A captain of the United States revenue cutter on the Erie
station in Pennsylvania was rated and assessed for county taxes, as
an officer of the United States, for his office.
Held that
he was not liable to be rated and assessed for his office under the
United States for county rates and levies.
The question presented in the case before the courts of
Pennsylvania was whether the office of captain of the revenue
cutter of the United States was liable to be assessed for taxes
under the laws of Pennsylvania. The validity of the laws of
Pennsylvania imposing such taxes was in question in the case on the
ground that the laws were repugnant to the Constitution and laws of
the United States, and the court decided in favor of the validity
of the law. The Supreme Court of the United States has jurisdiction
on a writ of error in such a case.
Taxation is a sacred right, essential to the existence of
government -- an incident of sovereignty. The right of legislation
is coextensive with the incident, to attach it upon all persons and
property within the jurisdiction of a state. But in our system,
there are limitations upon that right. There is a concurrent right
of legislation in the states, and the United States, except as both
are restrained by the Constitution of the United States. Both are
restrained by express prohibitions in the Constitution, and the
states by such as are reciprocally implied, when the exercise of
the right by a state conflicts with the perfect execution of
another sovereign power delegated to the United States. That occurs
when taxation by a state acts upon the instruments and emoluments
and persons which the United States may use and employ as necessary
and proper means to execute their sovereign power. The government
of the United States is supreme within its sphere of action. The
means necessary and proper to carry into effect the powers in the
Constitution are in Congress.
The compensation of an officer of the United States is fixed by
a law made by Congress. It is in its exclusive discretion to
declare what shall be given. It exercises the discretion and fixes
the amount, and confers upon the officer the right to receive
it when it has been earned. Any law of a state imposing a tax
upon the office, diminishing the recompense, is in conflict with
the law of the United States which secures the allowance to the
officer.
In the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County, the plaintiff in
error instituted an action against the commissioners of Erie County
the purpose of which was to have a decision on the right asserted
by the commissioners of the county to assess and collect taxes on
the office of the plaintiff, a citizen, and residing in
Page 41 U. S. 436
Erie County, Pennsylvania, a captain of the United States
revenue cutter. The following case was stated and submitted to the
court, either party to have the right to prosecute a writ of
error.
"The plaintiff is and has been for the last eight years an
officer of the United States, to-wit, captain of the United States
revenue cutter service, and ever since his appointment has been in
service in command of the United States revenue cutter
Erie, on the Erie station. He has been rated and assessed
with county taxes for the last three years, to-wit, 1835, 1836 and
1837, as such officer of the United States, for his office, as
such, valued at $500, which taxes so rated and assessed and paid by
the plaintiff amount to the sum of $10.75. The question submitted
to the court is whether the plaintiff is liable to be rated and
assessed for his office under the United States for county rates
and levies; if he is, then judgment to be entered for the
defendants; if not, then judgment to be entered for the plaintiff
for the sum of $10.75."
The court of common pleas gave judgment for the plaintiff, and
the case was removed to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in which
court the judgment was reversed and a judgment was entered for the
Commissioner of Erie County. The plaintiff, Daniel Dobbins,
prosecuted this writ of error.
Page 41 U. S. 443
WAYNE, JUSTICE, delivered the opinion of the Court.
That court reversed the judgment of the Court of Common
Page 41 U. S. 444
Pleas of Erie County, which it had given in favor of the
plaintiff (now in error), upon an agreed statement of facts in the
nature of a special verdict.
"It was agreed and admitted that the plaintiff has his residence
and domicile at Erie, Erie County, Pennsylvania, and votes in said
place; that he has been, for the last eight years, an officer of
the United States, a captain in the United States revenue cutter
service, and ever since his appointment has been in service in
command of the revenue cutter
Erie, on the Erie station.
