Page 258 U. S. 291
2. Business done by a corporation through order approved in a
state where its tangible property and business office were located
and its manufacturing conducted, but first obtained by its salesmen
from residents in other states,
held interstate. P.
258 U. S.
294.
3. Where a state law for taxing foreign corporations for the
privilege of doing local business base the tax upon the capital
stock actually represented by property located and business
transacted within the state, plainly intending not to tax
interstate commerce, and is reasonable as to mount and free from
discrimination in favor of local corporations, a tax assessed under
it will not be unconstitutional merely because a trifling part
resulted from inclusion of interstate business in the basis of
computation. P.
258 U. S.
295.
293 Ill. 387 affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Illinois in a suit
brought by the plaintiff in error to recover the amount of a
tax.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1918 the defendant in error, as Secretary of State, assessed
a tax of $6,045 upon the plaintiff in error, a corporation
organized under the laws of West Virginia, for the privilege of
doing business in the state of Illinois. The tax was paid under
protest and this suit was instituted to recover the amount of it,
based upon the contention that the statute under which it was
imposed offends against the federal Constitution for various
reasons; the only one argued in this Court, however, being that, if
given effect, it will constitute a regulation of, and impose a
direct burden upon, interstate commerce.
The case was tried on stipulated facts, from which we derive
these as essential to a disposition of it:
Page 258 U. S. 292
In 1918, the authorized capital stock of the company was
$6,000,000, of which $5,500,000 was reported by the company to the
state as paid in and issued. It was a manufacturing corporation,
with all of its tangible property in Illinois. Its method of doing
business was to send salesmen into Illinois and the various other
states to solicit orders, which, however, were not accepted until
approved at the Chicago office, after which they were filled from
stocks maintained in that city. The company represented the
potential value of its patent rights, licenses, trademarks, secret
processes, and goodwill as $5,124,126.72, and the total value of
its real and personal property as $416,629.27, making a total in
Illinois of $5,540,755.79. It also represented the total sales made
by it in 1917, on which year's business the tax was computed, as
$263,334.96, and of these $25,814 were made to residents of
Illinois.
The statute under which the tax was assessed reads:
"It shall be the duty of the Secretary of State to propound
interrogatories from time to time to officers of such foreign
corporations [with negligible exceptions] doing business in this
state to ascertain the proportion of capital stock actually being
represented by property located and business transacted in the
State of Illinois, which proportion shall be determined by
averaging the percentage of the total business of the corporation
transacted in Illinois with the percentage of the total tangible
property located in this state."
Hurd's Statutes 1917, p. 719, § 67fb.
In a recent case,
American Can Co. v. Emmerson, 288
Ill. 289, the Supreme Court of Illinois held that it has been the
policy of that state since 1872 to accord precisely equal treatment
to domestic and foreign corporations of like character (Hurd's
Statutes 1917, p. 703, § 26), and that the fees for
transacting business in the state are computed on the amount of the
authorized capital stock
Page 258 U. S. 293
of domestic corporations and at the same rate, on the amount of
the capital stock of foreign corporations actually "represented by
property located and business transacted" in the state, as
determined by the Secretary of State under the statute. The basis
for the computation was $50 for the first $5,000, and $1 upon each
$1,000 over that amount.
Acting under these statutes, the Secretary of State concluded
that, under the facts as we have stated them, all of the business
of the company was "transacted" in the State of Illinois, and, all
of the tangible property of the company being in the state, he
computed the tax on the entire authorized capital stock. The state
supreme court sustained the assessment as valid.
The contention of the plaintiff in error in this Court is that,
notwithstanding the manner in which it was done, the business which
the company did with residents of states other than Illinois was
interstate business, and that the treating of the amount of it as a
part of the business of the company transacted in that state, in
determining the percentage of the total business of the corporation
transacted therein, renders the act under which the computation was
made unconstitutional and void for the reason that the tax assessed
is a burden upon interstate commerce.
