PULLMAN SOUTHERN OAR 00.
v.
NOLAN.
277
2. PmVl1,EGE TAx. Under the constitution of Tennessee, as construed by the supreme court of that state, a privilege is the exercise of an occupation or business which requires a license from some proper authority, designated by Borne general law, and not free to all, or any, without such license. The right, therefore, of the legislature of 1hat state to declare an occupation or business a privilege must depend upon the right of the state to prohibit it altogether. 3. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-INTERSTATE COMMEIWE. The interstate transDortation of passengers is beyond the reach of a state legislature, and, therefore, the legislature of Tennessee has no power to impose upon the Pullman Southern Car Company a privilege tax of $75 per annum for running or using sleeping cars in the transportation of interstate passengers, notwithstanding such cars may enter or cross the territory of that state. 4. INTERSTATE COMMEHCIil. The cars used by the Pullman Southern Car Company are vehicles of transportation, and their use in receiving and delivering travelers at points widely separated is commerce. 5. SAME-TAXABLE DITl'S. The Pullman Southern Car Company. a corporation of Kentueky, has no domicile in Tennessee, and is not personally suuject to its jurisdiction for pur. poses of taxation. The sleeping cars which it runs upon the railroads of Tennessee, in the transportation of interstate' passengers. have no taxable sitt:,q within that state. They are not brought into the stale for the purpose of being employed in a business carried on within it. They are in the state only as passing to and from it While in the act of transportation, performed by virtue of a right secured to the owner of them, not by the authority of the laws of Tennessee, but by virtue of a right secured by the exclusive jurisdiction of congress under the constitution.
At Law. O. A. Lochrane and Ed. Baxter, for Pullman Southern Car Company. 'P, E. Matthews, for ComptrollElr Nolan and Davidson cnnty. Lanier &; Dodd, for Davidson county. W. A. Quarles, for Montgomery county and others. Head &; Champion, for the state of Tennessee. MATTHEWS, Justice. The first of these cases is an action at law to recover back an amount alleged to have been illegally exacted taxes, a statute of the state authorizing such a suit, and the plaintiff being a citizep of Kentucky. It is submitted for decision upon a general demurrer to the declaration. The second is a bill in equity, the object of which is to perpetually enjoin the defendants, the counties of Montgomery, Stewart, Houston, Robertson, Sumner, and son, from collecting taxes, which they assert the right to collect, of the same description as those involved in the action against the comptroller. The third suit is a bill in equity, filed by the state of ']'ennessee, seeking to compel a discovery from the defendant of the number of cars used by it, claimed to be subject to the tax in question, and to recover and to collect the amount of tax due thereon. This suit was commenced in the chancery court of Davidson county, but was removed into this court on the application of the defendant. All three cases involve and depend upon a single question. The constitution of Tennessee (article 2, § 28) provides that "all property, real, personal, or mixed, shall be taxed, b!lt the legislature
278
FEDERAL REPORTER.
may except such as may be held by the state, by oounties, cities, or towns, and used exolusively for publio or corporation purposes, and snch as may be held and used for purposes purely religious, oharitable, scientifio, literary, or eduoational; and shall except one thousand ($1,000) dollars worth of personal property in the hands of each taxpayer and the direct product of t.he soil in the hands of the produoer and his immediate vendee. All property shall be taxed according to its value, that value to be ascertained in such manner as the legislature shall direct, so that taxes shall be equal and uniform throughout the state. No species of property from which a tax may be oolleoted shall be taxed higher than any other species of property of the same value. But the legislature shall have power to tax merchants, peddlers, and privileges in such manner as they may from time to time direct." That constitution also provides (article 2, § 29) that "the general assembly shall have power to authorize the several counties and incorporated towns in tilis state to impose taxes for county and corporation purposes, respectively, in such manner as shall be presoribed by law, and all property shall be taxed according to its value upon the prinoiples established in regard to state taxation." On March 16, 1877, the general assembly of Tennessee passed an act entitled, "An act declaring the mode and manner of valuing the property of telegraph oompanies for taxation, and of taxing sleeping cars," the sixth section of which is as follows: "That· the running and using of sleeping cars or coaches on railroads in Tennessee not owned by the railroads upon which they are run or used is declared to be a privilege, and the companies owning and running or using said cars or coaches are required to report on or before the first of May of each year to the comptroller the number of cars so used by them in this state; and they shall be required to pay to the comptroller by the first of July following $50 for each and everyone of said cars or coaches used or so run over said roads; and if the said privilege tax herein assessed be not paid, as aforesaid, comptroller shall enforce the collection of the same by distress warrant."
