1. Where a bill in the district court to enjoin state officials
from enforcing a property tax raises substantial questions as to
its validity under the Fourteenth Amendment, the court has
jurisdiction even though its validity under the state law is also
questioned and has not been decided by the courts of the state. P.
275 U. S.
398.
2. The district court, having thus acquired jurisdiction as a
federal court, all material questions, state or federal, are open
for decision.
Id.
3. The equity jurisdiction also exists in such a case if the
legal remedy of paying the tax and suing to recover is doubtful
under the state law, would not include interest, and would involve
a multiplicity of suits. P.
275 U. S.
399.
4. A rehearing granted by the Supreme Court of California
vacates the previous opinion and judgment, and sets the whole
matter at large. P.
275 U. S.
400.
5. Under the constitution (Art. XIII, § 14) and statutes of
California, telephone companies pay a state property tax upon their
franchises, poles, wires, and other property used exclusively in
the operation of their business in the state, computed at certain
percentages upon the gross receipts from such operation, and such
taxes are in lieu of all other taxes upon such property of such
companies. The percentages are adjusted so that this tax shall
equal the average burden of taxation on other classes of property,
which are subject to local taxation by counties and municipalities,
and not by the state. Double taxation is forbidden. A telephone
company was assessed, and paid, the full percentage of the gross
receipts from the property operated by it, part of which was leased
from another company.
Held, that the leased property was
not subject to county and municipal taxes assessed against the
lessor. P.
275 U. S.
400.
6. Construction of a state constitution and statutes which may
create serious questions under the federal Constitution is to be
avoided if possible. P.
275 U. S.
403.
13 F.2d 817 affirmed.
Certiorari, 273 U.S. 685, to a decree of the circuit court of
appeals reversing a decree of the district court and directing an
injunction in a suit brought by the telephone company to enjoin the
County of Los Angeles and certain of its officers from seizing and
selling some 308,200 telephone "talking sets" in satisfaction of a
local tax. The district court had dismissed the bill for lack of
jurisdiction.
Page 275 U. S. 395
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners are Los Angeles County and its tax officials --
assessor, deputy assessor, collector, and auditor.
Respondents are incorporated under the laws of California, and
in that state operate telephone systems for the transmission of
local and long distance messages. For the use of patrons in Los
Angeles County, they supply and maintain more than 300,000
telephone instruments. The component parts of these instruments are
the receiver, transmitter, and induction coil, known as the
"talking set;" metal (desk) stand or wooden cabinet (for attachment
to wall), which support, connect, or house the talking devices, and
necessary wire connections.
Talking sets are essential to the operation of any telephone
system. Those associated with instruments supplied
Page 275 U. S. 396
by respondents are leased by them from the American Telephone
& Telegraph Company, a New York corporation, which holds title
thereto. The remaining parts of these instruments -- stands,
cabinets, etc. -- and perhaps all other operating property in the
systems -- poles, wires, conduits, etc. -- are owned by
respondents.
As the statute directs, respondents made regular reports to the
state board of equalization showing their operative property
(including telephone instruments) and their gross receipts from
every source. They paid to the state in lieu of taxes, or were
ready to pay when due, the prescribed portions of these receipts.
Without making formal objection to the inclusion in such reports of
telephone instruments as operating property, the petitioning tax
officers, purporting to act for the county and 16 municipalities
therein, for local purposes, assessed against the American
Telephone & Telegraph Company, as owner, the value of all
talking sets within that county (more than 300,000), and demanded
payment of taxes thereon for 1925 at the rate borne by ordinary
tangible personalty. This was not complied with, and they
threatened to disconnect the sets and sell them, and thereby
disrupt systems.
