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Nashville, C. St. L. Ry. v. Wallace

U.S.
Feb 6, 1933
288 U.S. 249 (1933)

Summary

holding that federal courts had jurisdiction over claim brought under state declaratory-judgment law

Summary of this case from Brackeen v. Haaland

Opinion

APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE.

No. 176.

Argued December 12, 1932. Decided February 6, 1933.

1. Whether an appeal to this Court from a judgment of a state court in a proceeding under a state "declaratory judgments" law, presents a "case or controversy" within the jurisdiction of this Court, depends not upon the name or the form, but upon the nature and substance, of the proceeding and the effect of the judgment upon the rights asserted by the appellant. P. 260. 2. The Tennessee Declaratory Judgments Act, as construed by the Supreme Court of the State, may be invoked only when the complainant asserts rights which are challenged by the defendant, and presents for decision an actual controversy, to which he is a party, capable of final adjudication by the judgment to be rendered; and no judgment will be rendered when all the parties who will be adversely affected by it are not before the court. In a suit under the Act to secure a judicial determination that a tax levied against the complainant, and about to be enforced by defendant state officers, was invalid under the Federal Constitution; which, in substance, differed from the ordinary injunction suit only in the absence of a prayer for an injunction and of an allegation of irreparable injury, — Held that a judgment upholding the tax and affirming dismissal of the bill on the merits, was reviewable by this Court. Pp. 260-264. 3. While the ordinary course of judicial procedure results in a judgment requiring an award of process or execution to carry it into effect, such relief is not an indispensable adjunct to the exercise of the judicial function. P. 263. 4. The Constitution does not require that the case or controversy should be presented by traditional forms of procedure, invoking only traditional remedies; the judiciary clause defined and limited judicial power, not the particular method by which that power might be invoked. P. 264. 5. When the judicial power is invoked to review judgments of state courts, the ultimate constitutional purpose is protection of rights arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States; changes by the States in the form or method by which federal rights are brought to final adjudication in their courts do not preclude review by this Court, so long as the case retains the essentials of an adversary proceeding, involving a real, not a hypothetical, controversy, which is finally determined by the judgment below. P. 264. 6. As the prayer for relief by injunction is not a necessary prerequisite to the exercise of judicial power, allegations of threatened irreparable injury, which are material only if an injunction is asked, may likewise be dispensed with, if in other respects the controversy is real and substantial. P. 264. 7. A railroad company brings gasoline into Tennessee, stores it in its tanks, and withdraws and uses it as required as a source of motive power for moving its interstate trains in that State and in others. No ascertainable part of the gasoline when imported has a destination beyond the local storage tanks. Held: (1) That, upon being unloaded and stored, the gasoline ceases to be a subject of interstate commerce, and loses its immunity as such from state taxation. P. 265. (2) A Tennessee "privilege tax" on the storage of gasoline within the State and its withdrawal from storage for sale or use, when applied to petitioner's gasoline, is not a tax on the use of the gasoline as an instrument of commerce, and burdens the function of interstate commerce too indirectly and remotely to transgress constitutional limitations. P. 267. 8. The power to tax property — the sum of all the rights and powers incident to ownership — necessarily includes the power to tax its constituent parts. As the gasoline in storage could be taxed by the State, as property, notwithstanding its prospective use as an instrument of interstate commerce, the State can likewise tax the successive exercise of two of the powers incident to its ownership, storage and withdrawal from storage, both completed before interstate commerce begins. P. 268. 9. The constitutional power to levy taxes does not depend upon the enjoyment by the taxpayer of any special benefit from the use of the funds raised by taxation. P. 268. 10. The allegations of the bill showing a heavier state tax burden upon railroads than upon common carriers by motor bus, fall short of alleging a discrimination forbidden by the commerce clause or by the Fourteenth Amendment. P. 268. Affirmed.

APPEAL from the affirmance of a decree dismissing a bill challenging a Tennessee excise tax.

Mr. Fitzgerald Hall, with whom Mr. Frank Slemons was on the brief, for appellant.

