1. A state tax on federal securities, or on the interest
therefrom, is invalid, regardless of the amount of the tax. P.
279 U. S.
624.
2. In determining whether a tax is an excise on the privilege of
doing business as a corporation, or is in reality a tax on income
from tax-exempt securities, this Court must inquire independently,
and is not bound by the designation of the tax in the taxing act or
the opinion of the state court as to its nature. P.
279 U. S.
625.
3. In the decisions of this Court holding that a tax lawfully
imposed on the exercise of corporate privileges within the taxing
power may be measured by income from the property of the
corporation, although a part of such income is derived from
nontaxable property, it is implicit that the thing taxed in form
was in fact and reality the subject aimed at, and that any burden
put upon the nontaxable subject by its use as a measure of value
was fortuitous and incidental. P.
279 U. S.
627.
4. The fact that a tax ostensibly laid upon a taxable subject is
to be measured by the value of a nontaxable subject at once
suggests the probability that it was the latter, rather than the
former, that the lawmaker sought to reach. If inquiry discloses
persuasive grounds for the conclusion that such is the real purpose
and effect of the legislation, the tax cannot be upheld. P.
279 U. S.
628.
Page 279 U. S. 621
5. A state cannot tax the bonds of the United States, or the
income therefrom, directly or indirectly, in any form. Words which,
literally considered, import a tax on something else --
e.g., a tax upon the privilege of doing corporate business
measured in part upon the amount of nontaxable interest received --
may nevertheless be adjudged to lay a tax upon the interest if that
purpose be fairly inferable from a consideration of the history,
the surrounding circumstances, or the statute itself, considered in
all its parts. P.
279 U.S.
629.
6. A liberal application of the foregoing principles is
essential to the preservation of the constitutional limitations
imposed upon the taxing power of the states. P.
279 U. S.
631.
7. The Massachusetts Legislature, having provided for a tax on
corporations measured in part by net income, but exempting from
consideration as part of the measure all interest upon nontaxable
securities, passed an amendment, presumably based on a report of a
special committee, which had the effect of repealing this exemption
and of thereby imposing a burden on the securities from which, by
express language, they had theretofore been free.
Held,
upon a consideration of the legislation and the contents of the
report, that the purpose of the change was to tax the income of the
securities. P.
279 U. S.
631.
8. Assuming that the states are authorized by Act of Congress to
tax income of national banks derived from United States bonds, this
would not justify imposition of like taxes in the case of an
ordinary corporation. P.
279 U. S.
633.
9. A state tax on the income of United States bonds held by an
ordinary corporation cannot be upheld upon the ground that it was
necessary in order to avoid discriminating against national banks
contrary to Acts of Congress. P.
279 U. S.
634.
10. State taxation of the income of county and municipal bonds
which were exempt by statutory contract of the state
held
invalid under the contract clause of the Federal Constitution. P.
279 U. S.
634.
264 Mass. 396 reversed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court dismissing
a petition for abatement of a tax.
Page 279 U. S. 622
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
A statute of Massachusetts, G.L. c. 63, § 32, as amended by
St.1923, c. 424, § 1, provides:
"Except as otherwise provided in sections thirty-four and
thirty-four A, every domestic business corporation shall pay
annually, with respect to the carrying on or doing of business by
it, an excise equal to the sum of the following, provided that
every such corporation shall pay annually a total excise not less
in amount than one twentieth of one percent of the fair cash value
of all the shares constituting its capital stock on the first day
of April when the return called for by section thirty-five is
due:"
"(1) An amount equal to five dollars per thousand upon the value
of its corporate excess."
"(2) An amount equal to two and one half percent of that part of
its net income, as defined in this chapter, which is derived from
business carried on within the commonwealth."
