Pickard v. Pullman Southern Car Co.

117 U.S. 34, 6 S. Ct. 635, 29 L. Ed. 785, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1814
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 6, 1886
Docket933
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 117 U.S. 34 (Pickard v. Pullman Southern Car Co.) 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
Pickard v. Pullman Southern Car Co., 117 U.S. 34, 6 S. Ct. 635, 29 L. Ed. 785, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1814 (1886).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Blatcheobd

delivered -the opinion of .the court. After stating the Case as above reported, he continued:

. The point upon which the final judgment was rendered in the case was the one considered and adjudged in the decision given on the demurrer to the declaration. The tax was not a property tax, because, under the Constitution of Tennessee, all property must be taxed according to its value, and this tax was *44 not measured by value, but was an arbitrary charge. What was done by the plaintiff was taxed as a privilege, it being assumed by the State authorities, that, the Legislature had the power, under the Constitution of Tennessee, to enact the 6th. section of the Act of 1877, and that the plaintiff had done what that section declared to be a. privilege. By the decisions of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, cited in the opinion of the Circuit Court on the demurrer; it is held, that the Legislature . may declare the right to carry on any business or occupation to be a privilege, to be purchased from- the State on such con'ditions as the statute law may prescribe, and that it is illegal to •carry on such business without complying with those conditions. In this case, the payment of the tax imposed was a condition prescribed, without complying with which what was done by thé plaintiff was made illegal. The tax was imposed as a' condition precedent to the right of the plaintiff to run and use the thirty-six sleeping cars owned by it, as it ran' and used them on railroads in Tennessee. The privilege tax is held by the Supreme Court of Tennessee to be a license tax, for the privilege of doing the thing for which the tax is imposed, it being unlawful to do the thing'without paying the tax. What was done by the plaintiff in this case,- in connection with the use of the thirty-six cars, if wholly a branch of inter-Státe commerce, was made by the State of Tennessee unlawful unless the tax; should be paid, and, to the extent of the tax, a burden was placed on such commerce; and, upon principle, the tax, if lawful, might equally well have been large. enough to practically stop altogether the particular species of commerce.

What was that commerce ? The plaintiff, by its' contract, furnished sleeping cars to the railroad company, to be used by the latter “for the transportation of passengers,” sufficient in numbers to meet the requirements of travel on the road. The plaintiff kept in order and renewed the carpets, upholstery and bedding of the cars, except repairs and renewals made' necessary by accident or casualty, but all damages to the cars by accident or casualty were repaired by the railroad company.’ The plaintiff furnished employes on each car to collect fares for the accommodations furnished by the car, and to wait upon *45 passengers and provide for -their comfort. Those employes were governed by the rules adopted by the railroad company to govern its own employés, and the railroad company was liable for personal injury to, or the death of, any such employ.é of the plaintiff to the same extent only as if such employe was in fact an employe of the railroad company, and the latter was indemnified by the plaintiff for all liability in excess thereof. The railroad company carried free on its line such employés of the plaintiff and its general officers when on duty for it, and the plaintiff carried free in the cars it so furnished the general officers of the railroad company. In consideration of the use of such cars, the railroad company hauled them on the passenger trains on its line, in such manner as best accommodated passengers désiring to use the cars, and furnished, at its own expense, fuel for them and materials for the lights, and washed and cleansed them, and kept them in good order and repair, including renewals of worn-out parts, and all things appertaining to them, necessary to keep them in first-class condition, with the exceptions before specified in regard to carpets, upholstery and bedding, and furnished room and conveniencies for airing and storing bedding. The plaintiff collected from every person occupying the car compensation for its accommodations in seats and couches. The railroad company permitted the plaintiff to place its tickets for seats and couches on sale in the ticket offices of the railroad company, the sale to be a part of the general duties of the ticket agents of the latter, and to be without charge to the plaintiff, but the proceeds of sales to be at its risk. The contract was made an exclusive one for fifteen years, and the plaintiff agreed to protect the railroad company against all liability for the infringement of any patent in the construction and use of the cars, and there was a provision for the termination of the contract by either party on a breach of it by the other.

On these facts, the cars in question were cars for the transportation of the passengers who occupied them, in their transit into, or through, or out of Tennessee. They were used by the railroad company for such transportation, and it received the transit fare or compensation. For purposes of transit, it dealt- *46 with the cars as it would with cars owned by itself. . It hauled them, furnished fuel and materials for lights, washed and cleansed them, kept them in repair, renewed worn-out parts, repaired all damages to them by accident or casualty, and even' repaired and renewed carpets, upholstery, and bedding damaged or destroyed by -accident or casualty; all at its own expense, and without charge to the plaintiff; leaving to the plaintiff only to make good the ordinary wear and tear of the sitting and sleeping convenieneies, and allowing it to have the compensation for such conveniences, and furnishing it free of charge with all facilities for selling seats and couches..

1 The tax was a unit, for 'the privilege of the transit of the passenger and all its accessories. No. distinction was made'in the tax between the right of transit,' as a branch of commerce between the States, and the sleeping and other conveniences which appertained to a transit in the car. The tax was really one on. the right of transit, though laid wholly on the owner of the car. So, too, the service rendered1 to the passenger was a unit. The car was equally a vehiqle of transit, as if it had been a car owned by the railroad company, and the special conveni-encies or comforts furnished to the passenger had been furnished .by the railroad company itself. As such vehicle of transit, the car, so far as it was engaged in inter-State commerce, was not taxable by the State of Tennessee; because the plaintiff háTd no domicil in Tennessee, and was not subject to its jurisdiction for purposes of taxation; and the cars had no situs within the State for purposes of taxationand the plaintiff carried, on no business within, the State, in the sense in which the carrying, on of business in a State is taxable by way of license or privilege.

The case of Attorney-General v. London & North Western Railway Co., in the Court of Appeal, 6 Q. B. Div. 216, before Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, and Lord Justices Baggallay and Brett, affirming the judgment of the Exchequer Division, 5 Ex. Div. 247, is instructive in the above point of view, as to the subject in hand. There, the railway company attached to its. night trains sleeping carriages for the accommodation of such of its first class passengers as might choose to avail them *47

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Bluebook (online)
117 U.S. 34, 6 S. Ct. 635, 29 L. Ed. 785, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickard-v-pullman-southern-car-co-scotus-1886.