In this case a citizen and a taxpayer has been formally called on by the proper public officials to pay taxes alleged to be due now. The taxpayer denies liability. Suit is brought to determine that liability. The question is not an academic one; the amount involved is fixed and certain; the demand to pay has been made; and the question at issue is whether payment is legally due. The taxpayer filed a bill, and the public officials obliged by law to collect are made respondents. Process is served in the ordinary way. The court is asked to determine whether the railway owes the tax actually claimed or not. And the Tennessee Supreme Court decided that question.

The Tennessee Declaratory Judgments Act by its own words provides for the determination of rights, and that this may be done by a declaration either in the affirmative or negative. Further, that the judgment or decree will terminate the controversy. Trials by jury may be had under the Act, and issues of law and fact both are thus finally determined.

The Tennessee Supreme Court has powers under the Tennessee constitution fairly comparable in this respect to the powers of this Court under the Federal Constitution. Muskrat v. United States, 219 U.S. 346; In re Cumberland Power Co., 147 Tenn. 504; Miller v. Miller, 149 Tenn. 463.

In construing this Declaratory Judgments Act, the Tennessee Supreme Court declines to merely give advice. It will not take jurisdiction unless actual parties — and all of them — are before the court, representing direct and adverse interests on actual, as distinguished from academic, issues. There is no federal case like the one now presented of which this Court has declined to take jurisdiction. Here is an actual and acute controversy.

Decisions of the Tennessee Supreme Court show the diligence of that court in avoiding giving mere advisory opinions. It requires, always, as in the instant case, an actually present controversy, with all the proper adverse parties before the court; and when decision is made it is final and further proceedings are not necessary.

The railway's obligation to pay a specific sum, to-wit, $13,381.23, as taxes, has been finally determined, unless this Court gives it relief.

The Tennessee legislature, apparently thinking only of filling stations, undertook to make those actually in the gasoline business collect from the road-users and pay such collections over to a special fund "to be used solely in the construction and maintenance of a highway system in the State," as privilege taxes. The road-user actually pays, and knows and understands that he is so paying.

The trouble arose when it was found that some nonroad-users consumed large quantities of gasoline. Unfortunately the test case of Foster Creighton v. Graham, 154 Tenn. 412, involved a road-user; and the statutory charge was properly sustained, but on the wrong grounds.

Appellant railway has automobiles using the public highways and pays, and should pay, compensation for such use, as these statutes provide. But the railway uses other gasoline on its own private property in railroad operation. This was a contingency which obviously the legislative mind did not anticipate.

If these statutes are taken literally and construed to mean exactly what they say, namely, that they impose privilege taxes for the doing of a gasoline business, then appellant railway may not consistently with the due process and commerce clauses of the Federal Constitution be taxed thereunder, as it is not engaged in the gasoline business and can, under its charter and the laws of Tennessee, engage in no business except that of operating a railroad.

The operation of a railroad involves the doing of many different things, all tending to the same end, namely, the transportation of persons and property. A State can not, under the due process and commerce clauses, reduce "railroading" to its basic elements and claim that, because a railroad uses steel, water, lumber, gasoline and coal, it is engaged in the steel business, the water business, the lumber business, the gasoline business, and the coal business; and, having made this artificial separation by legislative fiat, it can not then impose a separate privilege tax — wholly distinct from the privilege of doing an intrastate railroad business — on the doing of each of these various things.

There is no sale in Tennessee of the gasoline here involved, and none of it is consumed on public property; but all of it is used on privately owned railroad property in railroad operation. While the railway does both an interstate and intrastate business, there is no practicable way so to separate the gasoline thus used. It is consumed in the same way as coal in the fire box of a locomotive or water in its boiler. As there are no local sales, as the gasoline is not used in a local business, as it is not consumed on the public highways, to impose a tax on the use of this gasoline — the amount of the so-called tax increasing as interstate business increases — results, practically, in a direct burden on interstate commerce.

Forty per cent. of the gasoline stops only a few days at the Nashville shops in Tennessee for inspection — then moves out in interstate commerce for consumption in Alabama, Georgia, and Kentucky. This gasoline never comes to rest, in the technical sense, in Tennessee.

The charges imposed by these statutes are not general property taxes, nor taxes on local sales, nor on the doing of a local business. They are nothing more or less than compensation for the use of "special facilities" furnished at great expense by the State. It is not due process of law to force a citizen to pay compensation (as distinguished from a tax) for something it does not use.

