Respondent manufacturer of cordage products, in filing its Ohio
ad valorem personal property tax returns for 1976 and
1977, deducted from the total value of its inventory the value of
imported fibers that were stored in their original packages for
future use in the manufacturing process. In taking this deduction,
respondent relied on
Hooven & Allison Co. v. Evatt,
324 U. S. 652
(
Hooven I), a case involving the same tax and the same
parties as the instant case, as well as similar property, and
wherein it was held that subjecting the property in question there
to the Ohio personal property tax would violate the Import-Export
Clause. Petitioner Ohio Tax Commissioner disallowed the deduction
and accordingly increased the assessments, relying on
Michelin
Tire Corp. v. Wages, 423 U. S. 276,
where the assessment of a State's nondiscriminatory
ad
valorem property tax on an inventory of imported tires
maintained at a wholesale distribution warehouse was held not to be
within the Import-Export Clause's prohibition against States'
levying "any Imposts or Duties on Imports." The Ohio Board of Tax
Appeals reversed, ruling that petitioner was collaterally estopped
by the decision in
Hooven I from levying the increased
assessments, and rejecting respondent's argument that
Michelin implicitly overruled
Hooven I. The Ohio
Supreme Court affirmed.
Held:
1. The assessment of the Ohio personal property tax on the
original-package imported fibers in question does not violate the
Import-Export Clause. This Court in
Michelin specifically
abandoned the concept that the Import-Export Clause constituted a
broad prohibition against all forms of state taxation of imports,
and changed the focus of Import-Export Clause cases from whether
the goods have lost their status as imports to whether the tax
sought to be imposed is an "Impost or Duty."
Hooven I,
having been decided under the original-package doctrine, was among
the progeny of
Low v. Austin,
13 Wall. 29, which was expressly overruled in
Michelin.
Thus,
Hooven I is inconsistent with
Michelin, and
although not expressly overruled in
Michelin, must be
regarded as retaining no vitality since the
Michelin
decision, and accordingly is overruled to the extent that it
espoused the original-package doctrine. Pp.
466 U. S.
357-361.
Page 466 U. S. 354
2. Petitioner is not barred by collateral estoppel from levying
the increased assessments. Pp.
466 U. S.
361-363.
(a) Collateral estoppel was applied here as a matter of federal,
not state, law, and thus the case is not insulated from review in
this Court on the asserted ground that, because
Michelin
did not expressly overrule
Hooven I, state law principles
of collateral estoppel bar imposition of the Ohio tax on
respondent's imported fibers. The case concerns federal issues and
a contention that a state court disregarded a federal
constitutional ruling of this Court. Pp.
466 U. S.
361-362.
(b) While the parties, the tax, and the goods imported in their
containers are the same here as in
Hooven I, the years
involved are not. Because of this difference in tax years, the case
is controlled by
Commissioner v. Sunnen, 333 U.
S. 591, a federal income tax case wherein it was held
that an earlier decision of the Board of Tax Appeals involving the
same facts, questions, and parties, but different tax years, was
not conclusive under the collateral estoppel doctrine because
certain intervening decisions of this Court made manifest the error
of the result reached by the Board. Failure to follow
Sunnen's dictates would lead to the very tax inequality
that the admonition of that case was designed to avoid. Pp.
466 U. S.
362-363.
4 Ohio St.3d 169, 447 N.E.2d 1295, vacated and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In
Hooven & Allison Co. v. Evatt, 324 U.
S. 652 (1945) (
Hooven I), this Court passed
upon the constitutionality of Ohio's application of a
nondiscriminatory
ad valorem personal property tax to
imported fibers still in their original packages. The result there
was unfavorable to the State. In this case, the Tax Commissioner of
Ohio asks us to sustain
Page 466 U. S. 355
the application of the same nondiscriminatory
ad
valorem personal property tax to like fibers, still in their
original packages, imported by the same manufacturer. The case thus
presents, primarily, an issue of preclusion framed in terms of
collateral estoppel.