Thereupon, July 17, 1925, respondents filed the original bill --
afterwards amended -- in the United States District Court, Southern
District of California. They set forth the above-stated facts,
referred to the constitution and statutes of California, and said
no tax properly could be laid upon the leased speaking sets, since
all possible claim against them had been discharged through due
payment to the state of the prescribed portion of gross receipts
partly derived therefrom. They alleged that these sets were not
subject to local taxation; to disconnect them from respondents'
systems would do irreparable harm; to enforce the demand for local
taxes would violate rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment;
there was no adequate
Page 275 U. S. 397
remedy at law, through payment and suit to recover, or
otherwise. And they asked for an injunction restraining the
threatened wrong.
It appeared that, for the fiscal year 1924-1925, respondent
telephone companies paid to the state, out of their gross receipts,
$2,080,005.72, and for the year ending June 30, 1926, would pay
$2,340,075.12.
The cause was submitted
"upon defendants' motion to dismiss, and, in the event that said
motion should be denied, then, without further hearing, for final
determination upon the application for a permanent injunction as
prayed in their complaint."
The district court dismissed the bill, February 3, 1926, for
want of jurisdiction. The circuit court of appeals concluded
correctly, we think, that there was jurisdiction; the California
statutes afforded no certain adequate remedy through payment of the
demanded taxes followed by suit at law to recover; the talking sets
were not subject to local taxation, having been wholly relieved by
payment of the gross receipts tax to the state. It accordingly
reversed the decree of the trial court and directed an injunction
as prayed.
Section 14, Article XIII, Constitution of California
provides:
"Taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided
upon railroads, . . . telegraph companies, telephone companies, . .
. shall be entirely and exclusively for state purposes, and shall
be levied, assessed and collected in the manner hereinafter
provided. . . ."
"(a). . . all telegraph and telephone companies, and all
companies engaged in the transmission or sale of gas or electricity
shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their franchises,
roadways, roadbeds, rails, rolling stock, poles, wires, pipes,
canals, conduits, rights of way, and other property or any part
thereof used exclusively in the operation of their business in this
state, computed as follows:
Page 275 U. S. 398
said tax shall be equal to the percentages hereinafter fixed
upon the gross receipts from operation of such companies, and each
thereof within this state. . . ."
"The percentages above mentioned shall be as follows: . . . on
all telegraph and telephone companies, three and one-half percent
[by later legislative action increased to 5 1/2%]. Such taxes shall
be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county and
municipal, upon the property above enumerated of such companies
except as otherwise in this § provided. . . ."
Pertinent provisions of the Political Code are in the margin.
*
Considering what this Court said in
Raymond, Treasurer v.
Chicago Traction Co., 207 U. S. 20;
Home Telephone Co. v. County of Los Angeles, 227 U.
S. 278,
Page 275 U. S. 399
and
Binderup v. Pathe Exchange, 263 U.
S. 291, we must conclude that the bill set forth claims
of right under the federal Constitution sufficiently substantial to
give the trial court jurisdiction of the cause. As it acquired
jurisdiction, all material questions were open for decision.
Greene, Auditor v. Louisville, etc., Co., 244 U.
S. 499.
Petitioners maintain that, under §§ 3804 and 3819,
California Political Code, respondents could have protected their
rights by paying the assessed tax and bringing actions to recover.
But whether either of these sections applies in circumstances like
those here presented is far from certain. Section 3819 gives a
remedy to the owner, and
Warren v. San Francisco, 150 Cal.
167, intimates quite strongly that it applies only to actual
owners. Whether the lessee who has paid taxes upon the owners'
property can recover under § 3804 is also questionable.
Counsel differ widely concerning the meaning of these sections, and
no opinion of the state court removes the doubt. In no permitted
proceeding at law could interest
Page 275 U. S. 400
upon payments be recovered for the time necessary to obtain
judgments. The county and 16 municipalities were interested in the
taxes demanded, and, if petitioners had received payments, it would
have been incumbent upon them to make prompt distribution.
Considering all the circumstances, we find no clear, adequate
remedy at law. The equity proceeding was permissible.