The Pullman Southern Car Company is a corporation created by the laws of Kentucky, with its principal office and plaoe of business in Louisville, in that state. It manufactures sleeping cars and drawing-room coaches, and furnishes them to railroads, under oontracts for that purpose, retaining the ownership and receiving compensation by the sale of tickets to passengers desiring such accommodations. It has Fluch arrangements with various railroads in Tennessee, on and over whose roads its cars are run and used, in carrying passengers into the state from points out of it, and out of the state from pointR within it, and across the state between points in other states, as well as between points wholly within it. Two only of such cars are used exclusively for carrying passengers between points wholly within the state, and as to them no question is made. In respect to all others it is claimed that the tax is invalid, asa regulation of interstate commerce, the exclusive right to regulate which is expressly confided by the constitution to the congress of the United
PULLMAN SOUTHERN CAB CO. V. NOLAN.
279
States. The tax, it is not denied, is what is known to the constitution and laws of Tennessee as a privilege tax. It is not a property tax, for, by the terms of the state constitution, that must be based on value; whereas, this is an arbitrary charge fixed by the legislature it-. self, without regard to the actual or comparative value of the article which is the basis of the tax. A reference to repeated decisions of the supreme court of Tennessee leaves no room to doubt what constitutes a "privilege" as a subject of taxation, under the constitution and laws of that state. "The first legislature, after the formation of the constitution," said that court i{l F'rench v. Baker, 4 Sneed, 193, "acted upon the idea that every occupation which was not open to every citizen, but could only be exercised by a license from some constituted authority, was a privilege. And it is presumed that this is a correct definition of the term." In Mayor of Columbia v. Guest, 3 Head, 414, the keeping of a liverystable was held not to be a privilege, because the legislature had not so declared it. "A privilege," said the court, in Jenkins v. Ewin, 8 Heisk. 456, "is the exercise of an occupation or business which requires a license from some proper authority, designated by some generallaw, and not free to all, or any, without such license." "There is a clear distinction recognized," says the supreme court of Georgia, in Horne Ius. Co. v. Augusta, 50 Ga. 530, "between a license granted or required as .a condition precedent before a certain thing can be done and a tax assessed on the business which that license mayauthorize one to engage in. A license is a right granted by some competent authority to do an act which, without such authority, would be illegal. A tax is a rate or sum of money assessed upon the person, property, business, or occupation of the citizen." And this privilege, it is said by counsel for the staie in argument, has been repeatedly recognized by the supreme court of Tennessee. As early as 1839, in the case of Robinson v. Mayor of Franklin, 1 Humph. 158, and in Mayor of Columbia v. Beasly, Id. 232, the court says: "The legislature may tax privileges in what proportion they choose, and so may municipal corporations, provided the inequality be not such as to make it oppressive upon a particular class of the community." It results, therefore, in Tennessee that the legislature may declare the right to carryon any business or occupation to be a privilege, to be purchased from the state upon such conditions only as the law may prescribe, to engage in and pursue which, without compliance therewith, is illegal. In the present case "the running or using of sleeping cars or coaches on railroads in Tennessee, not owned by the railroads upon which they are run or used, is declared to be a privilege." The condition upon which it may be obtained and exercised is the payment of an annual tax of $75 for every car so run and used. n that condition is not complied with, such running and using of sleeping cars or coaches is forbidden and is unlawfut The right to legiso attach. this condition involves the right to attach any other
280
lature may see fit to adopt, and the question of the right to impose the tax, as a condition of the exercise of the privilege, resolves itself into the broader question of the right to prohibit it altogether; for that which the legislature mat license it may forbid. Indeed, it is forbidden unless it is licensed. The question, thus reduced, becomes one, not of the limitations upon the taxing powers of the state, but upon its power to declare the business of this company, as carried on upon and across its territory, a privilege, or to forbid it altogether. "Beyond question," said Mr. Justice CLIFFORD, delivering the opinion of the court in Transportation Co. v. Wheeling, 99 U. S. 273-279, "these authorities show that all subjects over which the sovereign power of a state extends are objects of taxation, the rule being that the sovereignty of a state extends to everything which exists by its own authority or is introduced by its permission, except those means which are employed by congress to carry into execution the powers given by the people to the federal government, whose laws, made in pursuance to the constitution, are supreme." And according to the decision in Crandall v. Nevada, 6 Wall. 35, the power of the states, whether exerted in the form of taxation or otherwise,is still further limited, so as not to deny 01' impair any rights belonging to citizens of the United States, as such, by virtue of the constitution, as in that case, the right of the people to pass and repass into, through, and out of any state, without interruption. In that case Mr. Justice MILLER, delivering the opinion of the court, after commenting on the case of McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, said (page 46:) "It will be observed that it was not the extent of the tax in that case which was complained of, but the right to levy any tax of that character. So in the case before us it may be said that a tax of one dollar for passing through the state of Nevada by stage. coach, or railroad cannot sensibly affect any function of the government or deprive a citizen of any \'aluable But if the state can tax a railroad passenger one dollar, it can tax him $1,000. If one state can do this, so can every other state. And then one or more states, covering the only practicable routes of travel from the east to the west or from the north to the south, may totally prevent or seriously burden all transportation of passengers from one part of the country to another."