By G.L. c. 63, § 30, par. 5, as amended by St.1925, c. 343,
§ 1A, "net income" is defined:
"'Net income,' except as otherwise provided in sections
thirty-four and thirty-nine, the net income for the taxable year as
required to be returned by the corporation to the federal
government under the federal Revenue Act applicable for the period,
adding thereto any net losses as defined in said federal revenue
act that have been deducted, and all interest and dividends not so
required to be returned as net income except dividends on shares of
stock of corporations organized under the laws of the commonwealth
and dividends in liquidation paid from capital. "
Page 279 U. S. 623
Before this amendment, the definition embodied in G.L. c. 63,
§ 30, par. 5, as amended, shortly before the passage of the
last-quoted amendment, by Stat. 1925, c. 265, § 1,
provided:
"'Net income,' except as otherwise provided in sections
thirty-four and thirty-nine, the net income for the taxable year as
required to be returned by the corporation to the federal
government under the federal revenue act applicable to the period,
adding thereto any net losses as defined by said federal revenue
act that have been deducted, and, in the case of a domestic
business corporation, such interest and dividends, not so required
to be returned as net income, as would be taxable if received by an
inhabitant of this commonwealth; less, both in the case of a
domestic business corporation and of a foreign corporation,
interest, so required to be returned, which is received upon bonds,
notes and certificates of indebtedness of the United States."
Thus, under the original definition of net income, there was
expressly excluded from the net income taxable at 2 1/2 percent all
interest received upon bonds, notes, and certificates of
indebtedness of the United States. And the definition had the
effect of excluding, in the same respect, interest on state,
county, and municipal bonds.
Appellant, a business corporation organized under the laws of
Massachusetts, owned a large number of United States Liberty bonds
and Federal Farm Loan bonds. The Liberty bonds, by statute of the
United States are, expressly made exempt from all taxation imposed
by any state except estate or inheritance taxes. C. 56, 40 Stat.
288, 291, § 7. Federal Farm Loan bonds are issued under
authority of c. 245, 39 Stat. 360, and by § 26, p. 380,
declared to be instrumentalities of the United States and both as
to principal and income exempt from all state taxation.
Page 279 U. S. 624
The corporation also owned a large number of bonds of
Massachusetts counties and municipalities which, when issued and
acquired by the corporation, were exempt from taxation by the terms
of a state statute. G.L. c. 59, § 5, par. 25. Of course, in
respect of United States securities, the statutory exemption is
superfluous. A state tax, however small, upon such securities or
interest derived therefrom interferes or tends to interfere with
the constitutional power of the general government to borrow money
on the credit of the United States, and constitutes a burden upon
the operations of government and, carried far enough, would prove
destructive. The principle set forth a century ago in
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449,
27 U. S. 468,
has never since been departed from by this Court:
"The right to tax the contract to any extent, when made, must
operate upon the power to borrow before it is exercised, and have a
sensible influence on the contract. The extent of this influence
depends on the will of a distinct government to any extent, however
inconsiderable, it is a burden on the operations of government. It
may be carried to an extent which shall arrest them entirely."
Home Savings Bank v. Des Moines, 205 U.
S. 503,
205 U. S.
513.
The taxing authorities of the state assessed against appellant,
for the year 1926, a tax under the provisions of the then existing
statute as first above quoted, adding, for the purpose of computing
the assessment, to the amount of the net income of appellant as
determined by the federal income tax returns of appellant, all sums
of interest received by appellant from the foregoing United States,
Farm Loan, and county and municipal bonds. Without this addition,
and under the original definition of net income, the amount of the
tax assessed would have been materially less.
Appellant paid the amount assessed under protest and brought a
petition for abatement of the tax under the provisions of the state
law, setting forth the foregoing facts
Page 279 U. S. 625
and alleging the unconstitutionality, under the federal
Constitution, of the statute insofar as it was held to include
interest derived from the tax exempt securities: (1) as impairing
the obligation of contracts; (2) as an attempt to impose a tax upon
income derived from securities and instrumentalities of the United
States; (3) as depriving petitioner of its property without due
process of law and denying it the equal protection of the law in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment; (4) as an impairment and in
derogation of the power of Congress to borrow money on the credit
of the United States, and for other reasons not necessary for
present purpose to be set forth.
A justice of the Supreme Judicial Court sustained a demurrer to
the petition. On appeal, this was affirmed by the full court, and
the petition dismissed. That court, through its chief justice,
delivered a carefully drawn opinion reviewing numerous decisions of
this Court bearing upon the question involved. The tax was held to
be not a tax on income, but an excise "with respect to the carrying
on or doing of business," as the statute itself in form declares.
While it was plain that the tax was larger than it would have been
if the income from the tax exempt securities had not been added to
the other items in making up the factor of "net income," the court
held that the income was not taxed, but simply employed together
with the other items in ascertaining the measure for computing the
excise.