To make a railroad (wholly separate from taxes proper) thus help construct and maintain highways for its competitors by motor vehicle — making those using and those not using the highways pay on exactly the same basis — is so palpably arbitrary as to lack due process of law, and so viciously discriminatory as to deny it the equal protection of the laws; and is a burden on interstate commerce.

Common carriers by railroad in Tennessee are subject to various taxes which together constitute one system. Common carriers by motor vehicle are subject to various taxes; and these jointly constitute another system. It is entirely proper for the State thus to classify; and it is not indispensable that the ultimate burden or "economic weight" on common carriers by railroad and common carriers by motor vehicle be exactly the same. But it is indispensable that the tax burden on these two competing businesses be in their ultimate effect relatively the same. Yet, the system in Tennessee as applicable to railroads imposes a burden, everything considered, over four hundred per cent. greater than the system applicable to common carriers by motor vehicle. This is arbitrary action and indefensible discrimination under the Fourteenth Amendment.

Messrs. W.F. Barry, Jr., and Edwin F. Hunt, Assistant Attorneys General of Tennessee, with whom Mr. R.H. Beeler, Attorney General, was on the brief, for appellees.

The opinion of the Supreme Court of Tennessee recognized and treated the suit merely as one in which a declaratory judgment was sought and obtained. The only relief sought from the Supreme Court of the United States in this proceeding is a reversal of a declaratory judgment rendered by the state courts. The effect of a consideration by this Court of the present case upon its merits will be the rendition by it of a declaratory judgment.

This Court has declared that the federal judiciary has no power to render a declaratory judgment. It has denied that the federal district courts have the power to proceed under a state declaratory judgment statute. It has said that the fact that a case is not a moot one, the fact that a final judgment might be given, the fact that there are adverse parties in interest, and the fact that the plaintiff in error has a real and substantial interest in the question, do not constitute a case or controversy within the meaning of Art. III of the Constitution. All of these elements the Supreme Court of Tennessee has said are required before a suit brought under the state Declaratory Judgment Law will be entertained; but the presence of these elements does not prevent the suit from being simply a declaratory proceeding. Indeed, the Supreme Court of Tennessee, in sustaining the validity of the Declaratory Judgment Law, recognized that its state constitution did not impose the same limitations upon the jurisdiction of its courts as was imposed by the Federal Constitution upon the federal judiciary. Miller v. Miller, 149 Tenn. 484.

It is true that the declaratory judgment of the state courts in this proceeding involved a federal question, but this is merely another manner of saying that the proceeding presents a case of which this Court would take jurisdiction "if it were the subject of judicial cognizance" by the federal courts. As this Court said in Postum Cereal Co. v. California Fig Nut Co., 272 U.S. 673, even if the effect of this conclusion were to leave the plaintiff in error without any other remedy, "as to which we express no opinion, it can not furnish a reason for exceeding the constitutional powers of this Court."

For the foregoing reasons, it is respectfully insisted that the present proceeding is not a case or controversy within the meaning of Art. III of the Federal Constitution, and that this Court is without jurisdiction.

The statutes in question impose a privilege tax upon all persons storing gasoline in Tennessee and thereafter withdrawing it from storage whether for sale or other use. Foster Creighton Co. v. Graham, 154 Tenn. 412, 420; Quick Service Tire Co. v. Smith, 156 Tenn. 96, 102.

The construction of a state statute by the highest court of the State is binding upon this court.

Under the constitution of Tennessee the Legislature has unlimited power to tax privileges, which power may be exercised in any manner, at its discretion.

A State has the power, unfettered by the commerce clause, to impose a privilege tax upon the sale or storage of gasoline which has reached its destination, has ceased to move in interstate commerce and has been transferred from the tank cars in which transported into a storage warehouse. Of course, the tax imposed is valid only if it does not discriminate against the gasoline as an article coming from interstate commerce. Woodruff v. Parham, 8 Wall. 123; Hinson v. Lott, 8 Wall. 148; Brown v. Houston, 114 U.S. 622; American Steel Wire Co. v. Speed, 192 U.S. 522; Sonneborn Bros. v. Keeling, 262 U.S. 506; Hart Refineries v. Harmon, 278 U.S. 499.