That he had been rated and assessed with county taxes for the last
three years, 1835, 1836, 1837, as such officer of the United
States, for his office as such, valued at $500, which taxes paid by
the plaintiff amount to the sum of $10.75. The question submitted
to the court is whether the plaintiff is liable to be rated and
assessed for his office under the United States for county rates
and levies. If he is, then judgment shall be entered for the
defendants; if not, then judgment shall be entered for the
plaintiff for the sum of $10.75."
This is the only question submitted upon the record. We think it
sufficiently appears to give the court jurisdiction that the
supreme court, in reversing the judgment of the court of common
pleas and in giving judgment against the plaintiffs, decided in
favor of the validity of a law of Pennsylvania subjecting the
plaintiff to be rated and assessed for his office under the United
States for county rates and levies, the validity of which law was
in question on the ground of its being repugnant to the
Constitution and laws of the United States.
It was urged in argument by the counsel for the defendants in
error, if the court has jurisdiction of the cause, that the
judgment of the supreme court should be affirmed because the
plaintiff, when assessed, did not apply to the commissioners for
relief, as the statute provides. And that having paid the tax to an
officer who had a color of right to receive it, it cannot be
recovered back by the plaintiff. Neither of these questions can be
considered by this Court. They are not in the special verdict upon
which the judgment was rendered. By referring to the case, as
reported in 7 Watts 513, it will be seen that the supreme court put
the case exclusively
Page 41 U. S. 445
upon the power and right of the commissioners to enforce the tax
upon the plaintiff for his office under the United States.
The assessment was made by the Commissioners of Erie County
under the Act of Pennsylvania of 15 April 1834. It is believed to
be the only instance of a tax's being rated in that state upon the
office of an officer of the United States. It has, however,
received the sanction of the supreme court. If it can be lawfully
done, it cannot be doubted that similar assessments will be made
under that law upon all other officers of the United States in
Pennsylvania. The language of the court is
"the case is put on the power and right to impose the tax. In
other words, is this a legitimate subject of taxation? Perhaps this
may in some measure depend on whether, within the true meaning of
the acts, it is the office itself or the emoluments of the office
which are made the subjects of taxation."
In the preceding extract we gave the language of the court. The
law is that an account shall be taken of "all offices and posts of
profit." The next section makes it the duty of the assessors "to
rate all offices and posts of profit, professions, trades and
occupations, at their discretion, having a due regard to the
profits arising therefrom." The emoluments of the office, then, are
taxable, and not the office. But whether it be one or the other, we
cannot perceive how a tax upon either conduces to comprehend within
the terms of the act the office or the compensation of an officer
of the United States. It will not do to say, as it was said in
argument, that though the language of the act may import that
offices and posts of profit were taxable, that it was the citizen
who holds the office whom the law intended to tax, and that it was
a burden he was bound to bear in return for the privileges enjoyed
and the protection received from government, and then that the
liability to pay the tax was a personal charge because the person
upon whom it was assessed was a taxable person.
The first answer to be given to these suggestions is that the
tax is to be levied upon a valuation of the income of the office.
But besides, the obligation upon persons to pay taxes is mistaken
and the sense in which a tax is a personal charge is misunderstood.
The foundation of the obligation to pay taxes is not the privileges
enjoyed or the protection given to a citizen by government, though
the payment of taxes gives a right to protection. Both are
enjoyed
Page 41 U. S. 446
as well by those members of a state who do not because they are
not able to pay taxes as by those who are able and do pay them.
Married women and children have privileges and protection, but they
are not assessed unless they have goods or property separate from
the heads of families. The necessity of money for the support of
states, in times of peace or war, fixes the obligation upon their
citizens to pay such taxes as may be imposed by lawful authority.