The words of the act and the opinion of the state court as to
the nature of the tax are to be given consideration and weight, but
they are not conclusive. As it many times has been decided, neither
state courts nor legislatures, by giving the tax a particular name
or by using some form of words, can take away our duty to consider
its nature and effect.
Choctaw & Gulf R. Co. v.
Harrison, 235 U. S. 292,
235 U. S. 298;
Galveston, Harrisburg, etc.,
Ry. Co. v.
Page 279 U. S. 626
Texas, 210 U. S. 217,
210 U. S. 227.
And this Court must determine for itself by independent inquiry
whether the tax here is what, in form and by the decision of the
state court, it is declared to be -- namely, an excise tax on the
privilege of doing business -- or, under the guise of that
designation, is in substance and reality a tax on the income
derived from tax exempt securities. If, by varying the form -- that
is to say, if, by using one name for a tax instead of another, or
imposing a tax in terms upon one subject when another is in reality
aimed at -- the substance and effect of the imposition may be
changed, constitutional limitations upon powers of taxation would
come to naught. The rule is otherwise. To this effect, the
following cases may be cited as illustrative:
A tax laid in terms on the occupation of an importer is in
effect a tax on imports.
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 444.
Answering the contention that a state may tax an occupation, and
that this tax was nothing more, Chief Justice Marshall said:
"It is impossible to conceal from ourselves that this is varying
the form without varying the substance. It is treating a
prohibition which is general as if it were confined to a particular
mode of doing the forbidden thing. All must perceive that a tax on
the sale of an article imported only for sale is a tax on the
article itself. . . . So a tax on the occupation of an importer is,
in like manner, a tax on importation. It must add to the price of
the article, and be paid by the consumer, or by the importer
himself, in like manner as a direct duty on the article itself
would be made. This the state has not a right to do, because it is
prohibited by the Constitution."
A tax on the income of an office is a tax on the office itself,
and cannot be laid in that form if the office be exempt.
Dobbins v. Erie
County, 16 Pet. 435.
Page 279 U. S. 627
A tax on sales made by an auctioneer is a tax on the goods sold,
and, where such goods are imported and sold for the importer, the
law authorizing the tax is void as imposing a duty on imports.
Cook v. Pennsylvania, 97 U. S. 566.
A stamp tax upon a bill of lading is in substance and effect a
tax upon the thing transported, because of its necessary
association with the shipment.
Almy v.
California, 24 How. 169,
65 U. S. 174.
And see 75 U. S.
Parham, 8 Wall. 123,
75 U. S.
138.
In
Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Oklahoma,
240 U. S. 522,
240 U. S. 530,
a tax upon oil leases of lands of Indians under the protection of
the federal government, made by authority of such government, was
held void as being in fact a tax upon the power to make the leases
and capable of being used to destroy such power. It was said that,
since the lessees were federal instrumentalities, the state could
not tax their interest in the leases either directly or as they
were represented by the capital stock of the corporations owning
them.
"A tax upon the leases is a tax upon the power to make them, and
could be used to destroy the power to make them. If they cannot be
taxed as entities, they cannot be taxed vicariously by taxing the
stock, whose only value is their value, or by taking the stock as
an evidence or measure of their value, rather than by directly
estimating them as the board of equalization and the referee
did."
In
Federal Land Bank v. Crosland, 261 U.
S. 374, this Court condemned, as beyond the
constitutional power of the state, a statute subjecting mortgages
executed to a Federal Land Bank to the payment of a recording tax,
as being in effect a tax upon the mortgages.
It is not necessary to extend the list of cases of like
effect.
Page 279 U. S. 628
The court below predicates its decision upon a series of
decisions, of which
Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U.
S. 107,
220 U. S.
163-165, is the extreme example, holding that a tax
lawfully imposed upon the exercise of corporate privileges within
the taxing power may be measured by income from the property of the
corporation although a part of such income is derived from
nontaxable property.
See also Home Ins. Co. v. New York,
134 U. S. 594;
Society for Savings v.
Coite, 6 Wall. 594;
Provident
Institution v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611. The
distinction pointed out in these cases is between an attempt to tax
the property or income as such and to measure a legitimate tax upon
the privileges involved in the use thereof. It is implicit in all
that the thing taxed in form was in fact and reality the subject
aimed at, and that any burden put upon the nontaxable subject by
its use as a measure of value was fortuitous and incidental.
