These cases concern challenges of several Indian Tribes to
efforts by the State of Washington to apply various state taxes and
other laws to transactions and activities occurring on Indian
reservations. Washington imposes a cigarette excise tax on the
"sale, use, consumption, handling, possession or distribution" of
cigarettes within the State. It also imposes a general retail sales
tax on sales of personal property, including cigarettes. The State
sought to compel Indian retailers to collect both taxes with
respect to sales of cigarettes to non-Indians, and the latter tax
with respect to sales of other goods as well. In addition, the
State sought to apply its motor vehicle excise tax and mobile home,
camper, and trailer taxes -- which are imposed for the privilege of
using the covered vehicles in the State -- to vehicles owned by the
Tribes or their members and used both on and off the reservation.
Finally, the State took steps to assume civil and criminal
jurisdiction over the affected reservations. The Indian Tribes
involved in this litigation have each adopted ordinances imposing
their own taxes upon on-reservation sales of cigarettes. In actions
brought in Federal District Court, they sought declaratory and
injunctive relief against enforcement of the state sales and
cigarette taxes, and in particular against the State's seizure of
untaxed cigarettes destined for delivery to the reservations,
contending that those taxes could not lawfully be applied to tribal
cigarette sales. In addition, the Tribes challenged the State's
efforts to apply its vehicle excise taxes to Indian-owned vehicles,
and asserted that the State's assumption of jurisdiction was
invalid. The complaints alleged,
inter alia, that the
challenged taxes were contrary to the Indian Commerce Clause.
Because injunctive relief against enforcement of state statutes was
sought, a three-judge District Court was convened pursuant to the
then applicable requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2281 (1970 ed.)
that an injunction restraining the enforcement of any state statute
shall not be granted
Page 447 U. S. 135
by any district court upon the ground of the statute's
unconstitutionality unless the application therefor is heard and
determined by a three-judge court. After a consolidated proceeding,
the District Court held that (1) it had jurisdiction as a
three-judge court; (2) the cigarette tax could not be applied to
on-reservation transactions because it was preempted by the tribal
taxing ordinance and constituted an impermissible interference with
tribal self-government; (3) the retail sales tax could not be
applied to tribal cigarette sales; (4) the State could not impose
certain recordkeeping requirements on the Tribes in connection with
various tax-exempt sales; (5) the vehicle excise taxes could not be
imposed on vehicles owned by the Tribes and their members; and (6)
the State's assumption of civil and criminal jurisdiction over
certain of the Tribes was unconstitutional. The court enjoined
enforcement of the statutes it had invalidated, and the State moved
unsuccessfully for a new trial.
Held:
1. The Tribes' Commerce Clause claims are not "insubstantial,"
and are not rendered inescapably frivolous by the decisions in
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.
S. 145, and
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax
Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164, so
as to defeat application of § 2281. In addition, the Tribes'
attack on the official seizure of cigarettes bound for the
reservations also triggers the three-judge requirement of §
2281. Accordingly, this Court has jurisdiction over the appeals
under 28 U.S.C. § 1253, which authorizes a direct appeal to
this Court from an order granting an injunction in a suit "required
by any Act of Congress to be heard and determined by a district
court of three judges." Pp.
447 U. S.
145-149.
2. The State's motion for a new trial on issues other than the
motor vehicle tax and assumption of jurisdiction issues rendered
nonfinal the disposition of all issues between the parties, and
thus the State's appeal from the District Court's resolution of
those two issues was timely under 28 U.S.C. § 2101(b), where
it was filed within 60 days of the denial of the motion for a
partial new trial but more than 60 days after the District Court's
decision on those two issues. Accordingly, the appeal from such
decision is properly before this Court. Pp.
447 U. S.
149-150.
3. The imposition of Washington's cigarette and sales taxes on
on-reservation purchases by nonmembers of the Tribes is valid. Pp.
447 U. S.
150-162.
(a) The Tribes have the power to impose their cigarette taxes on
nontribal purchases, since the power to tax transactions occurring
on trust lands and significantly involving a tribe or its members
is a fundamental attribute of sovereignty which the tribes retain
unless divested
Page 447 U. S. 136
of it by federal law or necessary implication of their dependent
status. Here, there is no federal statute showing any congressional
departure from the view that tribes have such power, and tribal
powers are not implicitly divested by virtue of the tribes'
dependent status. Pp.
447 U. S.
152-154.
(b) But the Tribes' involvement in the operation and taxation of
cigarette marketing on the reservation does not oust the State from
any power to exact its sales and cigarette taxes from nonmembers
purchasing cigarettes at tribal smokeshops. Principles of federal
Indian law, whether stated in terms of preemption, tribal
self-government, or otherwise, do not authorize Indian tribes to
market an exemption from state taxation to persons who would
normally do their business elsewhere. Federal statutes, such as the
Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, the Indian Financing Act of
1974, and the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance
Act of 1975, while evidencing a congressional concern with
fostering tribal self-government and economic development, do not
go so far as to grant tribal enterprises selling goods to
nonmembers an artificial competitive advantage over all other
businesses in a State. Washington does not infringe the right of
reservation Indians to make their own laws and be ruled by them
merely because the result of imposing taxes will be to deprive the
Tribes of revenues which they currently are receiving. Pp.
447 U. S.
154-157.
(c) The Indian Commerce Clause does not, of its own force,
automatically bar all state taxation of matters significantly
touching the political and economic interests of the Tribes. That
Clause may have a more limited role to play in preventing undue
discrimination against, or burdens on, Indian commerce, but
Washington's taxes are applied in a nondiscriminatory manner to all
transactions within the State, and do not burden commerce that
would exist on the reservations without respect to the tax
exemption. Although the result of these taxes will be to lessen or
eliminate tribal commerce with nonmembers, that market existed in
the first place only because of a claimed exemption for these very
taxes. Such taxes do not burden commerce that would exist on the
reservations without respect to the tax exemption. P.
447 U. S.
157.
(d) The Tribes failed to show that business at the smokeshops
would be significantly reduced by a state tax without a credit as
compared to a state tax with a credit. Pp.
447 U. S.
157-158.
(e) There is no direct conflict between the state taxes and the
Tribes' cigarette ordinances so as to warrant invalidation of the
state taxes on grounds of preemption or violation of the principle
of tribal self-government. Pp.
447 U. S.
158-159.
(f) The State may validly require, as a minimal burden, the
tribal smokeshops to affix tax stamps purchased from the State to
individual
Page 447 U. S. 137
packages of cigarettes prior to the time of sale to nonmembers
of the Tribe.
Cf. Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes,
425 U. S. 463. P.
447 U. S.
159.
(g) The State's recordkeeping requirements are valid
in
toto. The Tribes failed to demonstrate that such requirements
for exempt sales are not reasonably necessary as a means of
preventing fraudulent transactions. Pp.
447 U. S.
159-160.
(h) The State's interest in taxing nontribal purchasers
outweighs any tribal interest that may exist in preventing the
State from imposing its taxes. Pp.
447 U. S.
160-161.
(i) The State's interest in enforcing its taxes is sufficient to
justify its seizure of unstamped cigarettes as contraband if the
Tribes do not cooperate in collecting the taxes. Pp.
447 U. S.
161-162.
4. The motor vehicle and mobile home, camper, and trailer taxes
cannot properly be imposed upon vehicles owned by the Tribes or
their members and used both on and off the reservations.
Moe,
supra. Pp.
447 U. S.
162-164.
5. The District Court erred in holding that the State's
assumption of civil and criminal jurisdiction over the Makah and
Lummi Reservations was unlawful.
Washington v. Yakima Indian
Nation, 439 U. S. 463,
controlling. P.
447 U. S.
164.
446
F. Supp. 1339, affirmed in part and reversed in part.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C. J., and BLACKMUN, POWELL, and STEVENS JJ., joined; in Parts I,
II, III, IV�B(1), IV�D, V, and VI of which BRENNAN
and MARSHALL, JJ., joined; in Parts I, II, III, IV (except
IV-B(2)), and VI of which STEWART, J., joined; and in Parts I, II,
III, IV-C, IV-E, and VI of which REHNQUIST, J., joined. BRENNAN,
J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in
which MARSHALL, J., joined,
post, p.
447 U. S. 164.
STEWART, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in
part,
post, p.
447 U. S. 174.
REHNQUIST, J., filed an opinion concurring in part, concurring in
the result in part, and dissenting in part,
post, p.
447 U. S.
176.
Page 447 U. S. 138
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In recent Terms, we have more than once addressed the intricate
problem of state taxation of matters involving Indian tribes and
their members.
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes,
425 U. S. 463
(1976);
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n,
411 U. S. 164
(1973);
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.
S. 145 (1973). We return to that vexing area in the
present cases. Although a variety of questions are presented,
perhaps the most significant is whether an Indian tribe ousts a
State from any power to tax on-reservation purchases by nonmembers
of the tribe by imposing its own tax on the transaction, or by
otherwise earning revenues from the tribal business. A three-judge
District Court held for the Tribes. We affirm in part and reverse
in part
Page 447 U. S. 139
I
These cases are here on the State of Washington's appeal from
declaratory judgments and permanent injunctions entered by the
District Court at the close of consolidated proceedings in two
separate cases that raised related issues.
446
F. Supp. 1339 (ED Wash.1978). The first case,
Confederated
Tribes of the Colville Indian Reservation v. State of
Washington, Civ. No. 3868, was filed on May 17, 1973, by the
Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation (Colville), Makah,
and Lummi Tribes. The second,
United States of America and
Confederated Bands and Tribes of the Yakima Indian Nation v. State
of Washington, Civ. No. 3909, was commenced on July 18, 1973,
by the United States on behalf of the Confederated Bands and Tribes
of the Yakima Indian Nation (Yakima Tribe). [
Footnote 1] In each action, the complainants
contended that the State's cigarette and tobacco products taxes
[
Footnote 2] could not lawfully
be applied to sales by on-reservation tobacco outlets. They sought
declaratory judgments to that effect, as well as injunctions
barring the State from taking any measures to enforce the
challenged taxes. In particular, the plaintiffs sought to enjoin
the State from seizing as contraband untaxed cigarettes destined
for delivery to their reservations. [
Footnote 3] In the
Colville case, the Tribes also
challenged
Page 447 U. S. 140
the State's assumption of civil and criminal jurisdiction over
their reservations and, by amended pleadings, attacked the
application of the State's vehicle excise taxes to Indian-owned
vehicles. The
Yakima case did not present these latter
issues, but it did make a broad attack on the application of the
State's general retail sales tax to on-reservation
transactions.
From the time of filing, the two cases pursued closely parallel
courses. On November 5, 1973, a temporary restraining order against
the State's enforcement of the taxing statutes was issued in each.
App. 13, 147. Thereafter, because the complaints sought injunctive
relief against the enforcement of state statutes, a three-judge
District Court was convened pursuant to the then applicable
requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2281 (1970 ed.). [
Footnote 4] On September 6, 1974, the
three-judge court issued preliminary injunctions restraining the
State from enforcing the challenged taxes against the Tribes. App.
15, 156. There followed extensive discovery, [
Footnote 5] after which the parties to each case
reached agreement on pretrial orders setting forth facts and
clarifying the issues.
Trial was held in both cases on March 28, 1977, and the
three-judge court entered its consolidated decision on February 22,
1978. The court concluded (1) that it had jurisdiction as a
three-judge court to consider the issues presented; (2) that the
state cigarette tax could not be applied to on-reservation
transactions, because it was preempted by the tribal taxing
ordinances and constituted an impermissible interference with
tribal self-government; (3) that the state
Page 447 U. S. 141
retail sales tax could not be applied to tribal cigarette sales,
but could be applied to sales of other goods to non-Indians; (4)
that the State could not impose certain recordkeeping requirements
in connection with various tax-exempt sales; (5) that the State
could not impose its vehicle excise taxes upon vehicles owned by
the Tribes and their members; and (6) that the State's assumption
of civil and criminal jurisdiction over the Makah and Lummi Tribes
was unconstitutional. The court enjoined enforcement of the
statutes it had struck down, and the State moved unsuccessfully for
a new trial. This appeal followed. We postponed consideration of
certain jurisdictional questions to the merits. 440 U.S. 905
(1979).
We begin by sketching the relevant factual background, which is
not seriously in dispute. [
Footnote
6] Thereafter, we explore the jurisdictional questions
previously postponed, and then turn to the merits.
II
The State of Washington levies a cigarette excise tax of $1.60
per carton, [
Footnote 7] on the
"sale, use, consumption, handling, possession or distribution" of
cigarettes within the State. Wash.Rev.Code § 82.24.020 (1976).
The tax is enforced with tax stamps; and dealers are required to
sell only cigarettes to which such stamps have been affixed. §
82.24.030. Indian tribes are permitted to possess unstamped
cigarettes for purposes of resale to members of the tribe, but are
required by regulation to collect the tax with respect to sales to
nonmembers. § 82.24.260; Wash.Admin.Code § 458-20-192
Page 447 U. S. 142
(1977). [
Footnote 8] The
District Court found, on the basis of its examination of state
authorities, that the legal incidence of the tax is on the
purchaser in transactions between an Indian seller and a non-Indian
buyer. [
Footnote 9]
The State has sought to enforce its cigarette tax by seizing as
contraband unstamped cigarettes bound for various tribal
reservations. It claims that it is entitled to make such seizures
whenever the cigarettes are destined to be sold to non-Indians
without affixation of stamps or collection of the tax.
