Nippert v. City of Richmond

327 U.S. 416, 66 S. Ct. 586, 90 L. Ed. 760, 1946 U.S. LEXIS 2736, 162 A.L.R. 844
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 25, 1946
Docket72
StatusPublished
Cited by259 cases

This text of 327 U.S. 416 (Nippert v. City of Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nippert v. City of Richmond, 327 U.S. 416, 66 S. Ct. 586, 90 L. Ed. 760, 1946 U.S. LEXIS 2736, 162 A.L.R. 844 (1946).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Rutledge

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question is whether a license tax laid by an ordinance of the City of Richmond, Virginia, upon engaging in business as solicitor can be applied in the facts of this case consistently with the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution, Article I, § 8. As the case has been made, the issue is substantially whether the long line of so-called “drummer cases”1 beginning with Robbins v. Shelby [418]*418County Taxing District, 120 U. S. 489, shall be adhered to in result or shall now be overruled in the light of what attorneys for the city say are recent trends requiring that outcome.

The ordinance lays an annual license tax in the following terms:

“[Upon] . . .— Agents — Solicitors — Persons, Firms or Corporations engaged in business as solicitors . . . $50.00 and one-half of one per centum of the gross earnings, receipts, fees or commissions for the preceding license year in excess of $1,000.00. Permit of Director of Public Safety required before license will be issued. . . .”* 2

[419]*419Appellant was arrested in Richmond for having engaged in the business of a solicitor there without previously procuring the required license. After hearing before a police court justice she was fined $25.00 and costs and ordered to secure a license. An appeal was noted to the Hustings Court of the City of Richmond, where a trial de novo was had upon the agreed statement of facts set forth in the margin.* *3 The Hustings Court held the ordinance appli[420]*420cable to appellant in the circumstances disclosed by the facts and was of the opinion that, so applied, it was not in conflict with the commerce clause. Accordingly the court found the appellant guilty and finéd her five dollars and costs. The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia affirmed. 183 Va. 689, 33 S. E. 2d 206. From that judgment of the State’s highest court the case comes here by appeal.

If the matter is to be settled solely on the basis of authority, nothing more is required than bare reference to the long list of drummer decisions, which have held unvaryingly that such a tax as Richmond has exacted cannot be applied constitutionally to situations identical with or substantially similar .to the facts' of this case. Among the latest of these is Real Silk Hosiery Mills v. Portland, 268 U. S. 325, in which a municipal ordinance requiring solicitors to pay a license fee was held unconstitutional as a forbidden burden upon interstate commerce when applied to an out-of-state corporation whose representatives solicited orders for subsequent interstate shipment. Cf. Best & Co. v. Maxwell, 311 U. S. 454.

Counsel for Richmond, however, insist that other cases decided here have seriously impaired the “drummer” line of authority, so much so that those rulings no longer can stand consistently with the later ones. Their principal. reliance is on McGoldrick v. Berwind-White Co., 309 U. S. 33, in which the Court sustained the application of New York City’s sales tax to the delivery there, at the end of its interstate journey, of coal shipped from Pennsylvania pursuant to contracts of sale previously made in New [421]*421York.4 It is urged that the case is indistinguishable from the present one on any tenable basis relating to the bearing or effect of the tax upon interstate commerce, although the opinion reviewed at some length the drummer cases, among others, and expressly distinguished them.5

Unless therefore this latest pronouncement upon their continuing authority is to be put aside with the cases themselves, the application made of the ordinance in this case must be stricken down. For the tax thus laid is precisely the “fixed-sum license taxes imposed on the business of soliciting orders for the purchase of goods to be shipped [422]*422interstate” which the Berwind-White opinion distinguished from the New York tax.6

But we are told that the rationale of the decision requires the distinction to be discarded. As counsel state it, this was “that the tax was imposed upon events which occurred within the taxing jurisdiction which events are separate and distinct from the transportation or intercourse which is interstate commerce.” 7 The logic is completed by noting that the New York tax was upon the “local incident” of “delivery” while in this case it is on the like incident of “solicitation”;-and by adding the contention, given more substance since the argument by our decision in International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310, that “mere solicitation” when it is regular, continuous and persistent, rather than merely casual, constitutes “doing business,” contrary to formerly prevailing notions. Hence it is concluded, since the delivery in the Berwind-White case could be taxed, so can the solicitation in this case.

[423]*423Appellee’s rationalization takes only partial account of the reasoning and policy underlying the Berwind-White decision and its differentiation of the drummer authorities. If the only thing necessary to sustain a state tax bearing upon interstate commerce were to discover some local incident which might be regarded as separate and distinct from “the.transportation or intercourse which is” the commerce itself and then to lay the tax on that incident, all interstate commerce could be subjected to state taxation and without regard to the substantial economic effects of the tax upon the commerce. For the situation is difficult to think of in which some incident of an interstate transaction taking place within a State coúld not be segregated by an act of mental gymnastics and made the fulcrum of the tax. All interstate commerce takes place within the .confines of the States and necessarily involves “incidents” occurring within each State through which it passes or with which it is connected in fact. And there is no known limit to the human mind’s capacity to carve out from what is an entire or integral economic process particular phases or incidents, label them as “separate and distinct” or “local,” and thus achieve its desired result.

It has not yet been decided that every state tax bearing upon or affecting commerce becomes valid, if only some conceivably or conveniently separable “local incident” may be found and made the focus of the tax. This is not to say that the presence of so-called local incidents is irrelevant. On the contrary the absence of any connection in fact between the commerce and the state would be sufficient in itself for striking down the tax on due process grounds alone; and even substantial connections, in an economic sense, have been held inadequate to support the local tax.8 But beyond the presence of a sufficient con[424]

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Bluebook (online)
327 U.S. 416, 66 S. Ct. 586, 90 L. Ed. 760, 1946 U.S. LEXIS 2736, 162 A.L.R. 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nippert-v-city-of-richmond-scotus-1946.