A state tax on the local property of a railway company measured
upon gross receipts from intrastate business, and upon gross
receipts from interstate business in the proportion which the
mileage of the railway within the state bears to the entire mileage
of the railway over which such interstate business is done, is not
a burden to interstate commerce or violative of the due process and
equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, though part
of the property devoted to interstate commerce consist of docks
outside of the state at the terminus of a line running from within
it, and though the compensation received for the services of such
docks be included in the gross receipts of that line in computing
the gross receipts attributable to the taxable part of it.
So
held where the principal, and a very lucrative,
business of the line in question was hauling ore from mines in the
taxing state to the terminal docks, where the line and the docks
were treated by the railway as a unit, the charge for dock service
being
Page 278 U. S. 504
absorbed in the charge per ton transported, and where the
evidence did not show that the mileage value of the part of the
line outside of the taxing state, with the docks included, was
greater than the mileage value of the part within it. P.
278 U. S.
508.
174 Minn. 3 affirmed.
Error to and appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of
Minnesota sustaining a judgment for taxes in an action by the state
against the Railway.
See 160 Minn. 515; 273 U.S. 658. The
writ of error was dismissed.
Page 278 U. S. 506
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is here both by writ of error and appeals. Appeal
being the proper method, the writ of error (No. 106) will be
dismissed.
The action was brought by the state to recover taxes for the
years 1901 to 1912, inclusive. Judgment against the company was
rendered by the trial court for the years 1903 to 1912, no recovery
being allowed for 1901 or 1902. Upon appeal, the state supreme
court affirmed the judgment. 160 Minn. 515. A writ of error from
this Court was dismissed for want of jurisdiction, resulting from
an insufficient setting forth and waiver of claim of a substantial
federal constitutional question. 273 U.S. 658. Thereafter the state
supreme court vacated its judgment, granted a reargument upon the
constitutional question, and again affirmed the trial court. 174
Minn. 3. The present appeal is from the judgment of the court below
last described.
In Minnesota, by statute amended from time to time, but
substantially in effect since 1871 (
see 1 Mason's
Minnesota Statutes 1927, §§ 2246, 2247), a tax, measured
by gross earnings, is laid upon all railway companies, in lieu of
all taxes upon all of their property within the state. As a basis
for computing the tax, each railway company is required to report
annually its gross earnings upon business done upon its lines
wholly within the state and upon
Page 278 U. S. 507
interstate business in the proportion which the mileage within
the state bears to the entire mileage of the railway over which
such interstate business is done. The tax thus levied is a property
tax based on the gross earnings fairly attributable to the property
of the railway company within the state. The state supreme court
has so held. And, to the same effect,
see Cudahy Packing Co. v.
Minnesota, 246 U. S. 450,
246 U. S.
452.
The attack upon the statute is not that it is bad upon its face,
but that, as applied to the specific facts upon which the liability
of the company in the present action was sustained, it imposes a
tax in respect of earnings wholly referable to certain docks in
Wisconsin and a short stretch of track immediately connected
therewith, and therefore results in laying a tax upon property
outside the State of Minnesota. The contention is that the statute,
as thus construed and applied, constitutes a burden upon interstate
commerce and also violates the due process of law and equal
protection of the laws clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. The
facts follow.
Among the lines owned and operated by the railway company,
directly or through its subsidiaries, amounting in all to more than
2,000 miles within the state, is a road 107 miles in length,
running from the Mesaba Iron Range in Minnesota to, and including
as part thereof, the Wisconsin docks. Eighty-seven miles of the
road are in Minnesota, and 20 miles, including the docks, are in
Wisconsin. The principal business of the road in that of hauling
ore from the mines at Mesaba to the docks. For this service, the
tariff provides a single charge per ton of ore transported, in
which the dock service is absorbed without being separately
specified. For the years in question, the railway company, in
reporting the gross earnings assignable to the Minnesota part of
the line as proportioned to the foregoing division of the mileage,
first allocated to the docks and deducted, as compensation for dock
services, amounts
Page 278 U. S. 508
ranging from 15 to 25 cents per ton of ore hauled. This was done
upon the theory that, in calculating the gross earnings, the
portions of the line in the two states should be considered
entirely apart from the docks, and that the amounts thus allocated
and deducted constituted earnings fairly attributable to the docks
and the immediately connecting track alone. Taxes were computed and
paid accordingly. Subsequently, the facts being disclosed, the
state brought this action for additional taxes, calculated upon the
amounts thus allocated and deducted.
The constitutional contention was not pressed in the trial
court. No finding pertinent to that inquiry was either asked or
made. The question was raised by the answer, but waived in both
courts below, and we so held. But for the action of the state
supreme court in granting a reargument, it would not be here now.
We agree with that court that it fairly cannot be found from the
evidence that the mileage value of the Wisconsin part of the line,
including the docks, was in fact greater than the Minnesota part of
the line. The record contains some statements in respect of the
cost of the docks and in respect of expenditures in road
construction, but the showing is incomplete, and leaves even the
question of cost in large degree a subject for conjecture.
The evidence does not show the actual use value of either the
Minnesota or the Wisconsin part of the road, or their relative
values. If all the facts bearing upon the matter were revealed,
they well might demonstrate not only that cost, even if proved,
would not be a fair measure of the use value, but that the
Minnesota part of the line, mile for mile, was equal in value to
that of the Wisconsin portion with the docks included. Such
evidence as the record contains tends to that conclusion, rather
than the contrary. The road, including the docks, is a unit. The
charge for transportation of ore, including dock services, is a
single charge. The entire ore traffic originates and
Page 278 U. S. 509
seems to be controlled in Minnesota, and the earnings from that
source comparatively are very great, suggesting at least the
probability of a special use value of the Minnesota part of the
line. It is competent for the state to impose a tax upon the
property of the company within the state, and for that purpose to
measure the value of such property in the way here provided. We
find nothing in the record to indicate that the tax under
consideration, plus that already collected, exceeds
"what would be legitimate as an ordinary tax on the property
valued as part of a going concern, [or is] relatively higher than
the taxes on other kinds of property."
Pullman Co. v. Richardson, 261 U.
S. 330,
261 U. S.
339.
Under these circumstances, upon principles established by
numerous decisions of this Court, the tax is not open to challenge
as an exaction in violation of the federal Constitution.
Pullman Co. v. Richardson, supra, pp.
261 U. S.
338-339;
U.S. Express Co. v.
Minnesota, 223 U. S. 335,
223 U. S. 345;
Cudahy Packing Co. v. Minnesota, supra, pp/
246 U. S.
453-455, and cases cited.
Judgment affirmed.