Stanton v. Baltic Mining Co., 240 U.S. 103, 36 S.Ct. 278 (1916)
Supreme Court of the United States
JOHN R. STANTON, Appt.,
v.
BALTIC MINING COMPANY et al.
No. 359.
Decided February 21, 1916.
APPEAL from the District Court of the United
States for the District of Massachusetts to review a decree dismissing the bill
in a suit by a stockholder to restrain the corporation from voluntarily
complying with the Federal income tax. Affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Mr. Chief Justice White delivered the
opinion of the court:
As in Brushaber v. Union P. R. Co. 240 U. S.
1, 60 L. ed. 493, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 236, this case was commenced by the
appellant as a stockholder of the Baltic Mining Company, the appellee, to enjoin
the voluntary payment by the corporation and its officers of the tax assessed
against it under the income tax section of the tariff act of October 3, 1913
(38 Stat. at L. 166, 181, chap. 16). As to the grounds for the equitable relief
sought in this case so far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned are
substantially the same as those which were relied upon in the Brushaber Case,
it follows that the ruling in that case upholding the power to dispose of that
controversy is controlling here, and we put that subject out of view.
Further, also, like the Brushaber Case, this
is before us on a direct appeal prosecuted for the purpose of reviewing the
action of the court below in dismissing on motion the bill for want of equity.
The bill averred: 'That, under and by virtue
of the alleged authority contained in said income tax law, if valid and
constitutional, the respondent company is taxable at the rate of 1 per cent
upon its gross receipts from all sources, during the calendar year ending
December 31, 1914, after deducting (1) its ordinary and necessary expenses paid
within the year in the maintenance and operation of its business and
properties, and (2) all losses actually sustained within the year, and not
compensated by insurance or otherwise, including depreciation arising from
depletion of its ore deposits to the limited extent of 5 per cent of the 'gross
value at the mine of the output' during said year.' It was further alleged that
the company would, if not restrained, make a return for taxation conformably to
the statute, and would pay the tax upon the basis stated without protest, and
that to do so would result in depriving the complainant as a stockholder of
rights secured by the Constitution of the United States, as the tax which it
was proposed to pay without protest was void for repugnancy to that
Constitution. The bill contained many averments on the following subjects,
which may be divided into two generic classes: (A) Those concerning the
operation of the law in question upon individuals generally and upon other than
mining corporations, and the discrimination against mining corporations which
arose in favor of such other corporations and individuals by the legislation,
as well as discrimination which the provisions of the act operated against
mining corporations because of the separate and more unfavorable burden cast
upon them by the statute than was placed upon other corporations and
individuals,--averments all of which were obviously made to support the
subsequent charges which the bill contained as to the repugnancy of the law
imposing the tax to the equal protection, due process, and uniformity clauses
of the Constitution. And (B) those dealing with the practical results on the
company of the operation of the tax in question, evidently alleged for the
purpose of sustaining the charge which the bill made that the tax levied was
not what was deemed to be the peculiar direct tax which the 16th Amendment
exceptionally authorized to be levied without apportionment, and of the
resulting repugnancy of the tax to the Constitution as a direct tax on property
because of its ownership, levied without conforming to the regulation of
apportionment generally required by the Constitution as to such taxation.
We need not more particularly state the averments
as to the various contentions in class (a), as their character will necessarily
be made manifest by the statement of the legal propositions based on them which
we shall hereafter have occasion to make. As to the averments concerning class
(B), it suffices to say that it resulted from copious allegations in the bill
as to the value of the ore body contained in the mine which the company worked,
and the total output for the year of the product of the mine after deducting
the expenses as previously stated; that the 5 per cent deduction permitted by
the statute was inadequate to allow for the depletion of the ore body, and
therefore the law to a large extent taxed not the mere profit arising from the
operation of the mine, but taxed as income the yearly product which represented
to a large extent the yearly depletion or exhaustion of the ore body from
which, during the year, ore was taken. Indeed, the following alleged facts
concerning the relation which the annual production bore to the exhaustion or
diminution of the property in the ore bed must be taken as true for the purpose
of reviewing the judgment sustaining the motion to dismiss the bill.
'That the real or actual yearly income
derived by the respondent company from its business or property does not exceed
$550,000. That, under the income tax, the said company is held taxable, in an
average year, to the amount of approximately $1,150,000, the same being
ascertained by deducting from its net receipts of $1,400,000 only a
depreciation of $100,000 on its plant and a depletion of its ore supply limited
by law to 5 per cent of the value of its annual gross receipts, and amounting
to $150,000; whereas, in order properly to ascertain its actual income,
$750,000 per annum should be allowed to be deducted for such depletion, or five
times the amount actually allowed.'
Without attempting minutely to state every
possible ground of attack which might be deduced from the averments of the
bill, but in substance embracing every material grievance therein asserted and
pressed in argument upon our attention in the elaborate briefs which have been
submitted, we come to separately dispose of the legal propositions advanced in
the bill and arguments concerning the two classes.
Class A. Under this the bill charged that the
provisions of the statute 'are unconstitutional and void under the 5th
Amendment, in that they deny to mining companies and their stockholders equal
protection of the laws and deprive them of their property without due process
of law,' for the following reasons:
(1) Because all other individuals or
corporations were given a right to deduct a fair and reasonable percentage for
losses and depreciation of their capital, and they were therefore not confined
to the arbitrary 5 per cent fixed as the basis for deductions by mining
corporations.