The fact that, at the time of the storage of the gasoline and at the time of its withdrawal from storage, the owner intends that the gasoline, or a portion of it, shall be used in carrying on interstate commerce, does not affect the right of the State to tax the storage and withdrawal. Coe v. Erroll, 116 U.S. 517; Heisler v. Thomas Collieries Co., 260 U.S. 245; Crescent Cotton Oil Co. v. Mississippi, 257 U.S. 129; Texas Co. v. Brown, 258 U.S. 466; Oliver Iron Co. v. Lord, 262 U.S. 172; Hope Gas Co. v. Hall, 274 U.S. 284; N.J. Bell Tel. Co. v. State Board, 280 U.S. 338; Eastern Air Transport v. Tax Comm'n, 285 U.S. 147; Gregg Dyeing Co. v. Query, 286 U.S. 472.

The statutes in question impose a privilege tax upon the sale or storage of gasoline in Tennessee, and not a charge for the use of the state highways. Pub. Acts, Tenn., 1927, c. 54; id., 1931, c. 45; id., 2d Ex. Sess., 1931, c. 11; Kane v. New Jersey, 242 U.S. 160; Clark v. Poor, 274 U.S. 554; Sprout v. South Bend, 277 U.S. 169; Interstate Transit Co. v. Lindsey, 283 U.S. 183; Foster Creighton Co. v. Graham, 154 Tenn. 412.

Common carriers by railroad and common carriers by motor vehicle constitute different classes of taxpayers, which the State is not required to tax in the same manner or equally. The fact that the tax burden imposed upon carriers by railroad may be greater than that imposed upon carriers by motor vehicle does not constitute a violation of the due process clause or the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Dane v. Jackson, 256 U.S. 289; Kelly v. Pittsburgh, 104 U.S. 78; Green v. Frazier, 253 U.S. 233; Shaffer v. Carter, 252 U.S. 37; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wisconsin, 247 U.S. 132; Michigan Central R. Co. v. Powers, 201 U.S. 245; Citizens Tel. Co. v. Fuller, 229 U.S. 322; Quong Wing v. Kirkendall, 223 U.S. 59; St. Louis S.W.R. Co. v. Arkansas, 235 U.S. 350; Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co. v. Matthews, 174 U.S. 96; Lake Superior Lines v. Lord, 271 U.S. 575; Oliver Iron Co. v. Lord, 262 U.S. 172.

By leave of Court, Messrs. Edwin M. Borchard and Charles E. Clark, professors in the Yale Law School, filed as amici curiae, an elaborate brief dealing with the nature and history of declaratory judgments, and sustaining the jurisdiction to review the judgment in this case.


Appellant brought suit in the Chancery Court of Davidson County, Tennessee, under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act of that state, c. 29, Tennessee Public Acts, 1923, to secure a judicial declaration that a state excise tax levied on the storage of gasoline, c. 58, Tennessee Public Acts, 1923, as amended by c. 67, Tennessee Public Acts, 1925, is, as applied to appellant, invalid under the commerce clause and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. A decree for appellees was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State, and the case comes here on appeal under § 237(a) of the Judicial Code.

The procedure authorized by this statute has been extensively adopted both in this country and abroad. It is said that the Uniform Act is in force in 16 of the States and Porto Rico and that similar statutes have been enacted in 13 States, Hawaii and the Philippines. For a discussion of the history of this procedural device in France, Germany, Spain, Spanish America, Scotland, England and India, as well as in the United States, and the types of controversies in which it has been invoked, see Edwin M. Borchard, The Declaratory Judgment — A Needed Procedural Reform, 28 Yale L.J. 1, 105; Judicial Relief from Peril and Insecurity, 45 Harv. L. Rev. 793, 806; The Constitutionality of Declaratory Judgments, 31 Columbia L. Rev. 561.

After the jurisdictional statement required by Rule 12 was submitted, this Court, in ordering the cause set down for argument, invited the attention of counsel to the question "whether a case or controversy is presented in view of the nature of the proceedings in the state court." This preliminary question, which has been elaborately briefed and argued, must first be considered, for the judicial power with which this Court is invested by Art. 3, § 1 of the Constitution, extends by Art. 3, § 2, only to "cases" and "controversies"; if no "case" or "controversy" is presented for decision, we are without power to review the decree of the court below. Muskrat v. United States, 219 U.S. 346.

