Appellant Society, a nonprofit corporation with headquarters in
the District of Columbia, which maintains two offices in California
that solicit advertising for the Society's magazine but perform no
activities related to the Society's mail-order business for the
sale from the District of Columbia of maps, atlases, globes, and
books, challenges the constitutionality of California's use tax, as
applied to the Society's mail-order activities, which requires
every retailer engaged in business in that State and making sales
of tangible personal property for storage, use, or other
consumption in that State to collect from the purchaser a use tax
in lieu of the sales tax imposed on local retailers. Orders for the
Society's sales items are mailed from California directly to
appellant's headquarters on coupons or forms enclosed with
announcements mailed to Society members and magazine subscribers or
on order forms contained in the magazine.
Held: California's imposition of the use-tax-collection
liability on the Society's mail-order operation does not violate
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment or the Commerce
Clause, since the Society's continuous presence in California in
the two offices provides a sufficient nexus between the appellant
and the State to justify imposition of the use tax collection
liability as applied to appellant. The out-of-state seller
appellant runs no risk of double taxation, as the consumer's
identification as a resident of the taxing State is obvious, and
appellant becomes liable for the tax only by failing or refusing to
collect it from the resident consumer. Nor, contrary to appellant's
contention, is it material that there is no relationship between
the appellant's sales activity in California and the two
advertising offices, for, without regard to the nature of the
offices' activities, they had the advantage of the same municipal
services as they would have had if their activities had included
assistance to the mail-order operations. Pp.
430 U. S.
555-562.
16 Cal. 3d
637, 547 P.2d 458, affirmed.
BRENNAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
STEWART, WHITE, MARSHALL, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J.,
Page 430 U. S. 552
filed an opinion concurring in the result, p. 562. BURGER, C.J.,
and REHNQUIST, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of
the case.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellant National Geographic Society, a nonprofit scientific
and educational corporation of the District of Columbia, maintains
two offices in California that solicit advertising copy for the
Society's monthly magazine, the National Geographic Magazine.
However, the offices perform no activities related to the Society's
operation of mail-order business for the sale from the District of
Columbia of maps, atlases, globes, and books. Orders for these
items are mailed from California directly to appellant's
Washington, D.C., headquarters on coupons or forms enclosed with
announcements mailed to Society members and magazine subscribers or
on order forms contained in the magazine. Deliveries are made by
mail from the Society's Washington, D.C., or Maryland offices.
Payment is either by cash mailed with the order or after a mailed
billing following receipt of the merchandise. Such mail-order sales
to California residents during the period involved in this suit
aggregated $83, 596.48
Page 430 U. S. 553
California Rev. & Tax.Code § 6203 (West Supp. 1976)
requires every "retailer engaged in business in this state and
making sales of tangible personal property for storage, use, or
other consumption in this state" to collect from the purchaser a
use tax in lieu of the sales tax imposed upon local retailers. The
California Supreme Court held that appellant is subject to the
statute as a "
retailer engaged in business in this state,'"
because its maintenance of the two offices brings appellant within
the definition under § 6203(a) that includes "`[a]ny retailer
maintaining . . . an office. . . .'" 16 Cal. 3d
637, 642, 547 P.2d 458, 460-461 (1976). Section 6204 makes the
retailer liable to the State for any taxes required to be collected
regardless of whether he collects the tax. [Footnote 1] See Bank of
Page 430 U. S. 554
America v. State Bd. of Equalization, 209 Cal. App.
2d 780, 793, 26 Cal. Rptr. 348, 355 (1962).
The question presented by this case is whether the Society's
activities at the offices in California [
Footnote 2] provided sufficient nexus between the out
of-state seller appellant and the State -- as required by the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the Commerce Clause
-- to support the imposition upon the Society of a use tax
collection liability pursuant to §§ 6203 and 6204,
measured by the $83,596.48 of mail-order sales of merchandise from
the District of Columbia and Maryland. The California Supreme Court
held that the imposition of use tax collection liability on the
Society violated neither Clause,
16 Cal. 3d
637, 547 P.2d 458 (1976). [
Footnote 3] We noted probable jurisdiction. 429 U.S. 883
(1976). We affirm.
Page 430 U. S. 555
I
All States that impose sales taxes also impose a corollary use
tax on tangible property bought out of State to protect sales tax
revenues and put local retailers subject to the sales tax on a
competitive parity with out-of-state retailers exempt from the
sales tax. H.R.Rep. No. 565, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 614 (1965). The
constitutionality of such state schemes is settled.
Henneford
v. Silas Mason Co., 300 U. S. 577,
300 U. S. 581
(1937);
Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson, 292 U. S.
