A state franchise tax or license fee imposed on a manufacturing
corporation at the rate of five cents per hundred shares of that
portion of its issued capital stock which bore the same ratio to
all its issued capital stock as the amount of its property and
business within the state bore to its total business and property
held not violative of the commerce clause although much of
the business included in the computation as transacted in the state
consisted of sale of goods upon orders received from outside and
accepted by mail, the goods being shipped by the corporation f.o.b.
at its factories to the destinations designated by the purchasers.
Air Way Corp. v. Day, 266 U. S. 71,
distinguished.
335 Ill. 150 affirmed.
Certiorari, 280 U.S. 545, to review a judgment sustaining the
dismissal of the bill in a suit to enjoin payment to the Treasurer
of Illinois of the amount of a tax collected from the petitioner by
the respondent Secretary of State.
Page 281 U. S. 512
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, a Delaware corporation licensed to do business in
Illinois, brought this suit in the circuit court of Sangamon County
to enjoin payment to the state treasurer of the amount of a license
fee or franchise tax that respondent, as secretary of state,
collected from petitioner under § 105 of the General
Corporation Act of that state. The suit was based upon the claim
that, as construed and enforced by respondent, the section violates
the commerce clause of the federal Constitution. Article 1, §
8, cl. 3. After hearing upon bill, answer, and an agreed statement
of facts, the court dismissed the bill. The state supreme court
(335 Ill. 150) affirmed the decree following our decision in
Hump Hairpin Co. v. Emmerson, 258 U.
S. 290, which affirmed 293 Ill. 387.
Section 105 provides:
"Each corporation for profit, . . . except insurance companies,
. . . organized under the laws of this state or admitted to do
business in this state, . . . shall pay an annual license fee or
franchise tax . . . of five cents on each one hundred dollars of
the proportion of its issued capital stock . . . represented by
business transacted and property located in this state. . . ."
Petitioner operates factories and has its principal office in
Illinois. It there receives, upon forms furnished by it, orders for
its products from persons in Illinois and elsewhere and by sending
written acceptance consummates contracts of sale. In accordance
with the directions contained in the orders, petitioner delivers
the goods at its factories to common carriers for transportation to
purchasers at various destinations in Illinois, other states, and
foreign countries.
Petitioner had issued capital stock of the par value of
$5,701,800; it had property valued at $6,924,804.92, of
Page 281 U. S. 513
which $6,894,903.27 was situated in Illinois; its business for
the year in question amounted to $11,670,925.51, of which
$1,919,822.73 represented products shipped to purchasers in
Illinois; and $9,751,042.78, reported as interstate commerce, was
made up of shipments to customers outside the state.
Respondent treated all of petitioner's business as having been
transacted in Illinois and based the tax on such proportion of its
outstanding capital stock as its business plus its Illinois
property was of such business and all its property. The tax so
calculated amounted to $2,808.03, a substantial part of which
resulted from the inclusion of the transactions reported by
petitioner as interstate commerce.
All of the goods sold were manufactured by the petitioner in
Illinois, and the manufacturing was business carried on in that
state. The receipt and acceptance of orders, the packing, giving
shipping directions, and delivery to common carriers also
constituted business in that state; these things were common to all
sales whether the goods sold were sent to destinations within or
without the state, but, as to products shipped to other states or
foreign countries, the acceptance of orders and what was
subsequently done by petitioner became component parts of
interstate or foreign commerce.
Dahnke-Walker Co. v.
Bondurant, 257 U. S. 282,
257 U. S. 290;
Lemke v. Farmers' Grain Co., 258 U. S.
50,
258 U. S. 54;
Flanagan v. Federal Coal Co., 267 U.
S. 222,
267 U. S. 225;
Federal Trade Commission v. Pacific Paper Assn.,
273 U. S. 52,
273 U. S.
63-64.
Unquestionably Illinois has power to tax all petitioner's
property therein without regard to its use in connection with
interstate transactions, and to impose a license fee or excise upon
petitioner's local business.
International Paper Co. v.
Massachusetts, 246 U. S. 135,
246 U. S. 141.
The tax in question was not laid directly upon interstate commerce
or any of its elements. For the determination of
Page 281 U. S. 514
the amount the taxpayer's business and property located in
Illinois is divided by the total of all its business and property,
and that percentage is applied to the issued shares and the
resulting number taken for taxation at the rate of 5 cents per
$100. As the amount depends on the relation each to the others of
the various elements employed in the calculation, the fee or tax
does not directly depend upon the amount of the taxpayer's
interstate transactions. The exaction may rise while the sales to
customers outside Illinois decline, and may fall while such sales
increase.
The amount imposed upon petitioner did not even indirectly
burden the interstate transportation resulting from the shipping
directions given by petitioner in fulfillment of its contracts of
sale. There is nothing to indicate that, by the enactment in
question, the state intended to regulate or burden such commerce or
to discriminate as between sales to Illinois customers and those
made to buyers in other states and countries. The tax cannot be
said, directly or by necessary operation, to affect any of the
things done by petitioner which, by reason of transportation of
goods to places outside Illinois in accordance with the directions
of the purchasers, became elements or component parts of interstate
or foreign commerce. Petitioner's sales prices are based on
deliveries to common carriers at its factories. The expense of
transportation is not involved in the calculation. And it is plain
that, if the fee or tax in question affected petitioner's
interstate or foreign commerce at all, the burden was indirect and
remote, and not a violation of the commerce clause.
The petitioner relies on
Air-way Corp. v. Day,
266 U. S. 71. But,
as shown by the opinion, the tax considered in that case was based
on the authorized capital stock, and the rate was applied to a
number of shares greatly in excess of the total of all that had
been issued. The company
Page 281 U. S. 515
was authorized to issue 400,000 shares; it had issued only
50,485, and these represented all its property and business. The
tax at the rate of five cents each on 298,520 shares was held
directly to burden the company's interstate commerce.
Cf.
Cudahy Co. v. Hinkle, 278 U. S. 460. The
case now under consideration cannot be distinguished from
Hump
Hairpin Co. v. Emmerson, supra. And see International Shoe
Co. v. Shartel, 279 U. S. 429,
279 U. S.
433.
Decree affirmed.