In determining whether this litigation presents a case within the appellate jurisdiction of this Court, we are concerned, not with form, but with substance. See Fidelity National Bank v. Swope, 274 U.S. 123; compare Gasoline Products Co. v. Champlin Refining Co., 283 U.S. 494, 498. Hence, we look not to the label which the legislature has attached to the procedure followed in the state courts, or to the description of the judgment which is brought here for review, in popular parlance, as "declaratory," but to the nature of the proceeding which the statute authorizes, and the effect of the judgment rendered upon the rights which the appellant asserts.

Section 1 of the Tennessee Declaratory Judgments Act confers jurisdiction on courts of record "to declare rights . . . whether or not further relief is or could be claimed" and provides that "no action or proceeding shall be open to objection on the ground that a declaratory judgment or decree is prayed for. The declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect and such declaration shall have the force and effect of a final judgment or decree." By § 2 it is provided that "any person . . . whose rights, status or other legal relations are affected by a statute . . . may have determined any question of construction or validity arising under the . . . statute . . . and obtain a declaration of rights . . . thereunder."

Under § 6, the Court may refuse to render a declaratory judgment where, if rendered, it "would not terminate the uncertainty or controversy giving rise to the proceeding." Declaratory judgments may, in accordance with § 7, be reviewed as are other orders, judgments or decrees, and under § 8 "further relief based on a declaratory judgment or decree may be granted whenever necessary or proper." Section 11 requires that "when declaratory relief is sought all persons shall be made parties who have or claim any interest which would be affected by the declaration, and no declaration shall prejudice the rights of persons not parties to the proceeding."

This statute has often been considered by the highest court of Tennessee, which has consistently held that its provisions may only be invoked when the complainant asserts rights which are challenged by the defendant, and presents for decision an actual controversy to which he is a party, capable of final adjudication by the judgment or decree to be rendered. Miller v. Miller, 149 Tenn. 463; 261 S.W. 965; Goetz v. Smith, 152 Tenn. 451, 465; 278 S.W. 417; Hodges v. Hamblen County, 152 Tenn. 395; 277 S.W. 901; Cummings v. Shipp, 156 Tenn. 595; 3 S.W.2d 1062; Tennessee Eastern Electric Co. v. Hannah, 157 Tenn. 582, 587; 12 S.W.2d 372; Perry v. Elizabethton, 160 Tenn. 102, 106; 22 S.W.2d 359; Nashville Trust Co. v. Dake, 162 Tenn. 356, 359; 36 S.W.2d 905. It has also held that no judgment or decree will be rendered when all the parties who will be adversely affected by it are not before the Court. Harrell v. American Home Mortgage Co., 161 Tenn. 646; 32 S.W.2d 1023; Sadler v. Mitchell, 162 Tenn. 363, 367; 36 S.W.2d 891.

Proceeding in accordance with this statute, appellant filed its bill of complaint in the state Chancery Court, joining as defendants the appellees, the Attorney General and the state officials charged with the duty of collecting the gasoline privilege tax imposed by the Tennessee statute. The complaint alleged that appellant is engaged in purchasing gasoline outside the state, which it stores within the state pending its use within and without the state in the conduct of appellant's business as an interstate rail carrier; that appellees assert that the statute taxes the privilege of storing gasoline within the state and is applicable to appellant; that they have demanded payment of the tax in a specified amount and have determined to enforce their demand and that, under the circumstances alleged, the statute as applied to appellant is invalid under the commerce clause and the Fourteenth Amendment. The relief prayed was that the taxing act be declared unconstitutional as applied to appellant. The Chancery Court sustained the appellees' demurrer to the sufficiency in law of the allegations relied on to establish the unconstitutionality of the tax. Its final decree dismissing the bill on the merits has been affirmed by the highest court of the state.

