1. An Arkansas corporation which leases from the United States
and operates for profit a bath house on the federal reservation at
Hot Springs is taxable by Arkansas on its net income, under
authority of the Act of Congress of 1891, which gives the consent
of the United States to
"the taxation, under the authority of the laws of the Arkansas
applicable to the equal taxation of personal property in that
State, as personal property of all structures and other property in
private ownership on the Hot Springs Reservation."
P.
312 U. S.
178.
2. The Act of 1891 may not be construed as consenting only to
ad valorem taxes imposed directly on tangible property. P.
312 U. S.
179.
200 Ark. 233; 139 S.W.2d 378, affirmed.
Appeal from a decree sustaining the validity of a state tax.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
By a 1929 Act, Arkansas imposed a tax of 2% on the net income of
domestic corporations "with respect to
Page 312 U. S. 177
carrying on or doing business" in the state. [
Footnote 1] Appellant, a corporation
organized under Arkansas law, leases from the United States and
operates for profit a bath house on the federal reservation at Hot
Springs. Whether appellant is subject to the state tax depends on
the interpretation of the language of a provision of a
Congressional Act of 1891 and the corresponding provision of an
Arkansas Act of 1903. The Congressional Act reads:
"The consent of the United States is hereby given for the
taxation, under the authority of the laws of the Arkansas
applicable to the equal taxation of personal property in that
State, as personal property of all structures and other property in
private ownership on the Hot Springs Reservation. [
Footnote 2]"
The 1903 Arkansas act ceded to the United States exclusive
jurisdiction over the business area of the reservation, reserving
only the right to tax accorded by the 1891 Act and the right to
serve criminal and civil process. [
Footnote 3] The Supreme Court of Arkansas held appellant
liable for the tax, [
Footnote
4] and the case is here on appeal, as authorized by 28 U.S.C.
§ 344.
Page 312 U. S. 178
Arkansas does not contend, nor did the Supreme Court of that
state hold, that appellant was liable for the state income tax
under the general power of the state to tax corporations created
pursuant to Arkansas law. On the contrary, Arkansas admits that,
under the reciprocal state and federal acts, the United States
possesses complete sovereign power over the Hot Springs
Reservation, subject to the right of the Arkansas to tax in
accordance with the 1891 Act and subject to its right to execute
within the reservation its civil and criminal process. The state
does not claim a right of any kind to tax any corporation or
individual doing business on the reservation unless the tax comes
within the scope of its agreement with the government, effectuated
by the 1891 and 1903 federal and state legislation. Since the state
has taken this view, and since it is our opinion that the tax can
be sustained on this basis, it is unnecessary for us to determine
whether any other basis might conceivably exist.
While not controlling here, it has been the consistent
conviction of the Arkansas court that the federal legislation
conferred broad powers of taxation upon the state. In
Ex parte
Gaines, 56 Ark. 227, 19 S.W. 602, decided one year after the
original 1891 Act, the court held that a leasehold interest on the
reservation was subject to state taxation. In
Buckstaff Bath
House Co. v. McKinley, 198 Ark. 91, 127 S.W.2d 802, 805,
[
Footnote 5] the court upheld
the state unemployment compensation tax, saying of the 1891
Act:
"The Congress seemingly intended (and this construction is
strengthened by the
Gaines case) to permit
Page 312 U. S. 179
the State to exercise its sovereignty within the Reservation
with respect to the conduct of business, commerce, and the
professions, subject only to the interest retained by the
Government and the right to enforce restrictions under the Federal
laws. . . ."
Appellant, however, reads the Act more narrowly than does the
Arkansas court, and contends that the only taxes Arkansas can levy
are
ad valorem taxes imposed directly on tangible
property. But the words tangible and
ad valorem appear
nowhere in the Act, nor do any synonymous words there appear. And,
in our opinion, to construe the Act as though such words had been
used would do violence to the intent of Congress. The language of
Congress was peculiarly adapted to the broadening of the state's
taxing power -- not to its restriction. Thus, though, under
Arkansas law, structures attached to land were considered a part of
the realty, taxable or nontaxable with the land, [
Footnote 6] Congress provided that privately
owned structures on the tax exempt land of the reservation should
be taxed "as personal property." Not only was this done, but also
all "other property in private ownership" was expressly made
subject to state taxation. By these provisions, Congress manifested
its purpose that no type of privately owned property should escape
the state's taxing power merely because it was owned or used on the
reservation.
And appellant's insistence that these provisions permit only
ad valorem taxation loses sight of the fact that the word
property is by no means limited, in all its variations,
Page 312 U. S. 180
to actual tangible physical things. [
Footnote 7] Its meaning must be determined from its
context as illumined by the subject treated and the objectives
sought. It is true that Arkansas had no corporate income tax in
1891, when the original permission to tax was granted. But taxation
policies and systems change with necessities and experience, and no
support can be found in the Act for a belief that Congress
consented to state taxation only if Arkansas would make its 1891
tax system static. If we accept appellant's premise that what
Congress consented to was
ad valorem taxation only, we
must conclude that Congress consented to a tax under which Arkansas
was collecting virtually all of its revenues in 1891. Since 1900,
state governments -- Arkansas included -- have tended to secure
less and less of their revenue from
ad valorem taxation,
and more and more from taxes of other types. [
Footnote 8] The Arkansas legislature, in fact, in
the preamble to the 1929 income tax act, gave as a reason for its
adoption that
"Agricultural and Industrial development is now being retarded
because of a policy to secure practically all of the Revenue from
an
ad valorem Tax, thus penalizing and discouraging
ownership of property. . . . [
Footnote 9]"
The narrow construction of the Act urged by appellant -- a
corporation created under the laws of Arkansas -- would thus
relieve it from an Arkansas tax on corporate income enacted at
least in part, as a substitute for those state
ad valorem
taxes to which appellant admits it is subject. And "The privilege
of use is only one attribute, among many, of the bundle of
privileges that make up property or ownership." [
Footnote 10] It is our opinion that the
decision below must be affirmed. [
Footnote 11]
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Ark. Acts (1929) No. 118.