In the case of the State Freight Tax, 15 Wall. 232-281, it was distinctly declared that the transportation of passengers or merchandise through a state, or from one state to another, was subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of congress, and that a state could not directly tax persons or property passing through it, or tax them indirectly by levying a tax upon their transportation. And in Almy v. State of Oalifornia, 24 How. 169, as explained in Woodruff v. Parham, 8 Wall. 123-138, it was decided that a stamp tax imposed by state authority upon bills of lading for the transportation of gold and 3ilver from one point within the state to any point without the state "was a regulation of commerce, a tax imposed upon the transportation of,goods from one state to another over the high seas, in conflict
PULLMAN SOUTHERN CA.R CO. V. NOLA.N.
281
wiG1 that freedom of transit of goods and persons between one state a.nd another, which is within the rule laid down in Crandall v. Nevada, 6 Wall. 35, and with the authority of congress, to regulate commerce among the states." If a tax: upon the person or thing carried is a regulation of commerce forbidden to the states, it seems impossible to escape the conclusion that a tax: imposed as the price of the. privilege of being carried is equally such a regulation. It is immaterial whether the privilege granted or withheld is attributed to t1:le carrier or to that which he is engaged in carrying. In both cases it is a burden upon the act of transportation and a tribute levied directly upon commerce itself. In the language of Mr. Justice STRONG, de. livering the opinion of the court in the case of the State Freight Tax, 15 Wall. 232-281 : "Interstate transportation of passengers is beyond the reach of the state legislature. * * * We regard it as established that no state can impose a tax upon freight transported from state to state, or upon the transporter because of such transportation." The case is to be distinguished from that of Osborne v. Mobile, 16 Wall. 479, where the subject of the tax was not the act of transportation itself, but a general business carried on within the state by a resident citizen thereof, which included the making of contracts for transportation beyond the limits of tile state. Nor is it within the decision of the case of Wiggins Ferry Co. v. East St. Louis, 107 U. S. 365; S. C. 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 257, where the point ruled was that the levying of a tax upon vessels or other water-craft, or the exaction of a ferry license by the state within which the property subject to the exaction has its situ!! 'is not a regulation of commerce within the meaning of the constitution of the United States. In the present case the Pullman Southern Car Company, a corporotion of Kentucky, has no domicile in Tennessee, and is not personally subject to its jurisdiction for purposes of taxation, and the sleeping ears which it runs and uses upon the railroads of that state, in the transportation of passengers into and it, from and to other states, have no situs within that state for the purposes of taxation. They are not brought into the state for the purpose of being employed in a business carried on within it, and do not become a part of the mass of property within the jurisdiction of the state for purposes of taxation. They are in the state only as passing to and from it while in the act of transportation, performed by virtue of a right secured to the owners of them; not by the authority of the laws of Tennessee, but by virtue of a right secured by the exclusive jurisdiction of congress under the constitution. It has been suggested that these sleeping cars do not really perform any office in the act of transportation, but may be likened rather to hotels or inns on wheels, and, like other hotels or inns, subject to regulation and license by the state; but the refinement is too subtle to be sound. Even regarded as such, hotels or inns on wheels, pro-
282
FEDERAL
pelled by steam-power over railroad tracks, receiving and delivering travelers at points widely separated in distance, would properly be considered still as vehicles of transportation, and their use in that way would be commerce. The conclusion reached from these considerations is that the right to levy a tax upon the running and using of sleeping cars or coaches on railroads in Tennessee, not owned by the railroads upon which they are run or used as a privilege, can rest only upon a concession that the state may regulate It in all other respects, or forbid it altogether; that, consequently, it is a regulation of commerce among the states when applied to such cars employed in interstate transportation, and in that application contrary to the constitution of the United States, and therefore null and void. In accordance with this opinion, judgments and .decrees wilL be entered in these. cases as follows: (1)In No. 2,582, the action against the comptroller to recover the taxes paid under protest as illegally exacted, the demurrer will be overruled, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff for such amount as may be agreed on or otherwise ascertained. (2) In No. 2,591 a decree will be rendered finding the equity of the cause with the complainant, and granting the relief prayed, enjoining the several county authorities from proceeding further in the collection of the tax. (3) In No. 2,679 the bill of the state will be dismissed for want .of equity.
