Since 1959, California has imposed an excise tax on the
distribution of cigarettes, and respondent Chemehuevi Indian Tribe
originally remitted the tax to petitioner State Board of
Equalization (Board) insofar as the tax was imposed on the
distribution of cigarettes to non-Indians who purchased the
cigarettes from the Tribe on its reservation in California.
However, in 1977, the Tribe enacted its own cigarette tax and
ceased collecting and remitting the state tax. When California
sought to obtain the unremitted tax, the Tribe filed suit in
Federal District Court for injunctive relief and a declaratory
judgment that the Board could not lawfully apply the state tax to
cigarettes sold by the Tribe to non-Indian purchasers. The court
held that the Board's counterclaim for damages in the amount of
back taxes allegedly owed by the Tribe was barred by sovereign
immunity, but that California could lawfully require the Tribe to
collect state taxes imposed on cigarettes that it sold to
non-Indians. The Court of Appeals affirmed the first determination,
but reversed the second.
Held: The Court of Appeals erred insofar as it held
that the Tribe could not be required to collect the tax imposed by
California on non-Indian purchasers at tribal smoke shops. It is
not necessary that a state cigarette tax statute contain an express
statement that the tax is to be passed on to the ultimate purchaser
in order for the State to require a tribe to collect the tax from
non-Indian purchasers and remit the amounts of such tax to the
State. If the legal incidence of the tax falls on non-Indian
purchasers, the State may impose on the tribe the burden of
collecting the tax. The proper test for determining the legal
incidence of the tax is nothing more than a fair interpretation of
the taxing statute as written and applied. The fairest reading of
California's cigarette scheme as a whole is that the legal
incidence of the tax falls on consuming purchasers if the vendors
are untaxable, and thus the Board has the right to require the
Tribe to collect the tax on the Board's behalf with regard to
purchases of cigarettes by non-Indian consumers.
Certiorari granted; 757 F.2d 1047, reversed in part.
Page 474 U. S. 10
PER CURIAM.
Since 1959, California has imposed an excise tax on the
distribution of cigarettes. Respondent Chemehuevi Indian Tribe
sells cigarettes on its reservation in southeastern California. The
Tribe originally remitted the state tax to petitioner State Board
of Equalization (petitioner) insofar as that tax was imposed on the
distribution of cigarettes to non-Indian purchasers. But in 1977,
the Tribe enacted a cigarette tax of its own that was the
equivalent of the California tax, and then ceased collecting and
remitting the state tax. When California sought to obtain the
unremitted tax from the Tribe, the Tribe brought an action in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of
California requesting a declaratory judgment that petitioner could
not lawfully apply the state tax to cigarettes sold by the Tribe to
non-Indian purchasers. Respondent Tribe also sought an injunction
preventing petitioner from enforcing the state cigarette tax
against it. Petitioner counterclaimed for damages in the amount of
back taxes claimed to be owed by respondent Tribe.
The District Court held that petitioner's counterclaim was
barred by sovereign immunity,
492 F. Supp.
55 (1979), but also held that California could lawfully require
the Tribe to collect cigarette excise taxes imposed on cigarettes
that it sold to non-Indians. On appeal, the Court of Appeals
affirmed the first determination, but reversed the second. 757 F.2d
1047 (CA9 1985).
The Court of Appeals observed that, unlike the Washington
statute that we considered in
Washington v. Confederated Tribes
of Colville Indian Reservation, 447 U.
S. 134 (1980), California's cigarette tax statute "does
not contain any . . .
explicit pass-through'
language," 757 F.2d at 1056 (emphasis added), and that therefore
the question of the legal incidence of the California cigarette tax
was not controlled by our decision in that case. Id. at
1055-1056. It went on to observe that a "legislative intent to
impose even a collection
Page 474 U. S. 11
burden should be
explicitly stated."
Id. at
1056, n. 11 (emphasis added). The Court of Appeals concluded that
the California excise tax, properly construed, did not impose
liability on the ultimate purchaser of cigarettes when the vendor
was not a taxable entity.
Id. at 1057, and n. 13.
We think that the Court of Appeals applied a mistaken standard
in determining whether or not the California tax on cigarettes was
sufficiently like the Washington tax involved in
Colville
so that the result in the latter case should be controlling here.
None of our cases has suggested that an express statement that the
tax is to be passed on to the ultimate purchaser is necessary
before a State may require a tribe to collect cigarette taxes from
non-Indian purchasers and remit the amounts of such tax to the
State. Nor do our cases suggest that the only test for whether the
legal incidence of such a tax falls on purchasers is whether the
taxing statute contains an express "pass on and collect" provision.
Indeed, the Washington statute in
Colville did not contain
an express pass-through provision; the conclusion of the District
Court in that case, which we accepted, was that the statutory
scheme required consumers to pay the tax whenever the vendor was
untaxable, and thus the legal incidence of the tax fell on
purchasers in such cases. 447 U.S. at
447 U. S. 142,
and n. 9. The test to be derived from cases such as
Colville and
Moe v. Confederated Salish and Kootenai
Tribes, 425 U. S. 463,
425 U. S.
481-483 (1976), is nothing more than a fair
interpretation of the taxing statute as written and applied,
without any requirement that pass-through provisions or collection
requirements be "explicitly stated."
Cf. United States v.
Mississippi Tax Comm'n, 421 U. S. 599,
427 U. S.
607-608 (1975).
We think the fairest reading of California's cigarette scheme as
a whole is that the legal incidence of the tax falls on consuming
purchasers if the vendors are untaxable. California Rev. & Tax
Code Ann. § 30107 (West 1979) clearly seems to place on
consumers the obligation to pay the tax for all previously untaxed
cigarettes. The Board's implementing
Page 474 U. S. 12
regulation does not restrict this obligation to the
hypotheticals contained in the regulation; it merely indicates that
the consumer has a duty to pay any tax directly to the Board when
the vendor is the type of entity on which the State cannot impose a
collection requirement.
