1. Messages transmitted for a railroad company by a telegraph
company under a contract entitling each, in its business, to the
"free"
Page 273 U. S. 243
services of the other up to stated value each year, as gauged by
their respective public tariff rates, or on a cost-plus basts where
the tariffs are inapposite, are subject to Revenue Acts, 1918 and
1921, §§ 500, 501, imposing taxes on telegraph messages
according to the amounts charged therefor and payable by the person
paying for the service.
Postal Telegraph Co. v. Tonopah R.
Co., 248 U. S. 471,
distinguished. P.
273 U. S.
251.
2. Paragraph (c) of § 501, of the Revenue Act of 1918 has
no application to taxes on telegraph messages, but relate to taxes
on transportation of commodities or materials by carriers. P.
273 U. S.
255.
12 F.2d 978 reversed.
Certiorari (
post, p. 678) to a judgment of the circuit
court of appeals which reversed in part a judgment of the district
court in favor of Hellmich, Collector, in a suit by the railroad
company to recover taxes, assessed on telegraph messages and paid
under protest.
Page 273 U. S. 245
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Missouri Pacific Railroad Company brought this suit in the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri
against Hellmich, United States Collector of Internal Revenue, to
recover taxes amounting to $14,792.95, paid by it under protest,
for the transmission of telegraph messages from March, 1920, to
January, 1923, inclusive. The messages in question were transmitted
under the terms of a contract dated October 24, 1911, for the
exchange of services between the Western Union Telegraph Company,
on the one part, and the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and the
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad Company, on the
other part. To the rights and obligations of these two railway
companies,
Page 273 U. S. 246
the respondent company, the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company,
succeeded. The question of the legality of the taxes arises under
two acts of Congress. The first is the Revenue Act of 1918, c. 18,
40 Stat. 1057, 1101, 1102, which provides in its section 500:
"That from and after April 1, 1919, there shall be levied,
assessed, collected, and paid. in lieu of the taxes imposed by
Section 500 of the Revenue Act of 1917 --"
"
* * * *"
"(f) In the case of each telegraph, telephone, cable or radio,
dispatch, message, or conversation, which originates on or after
such date within the United States, and for the transmission of
which the charge is more than 14 cents and not more than 50 cents,
a tax of 5 cents, and if the charge is more than 50 cents, a tax of
10 cents: Provided, that only one payment of such tax shall be
required, notwithstanding the lines or stations of one or more
persons are used for the transmission of such dispatch, message, or
conversation."
"Section 501(a). That the taxes imposed by Section 500 shall be
paid by the person paying for the services or facilities
rendered."
The second is the Revenue Act of 1921, c. 136, 42 Stat. 227,
284, §§ 500 and 501 of which contain exactly the same
language as that just quoted from the Act of 1918.
The district court held that the messages here in question came
within these sections, and gave judgment for the government. The
Circuit Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit reversed the
district court, holding that the telegraph messages up to the
amount of $75,000 annually thus taxed were exempt, but that those
in excess of that amount were subject to the tax.
The point in the case is to determine whether these messages can
be construed to be messages for the transmission of which there can
be said to be a charge. The contention of the railroad company is
that, in the sense
Page 273 U. S. 247
of this § 500, the messages in question are not charged for
at all; that they cannot be fitted into the section, so that it
cannot be construed to cover them. We must therefore consider the
contract under which the messages for the railroad company were
sent by the telegraph company. The contract was dated October 24,
1911, and is of indefinite duration. By its fourth paragraph, the
telegraph company agrees to perform, for the railway companies,
telegraphic service between points on its lines in the United
States, either on or off the lines of the railways covered by this
agreement, as the railway companies may desire, for messages
pertaining to their railroad business, under franks issued to their
officers and agents, permitting all classes of messages and
telegraphic letters in public use on the lines of the telegraph
company. The railway companies agree to perform promptly such
transportation and distribution service over their railroads as the
telegraph company may require for its employees, supplies, and
material, whether for work or use along the railroads or beyond or
off their lines, and to furnish special trains, engines, crews, and
equipment for distribution service, and outfit, boarding, and tool
cars for work on their lines, whenever required by the telegraph
company. The transportation of employees is to be authorized by
passes to be issued by the railway companies on authorized request.