I
The Hooven & Allison Company (Hooven) is a domestic
manufacturer of cordage products made from natural fibers. These
fibers -- hemp, sisal, jute, manila, and the like -- are not grown
in the United States, and must be imported. Upon their arrival in
this country, the imported fibers are transported by rail to
Hooven's plant in Xenia, Ohio, where they are stored in their
original packages for future use in Hooven's manufacturing
process.
In accord with Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 5711.16 (1980), Hooven
timely filed personal property tax returns for 1976 and 1977. In
those returns, Hooven listed these original-package imported fibers
as "imports," but deducted their value from the total value of its
manufacturing inventory. The following written explanation was
given:
"The inventories represent fibers imported by the taxpayer from
foreign countries, held in the original packages in its warehouses
in Xenia prior to being used in manufacturing cordage, and when
they are removed therefrom or placed in the production line in the
factory, such imported fibers so used, or removed from the original
package, are thereupon transferred to the Goods in Process, and are
included in the taxable inventories in Xenia City."
Joint Record in the Supreme Court of Ohio 11. In taking this
deduction, Hooven relied expressly on this Court's 1945 decision in
Hooven I. In that decision, the Court, by a closely
divided vote, ruled that subjecting Hooven's imported
original-package raw materials to Ohio personal property taxation
would be in violation of the
Page 466 U. S. 356
Import-Export Clause of the United States Constitution, Art. I,
§ 10, cl. 2.
The Tax Commissioner of Ohio, however, for each of the two years
in question, disallowed the deduction and added back into Hooven's
taxable manufacturing inventory the imported raw materials held for
future use in manufacturing. Hooven's asserted property tax
liability for each of those years, accordingly, was increased.
Upon application for review, the Tax Commissioner sustained the
increased assessments. She rejected federal constitutional
arguments advanced by Hooven, as well as an additional argument
that, by the decision in
Hooven I, she was collaterally
estopped from levying the increased assessments. The Tax
Commissioner, in so ruling, relied on
Michelin Tire Corp. v.
Wages, 423 U. S. 276
(1976).
Hooven then appealed to the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals, advancing
the same collateral estoppel and federal constitutional issues.
That Board reversed the Tax Commissioner. App. to Pet. for Cert.
A-10. It ruled that the Commissioner was collaterally estopped by
the decision in
Hooven I. It noted that the parties were
the same as those in
Hooven I; that the issue as to the
taxability of original-package raw materials was also the issue in
Hooven I; that the raw materials and the type of taxation
were identical to those involved in
Hooven I; that
Hooven I has not been "reversed" by this Court, "and thus,
has the force and effect of law;" and that, under the doctrine of
collateral estoppel, litigation of the issue was barred "and the
exemption from taxation was improperly held to be unavailable."
App. to Pet. for Cert. A-23. The Board rejected the Tax
Commissioner's argument that the decision in
Michelin
implicitly had overruled
Hooven I. The Board did not reach
or consider the constitutional issues, observing that it lacked
jurisdiction to do so. App. to Pet. for Cert. A-20;
see S. S.
Kresge Co. v. Bowers, 170 Ohio St. 405, 166 N.E.2d 139 (1960),
appeal dism'd, 365 U. S. 466
(1961).
Page 466 U. S. 357
Hooven and the Tax Commissioner each filed a notice of appeal to
the Supreme Court of Ohio, the taxpayer doing so in order to
preserve the constitutional issues, and the Tax Commissioner
pressing the collateral estoppel issue. The Supreme Court of Ohio
affirmed the ruling of the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals.
Hooven
& Allison Co. v. Lindley, 4 Ohio St.3d 169, 447 N.E.2d
1295 (1983). That court, in a unanimous per curiam opinion, ruled
that principles of collateral estoppel prohibited the Tax
Commissioner from assessing personal property taxes upon Hooven's
imported raw materials held in the original containers for future
use in manufacturing. It acknowledged the presence of
Michelin, but noted that this Court had not overruled
Hooven I in
Michelin, although it had not
hesitated expressly to overrule
Low v.