That the issues thus raised and judicially determined would constitute a case or controversy if raised and decided in a suit brought by the taxpayer to enjoin collection of the tax cannot be questioned. See Risty v. Chicago, R.I. P. Ry. Co., 270 U.S. 378; compare Terrace v. Thompson, 263 U.S. 197; Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510; Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S. 365. The proceeding terminating in the decree below, unlike that in South Spring Hill Gold Mining Co. v. Amador Medean Gold Mining Co., 145 U.S. 300; Muskrat v. United States, 219 U.S. 346, was between adverse parties, seeking a determination of their legal rights upon the facts alleged in the bill and admitted by the demurrer. Unlike Fairchild v. Hughes, 258 U.S. 126; Texas v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 258 U.S. 158; Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U.S. 447; New Jersey v. Sargent, 269 U.S. 328, valuable legal rights asserted by the complainant and threatened with imminent invasion by appellees, will be directly affected to a specific and substantial degree by the decision of the question of law; and unlike Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1; Field v. Clark, 143 U.S. 649; Pacific States Telephone Telegraph Co. v. Oregon, 223 U.S. 118; Keller v. Potomac Electric Power Co., 261 U.S. 428; Federal Radio Commission v. General Electric Co., 281 U.S. 464, the question lends itself to judicial determination and is of the kind which this Court traditionally decides. The relief sought is a definitive adjudication of the disputed constitutional right of the appellant, in the circumstances alleged, to be free from the tax, see Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner, 279 U.S. 716, 724; and that adjudication is not, as in Gordon v. United States, 2 Wall. 561, and Postum Cereal Co. v. California Fig Nut Co., 272 U.S. 693, subject to revision by some other and more authoritative agency. Obviously the appellant, whose duty to pay the tax will be determined by the decision of this case, is not attempting to secure an abstract determination by the Court of the validity of a statute, compare Muskrat v. United States, supra, 361; Texas v. Interstate Commerce Commission, supra, 162; or a decision advising what the law would be on an uncertain or hypothetical state of facts, as was thought to be the case in Liberty Warehouse Co. v. Grannis, 273 U.S. 70, and Willing v. Chicago Auditorium Assn., 277 U.S. 274; see also Warehouse Co. v. Tobacco Growers Assn., 276 U.S. 71, 88; compare Arizona v. California, 283 U.S. 423, 463. Thus the narrow question presented for determination is whether the controversy before us, which would be justiciable in this Court if presented in a suit for injunction, is any the less so because through a modified procedure appellant has been permitted to present it in the state courts, without praying for an injunction or alleging that irreparable injury will result from the collection of the tax.

While the ordinary course of judicial procedure results in a judgment requiring an award of process or execution to carry it into effect, such relief is not an indispensable adjunct to the exercise of the judicial function. Fidelity National Bank v. Swope, supra, 132. This Court has often exerted its judicial power to adjudicate boundaries between states, although it gave no injunction or other relief beyond the determination of the legal rights which were the subject of controversy between the parties, Louisiana v. Mississippi, 202 U.S. 1; Arkansas v. Tennessee, 246 U.S. 158; Georgia v. South Carolina, 257 U.S. 516; Oklahoma v. Texas, 272 U.S. 21; Michigan v. Wisconsin, 272 U.S. 398, and to review judgments of the Court of Claims, although no process issues against the Government. United States v. Jones, 119 U.S. 477; compare District of Columbia v. Eslin, 183 U.S. 62; Ex parte Pocono Pines Hotels Co., 285 U.S. 526, reported below in 73 Ct. Cls. 447. As we said in Fidelity National Bank v. Swope, supra, 132, "Naturalization proceedings, Tutun v. United States, 270 U.S. 568; suits to determine a matrimonial or other status; suits for instructions to a trustee or for the construction of a will; Traphagen v. Levy, 45 N.J. Eq. 448; 18 A. 222; bills of interpleader so far as the stakeholder is concerned, Wakeman v. Kingsland, 46 N.J. Eq. 113; 18 A. 680; bills to quiet title where the plaintiff rests his claim on adverse possession, Sharon v. Tucker, 144 U.S. 533; are familiar examples of judicial proceedings which result in an adjudication of the rights of litigants, although execution is not necessary to carry the judgment into effect, in the sense that damages are required to be paid or acts to be performed by the parties." See also Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner, supra, 725; La Abra Silver Mining Co. v. United States, 175 U.S. 423.