The aphorism of Chief Justice Marshall in
McCulloch
v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 431,
that "the power to tax involves the power to destroy," has
frequently been reiterated by this Court. The principle, of course,
is important only where the tax is sought to be imposed upon a
nontaxable subject, or, as said in
Knowlton v. Moore,
178 U. S. 41,
178 U. S.
60,
". . . the power to destroy which may be the consequence of
taxation is a reason why the right to tax should be confined to
subjects which may be lawfully embraced therein, even although it
happens that, in some particular instance, no great harm may be
caused by the exercise of the taxing authority as to a subject
which is beyond its scope."
Not only may the power to tax be exercised oppressively, but for
one government -- state or national -- to lay a tax upon the
instrumentalities or securities of the other is derogatory to the
latter's dignity, subversive of its powers, and repugnant to its
paramount authority.
See California v. Central P. R.
Co., 127
Page 279 U. S. 629
U.S. 1,
127 U. S. 41.
These constitute special and compelling reasons why courts, in
scrutinizing taxing acts like that here involved, should be acute
to distinguish between an exaction which, in substance and reality,
is what it pretends to be and a scheme to lay a tax upon a
nontaxable subject by a deceptive use of words. The fact that a tax
ostensibly laid upon a taxable subject is to be measured by the
value of a nontaxable subject at once suggests the probability that
it was the latter, rather than the former, that the lawmaker sought
to reach. If inquiry discloses persuasive grounds for the
conclusion that such is the real purpose and effect of the
legislation, the tax cannot be upheld without subverting the well
established rule that
". . . what cannot be done directly because of constitutional
restriction cannot be accomplished indirectly by legislation which
accomplishes the same result. . . . Constitutional provisions,
whether operating by way of grant or limitation, are to be enforced
according to their letter and spirit, and cannot be evaded by any
legislation which, though not in terms trespassing on the letter,
yet in substance and effect destroy the grant or limitation."
Fairbank v. United States, 181 U.
S. 283,
181 U. S. 294,
181 U. S.
30.
In the consideration of such legislation, the controlling
principle, constantly to be borne in mind is that the state cannot
tax the instrumentalities or bonds of the United States, or, what
is the same thing, the income derived therefrom, directly or
indirectly -- that is to say, it cannot tax them in any form. Words
which, literally considered, import a tax upon something else -- a
tax, for example, as here, upon the privilege of doing business
measured in part by the amount of nontaxable interest received --
may nevertheless be adjudged to lay a tax upon the interest if that
purpose be fairly inferable from a consideration of the history,
the surrounding circumstances, or the statute itself considered in
all its parts.
See Home Savings Bank v. Des Moines,
205 U. S. 503,
205 U. S. 510,
205 U. S. 521.
Page 279 U. S. 630
On the one hand, the state is at liberty to tax a corporation
with respect to the doing of its business. On the other hand, the
state cannot tax the income of the corporation derived from
nontaxable securities. It necessarily follows that the legislature
may not, by an artful use of words, deprive this Court of its
authority to look beyond the words to the real legislative purpose.
And the power and the duty of the court to do so is of great
practical importance. For when the aim of the legislature is simply
to tax the former, it is less likely to impose an injurious burden
upon the latter than when the aim is directed primarily against the
latter.
See Galveston, Harrisburg, etc., Ry. Co. v. Texas,
supra, p.
210 U. S.
227.
In
Miller v. Milwaukee, 272 U.
S. 713, this Court had occasion to consider a question
quite analogous to that here involved. In that case, the state
statute exempted the income from bonds of the United Stated held by
corporations, but provided for taxing so much of the stockholders'
dividends as corresponded by the income of the corporation not
assessed. This Court, holding the tax invalid, said (p.
272 U. S.
715):
"It is a familiar principle that conduct which, in usual
situations, the law protects may become unlawful when part of a
scheme to reach a prohibited result. If the avowed purpose or
self-evident operation of a statute is to follow the bonds of the
United States and to make up for its inability to reach them
directly by indirectly achieving the same result, the statute must
fail even if, but for its purpose or special operation, it would be
perfectly good. Under the laws of Wisconsin, the income from the
United States bonds may not be the only item exempted from the
income tax on corporations, but it certainly is the most
conspicuous instance of exemption at the present time. A result
intelligently foreseen and offering the most obvious motive for an
act that will bring it about fairly may be taken to have been a
purpose of the act. On that
Page 279 U. S. 631
assumption, the immunity of the national bonds is too important
to allow any narrowing beyond what the Acts of Congress permit. We
think it would be going too far to say that they allow an
intentional interference that is only prevented from being direct
by the artificial distinction between a corporation and its
members. A tax very well may be upheld as against any casual effect
it may have upon the bonds of the United States when passed with a
different intent and not aimed at them, but it becomes a more
serious attack upon their immunity when they are its obvious aim.