Washington also imposes a sales tax on sales of personal
property, including cigarettes. Wash.Rev.Code § 82.08.020
(1976). This tax, which was 5% during the relevant period, is
collected from the purchaser by the retailer. § 82.08.050. It
does not apply to on-reservation sales to reservation Indians.
Wash. Admin. Code § 458-20-192 (1977).
The state motor vehicle excise tax is imposed on "the privilege
of using in the state any motor vehicle." Wash.Rev.Code §
82.44.020 (Supp. 1977). The tax is assessed annually, and during
the relevant period the amount was 2%
Page 447 U. S. 143
of the fair market value of the vehicle in question. In
addition, the State imposes an annual tax in the amount of 1% of
fair market value on the privilege of using campers and trailers in
the State. § 82.50.400 (1976). [
Footnote 10]
Each of the Tribes involved in this litigation is recognized by
the United States as a sovereign Indian tribe. Each is governed by
a business or tribal council approved by the Secretary of the
Interior. [
Footnote 11] The
Colville Tribe has some 5,800 members, of whom about 3,200 live on
the Colville Indian Reservation. [
Footnote 12] Enrolled members of the Tribe constitute
just under half of the reservation's population. The Lummi Tribe
has approximately 2,000 members. Roughly 1,250 of them live on the
reservation. [
Footnote 13]
The Makah Tribe has about 1,000 members. Some 900 live on the
reservation. [
Footnote 14]
The Colville, Lummi, and Makah Reservations are isolated and
underdeveloped. Many members reside in mobile homes. Most own at
least one automobile which is used both on and off the
reservation.
Page 447 U. S. 144
The Yakima Tribe has more than 6,000 members, of whom about
5,000 live on the reservation. [
Footnote 15] Enrolled members, however, constitute less
than one-fifth of the reservation's population. The balance is made
up of approximately 1,500 Indians who are not members of the Tribes
and more than 20,000 non-Indians.
The Colville, Lummi, and Makah Tribes have nearly identical
cigarette sales and taxing schemes. Each Tribe has enacted
ordinances pursuant to which it has authorized one or more
on-reservation tobacco outlets. [
Footnote 16] These ordinances have been approved by the
Secretary of the Interior; and the dealer at each tobacco outlet is
a federally licensed Indian trader. All three Tribes use federally
restricted tribal funds [
Footnote 17] to purchase cigarettes from out-of-state
dealers. [
Footnote 18] The
Tribes distribute the cigarettes to the tobacco outlets and collect
from the operators of those outlets both the wholesale distribution
price and a tax of 40 to 50 cents per carton. The cigarettes remain
the property of the Tribe until sale. The taxing ordinances specify
that the tax is to be passed on to the ultimate consumer of the
cigarettes. From 1972 through 1976, the Colville Tribe realized
approximately $266,000 from its cigarette tax; the Lummi Tribe
realized $54,000 and the Makah Tribe realized $13,000.
While the Colville, Lummi, and Makah Tribes function as
retailers, retaining possession of the cigarettes until their sale
to consumers, the Yakima Tribe acts as a wholesaler. It
purchases
Page 447 U. S. 145
cigarettes from out-of-state dealers and then sells them to its
licensed retailers. The Tribe receives a markup over the wholesale
price from those retailers, as well as a tax of 22.5 cents per
carton. There is no requirement that this tax be added to the
selling price. In 1975, the Yakima Tribe derived $278,000 from its
cigarette business.
Indian tobacco dealers make a large majority of their sales to
non-Indians -- residents of nearby communities who journey to the
reservation especially to take advantage of the claimed tribal
exemption from the state cigarette and sales taxes. The purchaser
saves more than a dollar on each carton, and that makes the trip
worthwhile. All parties agree that, if the State were able to tax
sales by Indian smokeshops and eliminate that $1 saving, the stream
of non-Indian bargain hunters would dry up. In short, the Indian
retailer's business is, to a substantial degree, dependent upon his
tax-exempt status, and if he loses that status, his sales will fall
off sharply.
III
We first address our jurisdiction to hear the State's appeal.
Two attacks are made upon that jurisdiction, one grounded in the
intricacies of the now-repealed statute governing three-judge
district courts and the other having to do with the timing of the
State's appeal.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1253, a direct appeal lies to this Court
from an order granting or denying an injunction in a suit "required
by any Act of Congress to be heard and determined by a district
court of three judges." At the time the
Yakima and
Colville cases were filed, 28 U.S.C. § 2281 (1970
ed.) provided that:
"An interlocutory or permanent injunction restraining the
enforcement, operation or execution of any State statute by
restraining the action of any officer of such State in the
enforcement or execution of such statute. . . shall not be granted
by any district court or judge thereof
Page 447 U. S. 146
upon the ground of the unconstitutionality of such statute
unless the application therefor is heard and determined by a
district court of three judges. . . . [
Footnote 19]"
After the State filed its jurisdictional statement in this
appeal, the United States moved to dismiss the
Yakima case
on the ground that it was not one required by § 2281 to be
heard by a court of three judges, and thus did not fall within the
grant of appellate jurisdiction in § 1253. Although directed
only to the
Yakima case, because that is the only one to
which the Government is a party, this challenge is quite clearly
germane to the
Colville case as well.
Section 2281 does not require a three-judge court where a
constitutional challenge to a state statute is grounded only in the
Supremacy Clause.
Swift & Co. v. Wickham, 382 U.
S. 111,
382 U. S.
128-129 (1965). In addition, § 2281 is not brought
into play by constitutional claims that are "insubstantial,"
Goosby v. Osser, 409 U. S. 512,
409 U. S. 518
(1973). The United States argues that the substantive tax claims
raised by these cases fall into one or the other category, and thus
failed to trigger § 2281. [
Footnote 20] Further, the Government continues, the
attacks on the State's seizure of cigarettes, while perhaps raising
genuine Commerce Clause issues, are not properly characterized as
challenges to the constitutionality
of a state statute.
Rather, the Government asserts, they go to the constitutionality of
the
result obtained by the
use of the statute. We
find neither contention persuasive.
The original complaints in these actions contended that the
state taxes were unconstitutional under the Indian Commerce
Page 447 U. S. 147
Clause as well as the Supremacy Clause. Relying primarily upon
language in footnote 17 in
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai
Tribes, 425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 481,
the United States asserts that the Tribes' Commerce Clause claims
were insubstantial. [
Footnote
21] But
Moe was decided in 1976 -- long after a
three-judge court was convened to hear these cases -- and it is
thus apparent that footnote 17 alone cannot be dispositive,
whatever its precise thrust. There is language in that footnote,
however, which suggests that the insubstantiality of Commerce
Clause claims such as those before us flows from
Mescalero
Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U. S. 145
(1973), and
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n,
411 U. S. 164
(1973) -- both of which were decided before the present suits were
filed. [
Footnote 22] We
think the United States reads too much into this language.
Goosby v. Osser, supra, made it clear that constitutional
claims will not lightly be found insubstantial for
Page 447 U. S. 148
purposes of § 2281. Indeed,
Goosby explicitly
states that prior decisions are not sufficient to support a
conclusion that certain claims are insubstantial unless those prior
decisions "inescapably render the claims frivolous." 409 U.S. at
409 U. S. 518.
We cannot say here that the
Goosby test has been met.
Neither
Mescalero nor
McClanahan "inescapably
render[s] the [Tribes' Commerce Clause] claims frivolous," because
neither holds that that Clause is wholly without force in
situations like the present. And even footnote 17 merely rejects
the stark and rather unhelpful notion that the Commerce Clause
provides an "
automatic exemptio[n]
as a matter of
constitutional law'" in such cases. (Emphasis added.) It does not
take that Clause entirely out of play in the field of state
regulation of Indian affairs.
In addition, it seems quite clear that the Tribes' attack on the
official seizure of cigarettes bound for the reservations also
triggers the three-judge requirement of § 2281. The United
States concedes that that attack raised Commerce Clause issues, but
maintains that the Tribes' target was not really the state
enforcement statutes themselves, but rather the discretionary
official conduct undertaken pursuant to those statutes. We have no
quarrel with the proposition that the mere fact that executives
seek shelter under various state statutes will not necessarily
convert a suit to restrain their lawless behavior into a 2281 case,
Phillips v. United States, 312 U.
S. 246,
312 U. S.
248-253 (1941). But this is not a situation in which the
only connection with state statutes arises when officials accused
of taking various
ultra vires actions seek to trace their
conduct back to vague statutes granting them broad executive
discretion. Here the state officials involved were attempting to
enforce the state tax laws by using the tools authorized for such
enforcement by the state legislature. They manifested an intention
to continue to use those tools for that purpose. And it is those
tools, as applied to cigarettes in Indian commerce, which the
Tribes challenged. [
Footnote
23]
Page 447 U. S. 149
We hold that this suffices to bring these cases within §
2281.
The other jurisdictional question postponed in 1979 is relevant
only to the
Colville case. It concerns the timeliness
under 28 U.S.C. § 2101(b) of the State's appeal from the
District Court's resolution of the motor vehicle tax and assumption
of jurisdiction issues. Basically, the problem is this: the notice
of appeal on these two issues was filed more than 60 days after the
District Court's decision, but within 60 days of the denial of a
state motion for partial new trial -- a motion that was not
addressed to the motor vehicle tax and assumption of jurisdiction
issues. The question is whether a motion for partial new trial
renders nonfinal the District Court's holding on all issues between
the parties, or merely renders nonfinal the disposition of those
issues actually raised in the new trial motion. If the former, the
State's notice of appeal on the vehicle taxes and assumption of
jurisdiction issues was timely. If the latter, that notice was
filed out of time, and, to that extent, the appeal is
jurisdictionally time-barred. [
Footnote 24]
Page 447 U. S. 150
We think that the filing of a motion for partial new trial in
these circumstances must have rendered nonfinal the disposition of
all issues between the parties. A contrary conclusion would serve
no useful purpose. At best it would make little difference save to
force future appellants to include in what might otherwise have
been narrow motions for partial new trials a blanket request for
reconsideration of all issues. And at worst it would be a
procedural pitfall, devoid of any sound supporting rationale but
capable of occasionally tripping those who failed to insert a line
of boilerplate or file a redundant slip of paper. Accordingly, we
hold that the appeal of the District Court's vehicle tax and
assumption of jurisdiction holdings is properly before us, and we
turn to the merits.
IV
A
In
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes, 425 U.
S. 463 (1976), we considered a state taxing scheme
remarkably similar to the cigarette and sales [
Footnote 25] taxes at issue in the present
cases. Montana there sought to impose a cigarette tax on sales by
smokeshops operated by tribal members and located on leased trust
lands within the reservation, and sought to require the smokeshop
operators to collect the tax. We upheld the tax, insofar
Page 447 U. S. 151
as sales to non-Indians were concerned, [
Footnote 26] because its legal incidence fell on
the non-Indian purchaser. Hence,
"the competitive advantage which the Indian seller doing
business on tribal land enjoys over all other cigarette retailers,
within and without the reservation, is dependent on the extent to
which the non-Indian purchaser is willing to flout
his
legal obligation to pay the tax."
Id. at
425 U. S. 482
(emphasis in original). We upheld the collection requirement, as
applied to purchases by non-Indians, on the ground that it was a
"minimal burden" designed to aid the State in collecting an
otherwise valid tax.
Id. at
425 U. S.
483.
Moe establishes several principles relevant to the
present cases. The State may sometimes impose a nondiscriminatory
tax on non-Indian customers of Indian retailers doing business on
the reservation. Such a tax may be valid even if it seriously
disadvantages or eliminates the Indian retailer's business with
non-Indians. [
Footnote 27]
And the State may impose at least "minimal" burdens on the Indian
retailer to aid in enforcing and collecting the tax. There is no
automatic bar, therefore, to Washington's extending its tax and
collection and recordkeeping requirements onto the reservation in
the present cases.
Although it narrows the issues in the present cases,
Moe does not definitively resolve several important
questions. First, unlike in
Moe, each of the Tribes
imposes its own tax on cigarette sales, and obtains further
revenues by participating in the cigarette enterprise at the
wholesale or retail level. Second, Washington requires the Indian
retailer to keep detailed records of exempt and nonexempt sales in
addition to simply pre-collecting the tax.
Moe expressed
no opinion
Page 447 U. S. 152
regarding the "complicated problems" of enforcement that
distinctions between exempt and nonexempt purchasers might entail.
Id. at
425 U. S. 468,
n. 6. Third,
Moe left unresolved the question of whether a
State can tax purchases by on-reservation Indians not members of
the governing tribe, as Washington seeks to do in the present
cases.
Id. at
425 U. S.
480-481, n. 16. Finally, unlike in
Moe,
Washington has seized, and threatens to continue seizing, shipments
of unstamped cigarettes en route to the reservations from
wholesalers outside the State. We address each of these
questions.
B
(1)
At the outset, the State argues that the Colville, Makah, and
Lummi Tribes have no power to impose their cigarette taxes on
nontribal purchasers. [
Footnote
28] We disagree. The power to tax transactions occurring on
trust lands and significantly involving a tribe or its members is a
fundamental attribute of sovereignty which the tribes retain unless
divested of it by federal law or necessary implication of their
dependent status.
Cf. United States v. Wheeler,
435 U. S. 313
(1978).