Austin, 13 Wall. 29 (1872). Thus, the Ohio court
observed, this Court's
"action -- or inaction -- must be accorded conclusive effect, at
least in regard to its intent in reappraising its earlier ruling in
Hooven I."
4 Ohio St.3d at 172, 447 N.E.2d at 1298. The court then
"decline[d] to address the [federal] constitutional issues raised
by Hooven in its appeal."
Id. at 173, 447 N.E.2d at
1299.
We granted certiorari. 464 U.S. 813 (1983).
II
In
Low v. Austin, supra, this Court, in an opinion by
Justice Field, unanimously enunciated the "original-package"
doctrine, although perhaps not for the first time,
See Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 442
(1827). It held that, under the Import-Export Clause, goods
imported from a foreign country are not subject to state
ad
valorem property taxation while remaining in their original
packages, unbroken and unsold, in the hands of the importer.
In
Michelin Tire Corp. v. Wages, supra, an importer
challenged the assessment of Georgia's nondiscriminatory
ad
valorem property tax upon an inventory of imported tires and
tubes maintained at a wholesale distribution warehouse.
Page 466 U. S. 358
This Court rejected the challenge to the state tax on the
imported tires. [
Footnote 1] It
found that, in the history of the Import-Export Clause, there was
nothing to suggest that a tax of the kind imposed on goods that
were no longer in import transit was the type of exaction that was
regarded as objectionable by the Framers. The tax could not affect
the Federal Government's exclusive regulation of foreign commerce,
since it did not fall on imports as such. Neither did the tax
interfere with the free flow of imported goods among the States.
The Clause, while not specifically excepting nondiscriminatory
taxes that had some impact on imports, was not couched in terms of
a broad prohibition of every tax, but prohibited States only from
laying "Imposts or Duties," which historically connoted exactions
directed only at imports or commercial activities as such. The
Court concluded that its reliance a century earlier in
Low v.
Austin "upon the
Brown dictum . . . was misplaced."
423 U.S. at
423 U. S. 283.
Chief Justice Taney's opinion in the
License
Cases, 5 How. 504 (1847), was carefully analyzed,
with the Court concluding that that opinion had been misread in
Low. "[P]recisely contrary" to the reading it was given in
Low, Chief Justice Taney's
License Cases opinion
was authority "that nondiscriminatory
ad valorem property
taxes are not prohibited by the Import-Export Clause." 423 U.S. at
423 U. S. 301.
It followed, this Court concluded, that "
Low v. Austin was
wrongly decided," and "therefore must be, and is, overruled."
Ibid. Hooven I was directly cited only once in
Michelin, and then only in a footnote in which the Court
stated that it found it unnecessary to address the assertion in
Hooven I that Congress could consent to state
nondiscriminatory taxation of imports even
Page 466 U. S. 359
were such taxes within the prohibition of the Import-Export
Clause.
See 423 U.S. at
423 U. S. 301,
n. 13. While we acknowledge that
Hooven I was not
expressly overruled in
Michelin, the latter case strongly
implies that the foundation of the former had been seriously
undermined. [
Footnote 2]
It is apparent, and indeed clear, that
Michelin, with
its overruling of
Low v. Austin, adopted a fundamentally
different approach to cases claiming the protection of the
Import-Export Clause. We said precisely as much in
Washington
Revenue Dept. v. Association of Wash. Stevedoring Cos.,
435 U. S. 734
(1978):
"Previous cases had assumed that all taxes on imports and
exports and on the importing and exporting processes were banned by
the Clause. . . . So long as the goods retained their status as
imports by remaining in their import packages, they enjoyed
immunity from state taxation. . . ."