The service performed by either party for the other is to be
charged for at its regular current telegraph rates, or its through
or local transportation rates, as the case may be, for the class of
services rendered. Services performed by either party for the other
for which there are no regular or published rates, and not
otherwise provided for in this agreement, are to be charged for at
actual cost, as determined by the officers of the party rendering
the service, plus not exceeding 25 percent of such cost. At the
close of each contract year, bills are to be rendered by each party
to the other for all services performed by
Page 273 U. S. 248
each party for the other during such year. If the bill therefor
rendered by either party to the other exceeds the sum of $75,000 in
any contract year, the party receiving such service is to pay to
the party rendering the same the amount of such excess, provided
that, in the event the services of both are in excess of $75,000 in
any contract year, the party in arrears if to pay to the other
party the difference between the rendered by each party to the
other for such services in any contract year do not exceed $75,000,
there is to be no payment by either party to the other
therefor.
By the fifth paragraph of the contract, it is provided that the
telegraph or telephone operators of the railway companies at
stations where the messages are less in number than 3,000 a year
are to act as the agents of the telegraph company and receive and
transmit them, charging the tariff rates and rendering to the
telegraph company monthly statements of the business, and are to
pay the receipts therefor to the telegraph company, but the railway
companies are not to be liable for receipts thus to be received and
paid over. The railway operators and employees in such service are
to conform to the rules and regulations of the telegraph company.
They are not to transmit over the wires of either party any free
messages, except those of the railway company's business. For
messages transmitted for it by the employees of the railway
company, the telegraph company agrees to pay the railway companies
10 percent of the gross cash receipts, except on ocean cable
messages, receipts for which are to be retained in full by the
telegraph company.
Pursuant to the authority vested in him by the Revenue Acts, the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, with the approval of the
Treasury, promulgated article IX of Regulation No. 57 of the
Treasury Department as to the proper construction of this section
500(f) of the Act of 1918, as follows:
Page 273 U. S. 249
"Messages Transmitted under Contract. -- Where, by contract, a
telegraph, telephone, radio, or cable company agrees, in
consideration of the payment of a lump sum or of the performance of
services, to transmit messages on frank, such messages are subject
to the tax imposed by this section [500(f)] of the act. The tax on
each such message is to be computed upon the amount of the regular
established charge for the transmission of similar messages for
ordinary customers, calculated at the regular fixed rate provided
in the tariffs of the transmitting carrier. The questions as to
whether such messages relate to the operation of the business of a
common carrier and whether they are 'on line' or 'off line' are
immaterial. Thus, a telegraph company agrees to transmit over its
lines to a railroad line all messages relating to railroad business
'free,' and all such messages over its line off the railroad lines
'free' to an amount not exceeding $10,000 per year calculated at
its regular rates, and all messages over that amount at half rates,
in consideration of services to be performed by the railroad in the
transportation of men and materials of the telegraph company. All
such messages, whether 'on line' or 'off line' and whether 'free'
or at half rates, are subject to the tax provided by this section
[500(f)] of the act. The tax must be computed, collected, and paid
upon each such message."
The case was heard upon a stipulation of facts, with some short
additional testimony furnished by the officers of the railway
company, as to the actual business transactions between the railway
company and the telegraph company during the years in question.
The evidence shows that, so far as the transportation of men and
material was concerned, the railroad company kept a record of all
transportation furnished to the telegraph company at tariff rates.
At the end of the contract year, statements setting forth the
transportation and the
Page 273 U. S. 250
charges were furnished to the Western Union. After they were
verified by the Western Union, they became the basis for settlement
under the contract. A similar arrangement was made by the Western
Union Telegraph company as to the messages which it charged at its
regular public rates.
For the contract year ending August 31, 1920, the total amount
of business handled by the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company for
the Western Union amounted to $80,721.72, or $5,721.72 in excess of
the $75,000 allowance under the contract. During the same year, the
amount of business handled by the Western Union for the Missouri
Pacific Railroad Company in telegraph messages was $71,815.17. That
was $3,184.83 less than the amount provided for under the contract,
and for that year there was no payment made by the Missouri Pacific
to the Western Union Telegraph Company for such messages. For the
year ending August 31, 1921, the net amount of business done by the
railroad company in the way of transportation, etc., for the
telegraph company was $144,023.95. This was $69,023.95 in excess of
the $75,000. During the same year, the business handled by the
telegraph company in messages for the railroad company amounted to
$86,221.92, or $11,221.92 in excess of the contract allowance.
