Warren Trading Post Co. v. Arizona Tax Commission
This text of 380 U.S. 685 (Warren Trading Post Co. v. Arizona Tax Commission) 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.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Arizona has levied a tax of 2% on the “gross proceeds of sales, or gross income” of appellant Warren Trading Post Company, which does a retail trading business with *686 Indians on the Arizona part of the Navajo Indian Reservation under a license granted by the United States Commissioner of Indian Affairs pursuant to 19 Stat. 200, 25 U. S. C. § 261 (1958 ed.). 1 Appellant claimed that as applied to its income from trading with reservation Indians on the reservation the state tax was invalid as (1) in violation of Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, of the United States Constitution, which provides that “Congress shall have Power ... To regulate Commerce . . . with the Indian Tribes”; (2) inconsistent with the comprehensive congressional plan, enacted under authority of Art. I, § 8, to regulate Indian trade and traders and to have Indian tribes on reservations govern themselves. The State Supreme Court rejected these contentions and upheld the tax, one Justice dissenting. 95 Ariz. 110, 387 P. 2d 809. The case is properly here on appeal under 28 U. S. C. § 1257 (2) (1958 ed.). Since we hold that this state tax cannot be imposed consistently with federal statutes applicable to the Indians on the Navajo Reservation, we find it unnecessary to consider whether the tax is also barred by that part of the Commerce Clause giving Congress power to regulate commerce with the Indian tribes.
The Navajo Reservation was set apart as a “permanent home” for the Navajos in a treaty made with the “Navajo nation or tribe of Indians” on June 1, 1868. 2 Long before that, in fact from the very first days of our Government, the Federal Government had been permitting the Indians largely to govern themselves, free from state *687 interference, 3 and had exercised through statutes and treaties 4 a sweeping and dominant control over persons who wished to trade with Indians and Indian tribes. As *688 Chief Justice John Marshall recognized in Worcester v. Georgia, 6 Pet. 515, 556-557:
“From the commencement of our government, congress has passed acts to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indians; which treat them as nations, respect their rights, and manifest a firm purpose to afford that protection which treaties stipulate.”
He went on to say that:
“The treaties and laws of the United States contemplate the Indian territory as completely separated from that of the states; and provide that all intercourse with them shall be carried on exclusively by the government of the union.” Id., at 557,
See also, e. g., United States v. Forty-three Gallons of Whiskey, 93 U. S. 188. In the very first volume of the federal statutes is found an Act, passed in 1790 by the first Congress, “to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes,” requiring that Indian traders obtain a license from a federal official, and specifying in detail the conditions on which such licenses would be granted. 5
Such comprehensive federal regulation of Indian traders has continued from that day to this. 6 Existing statutes make specific restrictions on trade with the Indians, 7 and *689 one of them, passed in 1876 and tracing back to comprehensive enactments of 1802 8 and 1834, 9 provides that the Commissioner of Indian Affairs shall have “the sole power and authority to appoint traders to the Indian tribes” and to specify “the kind and quantity of goods and the prices at which such goods shall be sold to the Indians.” 10 Acting under authority of this statute and one added in 1901, 11 the Commissioner has promulgated detailed regulations prescribing in the most minute fashion who may qualify to be a trader and how he shall be licensed; penalties for acting as a trader without a license; conditions under which government employees may trade with Indians; articles that cannot be sold to Indians; and conduct forbidden on a licensed trader’s premises. 12 He has ordered that detailed business records be kept and that government officials be allowed to inspect these records to make sure that prices charged are fair and reasonable; that traders pay Indians in money; that bonds be executed by proposed licensees; and that the governing body of an Indian reservation may assess from a trader “such fees, etc., as it may deem appropri *690 ate.” 13 It was under these comprehensive statutes and regulations that the Commissioner of Indian Affairs licensed appellant to trade with the Indians on the Navajo Reservation. These apparently all-inclusive regulations and the statutes authorizing them would seem in themselves sufficient to show that Congress has taken the business of Indian trading on reservations so fully in hand that no room remains for state laws imposing additional burdens upon traders. 14 In fact, the Solicitor’s Office of the Department of the Interior in 1940 15 and again in 1943 16 interpreted these statutes to bar States from taxing federally licensed Indian traders on their sales to reservation Indians on a reservation. We think those rulings were correct.
Congress has, since the creation of the Navajo Reservation nearly a century ago, left the Indians on it largely free to run the reservation and its affairs without state control, a policy which has automatically relieved Arizona of all burdens for carrying on those same responsibilities. And in compliance with its treaty obligations the Federal Government has provided for roads, education and other services needed by the Indians. 17 We *691
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380 U.S. 685, 85 S. Ct. 1242, 14 L. Ed. 2d 165, 1965 U.S. LEXIS 1344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-trading-post-co-v-arizona-tax-commission-scotus-1965.