In such a case, the court must consider the public welfare, rather
than the artifices contrived for private convenience, and must look
at the facts."
See also Northwestern Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin,
275 U. S. 136;
Alpha Cement Co. v. Massachusetts, 268 U.
S. 203,
268 U. S. 218;
Frick v. Pennsylvania, 268 U. S. 473,
268 U. S.
494-495;
Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. United States,
277 U. S. 508,
277 U. S.
519.
A liberal application of the foregoing principles, which find
confirmation especially in the later decisions of this Court, is
essential to the preservation of the constitutional limitations
imposed upon the taxing power of the states. Let it once be
conceded that such limitations may be evaded by the adoption of a
delusive name to characterize the tax or form of words to describe
it, and the destruction of the vitality of these necessary
safeguards will soon follow.
In the present case, it appears that the original statute
exempted from consideration as a part of the measure of the tax all
interest upon the nontaxable securities. The amended act now in
force has the effect of repealing this original provision and
imposing a burden upon the securities from which, by express
language, they had theretofore been free. This was a distinct
change of policy on the part of the commonwealth, adopted, as
though it had been so declared in precise words, for the very
purpose of subjecting these securities
pro tanto to the
burden of
Page 279 U. S. 632
the tax. This conclusion is confirmed, if that be necessary, by
the report of the special commission appointed by the legislature
to investigate the subject of taxation of banking institutions,
Mass.1925 House Documents, No. 233, from which we quote:
"Further, the Commission addressed itself to the question of
what might properly be considered as 'net income' for the purposes
of this proposed tax. The national banks and trust companies, in
their returns to the federal government and to the state under the
12 1/2 percent income tax law, are allowed certain deductions of
income from specified types of securities in addition to the
expense of conducting their business, bad debts, losses, etc. The
business corporations, also, are allowed the same deductions. In
the opinion of the Commission, there is no valid reason why, for
purposes of this tax, such income exemption should be allowed.
Corporations differ from the individual. Business corporations hold
tax exempt securities generally not because they fit into the
purpose of their organization, but for the bearing they may have
upon tax payments."
"The Commission believes that the income upon which this tax
should be laid, so far as national banks are concerned, should be
the total net income from whatever source, after the proper
deductions have been made for the cost of doing business and
losses. So far as relates to the business corporations, the same
should be the case in respect to the 2 1/2 percent part of the
excise measure based on net income."
"It is true that this extension of 'net income' for the purpose
of this tax would increase the tax which business corporations now
pay, but the Commission, after investigation, believes that such
increased tax would be relatively small. Many corporations invested
in Liberty Bonds and other government securities during the war for
patriotic reasons, which practice, so far as business corporations
are
Page 279 U. S. 633
concerned, is not generally prevalent at present, and the
Commission believes will not exist in the future to any appreciable
extent. So that it is its opinion that such, if any, increased
burden upon business corporations will not be appreciable."
"In respect to national banks and trust companies, the situation
is somewhat different. Considerable in amount of the assets or
surplus funds of financial institutions are invested from time to
time in securities now exempt from taxation either under federal or
state law. The income of banking institutions from these sources is
relatively much greater than that of other corporations. In
endeavoring to reach a basis for a fair and equitable tax on
national banks, the Commission, as previously stated in this
report, was limited to the methods permitted under § 5219 of
the United States Revised Statutes. A tax in the nature of an
excise tax upon the income of the bank is an equitable and proper
tax. . . ."
This report received the consideration of the legislature and,
it is fair to suppose, constituted the basis for adopting the
amendment here assailed. The effect of the report is that
nontaxable bonds nevertheless should be subjected to the burden of
the tax, and since that could not be imposed directly, the clear
intimation is that it be imposed indirectly through the medium of
the so-called "excise."