The widely held understanding within the Federal Government has
always been that federal law to date has not worked a divestiture
of Indian taxing power. Executive Branch officials have
consistently recognized that Indian tribes possess a broad measure
of civil jurisdiction over the activities of non-Indians on Indian
reservation lands in which the tribes have a significant interest,
17 Op.Atty.Gen. 134 (1881); 7 Op.Atty.Gen.
Page 447 U. S. 153
174 (1855), including jurisdiction to tax, 23 Op.Atty.Gen. 214
(1900); Powers of Indian Tribes, 55 I. D. 14, 46 (1934). According
to the Solicitor of the Department of the Interior:
"Chief among the powers of sovereignty recognized as pertaining
to an Indian tribe is the power of taxation. Except where Congress
has provided otherwise, this power may be exercised over members of
the tribe
and over nonmembers, so far as such nonmembers
may accept privileges of trade, residence, etc., to which taxes may
be attached as conditions."
Ibid. (emphasis added).
Federal courts also have acknowledged tribal power to tax
non-Indians entering the reservation to engage in economic
activity.
Buster v. Wright, 135 F. 947, 950 (CA8 1905),
appeal dism'd, 203 U.S. 599 (1906);
Iron Crow v.
Oglala Sioux Tribe, 231 F.2d 89 (CA8 1956);
cf. Morris v.
Hitchcock, 194 U. S. 384,
194 U. S. 393
(1904). No federal statute cited to us shows any congressional
departure from this view. To the contrary, authority to tax the
activities or property of non-Indians taking place or situated on
Indian lands, in cases where the tribe has a significant interest
in the subject matter, was very probably one of the tribal powers
under "existing law" confirmed by § 16 of the Indian
Reorganization Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 987, 25 U.S.C. § 476. In
these respects, the present cases differ sharply from
Oliphant
v. Suquamish Indian Tribe, 435 U. S. 191
(1978), in which we stressed the shared assumptions of the
Executive, Judicial, and Legislative Departments that Indian tribes
could not exercise criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians.
Tribal powers are not implicitly divested by virtue of the
tribes' dependent status. This Court has found such a divestiture
in cases where the exercise of tribal sovereignty would be
inconsistent with the overriding interests of the National
Government, as when the tribes seek to engage in foreign relations,
alienate their lands to non-Indians without federal
Page 447 U. S. 154
consent, or prosecute non-Indians in tribal courts which do not
accord the full protections of the Bill of Rights.
See id.
at
435 U. S.
208-210;
United States v. Wheeler, supra,at
435 U. S. 326.
In the present cases, we can see no overriding federal interest
that would necessarily be frustrated by tribal taxation. And even
if the State's interests were implicated by the tribal taxes, a
question we need not decide, it must be remembered that tribal
sovereignty is dependent on, and subordinate to, only the Federal
Government, not the States.
(2)
The Tribes contend that their involvement in the operation and
taxation of cigarette marketing on the reservation ousts the State
from any power to exact its sales and cigarette taxes from
nonmembers purchasing cigarettes at tribal smokeshops. The primary
argument is economic. It is asserted that smokeshop cigarette sales
generate substantial revenues for the Tribes which they expend for
essential governmental services, including programs to combat
severe poverty and underdevelopment at the reservations. Most
cigarette purchasers are outsiders attracted onto the reservations
by the bargain prices the smokeshops charge by virtue of their
claimed exemption from state taxation. If the State is permitted to
impose its taxes, the Tribes will no longer enjoy any competitive
advantage
vis-a-vis businesses in surrounding areas.
Indeed, because the Tribes themselves impose a tax on the
transaction, if the state tax is also collected the price charged
will necessarily be higher and the Tribes will be placed at a
competitive disadvantage as compared to businesses elsewhere.
Tribal smokeshops will lose a large percentage of their cigarette
sales, and the Tribes will forfeit substantial revenues. Because of
this economic impact, it is argued, the state taxes are (1)
preempted by federal statutes regulating Indian affairs; (2)
inconsistent with the principle of tribal self-government; and (3)
invalid under "negative implications" of the Indian Commerce
Clause.
Page 447 U. S. 155
It is painfully apparent that the value marketed by the
smokeshops to persons coming from outside is not generated on the
reservations by activities in which the tribes have a significant
interest.
Cf. Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes, 425
U.S. at
425 U. S.
475-481;
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax
Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164
(1973). What the smokeshops offer these customers, and what is not
available elsewhere, is solely an exemption from state taxation.
The Tribes assert the power to create such exemptions by imposing
their own taxes or otherwise earning revenues by participating in
the reservation enterprises. If this assertion were accepted, the
Tribes could impose a nominal tax and open chains of discount
stores at reservation borders, selling goods of all descriptions at
deep discounts and drawing custom from surrounding areas. We do not
believe that principles of federal Indian law, whether stated in
terms of preemption, tribal self-government, or otherwise,
authorize Indian tribes thus to market an exemption from state
taxation to persons who would normally do their business
elsewhere.
The federal statutes cited to us, even when given the broadest
reading to which they are fairly susceptible, cannot be said to
preempt Washington's sales and cigarette taxes. The Indian
Reorganization Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 984, 25 U.S.C. § 461
et seq., the Indian Financing Act of 1974, 88 Stat. 77, 25
U.S.C. § 1451
et seq., and the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975, 88 Stat.
2203, 25 U.S.C. § 450
et seq., evidence to varying
degrees a congressional concern with fostering tribal
self-government and economic development, but none goes so far as
to grant tribal enterprises selling goods to nonmembers an
artificial competitive advantage over all other businesses in a
State. The Indian traders statutes, 25 U.S.C. § 261
et
seq., incorporate a congressional desire comprehensively to
regulate businesses selling goods to reservation Indians for cash
or exchange,
see Warren Trading Post Co. v. Arizona Tax
Comm'n, 380 U. S. 685
(1965), but no similar intent is evident
Page 447 U. S. 156
with respect to sales by Indians to nonmembers of the Tribe. The
Washington Enabling Act, 25 Stat. 676, reflects an intent that the
State not tax reservation lands or income derived therefrom, but
the present taxes are assessed against nonmembers of the Tribes and
concern transactions in personalty with no substantial connection
to reservation lands. The relevant treaties, Treaty of Point
Elliott, 12 Stat. 927 (1855) (Lummi Tribe); Treaty with the Makah
Tribe, 12 Stat. 939 (1855); Treaty with the Yakimas, 12 Stat. 951
(1855), can be read to recognize inherent tribal power to exclude
non-Indians or impose conditions on those permitted to enter; but
purchasers entering the reservation are not the State's agents, and
any agreements which they might make cannot bind it. Finally,
although the Tribes themselves could perhaps preempt state taxation
through the exercise of properly delegated federal power to do so,
cf. Fisher v. District Court, 424 U.
S. 382,
424 U. S. 390
(1976) (per curiam);
United States v. Mazurie,
419 U. S. 544
(1975), we do not infer from the mere fact of federal approval of
the Indian taxing ordinances, or from the fact that the Tribes
exercise congressionally sanctioned powers of self-government, that
Congress has delegated the far-reaching authority to preempt valid
state sales and cigarette taxes otherwise collectible from
nonmembers of the Tribe.
Washington does not infringe the right of reservation Indians to
"make their own laws and be ruled by them,"
Williams v. Lee, 358 U. S. 217,
358 U. S. 220
(1959), merely because the result of imposing its taxes will be to
deprive the Tribes of revenues which they currently are receiving.
The principle of tribal self-government, grounded in notions of
inherent sovereignty and in congressional policies, seeks an
accommodation between the interests of the Tribes and the Federal
Government. on the one hand, and those of the State, on the other.
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n, supra at
411 U. S. 179.
While the Tribes do have an interest in raising revenues for
essential governmental programs, that interest is strongest when
the revenues are derived from value generated
Page 447 U. S. 157
on the reservation by activities involving the Tribes and when
the taxpayer is the recipient of tribal services. The State also
has a legitimate governmental interest in raising revenues, and
that interest is likewise strongest when the tax is directed at
off-reservation value and when the taxpayer is the recipient of
state services. As we have already noted, Washington's taxes are
reasonably designed to prevent the Tribes from marketing their tax
exemption to nonmembers who do not receive significant tribal
services and who would otherwise purchase their cigarettes outside
the reservations.
It can no longer be seriously argued that the Indian Commerce
Clause, of its own force, automatically bars all state taxation of
matters significantly touching the political and economic interests
of the Tribes.
See Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes,
supra, at
425 U. S. 481,
n. 17. That Clause may have a more limited role to play in
preventing undue discrimination against, or burdens on, Indian
commerce. But Washington's taxes are applied in a nondiscriminatory
manner to all transactions within the State. And although the
result of these taxes will be to lessen or eliminate tribal
commerce with nonmembers, that market existed in the first place
only because of a claimed exemption from these very taxes. The
taxes under consideration do not burden commerce that would exist
on the reservations without respect to the tax exemption.
We cannot fault the State for not giving credit on the amount of
tribal taxes paid. It is argued that if a credit is not given, the
tribal retailers will actually be placed at a competitive
disadvantage, as compared to retailers elsewhere, due to the
overlapping impact of tribal and state taxation. While this
argument is not without force, we find that the Tribes have failed
to demonstrate that business at the smokeshops would be
significantly reduced by a state tax without a credit as compared
to a state tax with a credit. With a credit, prices at the
smokeshops would presumably be roughly the same as those off the
reservation, assuming that the Indian enterprises are operated at
an efficiency similar to that of businesses
Page 447 U. S. 158
elsewhere; without a credit, prices at smokeshops would exceed
those off the reservation by the amount of the tribal taxes, about
40 to 50 cents per carton for the Lummi, Makah, and Colville
Tribes, and 22.5 cents per carton for the Yakima Tribe. It is
evident that even if credit were given, the bulk of the smokeshops'
present business would still be eliminated, since nonresidents of
the reservation could purchase cigarettes at the same price and
with greater convenience nearer their homes, and would have no
incentive to travel to the smokeshops for bargain purchases, as
they do now. Members of the Tribes, of course, would be indifferent
to whether a credit were given, because, under
Moe, they
are immune from any state tax, whether credited or not. Some
nonmembers of the Tribes living on the reservations would possibly
travel elsewhere to purchase cigarettes if a state credit were not
given, and smokeshop business would, to this extent, be decreased
as compared to the situation under a credited tax. But the Tribes
have not shown whether or to what extent this would he the case,
and we cannot infer on the present record that, by failing to give
a credit, Washington impermissibly taxes reservation value by
deterring sales that, if credit were given, would occur on the
reservation because of its location and because of the efforts of
the Tribes in importing and marketing the cigarettes.
A second asserted ground for the invalidity of the state taxes
is that they somehow conflict with the Tribes' cigarette
ordinances, and thereby are subject to preemption or contravene the
principle of tribal self-government. This argument need not detain
us. There is no direct conflict between the state and tribal
schemes, since each government is free to impose its taxes without
ousting the other. Although taxes can be used for distributive or
regulatory purposes, as well as for raising revenue, we see no
nonrevenue purposes to the tribal taxes at issue in these cases
and, as already noted, we perceive no intent on the part of
Congress to authorize the Tribes to preempt otherwise valid state
taxes. Other provisions
Page 447 U. S. 159
of the tribal ordinances do comprehensively regulate the
marketing of cigarettes by the tribal enterprises; but the State
does not interfere with the Tribes' power to regulate tribal
enterprises when it simply imposes its tax on sales to nonmembers.
Hence, we perceive no conflict between state and tribal law
warranting invalidation of the State's taxes.
C
We recognized in
Moe that, if a State's tax is valid,
the State may impose at least minimal burdens on Indian businesses
to aid in collecting and enforcing that tax. The simple collection
burden imposed by Washington's cigarette tax on tribal smokeshops
is legally indistinguishable from the collection burden upheld in
Moe, and we therefore hold that the State may validly
require the tribal smokeshops to affix tax stamps purchased from
the State to individual packages of cigarettes prior to the time of
sale to nonmembers of the Tribe.
The state sales tax scheme requires smokeshop operators to keep
detailed records of both taxable and nontaxable transactions. The
operator must record the number and dollar volume of taxable sales
to nonmembers of the Tribe. With respect to nontaxable sales, the
operator must record and retain for state inspection the names of
all Indian purchasers, their tribal affiliations, the Indian
reservations within which sales are made, and the dollar amount and
dates of sales. In addition, unless the Indian purchaser is
personally known to the operator, he must present a tribal
identification card.
The District Court struck down all recordkeeping requirements
with respect to cigarette sales, because it found that no cigarette
sales were taxable. With respect to sales of items other than
cigarettes, the District Court found no record evidence "as to
whether the recordkeeping requirements, as promulgated, are or are
not reasonably necessary to ensure payment of lawful taxes." 446 F.
Supp. at 1373. The District Court upheld the requirements insofar
as they pertained to taxable sales, but struck them down with
respect to nontaxable
Page 447 U. S. 160
sales on the ground that the State had not met its burden of
showing that the regulation was reasonably necessary to ensure
payment of taxes which it had power to impose.