See Cal.Admin. Register 72, No.
16, Tit. 18, Art. 16, § 4091. The regulation does not address
itself to the question of legal incidence. And since both
Colville and
Moe hold that, if the legal
incidence of a state excise tax falls on non-Indian purchasers, the
State may impose on the tribe the burden of collecting that tax
from the purchasers, 447 U.S. at
447 U. S. 159;
425 U.S. at
425 U. S.
482-483, this particular regulation is inapplicable to
purchasers from Indian tribes if the ultimate liability for the tax
falls on the purchaser when the vendor is not taxable. We think
that, in the context of the entire California statutory scheme,
interpreted without any of the restrictive requirements which the
Court of Appeals employed, Cal.Rev. & Tax Code Ann. §
30108(a) (West 1979) evidences an intent to impose on the Tribe
such a "pass on and collect" requirement. We hold that the legal
incidence of California's cigarette tax falls on the non-Indian
consumers of cigarettes purchased from respondent's smoke shop, and
that petitioner has the right to require respondent to collect the
tax on petitioner's behalf.
The petition for certiorari is granted on the first three
questions it presents. Insofar as the Court of Appeals held that
respondent might not be required to collect the cigarette tax
imposed by California on non-Indian purchasers at tribal smoke
shops, its judgment is
Reversed.
JUSTICE BRENNAN would deny certiorari.
JUSTICE MARSHALL dissents from this summary disposition, which
has been ordered without affording the parties prior notice or an
opportunity to file briefs on the merits.
See Maggio v.
Fulford, 462 U. S. 111,
462 U. S.
120-121 (1983) (MARSHALL,
Page 474 U. S. 13
J., dissenting);
Wyrick v. Fields, 459 U. S.
42,
459 U. S. 51-52
(1982) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting).
JUSTICE BLACKMUN would grant certiorari and give the case
plenary consideration.
JUSTICE STEVENS, dissenting.
The courts of appeals are better qualified to decide questions
of state law than is this Court. Most circuit judges formerly
practiced in States within their respective circuits. As judges,
they must confront state law issues on a regular basis. For these
reasons, it has long been the settled practice in this Court to
show the greatest deference to opinions of the courts of appeals on
questions of state law.
"In dealing with issues of state law that enter into judgments
of federal courts, we are hesitant to overrule decisions by federal
courts skilled in the law of particular states unless their
conclusions are shown to be unreasonable."
Propper v. Clark, 337 U. S. 472,
337 U. S.
486-487 (1949).
See also Haring v. Prosise,
462 U. S. 306,
462 U. S. 314,
n. 8 (1983) ("a challenge to state law determinations by the Court
of Appeals will rarely constitute an appropriate subject of this
Court's review");
Leroy v. Great Western United Corp.,
443 U. S. 173,
443 U. S. 181,
n. 11 (1979) ("it is not our practice to re-examine state law
determinations of this kind");
Bishop v. Wood,
426 U. S. 341,
426 U. S.
345-347 (1976), and cases cited therein.
The outcome of this case depends entirely on an interpretation
of the California Revenue and Taxation Code. I am not prepared to
say that the Court of Appeals' construction of the California Code
is correct or incorrect. [
Footnote
1] I am prepared,
Page 474 U. S. 14
however, to disagree with the Court's conclusion that we should
undertake to decide the state law question in a case of this kind.
Even if the Court is correct in its view that the Court of Appeals
applied a mistaken standard in construing the California tax,
[
Footnote 2] that premise does
not justify the action of the Court today in undertaking to decide
the state law issue on its own -- particularly when that issue has
not been fully briefed and argued. At most, the Court should remand
the case to the Court of Appeals for a reconsideration under the
proper standard. Such a remand would at least demonstrate that this
Court has not forgotten that "federal judges who deal regularly
with questions of state law in their respective districts and
circuits are in a better position than we" to interpret state law.
Butner v. United States, 440 U. S. 48,
440 U. S. 58
(1979). Because the Court's summary disposition conveys a different
message, I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
The Court of Appeals summarized its construction of the
California statute as follows:
"Upon careful examination, it is apparent that section 30108(a)
is merely a procedural section that denotes the manner in which a
vendor shall collect a tax from a purchaser if and when the
purchaser is obligated to pay the tax. In the case of a sale with
respect to which 'the [usual cigarette] tax imposed by Section
30101 is inapplicable,' the vendor is required to collect the tax
from the purchaser either (a) at the time of sale, if the purchaser
is then obligated to pay the tax, or (b) if the purchaser is not
then obligated to pay the tax, at the time the purchaser becomes so
obligated. Cal.Rev. & Tax. Code § 30108(a) (West 1979).
Collection by the vendor is mandatory, but only if and when the
purchaser has a tax obligation. The section does not contain any
substantive provisions that themselves impose any tax or that
indicate when section 30101 is inapplicable. Nor does it specify
under which situations a purchaser is obligated to pay the tax at
the time of sale or, if the purchaser is not then obligated, when
the purchaser becomes so obligated. We find no language in section
30108 -- the only section on which the Board relies for its
argument that the incidence of the tax falls upon the purchaser --
that remotely suggests a legislative intent to have the purchaser
pay the tax whenever the vendor is a non-taxable entity."
757 F.2d 1047, 1056-1057 (CA9 1985) (footnotes omitted).
[
Footnote 2]
The portion of the Court of Appeals opinion which I have quoted
in
n 1,
supra,
suggests that the Court of Appeals would have reached the same
conclusion even if it had not used the unfortunate word "explicit"
earlier in its opinion.