86 (1934). [
Footnote
4] But the limitation of use taxes to consumption within the
State so as to avoid problems of due process that might arise from
the extension of the sales tax to interstate commerce,
see,
e.g., Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 312 U.
S. 359,
312 U. S. 363
(1941);
Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson, supra at
292 U. S. 95,
does not avoid all constitutional difficulties. States necessarily
impose the burden of collecting the tax on the out-of-state seller;
the impracticability of its collection from the multitude of
individual purchasers is obvious.
Miller Bros Co. v.
Maryland, 347 U. S. 340,
347 U. S. 343
(1954). However, not every out-of-state seller may constitutionally
be made liable for payment of the use tax on merchandise sold to
purchasers in the State. The California Supreme Court concluded,
based on its survey of the relevant decisions of this Court, that
the "slightest presence" of the seller in California established
sufficient nexus between the State and the seller constitutionally
to support the imposition of the duty to collect and pay the tax.
The California court stated, 16 Cal. 3d at 644, 547 P.2d at
462:
"We are satisfied that from the above cited decisions
Page 430 U. S. 556
the following principle can be distilled, and we thus hold:
where an out-of-state seller conducts a substantial mail order
business with residents of a state imposing a use tax on such
purchasers and the seller's connection with the taxing state is
not exclusively by means of the instruments of interstate
commerce, the
slightest presence within such taxing state
independent of any connection through interstate commerce will
permit the state constitutionally to impose on the seller the duty
of collecting the use tax from such mail order purchasers and the
liability for failure to do so."
(Emphasis supplied.)
Our affirmance of the California Supreme Court is not to be
understood as implying agreement with that court's "slightest
presence" standard of constitutional nexus. Appellant's maintenance
of two offices in the State and solicitation by employees assigned
to those offices of advertising copy in the range of $1 million
annually, Tr. of Oral Arg. 6, establish a much more substantial
presence than the expression "slightest presence" connotes. Our
affirmance thus rests upon our conclusion that appellant's
maintenance of the two offices in California and activities there
adequately establish a relationship or "nexus" between the Society
and the State that renders constitutional the obligations imposed
upon appellant pursuant to §§ 6203 and 6204. [
Footnote 5] This conclusion is
supported by several of our decisions.
The requisite nexus was held to be shown when the out-of-state
sales were arranged by the seller's local agents working in the
taxing State,
Felt & Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher,
306 U. S. 62
(1939);
General Trading Co v. Tax
Comm'n,
Page 430 U. S. 557
322 U. S. 335
(1944), and in cases of maintenance in the State of local retail
store outlets by out-of-state mail-order sellers.
Nelson v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co., supra; Nelson v. Montgomery Ward,
312 U. S. 373
(1941). In
Scripto, Inc. v. Carson, 362 U.
S. 207 (1960), the necessary basis was found in the case
of a Georgia-based company that had
"10 wholesalers, jobbers, or 'salesmen' conducting continuous
local solicitation in Florida and forwarding the resulting orders
from that State to Atlanta for shipment of the ordered goods,"
id. at
362 U. S. 211,
although maintaining no office or place of business in Florida, and
having no property or regular full-time employees there.
Standard Pressed Steel Co. v. Washington Rev. Dept.,
419 U. S. 560
(1975), is also instructive. That case involved a direct tax upon
the gross receipts of a foreign corporation resulting from sales to
a State of Washington customer, and not imposition of use tax
collection duties. Although "a vice in a tax on gross receipts of a
corporation doing an interstate business is the risk of multiple
taxation . . . ,"
id. at
419 U. S. 563,
see Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson, supra, a concern not
present when only imposition of use tax collection duty is
involved,
Standard Pressed Steel held that maintenance in
the taxing State of a single employee, an engineer whose office was
in his Washington home and whose primary responsibility was to
consult with the Washington-based customer regarding its
anticipated needs for the out-of-state supplier's product,
established a sufficient relation to activities within the State
producing the gross receipts as to support imposition of the tax.
It is particularly significant for our purposes in this case that
the Court characterized as "frivolous" the argument that the
seller's in-state activities were so thin and inconsequential that
the tax had no reasonable relation to the protection and benefits
conferred by the taxing State, for the employee "made possible the
realization and continuance of valuable contractual relations
between [the seller and its Washington customer]."
Page 430 U. S. 558
419 U.S. at
419 U. S. 562.
Other fairly apportioned, nondiscriminatory direct taxes have also
been sustained when the taxes have been shown to be fairly related
to the services provided the out-of-state seller by the taxing
State.
Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady, ante p.
430 U. S. 274;
General Motors Corp. v. Washington, 377 U.
S. 436 (1964);
Northwestern Cement Co. v.
Minnesota, 358 U. S. 450
(1959);
Memphis Gas Co. v. Stone, 335 U. S.
80 (1948);
Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co.,
311 U. S. 435,
311 U. S. 444
(1940).
The case for the validity of the imposition upon the
out-of-state seller enjoying such services of a duty to collect a
use tax is even stronger.
See Norton Co. v. Illinois Rev.
Dept., 340 U. S. 534,
340 U. S. 537
(1951). The out-of-state seller runs no risk of double taxation.
The consumer's identification as a resident of the taxing State is
self-evident. The out-of-state seller becomes liable for the tax
only by failing or refusing to collect the tax from that resident
consumer. Thus, the sole burden imposed upon the out-of-state
seller by statutes like § § 6203 and 6204 is the
administrative one of collecting it.
Compare McLeod v. Dilworth
Co., 322 U. S. 327
(1944) (sales tax),
with Scripto, Inc. v. Carson, supra,
and
General Trading Co. v. Tax Comm'n, supra. See also
American Oil Co. v. Neill, 380 U. S. 451,
380 U. S.
454-455 (1965).
Two decisions that have held fact patterns deficient to
establish the necessary nexus to impose the duty to collect the use
tax highlight the significance of the inquiry whether the
out-of-state seller enjoys services of the taxing State.
Miller
Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U. S. 340
(1954), struck down a Maryland assessment against a Delaware store
near the border between the two States. The store had made
over-the-counter sales to Maryland residents and occasionally
shipped or delivered goods by truck into that State. The store
advertised in Delaware by newspaper and radio, and some of these
advertisements reached Maryland residents. These advertisements
were sometimes supplemented with
Page 430 U. S. 559
"flyers" mailed to customers, some of whom lived in Maryland.
The Court concluded that Maryland could not satisfy the due process
requirement. In addition to the almost total lack of contacts
between Maryland and the Delaware store -- Marylanders went to
Delaware to make purchases, the seller did not go to Maryland to
make sales -- the seller obviously could not know whether the goods
sold over the counter in Delaware were transported to Maryland
prior to their use.
See Scripto, Inc. v. Carson, supra at
362 U. S.
212.
National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Illinois Rev. Dept.,
386 U. S. 753
(1967), presented the question in the case of an out-of-state
seller whose only connection with customers in the taxing State was
by common carrier or mail. Illinois subjected appellant Bellas
Hess, a national mail-order house centered in Missouri, to use tax
liability based upon mail-order sales to customers in that State.
Bellas Hess owned no tangible property in Illinois, had no sales
outlets, representatives, telephone listings, or solicitors in that
State, and did not advertise there by radio, television,
billboards, or newspapers. It communicated with potential customers
by mailing catalogues throughout the United States, including
Illinois, twice a year, and occasionally supplemented this effort
by mailing out "flyers." All orders for merchandise were mailed to
Bellas Hess' Missouri plant, and the goods were sent to customers
by mail or common carrier.
Bellas Hess held that,
constitutionally, the basis for the requisite nexus was not to be
found solely in Bellas Hess' mail-order activities in the State.
The Court's opinion carefully underscored, however, the
"sharp distinction . . . between mail order sellers with retail
outlets, solicitors, or property within [the taxing] State, and
those [like Bellas Hess] who do no more than communicate with
customers in the State by mail or common carrier as part of a
general interstate business."
Id. at
386 U. S. 758.
Appellant Society clearly falls into the former category.
Page 430 U. S. 560
II
The Society argues, however, that its contacts with customers in
California were related solely to its mail-order sales by means of
common carrier or the mail, that the two offices played no part in
that activity, and that therefore this case is controlled by
Bellas Hess. [
Footnote
6] The Society argues, in other words, that there must exist a
nexus or relationship not only between the seller and the taxing
State, but also between the activity of the seller sought to be
taxed and the seller's activity within the State. We disagree.
However fatal to a direct tax a "showing that particular
transactions are dissociated from the local business . . . ,"
Norton Co. v. Illinois Rev. Dept., supra at
340 U. S. 537;
American Oil Co. v. Neill, supra; Connecticut Gen. Life Ins.