RUBEL 'V. BEAVER FALLS CUTLERY Co.
(Circuit Court, N. D. Illinoi8.
November 24,1884.'
PRACTICE-ACTION AGAINST FOREIGN CORPORATION-SERVICE ON AGENT-MoTION TO QUASH-PLEA IN ABATEMENT-ILLINOIS STATUTE.
The question of fact as to whether a party on whom service of summons in an action against a foreign corporation was mane under Illinois statute was at the time of sucb service an agent of the corporation can only be raised by plea in abatement, unless the grounds of the motion to quash the return of service appear on the face of the record.
Motion to Quash Return of Service. Ke'f'r ct Ba'f'r and Ira W. Rubel, for complainant. Wm. A. Montgomery, for defendant. BLODGETT, J. This is an action of assumpsit. The defendant is 8 non-resident corporation, and the return of the marshal on the summons is that he has served the same by reading and delivering a copy thereof to Arthur Brittan, agent of defendant, having been unable to find the president of the defendant company in this district. The defendant entered a special appearance, and moved to quash the return of service on the ground that Brittan, on whom the summons was served as agent of defendant, is not, and was not at the date of
RUBEL
BEAVER FALLS CUTLERY 00.
283
the service, an agent of defendant on whom service of process against defendant could lawfully be made. The plaintiff now moves to strik& this motion from the files, on the ground that the question of fact as to whether Brittan was such agent can only be raised by plea in abatement, unless the grounds of the motion to quash appear on the face of the record. By section 914, Rev. St., it is declared that the practice, pleadings, and forms and modes of proceeding in civil cases in the United States cOllrts, other than in equity and admiralty oases, shall conform as near as may be to the practice, pleadings, and forms and modes of proceeding in like causes in the courts of reoord of the states within which such courts are held. This provision being substantially the fifth section of the act of June 1, 1872, entitled, "An act to further the administration of justice." The important question, then, is to determine what is the proper practice in the courts of record of this state in suits of a like nature with this. By an act of the general assembly of this state, passed February 8, 1858, it was provided that service of process on an incorporated company in this state should be made by leaving a copy with the president, or if the president was not found in the county, then with any clerk, cashier, secretary, engineer, conductor, or other agent of such oompany found in the county, and this provision is substantially found in section 5, c. 110, Rev. St. Ill. 1874. In M'ineral Point R. Co. v. Keep, 22 Ill. 9, the supreme court of this state construed this statnte, and held that its provisions applied to foreign corporations doing business through their agents and officers in this state, but that the return of the sheriff was not conclusive upon the fact of the agency of the person on whom the process was served, and that the defendant could by plea in abatement put in issue the fact of the agency of the person on whom the process was served, the court, in its opinion, saying: "Great injustice and ruin to incorporated companies might be the consequence had the officer the undisputed power to select any person he might choose as the agent of a company sued, and serve the process upon him; that he was the agent mUfjt be held to be a fact open to the country. * * * OUf statute authorizing service of process on an agent or conductor is an innovation upon the ancient practice, and no force and effect should be given to it than is absolutely necessary. When a party sues an incorporated company, whose president and whose place of doing business is out of the county where suit is brought, and causes his process to be served on one whom he chooses to consider the agent of the company, it is no hardship to require him to prove such person was the agent. We think, therefore, that the fact of agency could have been put in issue by plea in abatement of the writ, the defendants appearing for that purpose only. By such practice no injustice can be done. If the issue is found against the company, and the fact of agency established, leave will always be given to plead to the merits."