It has been suggested that the object of the change was to
conform the taxation of business corporations to that authorized by
Congress for the taxation of national banks. Whether, under recent
federal statutes, states are authorized to impose a tax upon the
income from United States bonds held by national banks we need not
stop to inquire. Certainly there is no statute of the United States
which undertakes to authorize a state to impose a tax upon such
bonds held by other kinds of corporations. And what power Congress
has under the Constitution in respect of such authorization we need
not now determine.
Page 279 U. S. 634
It is clear that authority, even if given, to impose a tax on
federal bonds in the case of national banks does not include, by
implication or otherwise, the authority to impose a tax upon such
bonds held by ordinary corporations.
It is also suggested in that connection that the amendment in
question is necessary, and that its real object was to avoid
discrimination forbidden by federal statutes against national
banks. But it is enough to say that, if such discrimination would
otherwise result, it must be avoided by some method which does not
involve the imposition of a tax which uniformly for a century has
been condemned by this Court as unconstitutional. The state may not
save itself from infringing an Act of Congress by violating the
Constitution.
We conclude that the amended act, in substance and effect,
imposes a tax upon federal bonds and securities, and it necessarily
follows that the act, in substance and effect, also imposes a tax
upon the county and municipal bonds. In both respects, the act is
void. As to the former, the act is in derogation of the
constitutional power of Congress to borrow money on the credit of
the United States, as well as in violation of the acts of Congress
declaring such bonds and securities to be nontaxable, and, as to
the latter, the act impairs the obligation of the statutory
contract of the state by which such bonds were made exempt from
state taxation.
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE STONE.
Petitioner is a corporation of the State of Massachusetts. Its
very existence and the conduct of its business in corporate form
are privileges conferred by the state, which, under the
Constitution, it may tax. Under the Constitution of Massachusetts,
the present tax can be upheld
Page 279 U. S. 635
only if an excise, and it and its predecessors have been
consistently sustained as excises.
S.S. White Dental Mfg. Co.
v. Commonwealth, 212 Mass. 35, 37;
President, etc., of
Portland Bank v. Apthorp, 12 Mass. 252;
Commonwealth v.
Provident Institution, 94 Mass. 312;
Commonwealth v.
Hamilton Mfg. Co., 94 Mass. 298, 306;
Eaton, Crane &
Pike Co. v. Commonwealth, 237 Mass. 523, 527;
Alpha
Portland Cement Co. v. Commonwealth, 244 Mass. 547. This
interpretation of the nature of the exaction has been repeatedly
approved by this Court.
Provident Institution v.
Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611;
Hamilton
Co. v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 632;
cf. Baltic
Mining Co. v. Massachusetts, 231 U. S. 68,
231 U. S. 84;
National Leather Co. v. Massachusetts, 277 U.
S. 413;
Alpha Portland Cement Co. v.
Massachusetts, 268 U. S. 203,
268 U. S. 216.
It is imposed "with respect to the carrying on or doing business,"
and is collectible only when the corporation has in fact been so
engaged during the taxable year.
See Fore River Shipbuilding
Corp. v. Commonwealth, 248 Mass. 137, 140;
Attorney
General v. Boston & Albany R. Co., 233 Mass. 460. It is
measured by the value of the corporate assets (with appropriate
deductions for machinery and real estate otherwise taxed) and by
net income earned within the state, which this Court has often said
are fair measures of the exercise of the corporate franchise. The
tax is not measured by gross income, as in
Northwestern Mutual
Life Insurance Co. v. Wisconsin, 275 U.
S. 136, where the validity of an excise measured by net
income was recognized. The distinction between net income and gross
as the measure of a tax is well established.
Peck & Co. v.
Lowe, 247 U. S. 165.
Compare Crew-Levick Co. v. Pennsylvania, 245 U.
S. 292;
United States Glue Co. v. Oak Creek,
247 U. S. 321,
247 U. S. 328.
Being on net income, the tax does not vary in exact proportion to
the gross income from the tax exempt securities included in the
aggregate.
Page 279 U. S. 636
There is no constitutional principle and no decision of this
Court of which I am aware which would deny to the state the power
so to tax the privileges which it has conferred upon petitioner,
even though all its property were tax exempt securities of the
United States and income derived from them. For 70 years, this
Court has consistently adhered to the principle that either the
federal or state governments may constitutionally impose an excise
tax on corporations for the privilege of doing business in
corporate form, and measure the tax by the property or net income
of the corporation, including the tax exempt securities of the
other or income derived from them.
