Indiana Farmers Guide Publishing Co. v. Department of Treasury

29 N.E.2d 781, 217 Ind. 627, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 217
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1940
DocketNo. 27,384.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 781 (Indiana Farmers Guide Publishing Co. v. Department of Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Farmers Guide Publishing Co. v. Department of Treasury, 29 N.E.2d 781, 217 Ind. 627, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 217 (Ind. 1940).

Opinion

Swaim, C. J.

This action was instituted by the appellant, the publisher of a farm magazine at Huntington, Indiana, to recover from the Department of Treasury of the State of Indiana sums paid by the appellant, as gross income tax on receipts of appellant from nonresident advertisers for display advertisements which were inserted in the appellant’s paper pursuant to contracts with such advertisers.

The question presented by this case is whether the tax laid upon the receipts from such advertising infringes the commerce clause of the Federal constitution. Article 1, § 8, clause 3.

*630 The facts were found specially and, so far as they are necessary to the determination of the question, were as follows: The appellant is a corporation organized under, and doing business pursuant to, the laws of the State of Indiana, with its principal place of business located in the City of Huntington, Indiana, where it prints and publishes a farm magazine known as “The Indiana Farmer’s Guide.” During the past five years approximately one-fifth of the copies of said magazine have been mailed to subscribers located outside of the state. The principal revenues to the appellant in publishing said magazine are derived from the sale of display or commercial advertising space to customers both within and without said state. During the past five years approximately ninety per cent of such advertising has been sold to advertisers located outside of the state. The contracts for such advertising are obtained by the appellant through solicitation by mail, by agents of the appellant located outside of the state or by agents of the appellant operating out of the appellant’s home office. Said advertisers transmit to the appellant mats, cuts or electrotypes for setting up the advertisements, which mats, cuts and electrotypes the appellant returns to the contracting advertisers after the advertisements are set up. It is not the practice of appellant’s employees to edit the copy submitted by such advertisers but its employees do designate the position of such advertisements in the magazine.

The taxes in dispute were in an amount equal to one-fourth of one per cent of the gross revenues derived by the appellant from the sale of display advertising space to customers residing outside the State of Indiana. No tax has been levied against the appellant on the gross income derived by it from subscriptions fo or the sale of its magazine to subscribers or purchasers *631 who were located in spates other than the State of Indiana.

It is to be noted that the court did not find that the contracts between the appellant and its advertisers required that the advertisements should be sent to subscribers out of the state or that the compensation of the appellant would not be earned if subscribers outside the state should cancel their subscriptions.

On these facts the court stated as its conclusions of law that neither the solicitation and obtaining of such advertisements nor the formation of such advertising contracts between the appellant and its advertisers amounted to interstate commerce; that the performance of such advertising contracts between the appellant and its advertisers was the printing and publishing of advertisements in the magazine at Huntington, Indiana; that the Indiana Gross Income Tax Act, as amended, in so far as applicable to the appellant imposes a general nondiscriminatory tax levied upon the entire gross income derived from doing business within the state of all residents of the State of Indiana, the purpose of which tax was to permit the reduction of property taxes within the state; that the gross receipts earned from the performance of such advertising contracts were not derived from interstate commerce to the extent that the State of Indiana was prohibited, by virtue of Article I of § 8, clause 3 of the Constitution of the United States, from levying a tax measured by the amount of such receipts; and that the gross income earned by the appellant from the performance of the advertising contracts is not excepted from the gross income to be used as a measure of the Gross Income Tax by the provisions of § 6(a) of chapter 50 of the Acts of 1933 (§ 64-2606, Burns’ 1933, § 15986, Baldwin’s 1934), or the provisions of § 6(a) chapter 117 of the *632 Acts of 1937 (§ 64-2606, Burns’ 1933 (Supp.), § 15986, Baldwin’s Supp. 1937.) ■

The appellant insists that in publishing its magazine it is engaged in interstate commerce; that the sale, at • compensatory rates, of display advertising for publication in said magazine is an essential or integral element of such interstate commerce and that the Indiana Gross Income Tax Act, if construed to apply to the income derived from the sale of such advertising to advertisers who are not residents of the State of Indiana, burdens interstate commerce in violation of Article 1, § 8, clause 3 of the Federal Constitution. In support of these contentions the appellant relies, principally, on two cases, Indiana Farmers Guide Publishing Company v. Prairie Farmer Publishing Company (1934), 293 U. S. 268, 55 S. Ct. 182, and J. D. Adams Manufacturing Co. v. Storen (1938), 304 U. S. 307, 58 S. Ct. 913.

The appellee, on the other hand, admits that the circulation and distribution of the magazine interstate amounts to interstate commerce but contends that the performance of the advertising contracts was purely an intrastate matter; and that the taxation of the income received by the appellant from such contracts was, therefore, not in violation of the Interstate Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution.

Indiana Farmers Guide Publishing Co. v. Prairie Farmer Publishing Company, supra, was an action by the petitioner therein to recover from the respondent under § 7 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act for alleged violations by the respondent of §§ 1 and 2 of said act (15 U. S. C. A., §§ 1, 2, 15, note). The district court directed a verdict against the petitioner and entered judgment for respondent, which judgment was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court of the United States reversed the Circuit Court of *633 Appeals and directed the district court to grant a new trial on the ground that there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question of interstate commerce. The court pointed out that the business there alleged to have been damaged by the illegal acts of the respondent was the publication and circulation of these farm papers; that the business included the obtaining of advertising and transportation between states of electrotypes and the transportation of substantial quantities of the papers in. interstate commerce.

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29 N.E.2d 781, 217 Ind. 627, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-farmers-guide-publishing-co-v-department-of-treasury-ind-1940.