Contrary to the District Court, we find the State's
recordkeeping requirements valid
in toto. The Tribes, and
not the State, as the District Court supposed, bear the burden of
showing that the recordkeeping requirements which they are
challenging are invalid. The District Court made the factual
finding, which we accept, that there was no evidence of record on
this question. Applying the correct burden of proof to the District
Court's finding, we hold that the Tribes have failed to demonstrate
that the State's recordkeeping requirements for exempt sales are
not reasonably necessary as a means of preventing fraudulent
transactions.
D
The State asserts the power to apply its sales and cigarette
taxes to Indians resident on the reservation but not enrolled in
the governing Tribe. The issue arose in the
Yakima case in
the wake of the District Court's determination that the state
retail sales tax could be applied to the purchase by non-Indians of
goods other than cigarettes. It was, of course, quite clear after
Moe and
McClanahan that the sales tax could not
be applied to similar purchases by tribal members, but the State
argued that this exemption should not extend to nonmembers of the
Tribe. Relying in part on the lower court opinion in
Moe,
Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes v.
Moe, 392 F.
Supp. 1297, 1312 (Mont.1975) (three-judge court), the District
Court rejected the contention. 446 F. Supp. at 1371-1372. This
Court did not reach the question in
Moe, because Montana
failed to raise it on appeal. We do reach it now, and we
reverse.
Federal statutes, even given the broadest reading to which they
are reasonably susceptible, cannot be said to preempt Washington's
power to impose its taxes on Indians not members of the Tribe. We
do not so read the Major Crimes Act,
Page 447 U. S. 161
18 U.S.C. § 1153, which, at most, provides for federal
court jurisdiction over crimes committed by Indians on another
Tribe's reservation.
Cf. United States v. Antelope,
430 U. S. 641,
430 U. S.
646-647, n. 7 (1977). Similarly, the mere fact that
nonmembers resident on the reservation come within the definition
of "Indian" for purposes of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934,
48 Stat. 988, 25 U.S.C. § 479, does not demonstrate a
congressional intent to exempt such Indians from state
taxation.
Nor would the imposition of Washington's tax on these purchasers
contravene the principle of tribal self-government, for the simple
reason that nonmembers are not constituents of the governing Tribe.
For most practical purposes, those Indians stand on the same
footing as non-Indians resident on the reservation. There is no
evidence that nonmembers have a say in tribal affairs or
significantly share in tribal disbursements. We find, therefore,
that the State's interest in taxing these purchasers outweighs any
tribal interest that may exist in preventing the State from
imposing its taxes.
E
Finally, the State contends that it has the power to seize
unstamped cigarettes as contraband if the Tribes do not cooperate
in collecting the State's taxes. The State in fact seized shipments
traveling to the reservations from out-of-state wholesalers before
being enjoined from doing so by the District Court, and it has
declared its intention to continue such seizures if successful in
this litigation. The Tribes contest this power, noting that,
because sales by wholesalers to the tribal businesses are
concededly exempt from state taxation, no state tax is due while
the cigarettes are in transit.
We find that Washington's interest in enforcing its valid taxes
is sufficient to justify these seizures. Although the cigarettes in
transit are as yet exempt from state taxation, they are not immune
from seizure when the Tribes, as here, have refused to fulfill
collection and remittance obligations which
Page 447 U. S. 162
the State has validly imposed. It is significant that these
seizures take place outside the reservation, in locations where
state power over Indian affairs is considerably more expansive than
it is within reservation boundaries.
Cf. Mescalero Apache Tribe
v. Jones, 411 U. S. 145
(1973). By seizing cigarettes en route to the reservation, the
State polices against wholesale evasion of its own valid taxes
without unnecessarily intruding on core tribal interests.
Washington further contends that it may enter onto the
reservations, seize stocks of cigarettes which are intended for
sale to nonmembers, and sell these stocks in order to obtain
payment of the taxes due. However, this question, which obviously
is considerably different from the preceding one, is not properly
before us. The record does not disclose that the State has ever
entered the reservations to seize cigarettes because of the Tribes'
failure to collect the taxes due on sales to nonmembers, or ever
threatened to do so except in papers filed in this litigation.
Indeed, the State itself concedes that "it may very well be that
this Court will find it unnecessary to rule on this aspect of the
appeal." Brief for Appellants in No. 7630, p. 110. We therefore
express no opinion on the matter.
V
The next issue concerns the challenge in the
Colville
case to the Washington motor vehicle and mobile home, camper and
travel trailer taxes. Although not identical, these taxes are quite
similar. Each is denominated an excise tax for the "privilege" of
using the covered vehicle in the State, each is assessed annually
at a certain percentage of fair market value, and each is sought to
be imposed upon vehicles owned by the Tribe or its members and used
both on and off the reservation. [
Footnote 29]
Page 447 U. S. 163
Once again, our departure point is
Moe. There we held
that Montana's personal property tax could not validly be applied
to motor vehicles owned by tribal members who resided on the
reservation. 425 U.S. at
425 U. S.
480-481. The vehicles Montana attempted to tax were
apparently used both on and off the reservation, [
Footnote 30] and the tax was assessed
annually at a percentage of market value of the vehicles in
question. Thus, the only difference between the taxes now before us
and the one struck down in
Moe is that these are called
excise taxes and imposed for the privilege of using the vehicle in
the State, while the Montana tax was labeled a personal property
tax. The State asserts that this difference mandates a different
result. In
Moe, it argues, the District Court concluded
that the taxable event was "the ownership of a motor vehicle as of
January 1 of each year," [
Footnote 31] and that event took place on the
reservation. Accordingly, under
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax
Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164
(1973), Montana was without authority to impose its tax. In the
present case, the State continues, the taxable event is the use
within the State of the vehicle in question. Thus, we are
told, the
McClanahan principle is inapplicable, and the
tax should be upheld under
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones,
supra.
We do not think
Moe and
McClanahan can be this
easily circumvented. While Washington may well be free to levy a
tax on the use outside the reservation of Indian-owned vehicles, it
may not under that rubric accomplish what
Moe held was
prohibited. Had Washington tailored its tax to the amount of actual
off-reservation use, or otherwise varied something
Page 447 U. S. 164
more than mere nomenclature, this might be a different case. But
it has not done so, and we decline to treat the case as if it
had.
VI
Finally, we come to the challenge by the Colville, Lummi, and
Makah Tribes to the State's assumption of civil and criminal
jurisdiction over them. The District Court found that assumption
unlawful as regards the Makah and Lummi Reservations and lawful as
regards the Colville Reservation. 446 F. Supp. at 1366-1367. The
State challenges the former findings.
All parties apparently recognize that this issue is controlled
by the intervening decision in the State's favor in
Washington
v. Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U. S. 463
(1979). There a pattern of jurisdiction identical to those created
on the Makah and Lummi Reservations was upheld, and the holding of
the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on which the District
Court in the present case relied for its conclusion that such
patterns are unconstitutional was reversed. We therefore uphold the
State's assumption of jurisdiction over the Makah and Lummi
Reservations. [
Footnote 32]
Accordingly, the judgments of the District Court are
Reversed in part and affirmed in part.
* Together with
Washington v. United States et al.,
also on appeal from the same court, and No. 760,
Confederated
Tribes of the Colville Indian Reservation et al. v.
Washington, also on appeal from the same court but not argued.
See n 32,
infra.
[
Footnote 1]
On April 24, 1974, the Yakima Tribe intervened as a plaintiff in
the United States' case. Its complaint appears at App. 149.
[
Footnote 2]
The state tobacco products tax, which is imposed on cigars and
pipe tobacco pursuant to Wash.Rev.Code, ch. 82.26 (1976), is not
before us. The District Court concluded that that tax fell upon the
Indian sellers, and not upon the non-Indian purchasers.
446
F. Supp. 1339, 1355, n. 15 (ED Wash.1978). The State did not
appeal from this holding, Brief for Appellants in No. 78-630, p.
55, n. 40, and all parties agree that, in consequence, the tobacco
products tax may not be imposed on sales by tribal dealers.
[
Footnote 3]
The Tribes also sought damages for interference with their
cigarette businesses. The damages issues in both cases were
remanded by the three-judge court to a single District Judge. 446
F. Supp. at 1367, 1373.
[
Footnote 4]
Although § 2281 was subsequently repealed, Act of Aug. 12,
1976, § 1, 90 Stat. 1119, it was expressly left in place for
cases which, like those before us, were pending on the date of
repeal. § 7, 90 Stat. 1120. We consider issues concerning the
applicability of the former § 2281 to these cases in
447 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 5]
Proceedings in both cases were stayed for several months,
however, pending this Court's decisions in
Moe v. Salish &
Kootenai Tribes, 425 U. S. 463
(1976), and
Bryan v. Itasca County, 426 U.
S. 373 (1976).
[
Footnote 6]
Our statement of the factual background is drawn in large
measure from the opinion of the District Court, 446 F. Supp. at
1345-1349, 1368-1370.
[
Footnote 7]
The cigarette excise tax is imposed pursuant to Wash.Rev.Code
§ 82.24.020 (1976). That provision authorizes a levy of 6.5
mills per cigarette. The tax is brought up to its full amount by
Wash.Rev.Code §§ 28 A. 47.440 and 73.32.130 (1976), which
add 0.5 mill and 1 mill respectively.
[
Footnote 8]
Initially, the State asserted that it could tax all tribal
cigarette sales, regardless of whether the buyer was Indian or
non-Indian. Its theory was that Pub.L. 280, 67 Stat. 58, granted it
general authority to tax reservation Indians. After this theory was
rejected in
Bryan v. Itasca County, supra, the State
abandoned any claim of authority to tax sales to tribal members.
See 446 F. Supp. at 1346, n. 4.
[
Footnote 9]
Id. at 1352-1355. Essentially, the court accepted the
State's contention that the tax falls upon the first event which
may constitutionally be subjected to it. In the case of sales by
non-Indians to non-Indians, this means the incidence of the tax is
on the seller, or perhaps on someone even further up the chain of
distribution, because that person is the one who first sells, uses,
consumes, handles, possesses, or distributes the products. But
where the wholesaler or retailer is an Indian on whom the tax
cannot be imposed under
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax
Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164
(1973), the first taxable event is the use, consumption, or
possession by the non-Indian purchaser. Hence, the District Court
concluded, the tax falls on that purchaser. We accept this
conclusion.
[
Footnote 10]
The same chapter provided for an excise tax on mobile homes.
Initially, the State sought to apply this tax to Indians as well;
but after
Bryan v. Itasca County, 426 U.
S. 373 (1976), and
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai
Tribes, 425 U. S. 463
(1976), it no longer attempts to do so. 446 F. Supp. at 1365.
[
Footnote 11]
The Makah Tribe is organized under the Indian Reorganization Act
of 1934, 48 Stat. 984, 25 U.S.C. § 461
et seq. While
the Lummi and Colville Tribes do have federally-approved
constitutions, they voted in 1935 not to come under that Act. 446
F. Supp. at 1345, n. 2.
[
Footnote 12]
The Colville Reservation encompasses 1.3 million acres in the
northeastern section of Washington. It was established by Executive
Order on July 2, 1872. 1 C. Kappler, Indian Affairs, Laws and
Treaties 916 (2d ed.1904).
[
Footnote 13]
The Lummi Reservation encompasses 7,319 acres, most of them on a
peninsula near Bellingham, Wash. It was established by the Treaty
of Point Elliott in 1855. 12 Stat. 927.
[
Footnote 14]
The Makah Reservation encompasses 28,000 acres at the northwest
tip of the Olympic Peninsula. It too was established by treaty in
1855. Treaty with the Makah Tribe, 12 Stat. 939. Roughly 63% of its
inhabitants are enrolled members of the Tribe.
[
Footnote 15]
The Yakima Indian Reservation was set aside for the Tribe by
treaty ratified March 8, 1859. Treaty with the Yakimas, 12 Stat.
951. It encompasses about 1.4 million acres in south-central
Washington.
[
Footnote 16]
The tribal ordinances regulating the sale, distribution, and
taxing of cigarettes are set forth at App. 104, 118, and 111.
[
Footnote 17]
The funds are maintained in individual accounts in the Bureau of
Indian Affairs agency serving the reservation pursuant to 25 CFR
Part 104 (1978). App. 32-34.
[
Footnote 18]
These out-of-state wholesalers are also federally licensed
Indian traders.
[
Footnote 19]
The repeal of this provision in 1976 does not affect its
application to these cases.
See n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 20]
As the Government recognizes, its position in this regard is
somewhat anomalous, since it was the United States which initially
requested a three-judge court in the
Yakima case. App.
145. At that time, the Government seemed to have no doubt that it
sought to enjoin the enforcement of a state statute on grounds of
its unconstitutionality within the meaning of § 2281.
[
Footnote 21]
The District Court seems to have found this contention
persuasive, 446 F. Supp. at 1350, although it addressed it only
briefly. Presumably it saw no need to explore the matter more
fully, since it was confident that the three-judge requirement had,
in any event, been satisfied by the Tribes' challenges to the
State's enforcement measures.
Id. at 1350-1351.
[
Footnote 22]
Footnote 17 in its entirety reads as follows:
"It is thus clear that the basis for the invalidity of these
taxing measures, which we have found to be inconsistent with
existing federal statutes, is the Supremacy Clause, U.S.Const.,
Art. VI, cl. 2, and not any automatic exemptions 'as a matter of
constitutional law' either under the Commerce Clause or the
intergovernmental immunity doctrine as laid down originally in
M'Culloch v. Maryland, 4
Wheat. 316 (1819). If so, then the basis for convening a
three-judge court in this type of case has effectively disappeared,
for this Court has expressly held that attacks on state statutes
raising only Supremacy Clause invalidity do not fall within the
scope of 28 U.S.C. § 2281.