Provident Institution v.
Massachusetts, supra; 73 U. S.
Coite, 6 Wall. 594;
Hamilton Co. v. Massachusetts, supra;
Home Insurance Co. v. New York, 134 U.
S. 594;
Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U.
S. 107,
220 U. S.
162-165. In
Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., a federal
tax on corporations "with respect to carrying on or doing
business," measured by net income, was held to be an excise, not a
direct tax on property or income, and so was valid, although not
apportioned, under Article I, § 2, cl. 3, and § 9, cl. 4,
of the Constitution, and notwithstanding the fact that net income
from tax exempt municipal bonds was included in the measure of the
tax. In no technical sense does this tax seem open to objection.
Being an excise, the tax is not one on property or income, and may
include either in its measurement, although not directly
taxable.
Upon like principle, a state inheritance tax may be measured by
including the value of United States bonds of the decedent.
Plummer v. Coler, 178 U. S. 115;
Blodgett v. Silberman, 277 U. S. 1,
277 U. S.
12. Compare Greiner v. Lewellyn,
258 U.
S. 384. Similarly, an excise on a corporation may be
measured by its outstanding capital stock, International Shoe Co.
v. Shartel, ante, p.
279 U. S. 429;
Hump
Hairpin
Page 279 U. S. 637
Co. v. Emmerson, 258 U. S. 290; or
by its net income,
Underwood Typewriter Co. v.
Chamberlain, 254 U. S. 113,
254 U. S. 120;
United States Glue Co. v. Oak Creek, supra, even though a
part of its capital is used in, or some of its income is derived
from, interstate commerce.
It would seem that only considerations of public policy of
weight, which appear to be here wholly wanting, would justify
overturning a principle so long established. It has survived a
great war financed by the sale of government obligations, and it
has never even been suggested that in any practical way it has
impaired either the dignity or credit of the national
government.
I suppose a certain advantage would be enjoyed by a corporation
if the exercise of its corporate franchise in the purchase and use
of securities of one government could not be taxed by the other.
Theoretically, the advantage would inure to each government in the
marketing of its securities, just as would be the case if such
securities of the taxpayer could not be seized and sold for the
payment of any taxes lawfully levied by the state or national
government. But the advantage of the one would be gained only at
the expense of the other, and it would seem that neither immunity
could be claimed under any reasonably practical application of the
rule that government instrumentalities may not be taxed. In a broad
sense, the taxing power of neither state nor national government
can be exercised without having some effect on the other, and there
are many points at which the exercise of the undoubted power of one
affects the other; but
"the limitation upon the taxing power of each, so far as it
affects the other, must receive a practical construction which
permits both to function with a minimum of interference each with
the other, and that limitation cannot be so varied or extended as
seriously to impair either the taxing power of the government
Page 279 U. S. 638
imposing the tax . . . or the appropriate exercise of the
functions of the government affected by it."
See Metcalf & Eddy v. Mitchell, 269 U.
S. 514,
269 U. S.
523.
Granted that a statute otherwise valid may be deemed improper,
when intended as a covert means of directly burdening ownership of
securities of the other sovereignty,
see Miller v.
Milwaukee, 272 U. S. 713, I
can discern no such sinister purpose in the present legislation. It
was, of course, the intention of the Massachusetts Legislature, in
the amendment of § 30, to deal specifically not alone with
federal bonds, but with the tax-exempt securities of the
commonwealth and its municipalities, by including them in the
measure of the excise tax. The amendment did not aim at securities
of the national government, or discriminate against them. It was
obviously designed to impose on corporations generally a tax
similar to the excise on national banks, measured by net income,
recommended by the legislative committee as a means of avoiding a
then existing discrimination. The inclusion in the measure of the
tax of income from all tax exempt securities tended only to effect
this purpose, a similar computation of net income being
contemplated for national banks. But in neither case is there
anything to suggest that the legislature intended to impose a
direct tax on income, or do more than to impose an excise tax,
measured by income, including that upon federal bonds, which this
Court has declared it may do. Its purpose was to prevent the
evasion by corporations of payment of the tax which the
commonwealth had fixed as the price of the privilege of doing
business within it in corporate form, by any course of investment
of their funds in tax exempt securities, state or national. As this
seems to me to be a permissible purpose, both on principle and by
authority, I think the judgment below should be affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES and MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS concur in this
opinion.