Oregon applied its personal income tax law to the net income
derived by individuals from their work, within the boundaries of
the State, in the construction of the Bonneville Dam on the
Columbia River, a navigable stream, under a contract with the
United States. The work was performed partly in the bed of the
river and partly on other land purchased by the United States.
Held valid.
1. The tax did not burden the operations of the Federal
Government. P.
303 U. S.
21.
2. Subject to the paramount authority of the Federal Government
to have the work performed for purposes within the federal
province, the State retained its title and territorial jurisdiction
over the river bed. P.
303 U. S.
22.
3. With like restriction, the State retained its territorial
jurisdiction over the land purchased, notwithstanding a general law
of Oregon consenting to purchase of land by the United States for
the erection of "any needful buildings" and purporting to cede
exclusive jurisdiction over the same. since the Federal Government
need not accept such jurisdiction when tendered and. in this
instance. the facts show that it intended otherwise. P.
303 U. S.
23.
4. The tax involved no interference with the carrying out of the
federal project. P.
303 U. S.
25.
156 Ore. 461, 67 P.2d 161, affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of Oregon sustaining
a tax.
Page 303 U. S. 21
PER CURIAM.
This case presents the question of the validity of the personal
income tax law of Oregon (Oregon Code 1930, c. XV, Tit. LXIX,
§§ 69-1501 to 69-1538, as amended by Laws 1933, cc. 322,
387, and by Laws 1933, 2d Sp. Sess., c. 31), as applied to the net
income of the appellants derived from their work within the
exterior limits of the state in the construction of the Bonneville
Dam on the Columbia river under a contract with the United States.
The contract was made in February, 1934, and the work was completed
in that year. The tax was assailed upon the grounds (1) that it
burdened the operations of the Federal Government and (2) that the
area within which the work was done was within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the United States. The Supreme Court of the state
sustained the tax, 156 Or. 461, 62 P.2d 13, 67 P.2d 161, 166, and
the contractors appeal.
With respect to the contention that the state law lays an
unconstitutional burden upon the Federal Government, the case is
controlled by our previous decisions.
Metcalf & Eddy v.
Mitchell, 269 U. S. 514;
General Construction Co. v. Fisher, 295 U.S. 715;
James v. Dravo Contracting Co., 302 U.
S. 134;
Silas Mason Company v. Tax Commission,
302 U. S. 186. In
the two cases last mentioned, the tax which was upheld was upon the
gross income of the contractors. In
Metcalf & Eddy v.
Mitchell, supra, and
General Construction Co. v. Fisher,
supra, the tax was upon the net income.
As to territorial jurisdiction, it appears that the area within
the boundaries of Oregon in which the work was
Page 303 U. S. 22
performed embraced (a) the bed of the Columbia river, where the
main structural works are placed, and (b) Bradford island and a
portion of the mainland.
The United States did not acquire title to the bed of the river.
Upon this point, the state court said:
"Section 60-1302, Oregon Code 1930 (Laws 1874, p. 10), grants to
the Governor of Oregon authority and power to convey to the United
States title to land belonging to the state and covered by the
waters of the United States, not exceeding 10 acres in any one
tract, as the site of a lighthouse, beacon, or other aid to
navigation, upon application made to him by a duly authorized agent
of the United States, and further grants him authority 'to cede to
the said United States jurisdiction over the same,' reserving,
however, to the state the right to serve thereon civil or criminal
process issuing under authority of the state. No application has
been made to the Governor of this state or to the Legislature for
conveyance of any part of the bed of either the north or south
channel of the Columbia river within the project, or for cession to
the federal government of jurisdiction over the same. . . ."
"No authority has been called to our attention to the effect
that the state of Oregon has in any way relinquished its
sovereignty over the area occupied by the waters of Bradford slough
and that part of the north channel of the Columbia river which is
within the territorial limits of the state."
The case in this relation falls within the principle of our
decision in
James v. Dravo Contracting Co., supra. The
question, we there said, was not one of the paramount authority of
the Federal Government to have the work performed for purposes
within the federal province. The title to the bed of the river was
in the state. And, although subject to the dominant right of the
Federal
Page 303 U. S. 23
Government, the servient title continued in the state, which
thus retained its territorial jurisdiction for purposes not
inconsistent with the exercise by the Federal Government of its
constitutional functions.