"
Michelin initiated a different approach to
Import-Export Clause cases. It ignored the simple question whether
the tires and tubes were imports. Instead, it analyzed the nature
of the tax to determine whether it was an 'Impost or Duty.' 423
U.S. at
423 U. S. 279, 290-294.
Specifically, the analysis examined whether the exaction offended
any of the three policy considerations leading to the presence of
the Clause:"
" The Framers of the Constitution thus sought to alleviate three
main concerns . . . : the Federal Government must speak with one
voice when regulating commercial relations with foreign
governments, and tariffs, which might affect foreign relations,
could not be implemented
Page 466 U. S. 360
by the States consistently with that exclusive power; import
revenues were to be the major source of revenue of the Federal
Government and should not be diverted to the States; and harmony
among the States might be disturbed unless seaboard States, with
their crucial ports of entry, were prohibited from levying taxes on
citizens of other States by taxing goods merely flowing through
their ports to the other States not situated as favorably
geographically."
"
Id. at 285-286 (footnotes omitted)."
"The
ad valorem property tax there at issue offended
none of these policies. . . . The Court therefore concluded that
the Georgia
ad valorem property tax was not an 'Impost or
Duty,' within the meaning of the Import-Export Clause. . . ."
Id. at
435 U. S.
752-754.
See also id. at
435 U. S. 762
(opinion concurring in part and concurring in result).
To repeat: we think it clear that this Court in
Michelin specifically abandoned the concept that the
Import-Export Clause constituted a broad prohibition against all
forms of state taxation that fell on imports.
Michelin
changed the focus of Import-Export Clause cases from the nature of
the goods as imports to the nature of the tax at issue. The new
focus is not on whether the goods have lost their status as
imports, but is, instead, on whether the tax sought to be imposed
is an "Impost or Duty."
See P. Hartman, Federal
Limitations on State and Local Taxation, § 5:4 (1981);
Hellerstein, State Taxation and the Supreme Court: Toward a More
Unified Approach to Constitutional Adjudication?, 75 Mich.L.Rev.
1426, 1427-1434 (1977).
Cf. Montana v. United States,
440 U. S. 147
(1979).
Hooven I held that, under the Clause, a
nondiscriminatory state
ad valorem personal property tax
could not be imposed until the imported goods had lost their status
as imports by being removed from their original packages. This
decision was among the progeny of
Low v. Austin, for it,
too, was decided on the original-package doctrine. Thus,
Hooven
I is
Page 466 U. S. 361
inconsistent with the later ruling in
Michelin that
such a tax is not an "Impost or Duty," and therefore is not
prohibited by the Clause. Although
Hooven I was not
expressly overruled in
Michelin, it must be regarded as
retaining no vitality since the
Michelin decision. The
conclusion of the Supreme Court of Ohio that
Hooven I
retains current validity in this respect is therefore in error. A
contrary ruling would return us to the original-package doctrine.
So that there may be no misunderstanding,
Hooven I, to the
extent it espouses that doctrine, is not to be regarded as
authority, and is overruled.
III
A
Respondent Hooven, however, argues that, because the Court in
Michelin did not expressly overrule
Hooven I, it
must follow that state law principles of collateral estoppel bar
the imposition of an
ad valorem tax upon Hooven's raw
materials inventory.
We reject the suggestion that we are confronted, in the present
posture of the case, with a claim of collateral estoppel under
state, as distinguished from federal, law.
Hooven I was a
decision concerned with the application and impact of the
Import-Export Clause upon the Ohio tax. The issue, thus, was one of
a federal constitutional barrier. The Supreme Court of Ohio
certainly so viewed it. It referred to both
Hooven I and
Michelin in federal constitutional terms, and it described
the issue before it as whether the contested tax "may
constitutionally be assessed" in light of the Import-Export Clause.
4 Ohio St.3d at 171, 447 N.E.2d at 1297. And it viewed collateral
estoppel in the light of precepts set forth in
Commissioner v.
Sunnen, 333 U. S. 591
(1948), a federal income tax case. From this premise, the Ohio
court moved to its judgment that the levy of the tax was "barred by
the doctrine of collateral estoppel." 4 Ohio St.3d at 173, 447
N.E.2d at 1299.
Collateral estoppel, therefore, was applied as a matter of
federal, not state, law. We perceive in this case no state law
Page 466 U. S. 362
overtones that, by any stretch of the imagination, could serve
to insulate the case from review here. We are concerned with
federal issues and a contention that a state court disregarded a
federal constitutional ruling of this Court. The issue, then, is
reviewable here.