The issues raised here are the same as those which under old forms of procedure could be raised only in a suit for an injunction or one to recover the tax after its payment. But the Constitution does not require that the case or controversy should be presented by traditional forms of procedure, invoking only traditional remedies. The judiciary clause of the Constitution defined and limited judicial power, not the particular method by which that power might be invoked. It did not crystallize into changeless form the procedure of 1789 as the only possible means for presenting a case or controversy otherwise cognizable by the federal courts. Whenever the judicial power is invoked to review a judgment of a state court, the ultimate constitutional purpose is the protection, by the exercise of the judicial function, of rights arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States. The states are left free to regulate their own judicial procedure. Hence, changes merely in the form or method of procedure by which federal rights are brought to final adjudication in the state courts are not enough to preclude review of the adjudication by this Court, so long as the case retains the essentials of an adversary proceeding, involving a real, not a hypothetical, controversy, which is finally determined by the judgment below. See Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner, supra, 724. As the prayer for relief by injunction is not a necessary prerequisite to the exercise of judicial power, allegations of threatened irreparable injury which are material only if an injunction is asked, may likewise be dispensed with if, in other respects, the controversy presented is, as in this case, real and substantial. Such was the purport and effect of our decision in Fidelity National Bank v. Swope, supra, where it was held that a final judgment rendered by a state court in an adversary proceeding brought under a state statute to determine the validity of liens about to be imposed for benefits assessed under a city improvement ordinance, presented a case within the appellate jurisdiction of this Court. Accordingly, we must consider the constitutional questions raised by the appeal.

Chapter 58, Tennessee Public Acts, 1923, as amended by Chapter 67, Tennessee Public Acts, 1925, is said, by its caption, to impose a privilege tax "on persons . . . and corporations engaged in or carrying on the business . . . of selling or storing or distributing gasoline . . ." within the state at the rate of 2¢ per gallon on the gasoline sold or stored, the tax "to be used solely in the construction and maintenance of a highway system in the state." But § 3 provides: "The tax imposed by this Act shall apply to persons, firms or corporations, dealers or distributors storing any of the products mentioned in this Act and distributing the same or allowing the same to be withdrawn from storage whether such withdrawal be for sale or other use. . . ." Storage of the gasoline and withdrawal of it from storage within the state for use or sale, are, as the state Supreme Court has held, the events which, by the very terms of the statute, call it into operation. Foster Creighton Co. v. Graham, 154 Tenn. 412, 420; 285 S.W. 570; Quick Service Tire Co. v. Smith, 156 Tenn. 96, 102; 299 S.W. 807.

Appellant, an interstate rail carrier, purchases large quantities of gasoline outside the state of Tennessee and brings it into the state in tank cars, from which it is unloaded and placed in its own storage tanks. None of it is sold by appellant, but all is withdrawn and used by it as a source of motive power in interstate railway operation in Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama and Georgia. Storage of the gasoline is a preliminary step to such use in interstate commerce. The tax is assailed both on the ground that it is imposed on the gasoline while still a subject of interstate commerce in the course of transportation from points of origin to points outside the state of Tennessee; and on the ground that it is in effect a tax upon the use of the gasoline in appellant's business as an interstate carrier, and is thus an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce.

The gasoline, upon being unloaded and stored, ceased to be a subject of transportation in interstate commerce and lost its immunity as such from state taxation. General Oil Co. v. Crain, 209 U.S. 211; Bacon v. Illinois, 227 U.S. 504; Susquehanna Coal Co. v. South Amboy, 228 U.S. 665, 669; Hart Refineries v. Harmon, 278 U.S. 499; Gregg Dyeing Co. v. Query, 286 U.S. 472. The fact that the oil was, in the ordinary course of appellant's business, later withdrawn from storage for use, some within and some without the state, part of it thus becoming again the subject of interstate transportation, did not affect the power of the state to tax it all before that transportation commenced. Neither the appellant, the shippers, nor the carrier, at the time of the shipment of the gasoline from points of origin, arranged a destination for any part of the oil other than the appellant's storage tanks in Tennessee. Although in the usual course of business a variable and undefined part of it, when segregated for that purpose, would again be transported across state boundaries, appellant was free to distribute the oil either within or without the state for use in its business or for any other purpose. As nothing in the transaction before the withdrawal from storage in Tennessee can be said to have given any ascertainable part of the gasoline a destination to points beyond the state, the case is distinguishable from Carson Petroleum Co. v. Vial, 279 U.S. 95, and Texas New Orleans R. Co. v. Sabine Tram Co., 227 U.S. 111. The oil in storage was not a subject of interstate commerce and so was a part of the common mass of goods within the state, subject to local taxation. General Oil Co. v. Crain, supra; Susquehanna Coal Co. v. South Amboy, supra; Bacon v. Illinois, supra; compare Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Standard Oil Co., 275 U.S. 257.