Swift & Co. v.
Wickham, 382 U. S. 111 (1965). Here,
however, the District Court properly convened a § 2281 court,
because, at the outset, the Tribe's attack asserted
unconstitutionality of these statutes under the Commerce Clause, a
not insubstantial claim, since
Mescalero and
McClanahan had not yet been decided.
See Goosby v.
Osser, 409 U. S. 512 (1973)."
425 U.S. at
425 U. S.
481.
[
Footnote 23]
See Turner v. Fouche, 396 U. S. 346,
396 U. S. 354,
n. 10 (1970).
See also Department of Employment v. United
States, 385 U. S. 355
(1966);
Query v. United States, 316 U.
S. 486,
316 U. S. 490
(1942).
[
Footnote 24]
The actual chronology was as follows: on May 10, 1978, the
District Court entered its final order. On May 22, the State filed
a motion for partial new trial on the cigarette and sales tax
issues. On July 12, while that motion was pending, the State filed
a notice of appeal raising the motor vehicle excise tax and
assumption of jurisdiction issues. On July 17, the motion for
partial new trial was denied; and on August 14, the State filed a
notice of appeal on the sales and cigarette tax issues. On
September 8, the State filed an amended notice of appeal raising
all relevant issues. The July 12 notice of appeal was filed more
than 60 days after the original District Court order. Accordingly,
under 28 U.S.C. § 2101(b), it was out of time. The notice of
August 14 and the amended notice of September 8, however, were
filed within 60 days of the District Court's denial of the motion
for partial new trial. It seems clear that the filing of that
motion rendered nonfinal the disposition of all covered issues --
if not, one seeking a partial new trial would have to jeopardize
his right to appeal.
Community Party of Indiana v.
Whitcomb, 414 U. S. 441,
414 U. S. 445
446 (1974);
Department of Banking v. Pink, 317 U.
S. 264,
317 U. S. 266
(1942). Thus, the only remaining question is whether the motion for
partial new trial also suspended the finality of the District
Court's disposition of issues not covered by that motion.
[
Footnote 25]
We are here generally concerned only with the application of
Washington's retail sales tax to
cigarette sales. The
District Court upheld the sales tax as applied to sales of other
goods to non-Indians, and the Tribes do not contest that holding.
We do, however, consider the question of noncigarette sales when we
discuss (1) whether Washington can tax purchases by Indians not
members of the governing Tribe, and (2) whether Washington's
recordkeeping requirements are valid.
[
Footnote 26]
We struck down the tax as applied to sales to Indians. 425 U.S.
at
425 U. S.
475-481.
[
Footnote 27]
The United States reads
Moe too parsimoniously in
asserting its inapplicability to cases, such as the present ones,
in which the economic impact on tribal retailers is particularly
severe.
Moe makes clear that the Tribes have no vested
right to a certain volume of sales to non-Indians, or indeed to any
such sales at all.
[
Footnote 28]
The incidence of the Colville, Lummi, and Makah taxes falls on
the cigarette purchaser, since the tribal ordinances specify that
the tax is to be passed on to the ultimate consumer. The Yakima
ordinance, in contrast, does not require that the tax be added to
the selling price, and the incidence of the Yakima tax therefore
does not fall on the purchaser. The State's challenge is directed
only at the Colville, Lummi, and Makah taxes.
[
Footnote 29]
In the wake of
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n
and
Moe, the State does not claim that it can impose these
taxes upon vehicles used wholly within the reservation. Brief for
Appellants in No. 7630, p. 111, and n. 77.
[
Footnote 30]
Moe did not focus upon vehicle use at all. The District
Court opinion in that case, however, indicates that some of the
vehicles to which Montana sought to apply its tax were used both on
and off the reservation.
Confederated Salish and Kootenai
Tribes v. Montana, 392 F.
Supp. 1325, 1328-1329 (Mont.1975) (three-judge court) (Smith,
J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
[
Footnote 31]
Id. at 1327, citing the Montana statute, Mont.
Rev.Codes Ann. § 84-406(2) (Supp. 1974).
[
Footnote 32]
In No. 760,
Confederated Tribes of the Colville Indian
Reservation et al. v. Washington et al., which is pending on
appeal, the Colville Tribe appeals from so much of the District
Court's judgment as reflects the holding that Washington's
assumption of total jurisdiction over that Tribe's reservation was
lawful.
See 446 F. Supp. at 1366-1367. The Colville Tribe
challenges that holding on grounds (1) that Washington could not
assume jurisdiction without amending its Constitution and (2) that
the assumption of total jurisdiction over only selected
reservations violates the Equal Protection Clause.
Washington
v. Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U. S. 463
(1979), disposes of the first contention,
id. at
439 U. S. 493,
and makes clear that the second must fail if the assumption of
jurisdiction is rationally related to some valid state purpose,
id. at
439 U. S.
500-502. We find the pattern of jurisdiction in the
present case rational: the Colville Tribe consented in 1965 to the
State's assumption of jurisdiction over it, and the State has
assumed total jurisdiction only over tribes that have so consented.
The presence or absence of tribal consent is a rational basis for
distinguishing among reservations, and there is thus no
constitutional infirmity. Accordingly, the judgment is, in this
respect, affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL joins,
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I agree with the Court's analysis of the jurisdictional
questions posed in these cases, as well as with its treatment of
the
Page 447 U. S. 165
Washington motor vehicle, mobile home, camper and travel trailer
taxes and its disposition of the assumption of jurisdiction issue.
Accordingly, I join in their entirety Parts I, II, III, V, and VI
of the Court's opinion. I also agree with Part IV insofar as it
holds that the Colville, Makah, and Lummi Tribes have the power to
impose their cigarette taxes on nontribal purchasers (Part
IV-B(1)). As the Court points out, the power to tax on-reservation
transactions that involve a tribe or its members is a "fundamental
attribute of sovereignty which the tribes retain unless divested of
it by federal law or necessary implication. . . ."
Ante at
447 U. S. 152.
Recognition of that fundamental attribute, however, leads me to
disagree with much of the balance of the Court's Part IV. In my
view, the State of Washington's cigarette taxing scheme should be
invalidated both because it undermines the Tribes' sovereign
authority to regulate and tax the distribution of cigarettes on
trust lands and because it conflicts with tribal activities and
functions that have been expressly approved by the Federal
Government.
I
I begin with a somewhat general overview. While they are
sovereign for some purposes, it is now clear that Indian
reservations do not partake of the full territorial sovereignty of
States or foreign countries. [
Footnote
2/1] The result has been to blur the
Page 447 U. S. 166
boundary between state and tribal authority. A few guideposts do
exist, however. First, in the absence of tribal consent, state law
does not reach on-reservation conduct involving only Indians. Thus,
we have held that tribal courts have exclusive jurisdiction over
adoption proceedings involving the on-reservation conduct of tribal
members,
Fisher v. District Court, 424 U.
S. 382 (1976); that States cannot apply their income
taxes to the receipts derived by reservation Indians from
reservation sources,
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax
Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164
(1973); and that States may not levy cigarette taxes on
on-reservation sales to reservation Indians or impose personal
property taxes on property owned by such Indians,
Moe v. Salish
& Kootenai Tribes, 425 U. S. 463,
425 U. S. 48-481
(1976).
Second, there is a significant territorial component to tribal
power. Thus, state taxes on the off-reservation activities of
Indians are permissible,
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones,
411 U. S. 145
(1973), and tribal laws will often govern the on-reservation
conduct of non-Indians.
Williams v.
Lee, 358
Page 447 U. S. 167
U.S. 217 (1959).
See also United States v. Mazurie,
419 U. S. 544,
419 U. S.
557-558 (1975). [
Footnote
2/2]
Third, where it is necessary to resolve a conflict between state
and tribal authority over on-reservation conduct involving Indians
and non-Indians, a relatively particularistic look at the interests
of State and tribe and the federal policies that govern relations
with Indian tribes is appropriate. We have concluded, for example,
that a tribe lacks jurisdiction to try a non-Indian for a crime,
Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe, 435 U.
S. 191,
435 U. S. 208
(1978), but that a State may not resolve a dispute arising out of
on-reservation transactions between an Indian purchaser and a
non-Indian seller,
Williams v. Lee, supra, at
358 U. S. 219,
or tax the gross receipts of a federally licensed retail trading
post that deals on the reservation with reservation Indians,
Warren Trading Post Co. v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n,
380 U. S. 685
(1965).
And fourth, the preceding results flow from an intricate web of
sources including federal treaties and statutes, the broad policies
that underlie those federal enactments, and a presumption of
sovereignty or autonomy that has roots deep in aboriginal
independence. The prevalent mode of analysis is one of preemption.
It takes as its starting point the exclusive power of the Federal
Government to regulate Indian tribes, and proceeds to bound state
power where necessary to give vitality to the federal concerns at
stake.
Bryan v.
Page 447 U. S. 168
Itasca County 426 U. S. 373,
426 U. S. 376,
n. 2 (1976). Only rarely does the talismanic invocation of
constitutional language or rigid conceptions of state and tribal
sovereignty shed light on difficult problems.
Moe, supra,
at
425 U. S. 481,
n. 17;
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n, supra at
411 U. S.
172.
For present purposes, two federal concerns seem especially
important. One is the strong and oft-cited policy of encouraging
tribal self-government.
United States v. Wheeler,
435 U. S. 313,
435 U. S.
322-326 (1978);
Fisher v. District Court, supra
at
424 U. S.
386-388;
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n,
supra at
411 U. S. 179;
Williams v. Lee, supra, at
358 U. S.
219-220. And the other is a complementary interest in
stimulating Indian economic and commercial development. Both found
expression in the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, 25 U.S.C.
§ 461
et seq., [
Footnote
2/3] and are manifest in more recent statutes as well.
[
Footnote 2/4] They are,
Page 447 U. S. 169
I believe, of central importance in analyzing any conflict of
state and tribal law.
II
With this as background, I turn to the particular problem at
hand. Like the Court, I begin with
Moe, supra, which
considered a state cigarette tax similar to the one at issue here.
There we started with the observation that the tax itself was
"concededly lawful" -- it neither fell upon tribal members nor
impinged on tribal functions. 425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 483.
The key problem, as we saw it, was one of enforcement: could the
State of Montana require the Indian seller to collect a tax validly
imposed on the non-Indian purchaser? We determined that the burden
of collection was minimal, and noted that it would in no sense
"frustrat[e] tribal self-government." [
Footnote 2/5] Accordingly, we held that it could be
imposed to prevent wholesale tax avoidance by non-Indian
purchasers.
As the Court points out,
Moe does suggest a number of
limits upon Indian sovereignty in general and the federal interests
in tribal self-government and economic growth in particular: it
permits state law to come on the reservation in the form of a tax
and collection requirement, and it upholds the imposition of a tax
that will undoubtedly hurt Indian retailing activities by depriving
tribal smokeshops of a competitive edge.
But while, in
Moe, the cigarette business was largely a
private operation, the Tribes involved in these cases have adopted
comprehensive ordinances regulating and taxing the distribution of
cigarettes by on-reservation shops. Phrased differently, these
Tribes are acting in federally sanctioned and
Page 447 U. S. 170
encouraged ways -- they are raising governmental revenues,
establishing commercial enterprises, and struggling to escape from
"
a century of oppression and paternalism.'" Mescalero
Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.S. at 411 U. S. 152,
quoting H.R.Rep. No. 1804, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 6 (1934). As I see
it, that difference has three important consequences. First, it
means that, in this case, the sharp drop in cigarette sales that
would result from imposition of the state tax will reduce revenues
not only of individual Indian retailers, but also of the Tribes
themselves as governmental units. Second, it means that a decision
permitting application of the state tax would place Indian goods at
an actual competitive disadvantage as compared to non-Indian ones,
because the former would have to bear two tax burdens, while the
latter bore but one. And third, it leads to an actual conflict of
jurisdiction and sovereignty, because imposition of the Washington
tax would inject state law into an on-reservation transaction which
the Indians have chosen to subject to their own laws.
The Court, in effect, concludes that these consequences are
insignificant. The first, it suggests, is undercut by
Moe,
which made clear that Indian retailers have no absolute right to
market their tax-exempt status. The second is too speculative
--
"the Tribes have failed to demonstrate that business at the
smokeshops would be significantly reduced by a state tax without a
credit, as compared to a state tax with a credit."
Ante at
447 U. S. 157.
And the third "need not detain us," because "[t]here is no direct
conflict between the state and tribal schemes. . . ."
Ante
at
447 U. S.
158.
I do not agree. Whatever their individual force, I think that,
in combination, these three consequences bring the Washington taxes
into sharp conflict with important federal policies. Perhaps most
striking is the fact that a rule permitting imposition of the state
taxes would have the curious effect of making the federal concerns
with tribal self-government and commercial development inconsistent
with one another. In essence, tribes are put to an unsatisfactory
choice. They are
Page 447 U. S. 171
free to tax sales to non-Indians, but doing so will place a
burden upon such sales which may well make it profitable for
non-Indian buyers who are located on the reservation to journey to
surrounding communities to purchase cigarettes. [
Footnote 2/6] Or they can decide to remain
competitive by not taxing such sales, and, in the process, forgo
revenues urgently needed to fill governmental coffers. Commercial
growth, in short, can be had only at the expense of tax dollars.