[
Footnote 2]
26 Stat. 844. The quoted language was section 5 of a general Act
dealing with the reservation. The section was added as a Senate
amendment to a House bill, and the only relevant legislative
reference to it is a statement by the House conferees that "Section
5 provides for local taxation of the bath houses, so far as the
consent of the United States is concerned." 22 Cong.Rec. 3513.
Arkansas, in ceding exclusive jurisdiction over part of the
reservation, expressly referred to the taxing powers conferred by
the 1891 Act (Ark. Acts (1903) No. 30), and later federal Acts
extending exclusive federal jurisdiction over larger portions of
the reservation have provided that such extension of jurisdiction
shall "not be so construed as to interfere with the right to tax
all structures and other property. . . ."
E.g., Act Aug.
20, 1904, 33 Stat. 187.
[
Footnote 3]
Ark. Acts (1903) No. 30.
[
Footnote 4]
200 Ark. 233, 139 S.W.2d 378. In addition to urging that
Arkansas had no power to levy this tax, appellant had urged that it
was denied equal protection by virtue of a 1931 statute exempting
from the tax those domestic corporations organized for the purpose
of doing business outside the state. (Ark. Acts (1931) No. 220.)
This latter contention is wholly without merit, and will not be
discussed.
[
Footnote 5]
Affirmed on other grounds,
308 U. S. 308 U.S.
358.
[
Footnote 6]
At the time of the 1891 Act, the Arkansas law provided that "The
term "real property and lands" . . . shall be held to mean . . .
all buildings, structures and improvements, and other fixtures of
whatever kind. . . ." Ark.Stats. (Mansfield, 1884) § 5585.
See Union Compress Co. v. State, 64 Ark. 136, 41 S.W. 52.
Such is still the Arkansas law. Ark.Dig.Stats. (Pope, 1937) §
13358.
[
Footnote 7]
Cf. Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Arenz, 290 U. S.
66,
290 U. S.
68.
[
Footnote 8]
Arkansas, for example, received approximately 77% of its total
revenue from general property taxes in 1915, while, in 1937, this
source accounted for only 13%. Financial Statistics of States,
1915, Table 3, pp. 66-67;
id. 1937, Table 5, pp.
36-41.
[
Footnote 9]
Ark. Acts (1929) No. 118.
Compare the preceding
footnote.
[
Footnote 10]
Henneford v. Silas Mason Co., 300 U.
S. 577,
300 U. S.
582.
[
Footnote 11]
Cf. Buckstaff Bath House Co. v. McKinley, 308 U.
S. 358;
Collins v. Yosemite Park & Curry
Co., 304 U. S. 518.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, concurring.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS and I concur in the judgment of the Court,
but upon different grounds from those stated in its opinion.
The state court has held that, so far as the state constitution
and laws are involved, it has power to lay the present tax. It is
no concern of ours what reasons are assigned for that conclusion.
The only question for decision here is whether there is anything in
the acts of Congress establishing the reservation or in the
relationship of the two sovereignties, state and national, to
prevent the state from laying a tax on the net income of its own
corporation.
If the consent of the national government were needful in order
to sustain the present tax, we should have difficulty in finding
that consent in the words of the Act of Congress authorizing the
state to tax "all structures and other property in private
ownership on the . . . Reservation." But we think that such consent
is unnecessary to enable a state to tax the income of its own
corporations, derived from property located on the reservation. It
is enough that no Act of Congress and no agreement by the state
with the Federal Government prohibits the tax.
The fact that income-producing property is physically located on
the territory of another sovereignty does not foreclose the state
from taxing its own residents and corporations on the income
derived from the property.
Page 312 U. S. 182
Cohn v. Graves, 300 U. S. 308;
Lawrence v. State Tax Commission, 286 U.
S. 276;
see Newark Fire Insurance Co. v. State
Board, 307 U. S. 313. We
have recently held that such a tax is not a tax on the
income-producing property in any such sense as to preclude the tax
for want of "jurisdiction" of the state to lay it.
Cohn v.
Graves, supra, 300 U. S.
313-314;
Graves v. O'Keefe, 306 U.
S. 466,
306 U. S. 480.
There is no occasion now to give renewed currency to the notion
erroneously attributed to
Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust
Co., 157 U. S. 429;
cf. Cohn v. Graves, supra, 300 U. S.
314-315, that a tax on income is subject to the
limitations of a tax on the property which produces it.
For that reason, if Arkansas had made an unrestricted grant of
the reservation, it could not be said to have renounced its
authority to tax income of its corporations or citizens derived
from property on the reservation, more than if it were located in
the District of Columbia or in another state. It clearly has not
done so by reserving the right to lay a property tax within the
reservation or by agreeing that the United States shall have
exclusive jurisdiction over it for any or for every purpose. The
state's power to lay the tax, being independent of its jurisdiction
over the ceded territory, subsists unless waived or prohibited by
competent authority.
Whatever constitutional power the federal government may have to
prohibit the state taxation of income derived from property located
on the reservation, regarded as a federal instrumentality, it is
plain that it has not assumed to exercise the power.
Graves v.
O'Keefe, supra, 306 U. S. 480.
Since the state has not surrendered its constitutional power to tax
the income, and since Congress has not assumed in the act
establishing the reservation, or otherwise, to prohibit the tax,
the power of the state is unimpaired, unless restricted by its own
constitution and laws.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER while agreeing with the Court's opinion,
also agrees with the view expressed in this opinion.