City of New Orleans v. Texas Transport & Terminal Co.

93 So. 751, 152 La. 497, 1922 La. LEXIS 2374
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 17, 1922
DocketNo. 25294
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 So. 751 (City of New Orleans v. Texas Transport & Terminal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of New Orleans v. Texas Transport & Terminal Co., 93 So. 751, 152 La. 497, 1922 La. LEXIS 2374 (La. 1922).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

The question propounded is whether a license tax, imposed by municipal ordinance, upon the business of steamship agents, is, in its application to the business of the defendant in this ease, violative of the second clause of the eighth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States, reserving to the Congress exclusive authority to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states. The defendant company has appealed from' a judgment declaring the tax valid.

The ordinance in question, No. 6608 of the commission council of New Orleans, is the general revenue law of the city. It levies a graded license tax upon every business, trade or occupation that is subject to taxation. The tax levied upon the business of steamship agents is graded according to the annual gross receipts of the business, and is $400 per annum when the year’s receipts amount to $100,000 or more. The receipts of defendant’s business exceeded $100,000, and defendant is therefore liable for the tax of $400, unless the business is interstate or foreign commerce.

The record does not show whether defendant is a domestic or foreign corporation, but that is a matter of no importance. The main office, or what is called the home office, of the company, is in New York. The establishment in New Orleans, carrying on the business that is the subject of this litigation, is referred to in the testimony as a branch, office. The company has a branch office or establishment also at Galveston and at Port Arthur, Tex., at'San Francisco, Cal., at Savannah, Ga., and at Baltimore, Md. Whether the business done in each city is that of a separate corporation is left in doubt. However the only business that we are dealing with in this case is that which is done in New Orleans, by the local establishment.

The business is confined to dealings with shipowners, charterers and operators, whose vessels trade between New Orleans and foreign ports, and between New Orleans and ports outside of Louisiana, in the United States. None of the ships from which the defendant company derives its business or patronage- trades between New Orleans and [499]*499another port in Louisiana, or between two ports in this state. In other words, all of defendant’s patrons are shipowners, charterers or operators, engaged in either interstate or foreign commerce. Defendant represents four steamship lines regularly, under contract, for a commission fixed at a certain percentage of the gross amount of the freight charges collected by defendant for each steamship company. The four companies are the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, carrying passengers and freight between New Orleans and Havre, Bordeaux, Antwerp, Hamburg and Bremen; the Holland-American Line, carrying passengers and freight between New Orleans and Rotterdam and Amsterdam ; the Navigasions Generale Italiana, carrying freight between New Orleans and the Mediterranean ports; and the Toyo-Kison-Kaishn, carrying freight between New Orleans and the Japanese and Chinese ports. Defendant also, occasionally, handles the business of tankers carrying fuel oil from New Orleans or from Baton Rouge, and of tramp ships taking cargo of sugar from New Orleans, all engaged in interstate or foreign commerce. In such cases, defendant’s remuneration for the services rendered is not a commission, but, quoting the testimony of defendant’s local manager, “the vessels are handled on a lump-sum basis — so much for handling the steamer.” Defendant’s local manager admitted, too, in his testimony, that his company was always réady and willing to accept employment from any shipowner, charterer or operator, engaged in interstate commerce, at the port of New Orleans. All steamship traffic at this port is either interstate or foreign commerce.

Defendant does not own or charter or operate ships, or share in the profits or losses of any shipowner, charterer or operator. Nor does any shipowner, charterer or operator share in the profits or losses of defendant’s business. The duties performed and services rendered by defendant — and by steamship agents generally — are: Soliciting and engaging cargo for the ships, and nominating the ships for lifting the cargo; arranging for acceptance of delivery of cargo on the wharves; arranging with stevedores for discharging and loading cargo; issuing, in the name of the shipowner or charterer, bills of lading covering the cargo; arranging for bunkering and fitting the ships;. collecting the freight charges due the ships; paying the ship’s disbursements; attending to the immigration service, such as furnishing crew lists and obtaining identification cards for the seamen, and assisting the ship captains in all matters of local customs and regulations, with which, as a rule, ship captains are not familiar; and, finally, remitting to the shipowners or charterers the freight charges collected, less the ship’s disbursements and the commissions due the steamship agent. The steamship agent has authority from his principal to quote freight rates, in soliciting cargo. He has authority also to buy fuel oil or coal for bunkering a ship, and to contract for fitting a ship, when that is necessary, for any special or peculiar cargo. The steamship agent has authority also to issue receipts, in the name of his principal, for cargo delivered on the wharf. The steamship agent is therefore, in many respects, the local representative of any shipowner of charterer who has engaged his services.

With regard to the employment of stevedores for discharging or loading cargo, the record in this case shows that the service is rendered by another corporation, styled J. P. Florio & Company, Inc., which is a subsidiary of the defendant company.

The business of steamship agents is an extensive business in New Orleans, as it is in every large seaport. As a separate oían independent business, it is a result of the development of the country’s commerce with [501]*501foreign nation^ and among the several states. In the early days, when time was not so much the object or subject of economy as it is to-day, every ship’s captain, for his own ship, discharged the duties and rendered ttíe services for which local steamship agents are employed nowadays. But it would be impracticable now for a ship’s captain to remain with his ship in port long enough to attend to the many matters which the local steamship agents can and do attend to for a ship at sea or in a foreign port. The business of steamship agents is therefore a necessary adjunct to commerce on the high seas.

We have stated the facts fully, perhaps more in detail than is necessary, in order to show every feature or characteristic of defendant’s business, that might aid in determining whether it is subject to local taxation or is under Federal regulation. The Supreme Court of the United States admits that no formula has yet been devised, that is applicable to any or every case of this character, for determining whether a local tax is violative of the commerce clause of the Constitution. Osborne v. Mayor of Mobile, 16 Wall. (83 U. S.) 482, 21 L. Ed. 472; Hump Hairpin Mfg. Co. v. Emmerson, 258 U. S. 290, 42 Sup. Ct. 305, 66 L. Ed. 622. The decisions of the. august tribunal, however, boiled down and reduced to rules, have made it easy to recognize the important or distinguishing feature of any case.

The important and distinguishing feature of this case is that the business of the defendant company, however necessary as an adjunct to the interstate and foreign commerce of the steamship lines, is not a part of it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Yangming Marine Transport Corp. v. Revon Products U.S.A., Inc.
536 A.2d 633 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1988)
State v. Tampa Inter Ocean S. S. Co.
96 So. 828 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 So. 751, 152 La. 497, 1922 La. LEXIS 2374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-orleans-v-texas-transport-terminal-co-la-1922.