Co. v. Johnson, 303 U. S. 77
(1938), such dissociation does not bar the imposition of the use
tax collection duty. [
Footnote
7] It is true that
Sears, Roebuck and
Montgomery
Ward, relied on by appellant, involved fact patterns that
included proof of assistance by local operations of the mail-order
business. Sears maintained 12 retail stores in the taxing State and
was qualified to do business there. Sears' agents in the States,
although not directly involved in the solicitation of the
mail-order sales, at times assisted in processing such orders. The
holding that Sears could not avoid use tax liability did not,
however, turn on that fact. The holding, rather, was that the fact
Sears' business was departmentalized -- the mail-order and retail
stores operations were separately administered -- did not preclude
the finding of sufficient nexus.
Montgomery Ward, a
companion case to
Sears,
Page 430 U. S. 561
Roebuck, presented a somewhat similar fact pattern.
There, the local retail stores engaged in local advertising of the
mail-order merchandise. But, here again, we disagree that this fact
was crucial to the Court's decision. Even if, as the Society
argues, the fact patterns of
Sears and
Montgomery
Ward may be regarded as the equivalent of the in-state
solicitation by local agents found sufficient to supply the nexus
for imposition of the use tax collection duty in
Felt &
Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher, 306 U. S. 62
(1939),
see also Scripto, Inc. v. Carson, 362 U.
S. 207 (1960) (local solicitation by commission
"salesmen");
General Trading Co. v. Tax Comm'n,
322 U. S. 335
(1944) (traveling salesmen sent into taxing State);
Bowman v.
Continental Oil Co., 256 U. S. 642
(1921) (local distributor and dealer); and
Monamotor Oil Co. v.
Johnson, 292 U. S. 86 (1934)
(local refining, storage, and distributing facilities), the
relevant constitutional test to establish the requisite nexus for
requiring an out-of-state seller to collect and pay the use tax is
not whether the duty to collect the use tax relates to the seller's
activities carried on within the State, but simply whether the
facts demonstrate "some definite link, some minimum connection,
between [the State and] the
person . . . it seeks to tax."
Miller Bros. v. Maryland, 347 U.S. at
347 U. S.
344-345. (Emphasis added.) Here, the Society's two
offices, without regard to the nature of their activities, had the
advantage of the same municipal services -- fire and police
protection, and the like -- as they would have had if their
activities, as in
Sears and
Montgomery Ward,
included assistance to the mail-order operations that generated the
use taxes.
The Society's reliance on
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland,
supra, is also misplaced. The sales with respect to which
Maryland sought to impose upon Miller the duty to collect its tax
were of goods sold to residents of Maryland at Miller's Delaware
store, although Miller made occasional deliveries in Maryland.
Moreover, the lack of certainty that the merchandise sold over the
counter to Maryland customers in
Page 430 U. S. 562
Delaware was transported to Maryland prior to its use militated
against a finding of adequate nexus with respect to those
purchases.
Scripto, Inc. v. Carson, supra at
362 U. S.
212-213. The relational defect between the taxing State
and the person or property sought to be taxed therefore obviated
any relevance of a relationship between the State and the
out-of-state retailer.
We conclude that the Society's continuous presence in California
in offices that solicit advertising for its magazine provides a
sufficient nexus to justify that State's imposition upon the
Society of the duty to act as collector of the use tax.
Affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The relevant sections of the Cal.Rev. & Tax.Code
provide:
§ 6203 (West Supp. 1976).
"Except as provided by Sections 6292 and 6293, every retailer
engaged in business in this state and making sales of tangible
personal property for storage, use, or other consumption in this
state, not exempted under Chapters 3.5 or 4 of this part, shall, at
the time of making the sales or, if the storage, use, or other
consumption of the tangible personal property is not then taxable
hereunder, at the time the storage, use, or other consumption
becomes taxable, collect the tax from the purchaser and give to the
purchaser a receipt therefor in the manner and form prescribed by
the board."
.~
* * * *
"'Retailer engaged in business in this state' as used in this
and the preceding section means and includes any of the
following:"
"(a) Any retailer maintaining, occupying, or using, permanently
or temporarily, directly or indirectly, or through a subsidiary, or
agent, by whatever name called, an office, place of distribution,
sales or sample room or place, warehouse or storage place or other
place of business."
§ 6204 (West 1970).
"The tax required to be collected by the retailer and any amount
unreturned to the customer which is not tax but was collected from
the customer under the representation by the retailer that it was
tax constitutes debts owed by the retailer to this state."
The magazine is exempted from sales and use taxes as a
"periodical." § 6362.
