1. The validity of a flat tax imposed by a state law upon
brokers or commission merchants who solicit orders for goods in
intrastate
Page 264 U. S. 158
commerce is not affected by the fact that the persons taxed are
engaged also, and to a greater extent, in soliciting orders in
interstate commerce. P.
264 U. S.
159.
2. Because a state tax on merchants engaged in domestic business
is not and cannot be imposed on others engaged in interstate
business is manifestly no reason for thinking it repugnant to the
Equal Protection Clause. P.
264 U. S. 160.
154 Ga. 140 affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia affirming a
judgment dismissing a bill to enjoin collection of a tax.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
A statute of Georgia (Acts 1921, p. 46, § 2, par. 30)
imposes a flat tax of $100 upon any broker or commission merchant
buying or selling merchandise on commission for another, or engaged
in the business of receiving or distributing articles of
merchandise shipped to such broker or merchant for distribution on
account of the shipper. The bill filed below sought to enjoin the
collection of the tax on the ground that the statute violates the
commerce clause of the federal Constitution and also, contingently,
upon the further ground that the statute is void under the equal
protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The complainants were divided into two classes, A and B. The
business of those in class B was to solicit orders for goods from
dealers in Georgia, which orders were sent to be filled sometimes
to nonresident and sometimes to resident principals, the greater
part of the business being with nonresident principals. The
business of those in
Page 264 U. S. 159
class A was wholly confined to representation of nonresident
principals. Upon acceptance of an order, the goods are shipped by
the principal to the purchaser, but remain the property of the
former until the time of sale.
The trial court sustained the tax as to class B and enjoined its
collection as to class A, and its judgment was affirmed by the
Supreme Court. 154 Ga. 140. We are concerned here with the judgment
only insofar as it affects class B.
The contention is that the tax is laid expressly upon all
brokers and commission merchants in the state, and upon the
business done by them, whether interstate or intrastate, without
separating one from the other. The state courts, by whose
construction we are bound, held that the statute did not apply to
interstate business, and we consider it as though it so provided in
terms. It was held, however, that inasmuch as class B complainants
were engaged in intrastate business, they were subject to the tax,
and nonetheless because they were also engaged in interstate
business. With this conclusion we fully agree.
The complainants were definitely engaged in the domestic
business described in the statute and were liable to the tax,
irrespective of the extent of it, and whether they engaged in
interstate business in addition or not. That the former was small
in comparison with the latter makes no difference, nor does the
fact that both were carried on at the same time and in the same
establishment. If the two were not distinct, but the former a mere
incident of the latter, the burden was upon complainants to furnish
the proof, in which case a different question would arise.
Kehrer v. Stewart, 197 U. S. 60,
197 U. S. 69.
Certainly one cannot avoid a tax upon a taxable business by also
engaging in a nontaxable business.
There is nothing in the contention that, because, under the
construction placed upon the statute by the state
Page 264 U. S. 160
courts, the tax falls upon those engaged in domestic business
and does not fall upon those engaged in interstate business, it is
void for inequality. It would be a strange application of the
equality provision of the Fourteenth Amendment to say that, because
a state is forbidden by paramount law to impose a tax upon some
merchants, it is therefore powerless to impose it upon other
merchants to whom the restriction does not apply. It is enough if
the state observe the rule of equality among the persons subject to
its taxing power.
Affirmed.