And having to make that choice seriously intrudes on the Indians'
right "to make their own laws and be ruled by them,"
Williams
v. Lee, 358 U.S. at
358 U. S.
219-220. [
Footnote
2/7]
Page 447 U. S. 172
The Court provides no satisfactory explanation of why the State
is free to put the Tribes to such a choice. Rather, it
characterizes the tribal business as an effort to market a tax
exemption, and proceeds to label that effort illegitimate, and
beyond the reasonable bounds of any federally protected tribal
right. Yet that line of argument could, at most, justify a state
tax which through some sort of credit mechanism ensures that the
location of cigarette purchases is independent of state and tribal
taxing schemes -- it does not support a rule that the State may tax
all on-reservation sales to non-Indians regardless of tribal taxes.
[
Footnote 2/8] Nor is the Court's
argument saved by the contention that the Tribes have failed to
prove that the combination of these particular tribal and state
taxes will cause Indian smokeshops to lose volume that would
otherwise be theirs. The fact is that the Court today permits the
State to enact a tax without risking any attendant loss of business
for its retailers, while the Tribes must court economic harms when
they enact taxes of their own. That result erodes the Tribes'
sovereign authority and stands the special federal solicitude for
Indian commerce and governmental autonomy on its head.
The conflict with federal law is particularly evident on the
present facts because the Secretary of the Interior -- acting
pursuant to lawful regulations -- has approved the tribal taxing
and regulatory schemes at issue here. That approval, and the
federal policies which underlie it, both enhances tribal authority
and ousts inconsistent state law.
Cf. Fisher v.
Page 447 U. S. 173
District Court, 424 U. S. 382
(1976);
United States v. Mazurie, 419 U.
S. 544 (1975).
The Court draws support for its result from the suggestion that
a decision invalidating these taxes would give the Tribes
carte
blanche to establish vast tax-exempt shopping centers dealing
in every imaginable good. I think these fears are substantially
overdrawn.
Moe made clear that Indians do not have an
absolute entitlement to achieve some particular sales volume by
passing their tax-exempt status to non-Indian customers, and I do
not question that conclusion today. I would simply hold that the
State may not impose a tax that forces the Tribes to choose between
federally sanctioned goals and places their goods at an actual
competitive disadvantage. Nothing in such a holding would
emasculate state taxing authority or bring the specter of enormous
tribal tax havens closer to reality. On the contrary, I am
confident that the State could devise a taxing scheme without the
flaws which mar the present one.
In sum, I would hold these taxes impermissible and save for
another day the question of what sorts of less intrusive measures a
State may take to protect its tax base and avoid the parade of
horribles alluded to by the Court.
III
Because I would hold the state cigarette taxes invalid, I would
not reach the bulk of the recordkeeping and enforcement issues
addressed by the Court in Parts IV-C and IV-E of its opinion.
Indeed, since the District Court failed to discuss most of those
issues, I am startled that the majority proceeds to address and
decide them, rather than remanding for the views of that court. In
my judgment, only one relatively narrow recordkeeping issue ought
be addressed at this time, and that concerns the District Court's
holding that the State could not require the Tribes to keep records
of exempt sales to facilitate collection of valid taxes on
nonexempt sales.
446
F. Supp. 1339, 1358-1359, 1373. The District Court
Page 447 U. S. 174
found the record in this case inadequate to show any need for
such documentation. The Court, however, sees this as no obstacle to
upholding the requirement. I disagree. The State has no direct
power over exempt sales, and I see no reason why it should be
permitted to require Indians to keep records of such sales absent
some showing of necessity or utility. In consequence, I would
either affirm the District Court in this regard or remand so that
the record may be supplemented.
For the foregoing reason, I dissent as to Parts IV-B(2), IV-C,
and IV-E.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The starkest territorial conception of Indian sovereignty was
sketched by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in
Worcester
v. Georgia, 6 Pet. 515,
31 U. S.
557-561 (1832). An Indian reservation, he stated, was "a
distinct community, occupying its own territory . . . in which the
laws of Georgia can have no force. . . ."
See F. Cohen,
Handbook of Federal Indian Law 122 (1942).
Williams v.
Lee, 358 U. S. 217,
358 U. S. 219
(1959), noted that this view had been "modified . . . in cases
where essential tribal relations were not involved."
Kake
Village v. Egan, 369 U. S. 60,
369 U. S. 71-75
(1962), noted a shift as well. And
McClanahan v. Arizona State
Tax Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164,
411 U. S. 172
(1973), observed that "the trend has been away from the idea of
inherent Indian sovereignty as a bar to state jurisdiction."
Rather,
McClanahan concluded, sovereignty is better seen
as a "backdrop against which the applicable treaties and federal
statutes must be read."
Ibid. In a similar vein,
Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe, 435 U.
S. 191,
435 U. S. 208
(1978), recognized that Indian tribes are
"prohibited from exercising both those powers of autonomous
States that are expressly terminated by Congress and those powers
'inconsistent with their status.'"
(Emphasis and citations omitted.) Still,
United States v.
Wheeler, 435 U. S. 313,
435 U. S.
322-326 (1978), emphasized the sovereign nature of
tribal authority over Indians.
See also Mescalero Apache Tribe
v. Jones, 411 U. S. 145,
411 U. S. 148
(1973);
Antoine v. Washington, 420 U.
S. 194,
420 U. S.
201-203 (1975).
[
Footnote 2/2]
This territorial component is also suggested by recent statutes
like the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977, 91 Stat. 685, 735, which
provide that "[l]ands within the exterior boundaries of
reservations of federally recognized Indian tribes" may be
redesignated for air quality purposs "only by the appropriate
Indian governing body." A similar note is sounded in the Surface
Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, 91 Stat. 445, 523. In
addition, a geographical or territorial source for Indian authority
may be found in the Washington Enabling Act, 25 Stat. 676, §
4, by which the State was required to disclaim "all right and
title" to lands "owned or held by any Indian or Indian tribes" and
to agree that such lands "shall remain under the absolute
jurisdiction and control of the Congress. . . ."
[
Footnote 2/3]
See Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
151-152. There we noted that the
"intent and purpose of the Reorganization Act was 'to
rehabilitate the Indian's economic life and to give him a chance to
develop the initiative destroyed by a century of oppression and
paternalism.'"
Id. at
411 U. S. 152,
quoting H.R.Rep. No. 1804, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 6 (1934). The
Reorganization Act itself contains a number of provisions that
demonstrate Congress' concern with encouraging Indian economic
development.
See 25 U.S.C. §§ 469, 470, and 477.
See also Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 436 U. S.
49,
436 U. S. 59-60
(1978).
[
Footnote 2/4]
See the India Self-Determination and Education
Assistance Act of 1975, 25 U.S.C. § 450
et seq., and
the Indian Financing Act of 1974, 25 U.S.C. § 1451
et
seq. Section 2 of the latter statute states as follows:
"It is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress to provide
capital . . . to help develop and utilize Indian resources, both
physical and human, to a point where the Indians will fully
exercise responsibility for the utilization and management of their
own resources and where they will enjoy a standard of living from
their own productive efforts comparable to that enjoyed by
non-Indians in neighboring communities."
88 Stat. 77.
Adherence to the policies underlying the Reorganization Act has
not been without some interruption. The Termination Acts of the
1950's,
see, e.g., 25 U.S.C. §§ 564, 721-728,
741-760, and 891-901 (1958 ed.), seem to have signaled a
congressional urge to pursue an assimilationist policy somewhat
akin to the approach that was dominant prior to the Reorganization
Act.
See generally Menominee Tribe v. United States,
391 U. S. 404
(1968). But present policy "appears to be returning to a focus upon
strengthening tribal self-government."
Bryan v. Itasca
County, 426 U. S. 373,
426 U. S. 389,
n. 14 (1976).
[
Footnote 2/5]
Moe, 425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 483,
citing
Williams v. Lee, 358 U.S. at
358 U. S.
219-220.
[
Footnote 2/6]
This problem was entirely absent in
Moe. Nothing in the
result there disfavored the purchase of Indian goods. Rather,
imposition of the state tax on non-Indians simply created a
situation in which persons were encouraged to buy cigarettes on the
basis of factors other than tax benefits and avoidance -- factors
like geographical location and convenience. In the present
situation, the state tax actually tips the balance against the
Indians.
[
Footnote 2/7]
It might be argued that the choice I describe is entirely
commonplace -- that, in making its taxing decisions, every
governmental unit is required to balance its revenue needs against
the economic impact of the taxes it considers. In one sense, this
is quite true: if one State has a very low sales tax, a neighboring
State's ability to impose a higher one may, as a practical matter,
be impaired. In some circumstances, it can cope with this situation
by imposing a complementary tax on the in-state use of goods
purchased elsewhere.
National Geographic Society v. California
Bd. of Equalization, 430 U. S. 551,
430 U. S. 555
(1977). And in others, there will exist no efficacious way of
collecting such a tax. Whatever the case, however, the two States
will face each other across their common border with equal
arsenals.
I think the present situation is readily distinguishable for the
simple reason that Indian reservations are not States. This has two
sorts of consequences. First, it means the equality noted in the
preceding paragraph is absent.
Moe holds that sellers on
an Indian reservation may be required to collect state taxes on
sales to non-Indians that occur entirely on the reservation. Yet it
is highly unlikely that the Tribes in these cases could require
sellers elsewhere in Washington to collect tribal taxes. And
second, Indian Tribes, while less autonomous than States in
important respects, are the special beneficiaries of certain
federal concerns and policies. As a result, the tradeoffs and
frictions that may be inevitable in the state-state context demand
special scrutiny in the state-reservation context. Tribes may lack
the tools needed to protect themselves, and protecting them is an
important federal concern.
Cf. Morton v. Mancari,
417 U. S. 535,
417 U. S.
551-555 (1974) .
[
Footnote 2/8]
See Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 152
(quoting legislative history to the effect that Indians should be
able to "enter the white world on a footing of equal
competition").
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
I join all but
447 U. S. My
disagreement with
447 U. S. S.
188|>Part III of MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST's separate opinion. My
disagreement with Part IV-B(2) stems from the belief that the State
of Washington cannot impose the full combined measure of its
cigarette and sales taxes on purchases by nontribal members of
cigarettes from tobacco outlets on the Colville, Lummi, and Makah
Reservations.
In
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes, 425 U.
S. 463,
425 U. S.
481-483, the Court held that a State has the power to
tax sales of cigarettes to non-Indians by Indian tobacco outlets,
despite the exemptions from state taxes possessed by an Indian
tribe and its members themselves. The State may exert this power,
according to
Moe, even if it thereby deprives the tribe or
the enterprises the tribe operates of substantial revenues.
Cf.
Thomas v. Gay, 169 U. S. 264. The
cigarette and sales tax aspects of this case would, therefore, be
wholly controlled by the
Moe decision but for the fact
that all of the appellee Tribes levy their own cigarette excise
taxes on the on-reservation distribution of cigarettes to
non-Indians.
It seems clear to me that the appellee Tribes enjoy a power at
least equal to that of the State to tax the on-reservation
Page 447 U. S. 175
sales of cigarettes to nontribal members. Those sales are
entered into and consummated in places and circumstances subject to
the Tribes' protection and control. Furthermore, the taxation of
such transactions effectuates recognized federal policies by
providing funds for the maintenance and operation of tribal
self-government.
See generally Indian Reorganization Act
of 1934, 25 U.S.C. § 461 et seq;
McClanahan v. Arizona
State Tax Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164,
411 U. S.
179-181;
Williams v. Lee, 358 U.
S. 217.
Consequently, when a State and an Indian tribe tax in a
functionally identical manner the same on-reservation sales to
nontribal members, it is my view that congressional policy,
conjoined with the Indian Commerce Clause, requires the State to
credit against its own tax the amount of the tribe's tax. This
solution fully effectuates the State's goal of assuring that its
citizens who are not tribal members do not cash in on the exemption
from state taxation that the tribe and its members enjoy. On the
other hand, it permits the tribe to share with the State in the tax
revenues from cigarette sales, without at the same time placing the
tribe's federally encouraged enterprises at a competitive
disadvantage compared to similarly situated off-reservation
businesses.
Turning to the case at hand, the approach I have outlined leads
me to one conclusion with respect to sales on the Colville Lummi,
and Makah Reservations, and another with respect to sales on the
Yakima Reservation. The Colville, Lummi, and Makah Tribes each
collect from the operators of on-reservation tobacco outlets a tax
of 40 to 50 cents per carton. Although in each case the tax is
imposed at the time the cigarettes are distributed by the Tribe to
the retail outlets, the pertinent taxing ordinance requires that
the tax be passed on to the ultimate consumer. Thus, the actual
event taxed, as with the State's cigarette excise tax and general
sales tax, is the sale to the nontribal purchaser. Since the
Tribe's cigarette tax operates in functionally the same way as do
the State's cigarette excise and general sales taxes, I would hold
that the
Page 447 U. S. 176
State must credit the tribal tax against the combination of its
cigarette excise tax and general sales tax.