And the only sense in which a tax is a personal charge is that it
is assessed upon personal estate and the profits of labor and
industry. It is called a personal charge to distinguish such a tax
from the tax upon lands and tenements, which are enforced without
any regard to the persons who are the owners. Taxes are never
assessed, unless it be a capitation tax, upon persons, as persons,
but upon them on account of their goods and the profits made upon
professions, trades and occupations. They are so imposed because
public revenue can only be supplied by assessments upon the goods
of individuals --
"comprehending under the word 'goods' all the estate and effects
which everyone hath, of whatsoever sort they be; taxes regard the
persons of men only because of their goods."
The goods, then, are taxed, and not the person. But those who
are to pay the tax are taxable persons, because they are under an
obligation to contribute from their means to the necessities of the
state. The obligation, however, only becomes a charge upon the
person in consequence of the power in the state to enforce the
payment of taxes by coercion. The power extends to the
sequestration of the goods and the imprisonment of the delinquent.
A tax, according to the object upon which it is laid, may be a
personal charge, but that is a very different thing from its
becoming a charge upon the person in consequence of the coercion
which may be provided by law to enforce the payment.
We have been more particular in noticing this argument because
it enabled us to put the point upon which it was intended to bear
upon right principles. Besides, as it was drawn from the statutes
of Pennsylvania, it implied the supposition that her legislature,
in these enactments upon taxation, had disregarded those
principles. But this is not so. If the occasion was a proper one
for this Court to do it, we might easily show that the act
throughout
Page 41 U. S. 447
was framed upon an enlightened recognition by the legislators of
that state of all the principles upon which taxes are imposed. The
only difficulty in the act has arisen from the terms directing
assessments to be made upon all offices and posts of profit without
restricting the assessments to offices and posts of profit held
under the sovereignty of that state, and not excluding them from
being made upon offices and posts of profit of another sovereignty
-- the United States.
The case being now cleared of other objections except such as
relate to the unconstitutionality of the tax, we will consider the
real and only question in it -- that is, "whether the plaintiff is
liable to be rated and assessed for his office under the United
States, for county rates and levies?"
It is not necessary for the decision of this question that the
power of taxation in the states and in the United States under the
Constitution of the latter should be minutely discussed.
Taxation is a sacred right, essential to the existence of
government -- an incident of sovereignty. The right of legislation
is coextensive with the incident to attach it upon all persons and
property within the jurisdiction of a state. But in our system
there are limitations upon that right. There is a concurrent right
of legislation in the states and the United States, except as both
are restrained by the Constitution of the United States. Both are
restrained upon this subject by express prohibitions in the
Constitution, and the states, by such as are necessarily implied
when the exercise of the right by a state conflicts with the
perfect execution of another sovereign power delegated to the
United States; that occurs when taxation by a state acts upon the
instruments, emoluments and persons which the United States may use
and employ as necessary and proper means to execute their sovereign
powers. The government of the United States is supreme within its
sphere of action. The means necessary and proper to carry into
effect the powers in the Constitution are in Congress. Taxation is
a sovereign power in a state, but the collection of revenue by
imposts upon imported goods and the regulation of commerce are also
sovereign powers in the United States. Let us apply then the
principles just stated and the powers mentioned to the case in
judgment and see what will be the result.
Page 41 U. S. 448
Congress has power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts
&c., and to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among
the several states and with the Indian tribes. Neither can be done
without legislation. A complicate machinery of forms, instruments,
and persons must be established; revenue districts were to be
designated; collectors, naval officers, surveyors, inspectors,
appraisers, weighers, measurers and gaugers must be employed; "the
better to secure the collection of duties on goods and on the
tonnage of vessels," revenue cutters and officers to command them
are necessary. The latter are declared to be officers of the
customs, and they have large powers and authority. All of this is
legislation by Congress to execute sovereign powers. They are the
means necessary to an allowed end -- the end the great objects
which the Constitution was intended to secure to the states in
their character of a nation. Is the officer, as such, less a means
to carry into effect these great objects than the vessel which he
commands, the instruments which are used to navigate her or the
guns put on board to enforce obedience to the law? These inanimate
objects, it is admitted, cannot be taxed by a state, because they
are means. Is not the officer more so who gives use and efficacy to
the whole? Is not compensation the means by which his services are
procured and retained? It is true it becomes his when he has earned
it. If it can be taxed by a state, as compensation, will not
Congress have to graduate its amount with reference to its
reduction by the tax? Could Congress use an uncontrolled discretion
in fixing the amount of compensation, as it would do without the
interference on such a tax?
