very reasonable ground for subjecting such nonresident,
although not personally, yet to the extent of his property held, or
his occupation or business carried on therein, to a duty to pay
taxes not more onerous in effect than those imposed under like
circumstances upon citizens of the latter state. Section 2 of Art.
IV of the Constitution entitles him to the privilege and immunities
of a citizen, but no more -- not to an entire immunity from
taxation, nor to any preferential treatment as compared with
resident citizens. It protects him against discriminatory taxation,
but gives him no right to be favored by discrimination or
exemption.
See Ward v.
Maryland, 12 Wall. 418,
79 U. S.
430.
Oklahoma has assumed no power to tax nonresidents with respect
to income derived from property or business beyond the borders of
the state. The first section of the act, while imposing a tax upon
inhabitants with respect to their entire net income arising from
all sources, confines the tax upon nonresidents to their net income
from property owned and business, etc., carried on within the
state. A similar distinction has been observed in our federal
income tax laws from one of the earliest down to the present.
* The acts of 1861
(12 Stat. 309) and 1864 (13 Stat.
Page 252 U. S. 54
281, 417) confined the tax to persons residing in the United
States and citizens residing abroad. But, in 1866 (14 Stat. 137,
138), there was inserted by amendment the following:
"And a like tax shall be levied, collected, and paid annually
upon the gains, profits, and income of every business, trade, or
profession carried on in the United States by persons residing
without the United States, not citizens thereof."
Similar provisions were embodied in the acts of 1870 (16 Stat.
257) and 1894 (28 Stat. 553), and in the Act of 1913 (38 Stat.
166), after a clause imposing a tax upon the entire net income
arising or accruing from all sources (with exceptions not material
here) to every citizen of the United States, whether residing at
home or abroad, and to every person residing in the United States
though not a citizen thereof, the following appears:
"And a like tax shall be assessed, levied, collected, and paid
annually upon the entire net income from all property owned and of
every business, trade, or profession carried on in the United
States by persons residing elsewhere."
Evidently this furnished the model for § 1 of the Oklahoma
statute.
No doubt is suggested (the former requirement of apportionment
having been removed by constitutional amendment) as to the power of
Congress thus to impose taxes upon incomes produced within the
borders of the United States or arising from sources located
therein, even though the income accrues to a nonresident alien.
And, so far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned, the due
process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes no greater
restriction in this regard upon the several states than the
corresponding clause of the Fifth Amendment imposes upon the United
States.
It is insisted, however, both by appellant in this case and by
the opponents of the New York law in
Travis v. Yale & Towne
Mfg. Co., that an income tax is in its nature a personal tax,
or a "subjective tax imposing personal liability upon the recipient
of the income," and that, as to a
Page 252 U. S. 55
nonresident, the state has no jurisdiction to impose such a
liability. This argument, upon analysis, resolves itself into a
mere question of definitions, and has no legitimate bearing upon
any question raised under the federal Constitution. For where the
question is whether a state taxing law contravenes rights secured
by that instrument, the decision must depend not upon any mere
question of form, construction, or definition, but upon the
practical operation and effect of the tax imposed.
St. Louis
S.W. Ry. v. Arkansas, 235 U. S. 350,
235 U. S. 362;
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington, 243 U.
S. 219,
243 U. S. 237;
Crew Levick Co. v. Pennsylvania, 245 U.
S. 292,
245 U. S. 294;
American Mfg. Co. v. St. Louis, 250 U.
S. 459,
250 U. S. 463.
The practical burden of a tax imposed upon the net income derived
by a nonresident from a business carried on within the state
certainly is no greater than that of a tax upon the conduct of the
business, and this the state has the lawful power to impose, as we
have seen.
The fact that it required the personal skill and management of
appellant to bring his income from producing property in Oklahoma
to fruition, and that his management was exerted from his place of
business in another state, did not deprive Oklahoma of jurisdiction
to tax the income which arose within its own borders. The personal
element cannot, by any fiction, oust the jurisdiction of the state
within which the income actually arises and whose authority over it
operates
in rem. At most, there might be a question
whether the value of the service of management rendered from
without the state ought not to be allowed as an expense incurred in
producing the income, but no such question is raised in the present
case, hence we express no opinion upon it.