[
Footnote 2]
The offices are in San Francisco and Los Angeles and have been
maintained since 1956. Each office was originally staffed with one
salesman and one secretary, but each office has since increased its
personnel to four. The basic function of the offices is to solicit
advertising for the magazine, 16 Cal. 3d at 640, 547 P.2d at
459-460. Sales of advertising copy by the two offices aggregate
about $1 million annually. Tr. of Oral Arg. 6. During a nine-month
period from August 1, 1963, to May 6, 1964, appellant Society also
used these offices to make over-the-counter sales, upon which sales
taxes were paid, of maps, atlases, globes, and books totaling
$679.20 for the San Francisco office and $2,161.85 for the Los
Angeles office. The California Supreme Court found it unnecessary
to consider these sales in determining whether sufficient nexus was
shown, since the Society's office activities sufficed, in its view,
adequately to prove sufficient nexus. 16 Cal. 3d at 641 n. 6, 547
P.2d at 460 n. 6. We are of the same view.
[
Footnote 3]
Although appellant's potential liability exceeds $180,000 and
covers a nine-year period,
ibid., the assessment by the
California Board of Equalization for the years involved in this
case is $3,838.76, including interest and penalties. Appellant paid
the assessment under protest and sued for its refund in State
Superior Court and recovered a judgment. The California Court of
Appeal, First Appellate District, affirmed. 121 Cal. Rptr. 77
(1975). The California Supreme Court reversed and sustained the
assessment.
16 Cal. 3d
637, 547 P.2d 458 (1976).
[
Footnote 4]
Henneford obviated the necessity for legislation sought
by the National Association of State Tax Administrators in the 73d
through 76th Congresses to permit States to extend their sales
taxes to certain interstate transactions.
See H.R.Rep. No.
565, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., 613-615 (1965). Some 45 States and the
District of Columbia require out-of-state sellers to collect use
taxes on sales made to state residents. Brief for Direct
Mail/Marketing Assn. as
Amicus Curiae 4.
[
Footnote 5]
Appellant Society argues that. under the California Supreme
Court's "slightest presence" test. §§ 6203 and 6204 could
be applied even if the Society maintained no offices in the State,
but merely owned a parking lot. But the sections were applied to
appellant only because it maintained the offices. Appellant was
therefore only subject to the law because it fell within "retailer
engaged in business in this state" as defined in §
6203(a).
[
Footnote 6]
Appellant conceded at oral argument that
Bellas Hess
would have required reversal in the absence of the proof of
maintenance of the two offices. Tr. of Oral Arg. 29, 34-35.
[
Footnote 7]
Contrary to appellant's argument, Brief for Appellant 6, the
fact that it has not registered to do business in California is not
determinative against the validity of the application of
§§ 6203 and 6204.
See General Trading Co . v. Tax
Comm'n, 322 U. S. 335
(1944);
Felt & Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher, 306 U. S.
62 (1939).
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring in the result.
I am not at all convinced that the Court's facile distinction of
Miller Bros. Co. v. Maryland, 347 U.
S. 340 (1954), on the ground that, in that case, "the
seller obviously could not know whether the goods sold over the
counter in Delaware were transported to Maryland prior to their
use,"
ante at
430 U. S. 559,
and that there was a "lack of certainty that the merchandise sold
over the counter to Maryland customers in Delaware was transported
to Maryland prior to its use,"
ante at
430 U. S. 561
and this page, is a proper and acceptable distinction. I thought
that one of the factual difficulties of
Miller, in the
focus of the present case, was the Delaware seller's own
delivery of goods to Maryland, some by common carrier and
some by the seller's own truck. 347 U.S. at
347 U. S.
341-342. Indeed, Miller Bros. stipulated that, during
the taxable period, it delivered or paid a common carrier to
deliver $9,500 worth of merchandise to customers in Maryland
($8,000 through use of its truck, $1,500 by common carrier).
Id. at
347 U. S.
350-351, n. 5. Miller Bros. exhibited no uncertainty as
to the destination of those goods.
Page 430 U. S. 563
The Court appears to find an additional distinction in the fact
that the goods in
Miller Bros. were "sold to residents of
Maryland at Miller's Delaware store,"
ante at
430 U. S. 561.
If the Court intends thereby to rest a distinction on the fact that
the sales were made out of State, I am at a loss to follow its
reasoning. By definition, a use tax is imposed only on sales made
out of State. In short,
Miller Bros. is not so easily
explained away.
Thus, it seems to me, we have another instance where this
Court's past decisions in the tax area are not fully consistent.
See Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady, ante p.
430 U. S. 274, and
its development from its immediate predecessor,
Colonial
Pipeline Co. v. Traigle, 421 U. S. 100,
421 U. S. 101
(1975).
In any event, I find myself in accord with the Court's result in
the present case. If, as I suspect, the result today is not fully
consistent with the result in
Miller, I am content to let
Miller go.