The tax imposed by the Yakima Tribe operates differently. The
Tribe purchases cigarettes from out-of-state dealers and sells them
to its licensed retailers. In connection with this transaction, the
Tribe receives from its licensed retailers a tax of 22.5 cents per
cigarette carton. Unlike the situation with the Colville, Lummi,
and Makah taxes, however, there is no requirement that the tax then
be added to the ultimate retail selling price. As a consequence,
the event taxed is not the sale to the ultimate cigarette
purchaser, and, for this reason, I believe that the State has no
obligation to credit the Indian tax against the combination of its
cigarette excise and general sales taxes.
Accordingly, I would vacate the judgment of the District Court
insofar as it invalidates
in toto the imposition of the
State's cigarette excise and general sales taxes upon cigarette
sales on the Colville, Lummi, and Makah Reservations, and remand
the case for further proceedings. I would reverse the judgment of
the District Court insofar as it bars the imposition of the State's
taxes upon sales of cigarettes on the Yakima Reservation.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, concurring in part, concurring in the
result in part, and dissenting in part.
Since early in the last century, this Court has been struggling
to develop a coherent doctrine by which to measure with some
predictability the scope of Indian immunity from state taxation.
[
Footnote 3/1] In recent years, it
appeared such a doctrine was well on its way to being established.
I write separately to underscore what I think the contours of that
doctrine are because I am convinced that a well defined body of
principles is essential in order to end the need for case-by-case
litigation which has plagued this area of the law for a number of
years.
Page 447 U. S. 177
That doctrine, I had thought, was at bottom a preemption
analysis based on the principle that Indian immunities are
dependent upon congressional intent,
McClanahan v. Arizona
State Tax Comm'n, 411 U. S. 164
(1973);
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.
S. 145 (1973);
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai
Tribes, 425 U. S. 463
(1976);
Bryan v. Itasca County, 426 U.
S. 373 (1976), at least absent discriminatory state
action prohibited by the Indian Commerce Clause. I see no need for
this Court to balance the state and tribal interests in enacting
particular forms of taxation in order to determine their validity.
Ante at
447 U. S.
156-157. Absent discrimination, the question is only one
of congressional intent. Either Congress intended to preempt the
state taxing authority or it did not. Balancing of interests is not
the appropriate gauge for determining validity, since it is that
very balancing which we have reserved to Congress. I concur in the
Court's conclusion, however, that the cigarette tax is valid
because Congress has not preempted state authority to impose the
tax.
I
The principles necessary for the resolution of this case are
readily derived from our opinions in
McClanahan and
Mescalero. McClanahan confirmed the trend which
had been developing in recent decades towards a reliance on a
federal preemption analysis. Congress has for many years legislated
extensively in the field of Indian affairs.
McClanahan
therefore recognized that the answer to most claims of Indian
immunity from state power could be resolved by looking "to the
applicable treaties and statutes which define the limits of state
power." 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 172.
[
Footnote 3/2]
Page 447 U. S. 178
Despite the expanse of congressional statutes regulating Indian
affairs over the years,
McClanahan foresaw that
congressional intent would not always be readily apparent. As a
guide to ascertaining that intent in such cases, the Court invoked
the tradition of Indian sovereignty as reflected by the earlier
decisions of this Court:
"The Indian sovereignty doctrine is relevant . . . not because
it provides a definitive resolution of the issues in this suit, but
because it provides a backdrop against which the applicable
treaties and federal statutes must be read."
Ibid.
McClanahan readily illustrates application of the
analysis. The question presented in that case was whether the State
of Arizona had jurisdiction to impose a tax on a reservation
Indian's income derived solely from reservation sources. The Court
first reviewed the "tradition of sovereignty" relevant to this
"narrow question."
Id. at
411 U. S. 168.
[
Footnote 3/3] Historically, this
Court had found Indians to be exempt from taxes on Indian ownership
and activity confined to the reservation and not involving
non-Indians. [
Footnote 3/4]
The Kansas
Indians, 5 Wall. 737 (1867). With this tradition
placing reservation ownership beyond the jurisdiction of the
States, the Court undertook a review of the relevant treaties and
statutes to determine
Page 447 U. S. 179
whether this tradition of immunity had been altered by Congress.
[
Footnote 3/5] Although no
legislation directly provided that Indians were to be immune from
state taxation under these circumstances, the enactments reviewed
were certainly suggestive of that interpretation.
See
Arizona Enabling Act, § 20, 36 Stat. 569; the Buck Act, 4
U.S.C. § 105. The Court therefore declined to infer a
congressional departure from the prior tradition of Indian immunity
absent an express provision otherwise. Thus, as this Court's
opinion in
Bryan v. Itasca County, supra, later
characterized it,
McClanahan established a rule against
finding that "ambiguous statutes abolish by implication Indian tax
immunities." 426 U.S. at
426 U. S.
392.
The companion case to
McClanahan, Mescalero Apache Tribe v.
Jones, supra, established the corollary principle: when
tradition did not recognize a sovereign immunity in favor of the
Indians, this Court would recognize one only if Congress expressly
conferred one. In
Mescalero, the State of New Mexico
asserted the right to impose a tax on the gross receipts of a ski
resort owned and operated by an Indian tribe. The resort was
located on federal land adjacent to the Indian reservation, was
developed under the auspices of the Indian Reorganization Act of
1934, 25 U.S.C. § 461
et seq., and was funded with
federal money.
The Court in
Mescalero applied precisely the analysis
McClanahan adopted. First, the Court reviewed the
tradition of sovereignty and found that no immunity for
off-reservation activities had traditionally been recognized.
See Shaw v. Glibson-Zahniser Oil Corp., 276 U.
S. 575 (1928);
Ward v. Race Horse, 163 U.
S. 504 (1896). With that tradition as its backdrop, the
Court reviewed the particular statutes relevant to the question of
whether or not Congress intended
Page 447 U. S. 180
to immunize the Indian enterprise from the state gross receipts
tax. The principal Act relevant to the inquiry was the Indian
Reorganization Act, since it was the Act under which the tribal
enterprise was being conducted. Section 5 of that Act, 25 U.S.C.
§ 465, provides that the lands acquired under authority of the
Act are exempt from state and local taxation. The Court
nevertheless refused to read § 5 as broadly conferring an
immunity from income as well as property taxes. The Court invoked
the well established rule that "
tax exemptions are not granted
by implication,'" that such exemptions may not rest on "`dubious
inferences,'" but that they must be provided in "`plain words.'"
411 U.S. at 411 U. S. 156,
quoting Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. United States, 319 U.
S. 598, 319 U. S.
606-607 (1943). Despite the clear federal purpose of
promoting this tribal economic enterprise, the Court found that no
judicial immunities could appropriately be implied. [Footnote 3/6]
The subsequent Indian tax immunity cases have been unanimously
resolved through application of the corollary principles of
construction established in
McClanahan and
Mescalero. In
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai
Tribes, the Court invalidated attempted state taxation of
Indian conduct and property confined to the reservation. The Court
found, however, that imposition of a state tax on its non-Indian
residents' purchases of cigarettes from Indian sellers on a
reservation could not be found to "ru[n] afoul of any congressional
enactment dealing with the affairs of reservation Indians." 425
U.S. at
425 U. S. 483.
In
Bryan v. Itasca County, supra, the question was whether
the congressional grant of civil jurisdiction to the States
conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 1360 was a general grant of power to
tax reservation Indians. The tradition, of course, was otherwise,
and the statute did not specifically state that
Page 447 U. S. 181
a repeal of those immunities was intended. Consistent with the
principles enunciated in
McClanahan, the Court reasoned
that
"[t]his omission has significance in the application of the
canons of construction applicable to statutes affecting Indian
immunities, as some mention would normally be expected if such a
sweeping change in the status of tribal government and reservation
Indians had been contemplated by Congress."
426 U.S. at
426 U. S.
381.
Adherence to these principles of construction maximizes the
ability of States and tribes to determine the scope of their
respective authority without resort to adjudication, and maximizes
judicial deference to the legislative forum.
II
Application of these principles readily resolves the validity of
the cigarette tax levied by the State. The tax represents a
permissible nondiscriminatory exercise of state sovereign authority
which has not been preempted by Congress. These principles also
dispose of the claim of nontribal Indians to an immunity.
A
At issue here is not only Indian sovereignty, but, necessarily,
state sovereignty as well. As a general rule, of course, States are
given wide latitude in the exercise of their sovereign powers to
tax. In
Michelin Tire Corp. v. Wages, 423 U.
S. 276,
423 U. S. 293
(1976), this Court cautioned against invalidating any state
taxation absent "the clearest . . . mandate." Here the State
attempts to tax its citizens' use of cigarettes purchased in a
territory subject to the control of another sovereign. [
Footnote 3/7] As a general matter, we have
repeatedly held that such an exercise of state taxing power is
permissible. Here there is no question
Page 447 U. S. 182
that the State, by taxing its own non-Indian residents, has
"exerted its power in relation to opportunities which it has given,
to protection which it has afforded, to benefits which it has
conferred," and
"[t]he fact that a tax is contingent upon events brought to pass
without a state does not destroy the nexus between such a tax and
transactions within a state for which the tax is an exaction."
Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co., 311 U.
S. 435,
311 U. S.
444-445 (1940). Use tax schemes applicable to purchases
in other States, precisely comparable to that in issue here, have
long been upheld as a permissible exercise of state taxing power.
Henneford v. Silas Mason Co., 300 U.
S. 577 (1937);
National Geographic Society v.
California Board of Equalization, 430 U.
S. 551 (1977). Of course, in order to collect the tax
from the merchant located beyond the territorial jurisdiction of
the taxing State, there must also be a relationship between the
State and the burdened merchant sufficient to satisfy principles of
due process.
National Geographic Society, supra. After
Moe, however, the retailers on the tribal reservation
cannot gain invalidation of the tax on this basis. 425 U.S. at
485 U. S.
482-483. Thus, the State has exercised its taxing
authority consistent with its sovereign powers and constitutional
due process.
An otherwise legitimate exercise of state taxing authority will
be illegitimate, of course, if it is sought to be applied in
contravention of a constitutional or federal statutory immunity.
Indian sovereign immunity from nondiscriminatory taxation is a
question of congressional preemption. As outlined, we must first
identify the backdrop of sovereignty in order to interpret
congressional intent in the field. As
McClanahan
implicitly recognized through its citation of authorities, the
traditional cases clearly did not find that Indian sovereign
immunity was contravened by subjecting tribes to the burdens
inherent in state taxation of the reservation activities of
non-Indians.
Surplus Trading Co. v. Cook, 281 U.
S. 647 (1930);
Utah & Northern R. Co. v.
Fisher, 116 U. S. 28
(1885);
Thomas v. Gay, 169 U. S. 264
(1898).
Page 447 U. S. 183
Thomas v. Gay perhaps best illustrates the "backdrop"
relevant to the State's cigarette tax in issue. In
Thomas,
the State attempted to tax the cattle grazing on reservation lands
leased, pursuant to congressional authorization, by Indians to
non-Indians. The Court found that the Indians' sovereign immunity
did not operate to curtail state authority to impose this tax. The
case is particularly significant because of the arguments which it
expressly rejects. The tribe complained that the tax had to be
invalidated because the revenues which it received as lessor would
be directly reduced as a result of the state tax, since lessees
would be unwilling to pay the same price for tax-exempt grazing
lands as for taxable grazing lands. The Court stated that it is
urged that
"the money contracted to be paid for the privilege of grazing is
paid to the Indians as a tribe, and is used and expended by them
for their own purposes, and that, if, by reason of this taxation,
the conditions existing at the time the leases were executed were
changed, or could be changed by the legislature of Oklahoma at its
pleasure, the value of the lands for such purposes would fluctuate
or be destroyed altogether according to such conditions."
Id. at
169 U. S.
273.
Thomas v. Gay is a part of the "backdrop" which
supports Washington's power to impose the tax in issue. [
Footnote 3/8] The appellee
Page 447 U. S. 184
Tribes maintain that the tax in issue is impermissible, though
permissible in
Moe, because here the Tribes are raising
governmental revenues and establishing commercial enterprises. The
effect of the state tax then would be to reduce the tribe's
governmental revenues and force the tribe to choose between losing
those revenues by forgoing its tax or subjecting reservation
retailers to a competitive disadvantage compared to those retailers
outside the reservation not subject to the tribal tax. These may be
the facts, but they are facts which
Thomas v. Gay held to
be irrelevant to the recognition of a sovereign tribal immunity. In
Thomas, the tribe's involvement was far more direct than
that in issue here, since it was a tribal leasing enterprise.
There, the State's exercise of jurisdiction clearly required the
tribe, as lessor, to forgo some portion of rent which could have
been charged, and used the same as tax revenues, had the State not
asserted its taxing authority. The tribe could recover the full
rent (part of which may readily be considered the equivalent of a
tax and another part perhaps proprietary profit) only at the risk
of discouraging the economic enterprise. It is apparent therefore
that the backdrop relevant to this action is one of no sovereign
immunity. [
Footnote 3/9]
Page 447 U. S. 185
Congress could, of course, countermand this "tradition" of no
immunity. But it has not done so. Under
Mescalero, it is
dispositive of this case that no express immunity has been granted
by Congress since the tradition of sovereignty counsels against the
immunity. Even going beyond the
Mescalero rule against
implying an immunity from taxation, I agree with the Court that
review of the statutes does not suggest, even remotely, that
Congress intended either by its laws or the policies underlying
them to prevent the States from taxing these transactions.
