Pullman Co. v. Richardson

197 P. 346, 185 Cal. 484, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 573
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1921
DocketS. F. Nos. 9080, 9081, 9082, 9083, 9084, 9085. S. F. No. 9183.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 197 P. 346 (Pullman Co. v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullman Co. v. Richardson, 197 P. 346, 185 Cal. 484, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 573 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

The plaintiff brought seven separate suits for the purpose of recovering from the treasurer of the state of California taxes paid by it under protest. The taxes were levied at the rate of either three or four per cent upon the gross receipts from the business of the plaintiff transacted in the state of California. The rate is fixed and the tax authorized by section 14, article XIII, of the constitution of California, amended in 1910, and statutes passed in pursuance thereof. Approximately fifty per cent of the gross revenue of the plaintiff corporation in California consists of returns from the interstate business of the plaintiff corporation. The amount of the California revenue derived from interstate business is ascertained by apportioning to the business in the state of California the proportion of the fare derived from each item of the business of the plaintiff, into, out of, and through the state of California, which the mileage traveled by the passenger in California bears to the total mileage traveled by him upon his ticket, and by adding these several amounts to ascertain the total amount of gross receipts for the year for such business. These amounts were *486 furnished to the state board of equalization, and are as follows:

Intrastate Interstate Total Total Amount Plaintiff Seeks to Year Business Business Business Rate ' ' Tax Recover 1912. .$ 938,786.80 $ 966,516.17 $1,905,302,97 3% $57,159.08 $28,995.48 1913. .1,000,963.16 953,036.44 1,953,999.60 3% 58,619.98 28,591.09 1914. .1,124,877.77 956,213.61 2,081,091.38 4% 83,243.66 38,248.55 1915. .1,196,719.76 1,004,681.57 ' 2,201,401.33 4% 88,056.06 40,187.26 1916. . 998,330.30 855,072.22 1,853,402.52 4% 73,209.40 33,811.67 1917. .1,053,141.34 1,025,743.33 2,078,884.67 4% 82,115.94 40,516.86 1918. .1,214,463.33 1,182,424.90 2,396,888.23 4% 94,677.08 46,705.78

In considering the effect of this method of apportionment of the passenger fares derived from interstate business, it should be observed in passing that, if the rates of the plaintiff corporation for long interstate hauls are less proportionately per mile than for shorter hauls in intrastate business, it follows that if two passengers proceed from San Francisco to the state line at Yuma, one going to New York or Boston by the way of New Orleans and the other stopping at the state line, the amount of fare apportioned to the state of California would be less in the case of the traveler who is going to Boston or New York than in the ease of the one who stops at the state line. If the state is entitled to levy a tax in the manner adopted, this would seem to be the fairest method of apportioning the receipts of an interstate common carrier. If the same system was adopted in all the states traversed by the carrier, the sum of the amounts thus apportioned to the several states would be equal to the gross receipts of the carrier derived from such interstate commerce.

Appellant’s contention is that a tax upon the gross receipts derived from interstate commerce is in violation of the federal constitution giving Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce, and for that reason seeks to recover the proportion of the tax which is based upon the gross receipts derived from interstate commerce.

[1] It is apparently conceded by the appellant that the gross receipts of a common carrier engaged in interstate commerce can be considered as a basis in a bona fide effort to determine the value of the carrier’s property within the state, and that if the value so derived from the consideration of these gross receipts from interstate commerce and from intrastate commerce is the fair valuation of the property within the state subject to taxation, that the tax is valid. *487 If not so conceded, it is clear that snch a tax is valid. (Wisconsin & Michigan Ry. Co. v. Powers, 191 U. S. 379, [48 L. Ed. 229, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 107, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes].)

The section of the California constitution authorizing and levying the tax declares that it is a property tax in lieu of all other taxes, state, county and municipal, and if this declaration is a true statement of the fact, it is undoubtedly true that the method is unobjectionable. The constitution, after enumerating the various companies which are required to pay the tax levied under its provision, requires that they “(a) ... shall annually pay to the state a tax upon their franchises, roadways, roadbeds, rails, rolling stock, poles, wires, pipes, canals, conduits, rights of way, and other property, or any part thereof, used exclusively in the operation of their business in this state, computed as follows: Said tax shall be equal to the percentages hereinafter fixed upon the gross receipts from operation of such companies and each thereof within this state. . . . Such taxes shall be in lieu of all other taxes and licenses, state, county and municipal, upon the property above enumerated of such companies except as otherwise in this section provided. . . . All property enumerated in subdivision a [supra], b and d of this section shall be subject to taxation, in the maimer provided by law to pay the principal and interest of any bonded indebtedness created and outstanding by any city, city and county, county, town, township or district, before the adoption of this section. The taxes so paid for principal and interest on such bonded indebtedness shall be deducted from the total amount paid in taxes for state purposes. ...”

[2] The question as to whether or not the taxes levied by section 14, article XIII of the constitution are taxes upon property rather than upon receipts or income has several times been considered by this court and in each instance it has been declared to be essentially a property tax.

The opinion in City and County of San Francisco v. Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co., 166 Cal. 244, [135 Pac. 971], gives a history of the enactment of section 14, article XIII of the constitution, to which we refer without repeating the same herein. With reference to the nature of the tax it was therein stated:

*488 “The appellant’s contention, briefly stated, is that the constitutional provision relieves the companies named from no burden except that of taxes upon the property theretofore enumerated, and that the charge imposed by the ordinance is a business or occupation tax, and not a tax upon property at all, and therefore not covered by the so-called exemption. The respondent, on the other hand, claims that under a fair reading of the constitutional amendment, the liability of a telephone company to pay a percentage of its gross receipts was designed to exclude the power of the. state, or of any county or municipality, to exact from it any further revenue (except as stated in the proviso above quoted) whether by way of a direct tax upon its property or in the guise of a license fee upon its business. . . .
“The percentages enumerated in the amendment are declared to be ‘in lieu of all other taxes,’ etc., and such percentages were, doubtless, fixed at higher rates than would have been adopted in the absence of a restriction on other taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
197 P. 346, 185 Cal. 484, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullman-co-v-richardson-cal-1921.