Unquestionably the talking sets would have been free from local
assessments if the title had been in respondents, but petitioners
stoutly maintain that the gross receipts tax prescribed by the
Constitution is not in lieu of local taxes upon leased
property.
No ruling of the California Supreme Court authoritatively
determines whether personal property leased by a telephone company
and actually used for operating purposes is relieved from local
taxation by payment to the state of the prescribed percentage of
the lessee's gross receipts. July 2, 1927 -- after the decision
below -- that court handed down an opinion which declared leased
improved real estate, although actually used as operating property,
was subject to local taxation.
Pacific Telephone &
Telegraph Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 74 Cal.Dec. 96.
But rehearing was granted, and this vacated "the previous opinion
and judgment and set the whole matter at large."
Miller &
Lux Incorporated v. James, 180 Cal. 38, 48.
The argument against exemption of leased property from local
taxation rests chiefly upon literal and narrow interpretation of
words in § 14, Article XIII, California Constitution:
". . . all telegraph and telephone companies . . . shall
annually pay to the state a tax upon their franchises, . . poles,
wires, pipes, canals, conduits, rights of way, and other property .
. . used exclusively in the operation of their business,"
and
"such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and
licenses,
Page 275 U. S. 401
state, county and municipal, upon the
property above
enumerated of
such companies."
But the Constitution plainly directs:
"taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided
upon . . . telephone companies . . . shall be entirely and
exclusively for state purposes,"
and such companies
"shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their . . . poles, .
. . and other property, or any part thereof, used exclusively in
the operation of their business."
And the Political Code provides (Sec. 3664) that
"taxes levied, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided
upon . . . telephone companies . . . shall be entirely and
exclusively for state purposes, and shall be assessed and levied by
the state board of equalization."
Section 3664a, that
"all . . . telegraph and telephone companies . . . shall
annually pay to the state a tax upon their . . . poles, wires, . .
. and other property, or any part thereof, used exclusively in the
operation of their business. . . ."
Section 3664a(4):
"such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses,
state, county, and municipal, upon the property above enumerated of
such companies except. . . ."
Section 3665a:
"the term 'gross receipts from operation' as used in §
3664a of this Code is hereby defined to include all sums received
from business done within this state."
Section 3666: if an assessor finds reported as operative
property in his country any which he regards as nonoperative, he
shall notify the board of equalization within thirty days. And
§ 3607: "nothing in this Code shall be construed to require or
permit double taxation."
Section 14, Article XIII (adopted 1910) was proposed by a
commission which gave the matter much consideration and made an
elaborate report. It is the result of an earnest effort to provide
for enforcement of adequate contributions from public service and
some other corporations while avoiding double and unjust taxation.
Payment of
Page 275 U. S. 402
specified percentages (subject to change by the legislature) of
gross receipts was directed upon the theory that the value of
operative property could be fairly measured by considering receipts
therefrom; also, that, by paying to the state a portion of these,
the corporation would, in effect, contribute for its operative
property the substantial equivalent of all taxes laid upon other
property. The commission (Report 1910, p. 19) said:
"In explanation of the above rates, it may be stated that they
are fixed on the theory that these proportions of the gross
receipts will in each case equal the average burden of taxation on
other classes of property. The method of arriving at the different
rates is explained in detail in the 1906 report of this
commission."
The supreme court of the state has declared the gross receipts
tax is essentially one on property,
Pullman Co. v.
Richardson, 185 Cal. 484, 487, and it apparently approves the
view that
"a fair tax upon gross earnings bore such a relation to the
values of these properties under their unity of use as to justify
such a tax upon revenue as being a legal and commutated or
substituted tax for other taxes which were or might have been
levied."
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Roberts, 168 Cal.
420, 425.
See Southern Pacific Co. v. Levee District No.
1, 172 Cal. 345;
Great Western Power Co. v. City of
Oakland, 189 Cal. 649.
The state received from respondents a sum equal to 5 1/2
percentum of the gross revenues derived from all operative property
under their control, leased as well as owned. These did not depend
upon ownership, and rent paid out was not considered.
