Southern Pac. Co. v. City of Calexico

288 F. 634, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1678
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedFebruary 8, 1923
DocketNo. F-109
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 288 F. 634 (Southern Pac. Co. v. City of Calexico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pac. Co. v. City of Calexico, 288 F. 634, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1678 (S.D. Cal. 1923).

Opinion

BLEDSOE, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The extent and growth of the cotton industry in Lower California, the necessity for its regular importation into the United States, and the frequency which which the taxation questions involved herein will arise, all serve to make it necessary for the court to give extended consideration to this case. As hereinabove indicated, the only questions in the case relate to the power of the city, acting under authority granted to it by the state of California, to assess for general purposes of taxation the respective lots of cotton embraced in the 'seizure had, and referred to specifically in the foregoing statement of facts. In^ denial of that power, the claimant relies upon two provisions of the federal Constitution — a clause in section 8 of article 1 reading, “The Congress shall have power * * * to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes,” and a clause in section 10 of article 1 reading, “No state shall, without the consent of the Congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws.”

Under and pursuant to these provisions, the claim, broadly stated, is that all the cotton involved, having been imported from the republic of Mexico to the United States, at all times concerned herein was an-“import,” within the meaning of that term as used in the constitutional provision just quoted, was subject only to federal control, and was not therefore subject to any tax or burden being laid thereon by the state of California or any of its instrumentalities. Quite as broadly, the city contends that, no import duty having been levied or paid, and by various acts of the importer the commodity having been incorporat-' ed into the general mass of property in this state, like that general mass it ought to be subject to the payment of its proportionate part of the expenses of the local government under whose protection it rests.

The controversy thus broadly presented received the careful consideration of the Supreme Court of the United States in Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, 6 L. Ed. 678. The principles therein announced by Chief Justice Marshall “have been upheld by nearly all. courts that have since dealt with the subject of commerce,” and “equal in dignity and power the other great constitutional pronouncements of the great Chief Tustice.” Beveridge’s Life of Marshall, vol. IV, pp. 454, 459. Chief Justice Marshall in that decision vigorously defends the doctrine that, under the Constitution, to the federal government alone is given authority to regulate commerce with foreign nations and to levy duties on imports and exports, save with respect to the particular exception noted. By the same token, a state is denied the right to levy anything in the nature of a duty or burden on imports. The duty or burden therein referred to is not merely.a duty [639]*639on the act of importation, but a duty or burden on the thing imported. After a thing, however, shall have been imported into the country, and from any cause or for any reason shall have been merged “with the mass o'f property in the country,” or even reduced to- some beneficial use therein, as I understand the decision, then, of course, it is competent for the state to assert its own prerogative, and lay such a burden upon the article by way of tax as shall be deemed meet and necessary. So that, under that great decision, the question to be determined in every case is whether or not the thing imported is still to be classed as an import, or may be said, becausé of the use made of it, the change wrought in it, or the manner in which it has been “acted upon,” to have “become incorporated and mixed up with- the mass of property in the country.” In other words, the importer; before he has been “allowed to exercise his rights of ownership” over the thing imported, or before he has reduced the thing to some use beneficial to himself or made some disposition of it beneficial to-himself, is entitled to regard it merely as an “import,” and not a part of the mass of the property of the state susceptible to state taxation.

Brown v. Maryland was considered and quoted with approval by the Supreme Court in Low v. Austin, 13 Wall. 29, 20 L. Ed. 517, and it was there held, with respect to wine imported into California and held in storage for more than a year, pending a disposition of the same, that the state of California had no authority to levy or collect a tax on the same and that:

“Goods imported do not lose their character as imports, and become incorporated into the mass of property of the state, until they have passed from the control of the importer or been broken up by him from their original cases. * * * Imports, therefore, whilst retaining their distinctive character as such, must be treated as being without the jurisdiction of the taxing power of the state.”

Ml The application of the principles announced in these two cases will, I am persuaded, suffice easily to determine the legality of the various assessments involved in this case. In the first place, I see nothing in the contention of the city that the ruling announced in Brown v. Maryland is inapplicable because of the fact that there an import duty or tariff was actually paid, while here, cotton being on the free list, no such duty was paid. The language used in Brown v. Maryland must be construed with reference to the case then before the court, which involved a transaction in which an import duty had actually been paid as for the thing imported. The reasoning of the decision, however, and the language of the Constitution itself, serve to indicate, in my judgment, that the rule to be applied would be the same, whether a slight import duty was levied, or the article, because of controlling features of governmental policy, was admitted without tariff duty.

The precise question has in fact been determined adversely to the contention of the city in Imperial Development Co. v. City of Calexico, 47 Cal. App. 666, 671, 191 Pac. 50, in which case a petition for a rehearing in the Supreme Court of the state was denied. 47 Cal. App. 673, 191 Pac. 50. The reasoning advanced therein, I think persuasive. In addition, there is nothing to be derived from the language of the [640]*640Constitution itself to the effect that the state might impose a tax in the nature of an import duty in the absence of such imposition by Congress. On the contrary, the state is permitted to burden an import in such a way only in the event that “the consent of the Congress” shall have been secured. There is no claim here that the consent of Congress to the laying of anything approaching the nature of an import duty has been given. The most that can be said is that Congress itself has failed or refused to prescribe any import duty with respect to the particular commodity involved. A presumed governmental policy exempting cotton from import duties could hardly be said to be a “consent” that the states might levy such duties. Moreover, under the provision of section 8, art. 1, of the Constitution, the right to “regulate commerce with foreign nations”- is within the exclusive domain of Congress, and such right is not limited to the levying of duties in respect to the admissibility of imports. It comprehends the right, in the consummation of a predetermined federal policy, to admit goods free of duty or import charge.

This view is sustained, in my judgment, by the decision in the License Cases, 5 How. 504, 12 L. Ed. 256.

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Bluebook (online)
288 F. 634, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pac-co-v-city-of-calexico-casd-1923.