The execution of a national power by way of compensation to
officers can in no way be subordinate to the action of the state
legislatures upon the same subject. It would destroy also all
uniformity of compensation for the same service, as the taxes by
the states would be different. To allow such a right of taxation to
be in the states would also, in effect, be to give the states a
revenue out of the revenue of the United States to which they are
not constitutionally entitled, either directly or indirectly --
neither by their own action nor by that of Congress. The revenue of
the United States is intended by the Constitution to pay the debts
and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the
United States, to be expended in particular in carrying
Page 41 U. S. 449
into effect the laws made to execute all the express powers "and
all other powers vested by the Constitution in the government of
the United States." But the unconstitutionality of such taxation by
a state as that now before us may be safely put (though it is not
the only ground) upon its interference with the constitutional
means which have been legislated by the government of the United
States to carry into effect its powers to lay and collect taxes,
duties, imposts, &c., and to regulate commerce. In our view, it
presents a case of as strong interference as was presented by the
tax imposed by Maryland in the case of
McCulloch, 4
Wheat. 316, and the tax by the City Council of Charleston in
Weston's Case,
2 Pet. 449, in both of which it was decided by this Court that the
state governments cannot lay a tax upon the constitutional means
employed by the government of the Union to execute its
constitutional powers.
But we have said that the ground upon which we have just put the
unconstitutionality of the tax in the case before us is not the
sole ground upon which our conclusion can be maintained. We will
now state another ground, and we do so because it is applicable to
exempt the salaries of all officers of the United States from
taxation by the states. The powers of the national government can
only be executed by officers whose services must be compensated by
Congress. The allowance is in its discretion. The presumption is
that the compensation given by law is no more than the services are
worth, and only such in amount as will secure from the officer the
diligent performance of his duties.
"The officers execute their offices for the public good. This
implies their right of reaping from thence the recompense the
services they may render may deserve"
without that recompense being in any was lessened except by the
sovereign power from whom the officer derives his appointment or by
another sovereign power to whom the first has delegated the right
of taxation over all the objects of taxation, in common with
itself, for the benefit of both. And no diminution in the
recompense of an officer is just and lawful unless it be
prospective or by way of taxation by the sovereignty who has a
power to impose it, and which is intended to bear equally upon all
according to their estate. The compensation of an officer of the
United States is fixed by
Page 41 U. S. 450
a law made by Congress. It is in its exclusive discretion to
determine what shall be given. It exercises the discretion and
fixes the amount, and confers upon the officer the right to receive
it when it has been earned. Does not a tax, then, by a state upon
the office, diminishing the recompense, conflict with the law of
the United States which secures it to the officer in its
entireness? It certainly has such an effect, and any law of a state
imposing such a tax cannot be constitutional, because it conflicts
with a law of Congress made in pursuance of the Constitution, and
which makes it the supreme law of the land.
We are therefore of opinion that the judgment of the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania reversing the judgment of the Court of Common
Pleas of Erie County declaring the plaintiff was not liable to be
rated and assessed for county rates and levies for his office under
the United States is erroneous in this -- that the said supreme
court adjudged that the act of Pennsylvania, embracing all office
and posts of profit, comprehending offices of the United States,
was not repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the United
States, whereas this Court is of opinion that such repugnancy does
exist. We are therefore of opinion that the said judgment ought to
be reversed and annulled, and the cause remanded to the said
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in and for the Western District, with
directions to affirm the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of
Erie County.
Judgment reversed.