During that year, the Western Union Telegraph Company paid the
railroad company the difference between $69,023.95, and $11,221.92,
or $57,802.03. For the year ending August 31, 1922, the net amount
of business handled by the railroad company for the telegraph
company in the way of transportation was $132,349.02, or $57,349.02
in excess of the $75,000 limit, while the amount of business in
messages handled by the telegraph company for the railroad company
was $83.342.17, or $8,342.17 in excess of the same limit, and that
year the telegraph company paid the railroad company the difference
between $57,349.02 and $8,342.17, or $49,006.85. It further
appeared that the taxes which accrued under
Page 273 U. S. 251
the construction imposed by the Commission of Internal Revenue
from August, 1922 to January, 1923, were as follows:
August, 1922 . . . . . . . . . . $647.62
September, 1922. . . . . . . . . 604.55
October, 1922. . . . . . . . . . 885.30
November, 1922 . . . . . . . . . 797.25
December, 1922 . . . . . . . . . 937.80
January, 1923. . . . . . . . . . 883.60
---------
Total . . . . . . . . . . . $4,756.10
Upon these facts, we think that the telegraph messages were
subject to the tax imposed by § 500 in each law. We think that
the messages were charged for in the sense of that section, and
that Article IX of the Regulations No. 57 of the Treasury
Department was a proper regulation to carry out the statute with
reference to such a contract as this. The method adopted for the
mutual charges was an agreement between the companies that, up to a
certain amount, they were willing to run the risk that the
compensation to be paid by each for the service of the other would
not average more than the same sum. The contract was a contract for
many years, the amount of the service on the one hand and on the
other might vary from year to year, but year in and year out, the
two companies felt that $75,000 would be a safe sum for both. In
exceptional years, if either had the advantage beyond $75,000, this
should be made up for by the actual payment of cash for the excess
of the party earning it.
In argument, extreme instances for a single year were supposed,
such that as between the two contracting parties no transportation
would be furnished, and so no compensation would be received by the
telegraph company for the messages actually sent by it. Such a
hypothesis is not a test of the actual equilateral character of the
contract in its reciprocal obligations; $75,000, in the experience
and judgment of the parties, measured the probable
Page 273 U. S. 252
annual need of each for the service of the other. This was
deemed a fair balance between the two, agreed upon for their mutual
convenience of settlement. The contract was made long before the
tax was imposed, and we must treat it as having been the result of
transactions of previous years and justified by similar experiences
of other railroad and telegraph companies. Such contracts between
railroads and telegraph lines were and are very frequent.
Postal Telegraph & Cable Co. v. Tonopah Railroad Co.,
248 U. S. 471. The
payment of charges for telegrams or shipments or other services was
a mere substitute for the payment of the money down at the time
each message was sent or each shipment made or other service was
performed. Certainly no one would say that, because a patron of the
telegraph company paid his bills once a year, it rendered them free
from taxation. The arrangement here is not substantially different.
The payment for the messages --
i.e., the charge for them
to satisfy the statute -- should be for money or money's worth, and
that is what we think this contract in its ultimate and general
result amounted to.
Some elaborate arguments have been made against this conclusion.
The circuit court of appeals' view was that this was a mere
swapping of free privileges, and was not a service for a money
charge. We do not think the privileges were free. We think that the
one for messages was set off against the one for transportation,
and that the one paid for the other.
The counsel for the respondent insist that our decision in
Postal Telegraph & Cable Co. v. Tonopah & Tidewater
Railroad Co., supra, is inconsistent with our present
conclusion. That case concerned the right of telegraph companies to
recover against railroad companies for telegraph messages on
contracts like the one here in question. The defense was that such
contracts for an exchange of service, while valid
Page 273 U. S. 253
under the Interstate Commerce Law for messages and
transportation on or along the line, were invalid as to messages or
transportation service beyond the railway lines. The Interstate
Commerce Commission had held that such extras must be charged for
by the railroad upon the basis of its published rates, and by the
telegraph company upon reasonable rates as charged to other
customers for similar service. It arose under the amendment to
Interstate Commerce Act June 18, 1910, c. 309, § 7, which, in
bringing in under the Interstate Commerce Law telegraph and
telephone and cable companies, provided
"that nothing in this Act shall be construed to prevent
telephone, telegraph, and cable companies from entering into
contracts with common carriers for the exchange of services."
It was held that this proviso was general enough to allow an
exchange of services off the lines as well as services on them to
be exchanged. The Court said that the railroad and telegraph and
grown together in mutual dependence, and that contracts of this
sort for long terms had been nearly universal for 50 years; that,
as it was feared that such contract would be unlawful if the
telegraph companies were brought within the law, the amendment of
1910 was passed. This Court's conclusion was that, under the
contract, all the great benefits on one side were consideration for
all those conferred upon the other, and that Congress probably
allowed the exchange because it had been frequently advised by the
Commission that full performance of the exchange would not affect
any public or private interest adversely. Speaking of the meaning
of exchange, the Court said (p.
248 U. S.
474):
"But 'exchange' is barter, and carries with it no implication of
reduction to money as a common denominator. It contemplates simply
an estimate, determined by self-interest, of the relative value and
importance of the services rendered and those received. This is
admitted with regard to services on the line, and, if so,
whatever
Page 273 U. S. 254
services can be exchanged can be exchanged in the same way."
