Johnson v. Drummond

20 Va. 419
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 14, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 Va. 419 (Johnson v. Drummond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Drummond, 20 Va. 419 (Va. 1871).

Opinion

Joynes, J.

The seventh section of the act passed. March 3, 1866, entitled “An act imposing a tax on oysters ” (Sess. Acts 1865-6, p. 75), contains the following provision: “ Every captain or officer of a vessel which shall be employed in carrying oysters taken in the waters of Virginia, shall obtain from an inspector-a license, for which he shall pay to said inspector a tax. of three dollars per ton for every ton said vessel may measure, according to the custom-house enrollment or license; and it shall be the duty of every such captain or officer to have said license framed, and so set or-placed upon the quarter-deck or binnacle of his vessel,, as to be exposed to the full view of every person who-may board said vessel; which license shall authorize such vessel to carry away oysters for one year.”

The twelfth section of the act authorizes the inspector to attach the vessel and appurtenances of any captain or officer failing or refusing to obtain the license and pay the tax provided for in the seventh section; and invests him with all the powers and duties of a, sheriff for the collection of other taxes.

Sundry vessels owned by the plaintiffs were attached and seized by the defendant Drummond, an inspector, and were advertised for sale, for the non-payment of' the license tax imposed by the.seventh section; and. [421]*421"the bill in this case was filed to enjoin the sale. The •only ground alleged for the injunction is, that the provision quoted from the seventh section of the statute is in violation of that part of section 10, article I, of the constitution of the United States, which declares ‘that “ Uo State shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage.” The injunction was awarded; but, at the final hearing, it was dissolved, and the bill dismissed.

Under the articles of confederation, the power to regulate commerce, and to lay imposts and duties, belonged to the States respectively, subject only to the restriction contained in the third section of the sixth -article, that no State should lay any duties or imposts which might interfere with any stipulations in treaties entered into by the United States. Some of the States, from their geographical situation, were thus placed at "the mercy of those through which their imports and •exports had to pass. This independent right of the ■several States was often exercised, in an undue degree, under the influence of local interests and jealousies, and led to the adoption of conflicting, and even hostile •and oppressive regulations. The pressure of this condition of things led, at an early period after the close •of the war, to great complaint, and movements were made in Congress, and on the part of individual States, for the purpose of establishing uniformity in the commercial regulations of the several States, as “ necessary to their common interest, and their permanent harmony,” and was the. main cause which led to the adoption of the present constitution. The evils then felt would not have been effectually cured, however, by •conferring upon Congress power to regulate commerce, •even if the grant of .that power was exclusive of a like power in the several States. The power to regulate commerce.does not carry with it the power of taxation for revenue. , The power to regulate commerce [422]*422does not give to Congress the power to tax it. Congress derives that power from the express grant of power “ to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises.” Hor does the grant to Congress of the power to regulate commerce, even if construed to be exclusive of like power in the States, prohibit the States from making it the subject of taxation within their own jurisdiction. The inability of the States to levy Sll-Ck taxation, results altogether from the restrictions contained, in section 10, article I, of the constitution. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. U. S. R. 1; Passenger Cases, 7 How. U. S. R. 283; see Taney, C. J., pp. 479, 480; Federalist, No. 32.

One of the familiar modes of imposing a tax on commerce, is by laying duties on imports and exports. If this power had been left to the several States, without restraint, they could, by means of it, have brought about substantially the same evil which was so much complained of under the confederation. It was, therefore, made the subject of special prohibition by the several clauses of section 10, article I, of the constitution.

■ Another familiar mode of taxing commerce is by a tax upon the vessel, the vehicle of commerce, known as a tonnage tax, or a “ duty of tonnage,” as it is called in the constitution. A grievous burden might be laid upon any trade, by a tax upon the vehicle in which the trade is carried on, as by regulations applicable to the trade itself, or by taxes upon the articles which are the subjects of the trade. And, accordingly, this power is restricted by the third clause of section 10 of the same article; which provides that “ no State shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage.” This prohibition is general—“any duty of tonnage ”—and is not confined to any kind or kinds-of commerce, or to any class of vessels.

In Gibbons v. Ogden, Marshall, C. J., said: “A duly [423]*423of tonnage is as much a tax as a duty on imports or exports; and the same reason which induced the prohibition of those taxes, extends to this also.” And in Steamship Company v. Portwardens, 6 Wall. U. S. R. 31, Chase, C. J., said, delivering the opinion of the whole court: “ The general prohibition upon the States against laying duties on imports or exports, would have been ineffectual, if it had not been extended to duties on the ships which are the vehicles of commerce. This extension was doubtless intended by the prohibition of any duty of tonnage.”

A duty of tonnage, in the most obvious sense of the word, imports a tax or duty proportioned to the tonnage or size of the vessel. This description of tax has usually been imposed in that form, both in England and this country, and from the form, it doubtless received its appellation. But, in the case cited from 6 Wallace 31, the Supreme court held that “it was not only a pro rata tax that was prohibited, hut any duty on the ship, whether a fixed sum upon the whole tonnage, or a sum to he ascertained by comparing the amount of tonnage with the rate of duty.” Accordingly, in that case, the court held an act to he unconstitutional which laid a uniform tax of five dollars upon all vessels arriving at the port of New Orleans, without regard to size. And it seems, from what was said in that case, that the fact that the tax does not go to the State, hut to wardens of the port, whose duly it is, when called upon, to render service to vessels in the port, and purports, by the terms of the law, to he designed to provide compensation for the wardens, will not exempt it from condemnation as a duty of tonnage, if it would he so regarded, in the absence of such an appropriation of the money. And in that case the tax was held to he a regulation of commerce, and also a duty of tonnage, and forbidden on both grounds.

It is immaterial what form of expression is used in [424]*424describing tbe tax, or tbe object or tbe subject of it, if, upon looking at its real character and effect, it is found ■ to come within the meaning of a duty of tonnage. The question is one of substance and not of form or name. 12 Wheat. U. S. R. 445; 12 How. U. S. R. 314; 24 How. U. S. R. 169.

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20 Va. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-drummond-va-1871.