A Minnesota corporation which had not qualified to do business
in Iowa, and which maintained no office or other place of business
in Iowa, made sales of goods in Minnesota which were sent by common
carrier or by mail to purchasers in Iowa. Orders, solicited in Iowa
by salesmen from headquarters in Minnesota, were taken subject to
acceptance in Minnesota.
Held, that the tax imposed by the
Iowa Use Tax Act upon the use of such goods in Iowa, and the
requirement that the corporation collect the tax and pay it to the
State, did not violate the Federal Constitution. Following
Felt
& Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher, 306 U. S.
62;
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
312 U. S. 359, and
Nelson v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 312 U.
S. 373. Pp.
322 U. S. 336,
322 U. S.
338.
233 Iowa 877, 10 N.W.2d 659, affirmed.
Certiorari, 320 U.S. 731, to review the affirmance of a judgment
for the State Tax Commission in an action to recover use taxes.
Page 322 U. S. 336
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The State Tax Commission of Iowa brought this suit under the
authority of the Iowa Use Tax Law which was recently here in
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 312 U.
S. 359, and
Nelson v. Montgomery Ward,
312 U. S. 373. The
question now presented is, in short, whether Iowa may collect, in
the circumstances of this case, such a use tax from General Trading
Company, a Minnesota corporation, on the basis of property bought
from Trading Company and sent by it from Minnesota to purchasers in
Iowa for use and enjoyment there.
By the Iowa Use Tax Law, a tax is
"imposed on the use in this state of tangible personal property
purchased . . . for use in this state at the rate of two percent of
the purchase price of such property. Said tax is . . . imposed upon
every person using such property within this state until such tax
has been paid directly to the county treasurer, to a retailer, or
to the commission. . . ."
§ 6943.103, Code of Iowa 1939. The use of property the sale
of which is subject to Iowa's sales tax is exempted from the use
tax (§ 6943.104(1)), but the sales tax can be laid only on
sales at retail within the State. § 6943.075. The use tax
constitutes a debt owed by the retailer to the State. §
6943.112. But "[e]very retailer maintaining a place of business" in
Iowa must collect this tax from the purchaser (§ 6943.109),
and may not advertise that he will himself absorb the tax. §
6943.111. Finally, an offsetting credit
Page 322 U. S. 337
(
see Henneford v. Silas Mason Co., 300 U.
S. 577,
300 U. S. 584,
300 U. S.
586-587) if another use or sales tax has been paid for
the same thing elsewhere is allowed, and if the tax "imposed in
such other state is two percent or more, then no tax shall be due
on such articles." § 6943.125.
A judgment in favor of the Tax Commission by one of the lower
courts was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Iowa. 233 Iowa 877, 10
N.W.2d 659. The application by that Court of its local laws and the
facts on which it founded its judgment are, of course, controlling
here. From these, it appears that General Trading Company had never
qualified to do business as a foreign corporation in Iowa, nor does
it maintain there any office, branch, or warehouse. The property on
which the use tax was laid was sent to Iowa as a result of orders
solicited by traveling salesmen sent into Iowa from their Minnesota
headquarters. The orders were always subject to acceptance in
Minnesota, whence the goods were shipped into Iowa by common
carriers or the post. Upon these facts and its holding that Trading
Company was a "retailer maintaining a place of business in this
state" within the meaning of the Iowa Statute, the Iowa Supreme
Court held that Iowa had not exceeded its powers in the imposition
of this use tax on Iowa purchasers, and that collection could
validly be made through the Trading Company.
We brought the case here, 320 U.S. 731, to meet the claim that
there was need for further precision regarding the scope of our
previous rulings on the power of States to levy use taxes. In view
however of the clear understanding by the court below that the
facts we have summarized bring the transaction within the taxing
power of Iowa, there is little need for elaboration. We agree with
the Iowa Supreme Court that
Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co. v.