We cannot say that the tax is a forbidden burden on interstate commerce because appellant uses the gasoline, subsequent to the incidence of the tax, as an instrument of interstate commerce. Taxes said to burden interstate commerce directly when levied upon or measured by the operation of interstate commerce or gross receipts derived from it, are beyond the state taxing power, East Ohio Gas Co. v. Tax Commission, 283 U.S. 465, 470; Sprout v. South Bend, 277 U.S. 163, 170, 171; Crew Levick Co. v. Pennsylvania, 245 U.S. 292, 297, and a tax levied upon the use of gasoline in generating motive power for a ferry boat used exclusively in interstate commerce has been held to be so direct and immediate a burden on the commerce itself as to be invalid. Helson v. Kentucky, 279 U.S. 245.

But interstate rail carriers are not wholly immune from other forms of non-discriminatory state taxation, even though the burden of the tax is thus indirectly or incidentally imposed upon the interstate commerce in which they are engaged. It cannot be doubted that, when the gasoline came to rest in storage, the state was as free to tax it, notwithstanding its prospective use as an instrument of interstate commerce, as it was to tax appellant's right of way, rolling stock or other instruments of interstate commerce, which are subject to local property taxes. Cudahy Packing Co. v. Minnesota, 246 U.S. 450; U.S. Express Co. v. Minnesota, 223 U.S. 335; Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Gottlieb, 190 U.S. 412; Adams Express Co. v. Ohio, 165 U.S. 194, 220; see General American Tank Car Corp. v. Day, 270 U.S. 367; Interstate Busses Corp. v. Blodgett, 276 U.S. 245, compare St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Middlekamp, 256 U.S. 226, 231; St. Louis, Southwestern Ry. v. Arkansas, 235 U.S. 350; Kansas City, F.S. M. Ry. Co. v. Botkin, 240 U.S. 227; Kansas City, M. B.R. Co. v. Stiles, 242 U.S. 111; Southern Ry. Co. v. Watts, 260 U.S. 519. The power to tax property, the sum of all the rights and powers incident to ownership, necessarily includes the power to tax its constituent elements. See Bromley v. McCaughn, 280 U.S. 124, 136-138. Hence, there can be no valid objection to the taxation of the exercise of any right or power incident to appellant's ownership of the gasoline, which falls short of a tax directly imposed on its use in interstate commerce, deemed forbidden in Helson v. Kentucky, supra. Here the tax is imposed on the successive exercise of two of those powers, the storage and withdrawal from storage of the gasoline. Both powers are completely exercised before use of the gasoline in interstate commerce begins. The tax imposed upon their exercise is therefore not one imposed on the use of the gasoline as an instrument of commerce and the burden of it is too indirect and remote from the function of interstate commerce itself to transgress constitutional limitations. See Eastern Air Transport v. Tax Commission, 285 U.S. 147.

Appellant objects that the tax violates the Fourteenth Amendment in that it is levied as a charge for the use of the highways which appellant does not use. But the levy is a tax, not a toll or charge for use of the highways, see Carley Hamilton v. Snook, 281 U.S. 66, and the constitutional power to levy taxes does not depend upon the enjoyment by the taxpayer of any special benefit from the use of the funds raised by taxation. Carley Hamilton v. Snook, supra; St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Nattin, 277 U.S. 157, 159. The allegations of the bill showing that a heavier burden of taxation is imposed upon railroads than upon common carriers by motor bus, examined in the light of the applicable statutes of the State, fall short of alleging a discrimination forbidden by either the commerce clause or the Fourteenth Amendment.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Nashville, C. St. L. Ry. v. Wallace

U.S.
Feb 6, 1933
288 U.S. 249 (1933)

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Case details for

Nashville, C. St. L. Ry. v. Wallace

Case Details

Full title:NASHVILLE, CHATTANOOGA ST. LOUIS RAILWAY CO. v . WALLACE, COMPTROLLER OF…

Court:U.S.

Date published: Feb 6, 1933

Citations

288 U.S. 249 (1933)
53 S. Ct. 345

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