If payment of the prescribed part of the gross receipts only
relieves from local taxation property actually owned, and leaves
all held under lease subject thereto, inequalities, with possible
confiscation, would certainly result. Under that theory, a
corporation with title to half (in value) of its operative
property, the remainder being leased, would
Page 275 U. S. 403
really pay on account of the portion owned at twice the rate
required of another corporation operating the same amount of
property and having equal receipts, but holding nothing by lease.
And if the ratio between property owned and leased were less, the
difference in rate would be still greater. A telephone company
which leased everything it used would release no property from
taxation by paying the gross receipts tax, while the competitor
with equal receipts, by paying the same amount, might absolve from
local assessment property of very large value.
These difficulties cannot be avoided by saying the lessee will
not pay assessments against the lessor, and therefore cannot
complain. Leases are commonly made with reference to taxation. When
the lessor discharges the tax, the lessee pays rent accordingly.
And the Fourteenth Amendment protects those within the same class
against unequal taxation; all are entitled to like treatment.
Here, respondents have surrendered out of gross receipts the
equivalent of the burden imposed upon other property not less
valuable than all the operating property in their systems, and now,
unless more is paid, disruption is threatened through seizure and
sale of essential instrumentalities actually employed to produce
those receipts.
We think the purpose of the 1910 amendment is to tax all
operating property of a telephone company by ascertaining the gross
receipts and taking therefrom the specified percentage. Thus, the
imposition becomes approximately equal to what other property
bears. Unless the gross receipts tax be so treated, some very
serious questions under the federal Constitution are almost certain
to arise. Without an authoritative holding by the state supreme
court to the contrary, we must conclude the leased speaking sets
are not subject to local taxation.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
* California Political Code:
"Sec. 3664a."
"1. All railroad companies, . . . all telegraph and telephone
companies, . . . shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their
franchises, roadways, roadbeds, rails, rolling stock, poles, wires,
pipes, canals, conduits, rights of way, and other property, or any
part thereof, used exclusively in the operation of their business
in this state, computed as follows: said tax shall be equal to the
percentages hereinafter fixed upon the gross receipts from
operation of such companies and each thereof within this
state."
* * * *
"4. Such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses,
state, county, and municipal, upon the property above enumerated of
such companies except as otherwise provided in section fourteen of
article thirteen of the Constitution of this state."
"Sec. 3665a."
"1. The term 'gross receipts from operation' as used in section
three thousand six hundred sixty-four a of this Code is hereby
defined to include all sums received from business done within this
state, during the year ending the thirty-first day of December last
preceding, including the company's proportion of gross receipts
from any and all sources on account of business done by it within
this state, in connection with other companies described in said
section."
"Sec. 3665b."
"1. The term 'operative property' as used in any section of this
Code shall include:"
* * * *
"(d) In the case of telegraph and telephone companies doing
business in this state: the franchises, rights of way, poles,
wires, pipes, conduits, cables, switchboards, telegraph and
telephone instruments, batteries, generators, and other electrical
appliances, and exchange and other buildings used in the telegraph
and telephone business and so much of the land on which said
buildings are situate as may be required for the convenient use and
occupation of said buildings."
"Sec. 3666."
"1. If any assessor finds in the report of the operative
property in his county, city, and county, municipality, or
district, furnished to him by any of the companies as required in
section three thousand six hundred sixty-five
c of this
Code, any piece or parcel of property which he regards as
nonoperative property, or partially operative and partially
nonoperative, he shall, within thirty days after receiving such
report, notify the state board of equalization thereof by mail,
which notice shall contain a general description of the property
and the assessor's reasons for regarding the same as nonoperative
property. [The board must pass upon the contest.]. . . Said
decision shall be binding upon all parties, the state, the county,
city and county, municipality, or district, and the company, unless
set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction, and each such
assessor must note the
decision on his assessment roll,
and must assess since property accordingly."