The contention that the act deprives appellant and others
similarly circumstanced of the privileges and immunities enjoyed by
residents and citizens of the State of Oklahoma, in violation of
§ 2 of Art. IV of the Constitution,
Page 252 U. S. 56
is based upon two grounds, which are relied upon as showing also
a violation of the "equal protection" clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
One of the rights intended to be secured by the former provision
is that a citizen of one state may remove to and carry on business
in another without being subjected in property or person to taxes
more onerous than the citizens of the latter state are subjected
to.
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S. 180;
Ward v.
Maryland, 12 Wall. 418,
79 U. S. 430;
Maxwell v. Bugbee, 250 U. S. 525,
250 U. S. 537.
The judge who dissented in
Shaffer v. Howard, 250 F. 873,
883, concluded that the Oklahoma Income Tax Law offended in this
regard, upon the ground (p. 888) that, since the tax is as to
citizens of Oklahoma a purely personal tax measured by their
incomes, while, as applied to a nonresident, it is "essentially a
tax upon his property and business within the state, to which the
property and business of citizens and residents of the state are
not subjected," there was a discrimination against the nonresident.
We are unable to accept this reasoning. It errs in paying too much
regard to theoretical distinctions and too little to the practical
effect and operation of the respective taxes as levied; in failing
to observe that, in effect, citizens and residents of the state are
subjected at least to the same burden as nonresidents, and perhaps
to a greater, since the tax imposed upon the former includes all
income derived from their property and business within the state
and, in addition, any income they may derive from outside
sources.
Appellant contends that there is a denial to noncitizens of the
privileges and immunities to which they are entitled, and also a
denial of the equal protection of the laws, in that the act permits
residents to deduct from their gross income not only losses
incurred within the State of Oklahoma, but also those sustained
outside of that state, while nonresidents may deduct only those
incurred within the
Page 252 U. S. 57
state. The difference, however, is only such as arises naturally
from the extent of the jurisdiction of the state in the two classes
of cases, and cannot be regarded as an unfriendly or unreasonable
discrimination. As to residents, it may, and does, exert its taxing
power over their income from all sources, whether within or without
the state, and it accords to them a corresponding privilege of
deducting their losses, wherever these accrue. As to nonresidents,
the jurisdiction extends only to their property owned within the
state and their business, trade, or profession carried on therein,
and the tax is only on such income as is derived from those
sources. Hence, there is no obligation to accord to them a
deduction by reason of losses elsewhere incurred. It may be
remarked, in passing, that there is no showing that appellant has
sustained such losses, and so he is not entitled to raise this
question.
It is urged that, regarding the tax as imposed upon the business
conducted within the state, it amounts in the case of appellant's
business to a burden upon interstate commerce, because the products
of his oil operations are shipped out of the state. Assuming that
it fairly appears that his method of business constitutes
interstate commerce, it is sufficient to say that the tax is
imposed not upon the gross receipts, as in
Crew Levick Co. v.
Pennsylvania, 245 U. S. 292, but
only upon the net proceeds, and is plainly sustainable even if it
includes net gains from interstate commerce.
U.S. Glue
C. v. Oak Creek, 247 U. S. 321.
Compare Peck & Co. v. Lowe, 247 U.
S. 165.
Reference is made to the gross production tax law of 1915 (c.