Plainly this contention cannot be sustained. The statute and the
state supreme court both show a candid purpose to differentiate
state from interstate business and to use only the former in
determining the amount of the disputed tax. If the Secretary of
State or the court, in computing the tax, erroneously treated as
intrastate that which was really interstate business, such error
would be reason in a proper case for correcting the computation,
but would not justify declaring the act unconstitutional. The facts
that all of the property of the company was located in Illinois,
that all of its manufacturing operations
Page 258 U. S. 294
were conducted in that state, and that all contracts of sale
must be approved at Chicago, where the only business office of the
company was maintained, certainly reduce the interstate element in
its business to the lowest terms, but nevertheless we are
constrained to hold that the business done with residents of states
other than Illinois is interstate business, and therefore there
remains the questions whether the use made of the amount of such
interstate business in determining the amount of the tax renders it
invalid.
While a state may not use its taxing power to regulate or burden
interstate commerce (
United States Express Co. v.
Minnesota, 223 U. S. 335;
International Paper Co. v. Massachusetts, 246 U.
S. 135), on the other hand, it is settled that a state
excise tax which affects such commerce not directly, but only
incidentally and remotely, may be entirely valid where it is clear
that it is not imposed with the covert purpose or with the effect
of defeating federal constitutional rights. As coming within this
latter description, taxes have been so repeatedly sustained where
the proceeds of interstate commerce have been used as one of the
elements in the process of determining the amount of a fund (not
wholly derived from such commerce) to be assessed, that the
principle of the cases so holding must be regarded as a settled
exception to the general rule.
Maine v. Grand Trunk Railway
Co., 142 U. S. 217;
Wisconsin & Michigan Railway Co. v. Powers,
191 U. S. 379;
Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U.
S. 107;
United States Express Co. v. Minnesota,
223 U. S. 335,
223 U. S. 343;
Baltic Mining Co. v. Massachusetts, 231 U. S.
68;
Kansas City, &c., R. Co. v. Stiles,
242 U. S. 111;
United States Glue Co. v. Oak Creek, 247 U.
S. 321,
247 U. S.
326-327. The turning point of these decisions is
whether, in its incidence, the tax affects interstate commerce so
directly and immediately as to amount to a genuine and substantial
regulation of, or restraint upon
Page 258 U. S. 295
it, or whether it affects it only incidentally or remotely, so
that the tax is not in reality a burden, although in form it may
touch and in fact distantly affect it.
No formula has yet been devised by which it can be determined in
all cases whether or not such a tax is valid, and, applying the
repeated declaration of this Court, in the cases cited and in many
others, that the question is inherently a practical one, depending
for its decision on the special facts of each case, we are clear
that the tax here involved falls within the excepted class
described, even though the business done with residents of states
other than Illinois be regarded as interstate.
Clearly the statute is not a disguised attempt to tax interstate
commerce. On the contrary, its purpose plainly is to differentiate
state from interstate business and to impose the tax only on the
former. Construed with other statutes, the act accords equal
treatment to domestic and foreign corporations, and clearly in this
case property of the company beyond the jurisdiction of the state
is not taxed -- all of its property is in Illinois. To require
foreign corporations to pay for the privilege of doing business in
a state is, of course, a familiar and often approved form of
taxation, and in this case, the fee imposed is reasonable in
amount.
The tax is not imposed directly upon the proceeds of interstate
commerce, and is not computed upon it. The $235,000 of interstate
business of the company is only one of three factors used in
estimating or measuring "the amount of the capital stock
represented by property and business transacted in Illinois," upon
which the privilege tax in dispute was computed. The other two
factors were $5,540,000 of property in Illinois and $25,000 of
business stipulated as done with residents of that state. If the
fee or privilege tax were computed at the statutory rate on the
whole of the interstate business, it would be trifling in amount,
but if computed on the property admitted to
Page 258 U. S. 296
have been in use in the state, it would be but slightly less
than the tax collected.
If this same amount of tax had been imposed upon such a
manufacturing corporation as we have here without reference being
made to the basis of its computation, very certainly no objection
to its validity would have been thought of (142 U.S.,
supra, p.
142 U. S.
229). Or, if the state had imposed an income tax, a part
of which would have been derived from the net profits on this same
interstate business, no valid objection could have been made to it.
(
United States Glue Co. v. Oak Creek, supra.) At most, the
assessment, so far as interstate commerce is concerned, is
incidental, remote, and unimportant, and it is therefore
constitutional. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Illinois must
be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER dissents.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS concurs in the result.