In Sibert v. Thorp, 77 Ill. 4:8, the supreme court went still further, and held t1).at any defendant might put the truth of the return of the sheriff upon the process in issue by plea in abatement; that instea.d
284
Of the officer's return upon the process being conclusive upon the defendant it is only prima facie eviden(le of the matters therein stated, although the court admitted that this decision was in conflict with the dicta in many of its earlier decisions. And in National Bank v. National Bank, 90 Ill. 56, the rule in ll1ineral Point R. Go v. Keep and Sibert v. Thorp was affirmed. It is true there are some expressions in Protection Life Ins. Go. v. Palmer, 81 Ill. 88, which seem repugnant to the rule laid down in Mineral Point R. Go. v. Keep, supra, and Sibert v. Thorp, supra,; bnt in the later case, in 90 IIl., the court expressly says there was no intention in Protection Life Ins. Co. v. Palmer to overrule the previous decision in Mineral Point R. Go. v. Keep, and reiterates the rule that the only way to traverse the return of service made by the officer serving the process is by a plea in abatement. It is trne that in Mineral Point R. Co. v. Keep the court said: "If the issue is found against the company, and the fact of agency established, leave will always be given to plead to the merits;" while in Brown v.Illinois Cent. Mut. Ins. Co. 42 Ill. 366, it was held that if the issue of fact on such a plea was found against the defendant, the judgment must go against him. And in 1 Chit. PI. 464, it is said: "If the issue of fact be joined upon the replication, and found for the plaintiffs, the jury should assess the damages, and the judgment is peremptory, for the delay quod recuperet and not respondent ouster." And the same rule was applied in McKinstry v. Pennoyer, 1 Scam. 319, and Motherell v. Beave?', 2 Gilm. 70. It may therefore be considered that under the Illinois cases, both before and since Mineral Point R. Go. v. Keep, the expression used in the latter case that "leave will always be given to plead to the merits," if the defendant fails to sustain his plea in abatement, has been overruled, and that the common-law rule of judgment, quod recupcret, must be followed. A brief examination of Mineral Foint R. Co. v. Keep shows that the question as to what judgment the court should render when the issue on such a plea is found against the defendant was not before the court, and the expressions on that point in the opinion may be considered -as obiter even if the court had not since, in effect, so ruled. But it is urged that the practice of the United States courts is different from that indicated by the Illinois authorities. It may be sufficient to say that the question in this case is to determine what is the proper practice in the Illinois courts, and then follow their rule, but I do not think the cases cited by defendant sustain the practice. In Halsey v. Hurd, 6 McLean, 14, the defect in the service appeared upon the face of the return, and was properly brought to the attention of the court by motion to quash the service. In Juneau Bank v. McSpedan, 5 Biss. 64, a non-resident party to a suit, while in necessary attendance upon the court where his suit was pending, was served with process in another suit, and the court, on motion, held that he was privileged from suit under the circumstances, find set aside the service as it might properly do, as all the facts ap-
UNITED STATES
V.
BARNHART.
285
peared of record and the party was under the protection of the court where his suit was pending. Hm'kneS8 v. Hyde t 98 U. S. 476, was a case from Idaho territory, where objection was made· to the service of process on the ground that it was served outside of the limits of the territory; but the question as to how the sufficiency of the service was to be questioned, whether by motion or by plea, was not made, but·the only point considered was whether the marshal could serve the proceSil outside the territorial limits, so that this case gives no aid upon the question at bar. And the same may be said of Nazro v. Oragin, 3 Dill. 474. While the general rule in this state undoubtedly is that a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction or quash the service of process will not be entertained unless the objection appears upon the face of the record. In Holloway v. Freeman, 22 Ill. 197t it is said that a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction will not be entertained unless the objection taken appears upon the face of the papers; but that when the grounds of the objection do not so appeart but have to be shown by extrinsic proof, the question must be raised by plea in abatement. The same rule was applied in McNab v. Bennett, 66 Ill. 157, and in Holton v. Daly, 106 Ill. 131. It is true the rule that judgment must be rendered against a defendant who fails to sustain his issue of fact on a plea of abatement is a harsh one, but in most cases such a defense can be only a mere dilatory plea and should not be encouraged by the courts; andin cases like this, certainly, a defendant ought to know whether the person on whom process is served is or is not his agent, and should be held to make the issue on that point at his peril. The motion to strike from the files the motion to quash is sustained.
BARNHART and another.
(Circuit Court, D. Oregon. December 8, 1884.) 1. INDIAN COUNTRY-UMATILLA RESERVATION.
The UmatiIla Indian reservation is a place within the geographical limits and general jurisdiction of the state of Oregon, but is also a tract of country to which the Indian title is not extinguished, and which has been permanently set apart by treaty as a reservation for the sole and exclusive use of the Indians thereon, and is therefore" Indian country," within the meaning of that phrase as used in the Revised Statutes. The United 8tates has jurisdiction over the intercourse with trihallndians, and congress may prohibit and provide for t1)e punishment of acts relating to or affecting such intercourse anywhere in the 'United i:ltates.
2.
INTERCOURSE WITH INDIAN TRIBES.