[
Footnote 3/10] In all areas of
tax immunity, this Court has staunchly refused to consider the
permissibility of a tax by
Page 447 U. S. 186
reference to the economic burdens which it imposes if those
burdens are nondiscriminatory and satisfy due process.
See
United States v. County of Fresno, 429 U.
S. 452 (1977) (state taxation of the Federal
Government);
New York v. United States, 326 U.
S. 572 (1946) (federal taxation of the state
government);
Michelin Tire Corp. v. Wages, 423 U.
S. 276 (1976) (state taxation of imports and exports).
If Indians are to function as quasi co-sovereigns with the States,
they like the States, must adjust to the economic realities of that
status as every other sovereign competing for tax revenues, absent
express intervention by Congress. [
Footnote 3/11]
B
Relying on the same preemption analysis, I also concur in the
Court's conclusion that Indians not members of the governing tribe
are not immune from taxation.
McClanahan/ Mescalero are
once again dispositive. As
McClanahan explained, the
doctrine of sovereign immunity traditionally
Page 447 U. S. 187
recognized by this Court derived from the sovereign relationship
between a tribe and its members, and a recognition that state
jurisdiction should not be asserted in a manner which "frustrates
tribal self-government." 411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 170.
See Williams v. Lee, 358 U. S. 217,
358 U. S.
219-220 (1959);
Moe, 425 U.S. at
425 U. S. 483.
Immunities which have formed the backdrop for this Court's
preemption analysis have been those derived from these precepts.
This form of immunity, and the principles which underlie it, are
simply inapplicable to the recognition of a tax immunity for an
individual who resides on a reservation, but is not a member of the
tribe. The holding in
Moe that non-Indians, even those
resident on a reservation, could be subject to cigarette taxes for
on-reservation purchases, was a reflection of this principle. The
fact that the nonmember resident happens to be an Indian by race
provides no basis for distinction. The traditional immunity is not
based on race, but accouterments of self-government in which a
nonmember does not share.
Congress, of course, has gone beyond protection of merely Indian
self-government, extending its regulatory authority to Indians not
residing on the reservation of their own tribe, or, in fact, not
residing on any reservation.
See 25 U.S.C. § 13 (1970
ed.), as construed in
Morton v. Ruiz, 415 U.
S. 199 (1974).
See also the definition of
"Indian" in the Indian Reorganization Act, 25 U.S.C. § 479.
Congress, however, has certainly provided no express immunity from
the type of taxation in issue for Indians not members of the tribe,
and under the Mescalero principles of construction, the backdrop of
sovereignty makes it clear that it is not this Court's province to
imply such an immunity. These Indians residing on the reservation
are citizens of the State, just the same as their non-Indian
neighbors, and I am unwilling to conclude that their Indian status
entitles them to an implied immunity from taxes which their
non-Indian neighbors are required to pay.
Page 447 U. S. 188
III
I cannot concur in the Court's disposition of the challenge to
the state vehicle excise tax. Wash. Rev. Code, chs. 82.44 and 82.50
(1976 and Supp. 1977). The lower court did not conduct a very
extensive inquiry into the mechanics or state interpretation of
this excise taxing scheme, believing that the tax was clearly
invalid under our prior decision in
Moe. In
Moe,
this Court refused to uphold a State's authority to impose a
property tax on motor vehicles owned by tribal members residing on
the reservation. The lower court here found that
Moe was
controlling because, in both cases, the vehicles which the State
seeks to tax are used both on and off the reservation, and the tax
is assessed annually at a percentage of the market value of the
vehicle. Thus, the lower court, and this Court, have concluded that
the only difference between the taxes is one of label, a difference
insufficient to warrant a difference in outcome.
Complete Auto
Transit, Inc. v. Brady, 430 U. S. 274
(1977). The Court therefore looked no further to the operation of
the taxing scheme in question.
I do not find the issue clearly disposed of by
Moe
without a dispositive construction of the actual operation of this
state taxing scheme. There is, of course, no question that this
Court has discarded the controlling significance of the label a
State attaches to its taxes. A tax instead must be judged by its
"practical operation."
Detroit v. Murray Corp.,
355 U. S. 489
(1958). But only if the practical operation of this excise taxing
scheme is the same as the property taxing scheme addressed in
Moe would the tax be invalid on the basis of that
decision. In
Moe, the tax was assessed on the basis of
ownership, and, therefore, an Indian was required to pay the tax
regardless of whether the vehicle was ever used off the
reservation. If the state taxing scheme in question here, however,
exacts a tax only in the event that the vehicle is used off the
reservation, then the practical operation of
Page 447 U. S. 189
the taxes would be totally different. In
Moe, the
Indian purchaser could not avoid assessment of the tax once the
vehicle was purchased. It is possible, however, that, under an
excise taxing scheme, no tax would be assessed if the vehicle were
used only on the reservation.
What is dispositive for me, then, is whether Washington has
structured or will construe its overall tax and exemption scheme so
as to avoid exaction of the tax in the event the vehicle is never
used off the reservation. No decision of this Court would preclude
the State from taxing Indians for the use of off-reservation
highways. The lower court did not appreciate the significance of
this distinction, and accordingly did not focus on the manner in
which the state taxing scheme would be applied to Indians limiting
their vehicle use to the reservation. Judge Kilkenny, in a
dissenting opinion, found the record inadequate to resolve the
question of validity. I agree with Judge Kilkenny that federal
courts cannot invalidate state taxes without a thorough review of
state law and precedents necessary to determine whether the scheme
in fact contravenes federal law. It may well be that the excise tax
is applicable without exception to even those Indians using their
vehicles exclusively on the reservation, but I would remand the
question to the lower court to clarify that this is the controlling
question so that it might examine the state taxing scheme under a
corrected view of what federal law requires.
Cf. Perkins v.
Benguet Consolidated Mining Co., 342 U.
S. 437 (1952);
Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard
Broadcasting Co., 433 U. S. 562,
433 U. S.
578-579 (1977).
Assuming a construction which excludes reservation use,
arguendo, I do not find it significant that Washington has
not tailored this tax to the "amount of actual off-reservation
use," in which case the Court suggests this tax might be
permissible. A non-Indian resident of the State of Washington pays
the same tax on his use of the public highways whether he drives
his car once a year or every day. We have certainly never held that
a State is under an obligation to apportion
Page 447 U. S. 190
its use taxes in such a way that reflects actual use. I am aware
of no principle for making a different rule to cover the case of
Indians using the public highways. If they choose to avoid the use
tax, they need only limit their driving to reservation boundaries.
But once they venture onto highways off the reservation, nothing in
the United States Constitution, or in the federal statutes,
prevents them from being subject to use taxes in common with other
state residents.
I would therefore reverse the judgment of the District Court on
the issue of the permissibility of the State's assessment of its
cigarette tax on purchases made by non-Indians, and by Indians not
members of the governing tribe. I would remand the case to that
court for a determination of the construction and effect of the
state excise tax.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Much of that developmental history is recounted in
McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n, 411 U.
S. 164,
411 U. S.
168-172 (1973).
[
Footnote 3/2]
The Court in
McClanahan did not resolve to what extent
residual Indian sovereignty in the total absence of federal treaty
obligations or legislation still would be recognized. The Court
found that
"[t]he question is generally of little more than theoretical
importance, . . . since in almost all cases federal treaties and
statutes define the boundaries of federal and state
jurisdiction."
411 U.S. at
411 U. S. 172,
n. 8. I am convinced that this "residue" of sovereignty is no
greater than the freedom from nondiscriminatory taxation held
sufficient to protect sovereignty in other areas of
constitutionally derived immunities.
See 447
U.S. 134fn3/9|>n. 9,
infra. Our opinions have
recognized that Indian sovereignty is dependent upon congressional
preservation,
see United States v. Wheeler, 435 U.
S. 313,
435 U. S. 323
(1978), and I decline to use our adjudicatory powers to assume a
role properly reserved to Congress.
[
Footnote 3/3]
The Court emphasized that its review of Indian sovereignty was
relevant only to this narrow category,
i.e., the
reservation-derived income of a reservation Indian, and that the
Court was expressly not reviewing any situation in which the State
attempted to exert its sovereignty over non-Indians undertaking
activity on Indian reservations. 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
168.
[
Footnote 3/4]
I use "Indians" throughout this discussion of sovereign immunity
to refer to members of a reservation tribe.
See infra at
447 U. S.
186-187.
[
Footnote 3/5]
The Court has explicitly held that attributes of Indian
sovereignty are subject to complete defeasance by Congress.
United States v. Wheeler, supra at
435 U. S.
323.
[
Footnote 3/6]
In addition, the Court expressed the opinion that congressional
policy was not at odds with state taxation, since Congress intended
that the Indians be prepared to "enter the white world on a footing
of equal competition." 411 U.S. at
411 U. S.
157.
[
Footnote 3/7]
Indian reservations are not, of course, subject to the exclusive
control of the tribe. The Federal Government and the States also
have jurisdiction for some purposes.
[
Footnote 3/8]
It should be noted that the principles in
Thomas v. Gay
were not always those used to determine Indian immunities. A series
of decisions, as noted in
McClanahan, treated Indian
immunities as derivative from the Federal Government's immunity
from state taxation. During the reign of the treatment of Indian
reservations as federal instrumentalities for purposes of state
taxation, this Court did prohibit States from taxing the net income
derived by the lessees of Indian lands.
Gillespie v.
Oklahoma, 257 U. S. 501
(1922).
See also Choctaw, O. & a R. Co. v. Harrison,
235 U. S. 292
(1914);
Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Oklahoma,
240 U. S. 522
(1916). While
Thomas v. Gay was never explicitly
overruled, these decisions were clearly inconsistent. Nevertheless,
it was the line of analysis employed in
Gillespie that was
later overruled in
Helvering v. Mountain Producers Corp.,
303 U. S. 376
(1938).
Thomas v. Gay stands as the traditional analysis
of Indian sovereign immunity held to be relevant in
McClanahan.
[
Footnote 3/9]
This conclusion derives support from not only
Thomas v.
Gay, but also analogous applications of sovereign tax
immunities. When two sovereigns have legitimate authority to tax
the same transaction, exercise of that authority by one sovereign
does not oust the jurisdiction of the other. If it were otherwise,
we would not be obligated to pay federal as well as state taxes on
our income or gasoline purchases. Economic burdens on the competing
sovereign also do not alter the concurrent nature of the taxing
authority. Decisions of this Court unequivocally recognize that a
state tax comparable to that in issue, imposed on its residents'
transactions in another State, or on a federal enclave, will not be
barred by force of the respective immunities of that State or the
Federal Government. In
Henneford v. Silas Mason Co.,
300 U. S. 577
(1937), this Court upheld a state tax on one of its resident's use
of goods purchased in another State without regard to the fact that
the other State's competitive ability to tax the same transaction
was obviously reduced. The Court observed that such a tax was
permissible even if no credit for the other state tax were allowed.
Id. at
300 U. S. 581.
See also National Geographic Society v. California Board of
Equalization, 430 U. S. 551
(1977). Even the sovereign immunity of the Federal Government would
not prevent the effects of a tax comparable to those in issue. In
United States v. County of Fresno, 429 U.
S. 452 (1977), the State sought to impose a possessory
use tax on federal employees occupying federal housing located in
federal enclaves within the State of California. This Court upheld
the tax even though it accepted the Federal Government's argument
that, in order to remain competitive as an employer or landlord, it
would have to reimburse the employees for the payment of the added
cost.
Id. at
429 U. S. 464,
and n. 12.
See also United States v. Detroit, 355 U.
S. 466,
355 U. S. 472
(1958);
Alabama v. King & Boozer, 314 U. S.
1,
314 U. S. 12
(1941). Thus, the State, through its exercise of taxing authority,
can effectively require the Federal Government to forgo revenues
which would otherwise be available to it in order to remain
competitive as an enterprise.
[
Footnote 3/10]
The total absence of any suggestion that Congress intended to
confer the immunity sought in this action should not be surprising.
As this Court has found, other statutes are premised on
congressional "recognition of the imperative need of a State to
administer its own fiscal operations," free from federal
interference.
Tully v. Griffin, Inc., 429 U. S.
68,
429 U. S. 73
(1976). In
Tully, this congressional policy was not found
to be diminished even though the State sought to assert its taxing
authority over nonresidents.
[
Footnote 3/11]
These considerations, determinative in other areas of tax
immunity law, are equally appropriate when one of the taxing
jurisdictions is an Indian tribe. While Indian tribes are not
States, the tribes are also not helpless hostages of the State
absent judicial intervention. Two substantial sources of protection
are available to them. First, the Indians could not be subjected to
the burdens of discriminatory taxation,
e.g., a state tax
on only cigarette purchases on a reservation with no corresponding
off-reservation tax. The prohibition of discriminatory taxation has
been recognized by this Court as a substantial safeguard against
the potential for any abusive taxation, since only those taxes
which the general population are willing to withstand can be
imposed.
See County of Fresno, supra at
429 U. S. 463,
n. 11;
Alabama v. King & Boozer, supra, (federal
immunity);
Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady,
430 U. S. 274
(1977) (state taxation of interstate commerce). Second, Indian
tribes are always subject to protection by Congress. This source of
protection is more than adequate to preclude any unwarranted
interference with tribal self-government. Congress, and not the
judiciary, is the forum charged with the responsibility of
extending the necessary level of protection beyond that inherent in
prohibiting nondiscriminatory taxation.