This language is thought to show that the use of transportation
service as a consideration for telegraphic messages could not
properly be regarded as the equivalent of a money payment necessary
to meet the requirement of § 500 as a basis of taxation. We do
not think the case or the language quoted apposite. The Court in
the opinion cited was merely deciding what the general expression
"exchange of service" meant, and whether it must be narrowly,
meticulously, and rigidly construed exactly to conform to the
general rule that all rates of tariff on the same class of service
should be uniform. The Court was merely pointing out that, in
allowing a general exchange of service between two such partners as
a railroad and a telegraph company, Congress did not intend to
enforce the uniformity rule strictly, and require a nice
mathematical or monetary equivalence between the exchanged
services. The issue here is different. It concerns a tax upon
telegraph messages paid for by transportation, and the question is
whether such payment is a charge which can be measured, or measures
itself, in money. The most significant evidence that it is appears
in the conduct of the parties themselves, for, in their exchange of
such services, they make actual payments to each other in money
above a certain amount of business, which amount itself they
determine by a carefully kept account of actual services in money
figures.
A lengthy argument is made that the Revenue Act and the
Interstate Commerce Act are
in pari materia, and therefore
that the word "charge" in the Revenue Act should be controlled by
the meaning of the same word in interstate commerce legislation,
which, it is said, it could not be satisfied by a mere exchange of
service. We think this is a far cry to the proper meaning of §
500 in imposing a tax, and do not think its correct interpretation
is thus assisted.
Page 273 U. S. 255
Then it is said that paragraph (c) of § 501 of the Act of
1918 prevents the imposition of this tax. That paragraph is as
follows:
"(c) The taxes imposed by section 500 shall apply to all
services or facilities specified in such section when rendered for
hire whether or not the agency rendering them is a common carrier.
In case a carrier (other than a pipeline) principally engaged in
rendering transportation services or facilities for hire does not,
because of its ownership of the goods transported, or for any other
reason, receive the amount which as a carrier it would otherwise
charge, such carrier shall pay a tax equivalent to the tax which
would be imposed upon the transportation of such goods if the
carrier received payment for such transportation, such tax, if it
cannot be computed from actual rates or tariffs of the carrier, to
be computed on the basis of the rates or tariffs of other carriers
for like services as determined by the Commissioner. In the case of
any carrier (other than a pipeline) the principal business of which
is to transport goods belonging to it on its own account and which
only incidentally renders services for hire, the tax shall apply to
such services for facilities only as are actually rendered by it
for hire. Nothing in this or the preceding section shall be
construed as imposing a tax (1) upon the transportation of any
commodity which is necessary for the use of the carrier in the
conduct of its business as such and is intended to be so used or
has been so used, or (2) upon the transportation of company
material transported by one carrier, which constitutes a part of a
railroad system, for another carrier which is also a part of the
same system."
Regulation No. 49, issued by the Internal Revenue Department to
carry out this paragraph, was as follows:
"If a telegraph or telephone line or lines along the line of any
railroad company be necessary for the use of such railroad company
in the conduct of the railroad company's business as such, and if
the railroad company, under contract
Page 273 U. S. 256
transports commodities necessary to maintain or operate such
telegraph or telephone line or lines along the line of such
railroad company, such commodities being intended to be, or having
been so used, and the railroad company makes no charge for such
transportation, the charges which, but for such arrangement, would
have accrued upon such transportation are exempt from the tax."
Paragraph (c) of § 501 is only to be found in the Revenue
Act of 1918, and could not affect the validity of any taxes at
issue in this case after August, 1922, when the Revenue Act of 1921
became applicable. In the next place, paragraph (c), with the
enforcing regulation No. 49, has no application to the payment of
taxes on telegraph messages. It is dealing with the transportation
of goods and commodities by common carriers and the tax on rates
received from their carriage. The words used make this
interpretation necessary, and it is supported by the fact that
when, in the Revenue Act of 1921, the taxes on freight and express
shipments were repealed, this paragraph (c) was also repealed,
though the tax on telegraph messages was retained.
It is true that this result leaves a the telegraph messages in
the exchange of services and exempts receipts on the transportation
side of the exchange. But Congress did not fix its taxes with
reference to the particular phase of this contract by which charges
for messages are balanced against those for transportation, and
doubtless had satisfactory reasons for exempting the one and not
the other. The difference furnishes no ground for varying the
meaning and scope of § 500(f) or its application to the
telegrams which were exchanged for the exempted transportation.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the district court is
restored.