107, Art. 2, subd. A, § 1, Sess.Laws 1915, p. 151), as amended
by c. 39 of Sess.Laws 1916 (p. 104), under which every person or
corporation engaged in producing oil or natural gas within the
state is required to pay a tax equal to 3 percentum of the gross
value of such product in lieu of all taxes imposed by the state,
counties, or municipalities upon the land or the leases, mining
rights,
Page 252 U. S. 58
and privileges, and the machinery, appliances, and equipment,
pertaining to such production. It is contended that payment of the
gross production tax relieves the producer from the payment of the
income tax. This is a question of state law, upon which no
controlling decision by the supreme court of the state is cited. We
overrule the contention, deeming it clear, as a matter of
construction, that the gross production tax was intended as a
substitute for the
ad valorem property tax, but not for
the income tax, and that there is no such repugnance between it and
the income tax as to produce a repeal by implication. Nor, even if
the effect of this is akin to double taxation, can it be regarded
as obnoxious to the federal Constitution for that reason, since it
is settled that nothing in that instrument or in the Fourteenth
Amendment prevents the states from imposing double taxation, or any
other form of unequal taxation, so long as the inequality is not
based up on arbitrary distinctions.
St. Louis S.W. Railway v.
Arkansas, 235 U. S. 350,
235 U. S.
367-368.
The contention that there is a want of due process in the
proceedings for enforcement of the tax, especially in the lien
imposed by § 11 upon all of the delinquent's property, real
and personal, reduces itself to this: that the state is without
power to create a lien upon any property of a nonresident for
income taxes except the very property from which the income
proceeded; or, putting it in another way, that a lien for an income
tax may not be imposed upon a nonresident's unproductive property,
nor upon any particular productive property beyond the amount of
the tax upon the income that has proceeded from it.
But the facts of the case do not raise this question. It clearly
appears from the averments of the bill that the whole of
plaintiff's property in the State of Oklahoma consists of
oil-producing land, oil and gas mining leaseholds, and other
property used in the production of oil and gas, and that, beginning
at least as early as the year 1915,
Page 252 U. S. 59
when the act was passed, and continuing without interruption
until the time of the commencement of the suit (April 16, 1919), he
was engaged in the business of developing and operating these
properties for the production of oil, his entire business in that
and other states was managed as one business, and his entire net
income in the state for the year 1916 was derived from that
business. Laying aside the probability that from time to time there
may have been changes arising from purchases, new leases, sales,
and expirations (none of which, however, is set forth in the bill),
it is evident that the lien will rest upon the same property
interests which were the source of the income upon which the tax
was imposed. The entire jurisdiction of the state over appellant's
property and business and the income that he derived from them --
the only jurisdiction that it has sought to assert -- is a
jurisdiction
in rem, and we are clear that the state acted
within its lawful power in treating his property interests and
business as having both unity and continuity. Its purpose to impose
income taxes was declared in its own Constitution, and the precise
nature of the tax and the measures to be taken for enforcing it
were plainly set forth in the Act of 1915, and plaintiff having
thereafter proceeded, with notice of this law, to manage the
property and conduct the business out of which proceeded the income
now taxed, the state did not exceed its power or authority in
treating his property interests and his business as a single
entity, and enforcing payment of the tax by the imposition of a
lien, to be followed by execution or other appropriate process,
upon all property employed in the business.
No. 531: Appeal dismissed.
No. 580: Decree affirmed.
* Acts of August 5, 1861, c. 45, § 49, 12 Stat. 292, 309;
June 30, 1864, c. 173, § 116, 13 Stat. 223, 281; July 4, 1864,
Joint Res. 77, 13 Stat. 417; July 13, 1866, c. 184, § 9, 14
Stat. 98, 137, 138; March 2, 1867, c. 169, § 13, 14 Stat. 471,
477, 478; July 14, 1870, c. 255, § 6, 16 Stat. 256, 257;
August 27, 1894, c. 349, § 27, 28 Stat. 509, 553; October 3,
1913, c. 16, § II, A. Subd. 1, 38 Stat. 114, 166; September 8,
1916, c. 463, Title I, Part. I, § 1a, 39 Stat. 756; October 3,
1917, c. 63, Title I, §§ 1 and 2, 40 Stat. 300; February
24, 1919, c. 18, §§ 210, 213, c. 40 Stat. 1057, 1062,
1066.