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Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Shannon, 88 (1912)

Court: Supreme Court of the United States Number: 88 Visitors: 43
Judges: Lamar, After Making the Foregoing Statement
Filed: Feb. 19, 1912
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: 223 U.S. 468 (1912) GAAR, SCOTT & COMPANY v. SHANNON. No. 88. Supreme Court of United States. Argued December 11, 1911. Decided February 19, 1912. ERROR TO THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS FOR THE THIRD SUPREME JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF TEXAS. *470 Mr. C.E. More, with whom Mr. Almon W. Bulkley and Mr. J.L. Patterson were on the brief, for plaintiffs in error. Mr. James D. Walthall, with whom Mr. Jewell P. Lightfoot was on the brief, for defendant in error. MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, after making the f
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223 U.S. 468 (1912)

GAAR, SCOTT & COMPANY
v.
SHANNON.

No. 88.

Supreme Court of United States.

Argued December 11, 1911.
Decided February 19, 1912.
ERROR TO THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS FOR THE THIRD SUPREME JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF TEXAS.

*470 Mr. C.E. More, with whom Mr. Almon W. Bulkley and Mr. J.L. Patterson were on the brief, for plaintiffs in error.

Mr. James D. Walthall, with whom Mr. Jewell P. Lightfoot was on the brief, for defendant in error.

MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

On writ of error to a judgment, sustaining defendant's demurrer to the complaint for the recovery of taxes paid under protest, the Court of Appeals of Texas considered all the assignments of error. It held that the permit of 1901, to do business for ten years, was not a contract and that therefore the State during that period might demand an increased or additional franchise tax. It ruled that foreign corporations might be altogether excluded, or required to pay a discriminatory tax as the condition of the right to do business in Texas. It further held that even if there had been merit in plaintiff's contention, it was not entitled to recover the taxes for 1905 and 1906, because they had been voluntarily paid.

1. If the record affords a basis for sustaining the last proposition, this court cannot consider whether the act violates the Fourteenth Amendment, or the commerce and contract clauses of the Constitution. For, as repeatedly ruled, where a state court has decided against the plaintiff in error on a matter of general law broad enough to sustain the judgment, this court will not consider the Federal questions, even though they may have been actually considered and determined adversely to his contention. Hale v. Akers, 132 U.S. 554, 564. The principle has been enforced in cases where the ruling of the state court was based on the application of the doctrine of res adjudicata, laches, statute of limitations, and others *471 similar in kind to that involving the effect of a voluntary payment. Northern Pacific R.R. Co. v. Ellis, 144 U.S. 458; Hale v. Lewis, 181 U.S. 473; Moran v. Horsky, 178 U.S. 205; Pierce v. Somerset Ry., 171 U.S. 641, 648; Rector v. Ashley, 6 Wall. 142.

It is, however, equally well settled that if the Federal question is properly presented and necessarily controls the determination of the case, the appellate jurisdiction of this court is not defeated because the decision is put upon some matter of local law. West Chicago R.R. Co. v. Chicago, 201 U.S. 506, 520. And the plaintiff in error insists that, under this rule, the constitutionality of the statute must be decided, because the facts stated in the complaint, and admitted by the demurrer, do not afford any basis for holding that the money was voluntarily paid.

2. Neither a statute imposing a tax, nor the execution thereunder, nor a mere demand for payment, is treated as duress. It does not necessarily follow that there will be a levy on goods. Or, if there is, the citizen, to avoid the consequences of the levy, may pay the money, regain the use of his property and maintain a suit for the recovery of what has been exacted from him. The legal remedy redresses the wrong. But he has the same right to sue if he pays under compulsion of a statute, whose self-executing provisions amount to duress. An act which declares that where the franchise tax is not paid by a given date a penalty of twenty-five per cent shall be incurred, the license of the company shall be cancelled, and the right to sue shall be lost, operates much more as duress, than a levy on a limited amount of property. Payment to avoid such consequences is not voluntary but compulsory, and may be recovered back. Swift Co. v. United States, 111 U.S. 22, 29; Robertson v. Frank Brothers Co., 132 U.S. 17, 23; Oceanic Navigation Co. v. Stranahan, 214 U.S. 320, 329; Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R.R. *472 v. O'Connor, decided this day, ante, p. 280. Otherwise plaintiff might be without any remedy whatever. For in Arkansas Building & Loan Asso. v. Madden, 175 U.S. 269, it was held that a taxpayer was not entitled to an injunction, against the enforcement of a similar statute of the State of Texas, unless he could show that there was no adequate remedy at law. And, as payment under such an act was treated as compulsory, for which suit might be maintained, and as there was nothing to indicate inability of complainant to pay, or of the defendant to respond to a judgment, the bill was dismissed without prejudice. That necessarily recognized that the plaintiff had the right to pay under protest, sue the officer for the amount exacted and recover it back in case it should be made to appear that the statute was void.

3. If, therefore, the plaintiff had been included in the class to which this statute applied, and, under the duress of its automatically enforced provisions, had paid the tax to avoid the disruption of its business, it could have maintained an action to recover the amount thus exacted. In that suit it would have been entitled to a decision on the question as to whether the statute was constitutional, and to a review of the judgment if it had been adverse to the company's contention. But the company did not, in any sense, come within the purview of the act. The plaintiff alleged that it was engaged only in interstate commerce. If so, the statute did not require from it the payment of the tax. For the Supreme Court of Texas in Allen v. Tyson-Jones Buggy Co., 91 Texas, 22, and Miller v. Goodman, 91 Texas, 41, had held that the franchise tax act had no application to corporations doing an interstate business. The duress of its provisions, therefore, operated only on those doing intrastate business; and if the plaintiff, on a mere demand, paid the tax imposed by a statute, applicable only to other corporations, it had no more right to recover than would a drygoods merchant who voluntarily *473 paid a tax illegally imposed on those engaged in the selling of liquor.

To permit those not affected by a statute to pay the sum thereby assessed, and then sue for its recovery on the ground that the act was void, would reverse the rule that "one who would strike down a State statute as violative of the Federal Constitution must bring himself by proper averments and showing within the class as to whom the act thus attacked is unconstitutional. He must show that the alleged unconstitutional feature of the law injures him, and so operates as to deprive him of rights protected by the Federal Constitution." Southern Railway Co. v. King, 217 U.S. 524, 534.

What we have said shows that the question as to voluntary payment fairly arose out of the record, and was not arbitrarily injected into the case. Leathe v. Thomas, 207 U.S. 93,99. A decision on that non-federal point could properly dispose of the plaintiff's suit to recover back what it had paid. The judgment of the Civil Court of Appeals must, therefore, be

Affirmed.

Source:  CourtListener

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