See also Silas Mason Company v. Tax
Commission, supra.
The remaining question concerns the lands on Bradford Island and
the mainland which were purchased by the United States. Appellants
rely upon the Oregon statute giving consent to the United States to
purchase or otherwise acquire any land within the state "for the
purpose of erecting thereon any needful public buildings" under
authority of any act of Congress, and providing that the United
States should have "the right of exclusive jurisdiction over the
same," saving the authority of the state for the service of
process. Oregon Code 1930, § 60-1303.
In
Silas Mason Company v. Tax Commission, supra, we
said that, as a transfer of exclusive jurisdiction rests upon a
grant by the state, it follows, in accordance with familiar
principles applicable to grants, that the grant may be accepted or
declined. Acceptance may be presumed in the absence of evidence of
a contrary intent. But we found no constitutional principle "which
compels acceptance by the United States of an exclusive
jurisdiction contrary to its own conception of its interests." The
mere fact that the Government needs title to property within the
boundaries of a state "does not necessitate the assumption by the
Government of the burdens incident to an exclusive
jurisdiction."
In this instance, the state court took the view that the Federal
Government had not accepted, and did not intend to exercise,
exclusive legislative authority over the lands which had been
purchased for this project. The court said:
"The mere fact that there may be on the statute books of the
state a general law, such as § 60-1303, Oregon Code 1930,
consenting to the purchase of land by the
Page 303 U. S. 24
United States and granting to the national government the right
to exercise exclusive jurisdiction thereover, does not imply that
over all lands purchased by the national government in the state
after the enactment of such law the state is divested
ipso
facto of sovereignty, and exclusive control over the acquired
area is assumed by the federal government. In the instant case,
there is nothing to indicate that the federal government desires to
exercise exclusive legislative jurisdiction over the land purchased
by it within the Bonneville Project. It would be somewhat
inconsistent to assume that, since it does not have such
jurisdiction over the major part of the structures which are now
being built, the federal government is seeking to exercise
exclusive jurisdiction over that part of the works located on lands
title to which it has acquired."
'The record discloses that the government officials in charge of
the construction work required the contractors to come under the
provisions of the workmen's compensation law of the state in which
the work was to be performed. At the time the contract with the
plaintiffs was entered into, at least two states had held that
their workmen's compensation laws were not effective on territory
over which the federal government had exclusive jurisdiction:
Willis v. Oscar Daniels Co., 200 Mich. 30, 166 N.W. 496;
Murray v. Joe Gerrick & Co., 172 Wash. 365, 20 P.2d
591. On February 5, 1934, the Supreme Court of the United States
affirmed the latter case.
See 291 U. S. 291 U.S.
315.
"The contract between the plaintiffs and the federal government
was dated February 6, 1934. In view of those decisions, it is
reasonable to assume that the officials in charge of construction
of the Bonneville Dam on behalf of the federal government
understood that the land included in the project was not under the
exclusive legislative jurisdiction of the United States. Otherwise,
they
Page 303 U. S. 25
would not have required contractors to provide state workmen's
compensation."
The contract between the Government and appellants is not in
evidence, but the record discloses, as stated by the state court,
that the Government did not seek to exclude the state from all
legislative authority, an exclusion which would have followed from
an acceptance of a grant of "exclusive jurisdiction" with the sole
reservation of the right to serve process. The enforcement and
administration of the Oregon Compensation Law,
see Oregon
Code 1930, §§ 49-1801 to 49-1845, as amended, with which
the contractors were required to comply, were incompatible with the
existence of exclusive legislative authority in the United States.
* If, however,
exclusive jurisdiction, although offered, was not accepted by the
United States, there is no warrant for the conclusion that the
state did not retain its territorial jurisdiction over the area in
question so far as its exercise involved no interference with the
carrying out of the federal project. And, as we have decided that
there is no such interference through the enforcement of a tax such
as is here assailed, we find no ground for overruling the decision
of the state court.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice CARDOZO took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.
* The purchases of the lands here involved were made by the
Government, and the contract with the appellants was made and
performed, prior to the enactment of the Act of Congress of June
25, 1936, 49 Stat. 1938, and we express no opinion as to the effect
of that act in relation to lands as to which exclusive jurisdiction
had previously been granted to and accepted by the United
States.