(2) Because by reason of the differences in
the allowances which the statute permitted, the tax levied was virtually a net
income tax on other corporations and individuals, and a gross income tax on
mining corporations.
(3) Because the statute established a
discriminating rule as to individuals and other corporations as against mining
corporations on the subject of the method of the allowance for depreciations.
(4) Because the law permitted all individuals
to deduct from their net income dividends received from corporations which had
paid the tax on their incomes, and did not give the right to corporations to
make such deductions from their income of dividends received from other
corporations which had paid their income tax. This was illustrated by the
averment that 99 per cent of the stock of the defendant company was owned by a
holding company, and that under the statute not only was the corporation
obliged to pay the tax on its income, but so also was the holding company
obliged to pay on the dividends paid it by the defendant company.
(5) Because of the discrimination resulting
from the provision of the statute providing for a progressive increase of
taxation or surtax as to individuals, and not as to corporations.
(6) Because of the exemptions which the
statute made of individual incomes below $4,000, and of incomes of labor
organizations and various other exemptions which were set forth.
But it is apparent from the mere statement of
these contentions that each and all of them were adversely disposed of by the
decision in the Brushaber Case, and they all therefore may be put out of view.
Class B. Under this class these propositions
are relied upon:
(1) That as the 16th Amendment authorizes only an exceptional direct income tax without apportionment, to which the tax in question does not conform, it is therefore not within the authority of that Amendment.
(2)
Not being within the authority of the 16th Amendment, the tax is therefore,
within the ruling of Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & T. Co. 157 U. S. 429, 39 L.
ed. 759, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 673; 158 U. S. 601, 39 L. ed. 1108, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep.
912, a direct tax and void for want of compliance with the regulation of
apportionment.
As the first proposition is plainly in conflict with the meaning of the 16th Amendment as interpreted in the Brushaber Case, it may also be put out of view. As to the second, while indeed it is distinct from the subjects considered in the Brushaber Case to the extent that the particular tax which the statute levies on mining corporations here under consideration is distinct from the tax on corporations other than mining and on individuals, which was disposed of in the Brushaber Case, a brief analysis will serve to demonstrate that the distinction is one without a difference, and therefore that the proposition is also foreclosed by the previous ruling. The contention is that as the tax here imposed is not on the net product, but in a sense somewhat equivalent to a tax on the gross product of the working of the mine by the corporation, therefore the tax is not within the purview of the 16th Amendment, and consequently it must be treated as a direct tax on property because of its ownership, and as such void for want of apportionment. But, aside from the obvious error of the proposition, intrinsically considered, it manifestly disregards the fact that by the previous ruling it was settled that the provisions of the 16th Amendment conferred no new power of taxation, but simply prohibited the previous complete and plenary power of income taxation possessed by Congress from the beginning from being taken out of the category of indirect taxation to which it inherently belonged, and being placed in the category of direct taxation subject to apportionment by a consideration of the sources from which the income was derived,--that is, by testing the tax not by what it was, a tax on income, but by a mistaken theory deduced from the origin or source of the income taxed. Mark, of course, in saying this we are not here considering a tax not within the provisions of the 16th Amendment, that is, one in which the regulation of apportionment or the rule of uniformity is wholly negligible because the tax is one entirely beyond the scope of the taxing power of Congress, and where consequently no authority to impose a burden, either direct or indirect, exists. In other words, we are here dealing solely with the restriction imposed by the 16th Amendment on the right to resort to the source whence an income is derived in a case where there is power to tax for the purpose of taking the income tax out of the class of indirect, to which it generically belongs, and putting it in the class of direct, to which it would not otherwise belong, in order to subject it to the regulation of apportionment. But it is said that although this be undoubtedly true as a general rule, the peculiarity of mining property and the exhaustion of the ore body which must result from working the mine cause the tax in a case like this, where an inadequate allowance by way of deduction is made for the exhaustion of the ore body, to be in the nature of things a tax on property because of its ownership, and therefore subject to apportionment. Not to so hold, it is urged, is as to mining property but to say that mere form controls, thus rendering in substance the command of the Constitution that taxation directly on property because of its ownership be apportioned, wholly illusory or futile. But this merely asserts a right to take the taxation of mining corporations out of the rule established by the 16th Amendment when there is no authority for so doing. It moreover rests upon the wholly fallacious assumption that, looked at from the point of view of substance, a tax on the product of a mine is necessarily in its essence and nature in every case a direct tax on property because of its ownership, unless adequate allowance be made for the exhaustion of the ore body to result from working the mine. We say wholly fallacious assumption because, independently of the effect of the operation of the 16th Amendment, it was settled in Stratton's Independence v. Howbert, 231 U. S. 399, 58 L. ed. 285, 34 Sup. Ct. Rep. 136, that such tax is not a tax upon property as such because of its ownership, but a true excise levied on the results of the business of carrying on mining operations. (pp. 413 et seq.)
As it follows from what we have said that the
contentions are in substance and effect controlled by the Brushaber Case, and,
in so for as this may not be the case, are without merit, it results that, for
the reasons stated in the opinion in that case and those expressed in this, the
judgment must be and it is affirmed.
Mr. Justice McReynolds took no part in
the consideration and decision of this case.