Gallagher, 306 U. S. 62;
Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., supra, and
Nelson
v. Montgomery Ward, supra, are
Page 322 U. S. 338
controlling. The
Gallagher case is indistinguishable --
certainly nothing can turn on the more elaborate arrangements for
soliciting orders for an intricate machine for shipment from
without a State as in the
Gallagher case, compared with
the apparently simpler needs for soliciting business in this case.
And the fact that, in the
Sears Roebuck and
Montgomery
Ward cases, the interstate vendor also had retail stores in
Iowa, whose sales were appropriately subjected to the sales tax, is
constitutionally irrelevant to the right of Iowa sustained in those
cases to exact a use tax from purchasers on mail order goods
forwarded into Iowa from without the State. All these
differentiations are without constitutional significance. Of
course, no State can tax the privilege of doing interstate
business.
See Western Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue,
303 U. S. 250.
That is within the protection of the Commerce Clause, and subject
to the power of Congress. On the other hand, the mere fact that
property is used for interstate commerce or has come into an
owner's possession as a result of interstate commerce does not
diminish the protection which he may draw from a State to the
upkeep of which he may be asked to bear his fair share. But a fair
share precludes legislation obviously hostile or practically
discriminatory toward interstate commerce.
See Best & Co.
v. Maxwell, 311 U. S. 454.
None of these infirmities affects the tax in this case any more
than it did in the other cases with which it forms a group. The tax
is what it professes to be -- a nondiscriminatory excise laid on
all personal property consumed in Iowa. The property is enjoyed by
an Iowa resident partly because the opportunity is given by Iowa to
enjoy property no matter whence acquired. The exaction is made
against the ultimate consumer -- the Iowa resident who is paying
taxes to sustain his own state government. To make the distributor
the tax collector for the State is a familiar and sanctioned
device.
Monamotor Oil Co.
v.
Page 322 U. S. 339
Johnson, 292 U. S. 86,
292 U. S. 93-94;
Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co. v. Gallagher, supra.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting.
This decision authorizes, in my opinion, an unwarranted
extension of the power of a state to subject persons to its taxing
power who are not within its jurisdiction and have not in any
manner submitted themselves to it. The General Trading Company is,
in the language of the opinion, made "the tax collector for the
tax." We have heretofore held, and I think properly, that the state
may make tax collectors of those who come in and do business within
its jurisdiction, for thereby they submit themselves to its power.
Such was the situation in both
Monamotor Oil Co. v.
Johnson, 292 U. S. 86, and
Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co. v. Gallagher, 306 U. S.
62. These are the only authorities cited by the Court on
this point, and they clearly are not precedents to support this
decision.
In this case, as the opinion points out, the General Trading
Company never qualified in Iowa, and has no office, branch,
warehouse, or general agent in the State. From Minnesota it ships
goods ordered from salesmen by purchasers in Iowa. Orders are
accepted only in Minnesota. The transaction of sale is not taxed,
and, being clearly interstate commerce, is not taxable.
McLeod
v. Dilworth Co., ante, p.
322 U. S. 327. So
we are holding that a state has power to make a tax collector of
one whom it has no power to tax. Certainly no state has a
constitutional warrant for making a tax collector of one as the
price of the privilege of doing interstate commerce. He does not
get the right from the state, and the state cannot qualify it. I
can imagine no principle of states' rights or state comity which
can justify what is done here.
Page 322 U. S. 340
Nor does the practice seem conducive to good order in the
federal system. The power of Iowa to enforce collection in other
states is certainly very limited, and the effort to do so on any
wide scale is unlikely either to be systematically pursued or
successfully executed.
I recognize the pressure to uphold all manner of efforts to
collect tax moneys. But this decision, by which one may not ship
goods from anywhere in the United States to a purchaser in Iowa
without becoming a nonresident tax collector, exceeds everything so
far done by this Court. In my opinion, the statute is an effort to
exert extraterritorial control beyond any which a state could exert
if there were no Constitution at all. I can think of nothing in or
out of the Constitution which warrants this effort to reach beyond
the State's own border to make out-of-state merchants tax
collectors because they engage in interstate commerce with the
State's citizens.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS joins in this opinion.