See Deposit Bank v. Frankfort,
191 U. S. 499
(1903);
Stoll v. Gottlieb, 305 U.
S. 165 (1938);
Toucey v. New York Life Ins.
Co., 314 U. S. 118,
314 U. S. 129,
n. 1 (1941).
B
We move on to respondent's collateral estoppel argument. It is
true, of course, that the parties in
Hooven I were the
same parties as those before us in the present case. It is true
that the property sought to be taxed for 1976 and 1977 identifies
with the property sought to be taxed for 1938, 1939, and 1940 in
Hooven I. And it is true that the tax involved is the same
Ohio nondiscriminatory
ad valorem personal property tax.
The parties, the tax, and the goods imported and their containers
are the same. The Tax Commissioner does not dispute this. Tr. of
Oral Arg. 12. Collateral estoppel concepts, therefore, might have
an initial appeal.
The years involved in this tax case, however, are not the same
tax years at issue in
Hooven I. Because of this,
Commissioner v. Sunnen, supra, is pertinent and, indeed,
is controlling. That case concerned licenses granted by a patent
owner and his assignment of interests in the royalty agreements to
his wife. An earlier decision of the Board of Tax Appeals,
involving the same facts, questions, and parties but different tax
years, was held not to be conclusive under the doctrine of
collateral estoppel because certain intervening decisions of this
Court made manifest the error of the result that had been reached
by the Board. 333 U.S. at
333 U. S.
602-607. The reason for not applying the collateral
estoppel doctrine in the present case is even stronger than that in
Sunnen, for here the constitutional analysis of the
earlier case is repudiated by this Court's intervening
pronouncement.
Page 466 U. S. 363
Because the Supreme Court of Ohio did not apply the principles
of
Sunnen, its judgment must be vacated and the case
remanded. Failure to follow
Sunnen's dictates would lead
to the very tax inequality that the admonition of that case was
designed to avoid. Hooven then would be immune forever from tax on
its imported goods because of an early decision based upon a now
repudiated legal doctrine, while all other taxpayers would have
their tax liabilities determined upon the basis of the
fundamentally different approach adopted in
Michelin.
See Sunnen, 333 U.S. at
333 U. S.
599.
Petitioner, therefore, is not barred by collateral estoppel in
asserting the increases in tax for 1976 and 1977.
IV
The case is before us without a developed factual record. Hooven
takes the position that it is entitled to an opportunity to
demonstrate that the facts of this case are significantly different
from those of
Michelin, so that the result in that case is
not controlling here. Hooven suggests that, in
Michelin,
the tires had been mingled with domestically manufactured tires and
had been arranged and stored for sale and delivery; moreover, the
tires were finished goods. Here, according to Hooven, its imported
fibers are not for sale, are not finished goods, and are destined
for incorporation into a manufacturing process. Hooven further
asserts that, once a factual record has been developed, a court
will be in a position to examine the case in the light of any other
constitutional provision respondent is then in a position to
invoke, including the Foreign Commerce Clause.
Any development of the record, of course, should take place in
the state courts and first be evaluated there. Accordingly, we make
no judgment on the merits of Hooven's constitutional claims. The
judgment of the Supreme Court of Ohio is therefore vacated, and the
case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Because the respondents there, the county Tax Commissioner and
Tax Assessors, did not cross-petition for certiorari, the Georgia
courts' ruling that tubes still in corrugated shipping cartons were
immune from the tax was not before this Court for review.
Michelin Tire Corp. v. Wages, 423 U.S. at
423 U. S. 279,
n. 2.
[
Footnote 2]
Since
Michelin, Hooven I has been cited by this Court
only twice.
See California Retail Liquor Dealers Assn. v.
Midcal Aluminum, Inc., 445 U. S. 97,
445 U. S. 111
(1980), and
Kleppe v. New Mexico, 426 U.
S. 529,
426 U. S. 540
(1976). Neither citation bears upon the issue before us in the
present case.