U.S. Supreme Court
QUILL CORP. v. HEITKAMP,
504 U.S. 298 (1992)
504
U.S. 298
QUILL CORPORATION,
PETITIONER v. NORTH DAKOTA
by and through its TAX COMMISSIONER, HEIDI HEITKAMP
CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH DAKOTA
No. 91-194
Argued January 22, 1992
Decided May 26, 1992
Respondent North Dakota through its Tax Commissioner, filed an
action in state court to require petitioner Quill Corporation - an
out-of-state mail-order house with neither outlets nor sales
representatives in the State - to collect and pay a use tax on goods
purchased for use in the State. The trial court ruled in Quill's
favor. It found the case indistinguishable from National Bellas Hess,
Inc. v. Department of Revenue of Ill.,
386 U.S. 753 , which, in holding that a similar Illinois statute
violated the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause and created an
unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce, concluded that a
"seller whose only connection with customers in the State is by common
carrier or the . . . mail" lacked the requisite minimum contacts with
the State. Id., at 758. The State Supreme Court reversed, concluding,
inter alia, that, pursuant to Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady,
430 U.S. 274 , and its progeny, the Commerce Clause no longer
mandated the sort of physical presence nexus suggested in Bellas Hess;
and that, with respect to the Due Process Clause, cases following
Bellas Hess had not construed minimum contacts to require physical
presence within a State as a prerequisite to the legitimate exercise
of state power.
Held:
1. The Due Process
Clause does not bar enforcement of the State's use tax against Quill.
This Court's due process jurisprudence has evolved substantially since
Bellas Hess, abandoning formalistic tests focused on a defendant's
presence within a State in favor of a more flexible inquiry into
whether a defendant's contacts with the forum made it reasonable, in
the context of the federal system of Government, to require it to
defend the suit in that State. See Shaffer v. Heitner,
433 U.S. 186, 212 . Thus, to the extent that this Court's
decisions have indicated that the Clause requires a physical presence
in a State, they are overruled. In this case, Quill has purposefully
directed its activities at North Dakota residents, the magnitude of
those contacts are more than sufficient for due process purposes, and
the tax is related to the benefits Quill receives from access to the
State. Pp. 5-8.
2. The State's
enforcement of the use tax against Quill places an unconstitutional
burden on interstate commerce. Pp. 9-19.
[504
U.S. 298, 299]
(a) Bellas Hess was not
rendered obsolete by this Court's subsequent decision in Complete
Auto, supra, which set forth the four-part test that continues to
govern the validity of state taxes under the Commerce Clause. Although
Complete Auto renounced an analytical approach that looked to a
statute's formal language, rather than its practical effect, in
determining a state tax statute's validity, the Bellas Hess decision
did not rely on such formalism. Nor is Bellas Hess inconsistent with
Complete Auto. It concerns the first part of the Complete Auto, test
and stands for the proposition that a vendor whose only contacts with
the taxing State are by mail or common carrier lacks the "substantial
nexus" required by the Commerce Clause. Pp. 9-12.
(b) Contrary to the
State's argument, a mail-order house may have the "minimum contacts"
with a taxing State as required by the Due Process Clause and yet lack
the "substantial nexus" with the State required by the Commerce
Clause. These requirements are not identical, and are animated by
different constitutional concerns and policies. Due process concerns
the fundamental fairness of governmental activity, and the touchstone
of due process nexus analysis is often identified as "notice" or "fair
warning." In contrast, the Commerce Clause and its nexus requirement
are informed by structural concerns about the effects of state
regulation on the national economy. Pp. 12-13.
(c) The evolution of
this Court's Commerce Clause jurisprudence does not indicate
repudiation of the Bellas Hess rule. While cases subsequent to Bellas
Hess and concerning other types of taxes have not adopted a
bright-line, physical presence requirement similar to that in Bellas
Hess, see, e.g., Standard Pressed Steel Co. v. Department of Revenue
of Wash.,
419 U.S. 560 , their reasoning does not compel rejection of the
Bellas Hess rule regarding sales and use taxes. To the contrary, the
continuing value of a bright-line rule in this area and the doctrine
and principles of stare decisis indicate that the rule remains good
law. Pp. 14-18.
(d) The underlying issue
here is one that Congress may be better qualified to resolve, and one
that it has the ultimate power to resolve. Pp. 18-19.
470 N.W.2d 203 (N.D. 1991), reversed and
remanded.
STEVENS, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court with
respect to Parts I, II, and III, and the opinion of the Court with
respect to Part IV, in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and BLACKMUN, O'CONNOR,
and SOUTER, JJ., joined. SCALIA, J., filed an opinion concurring in
part and concurring in the judgment, in which KENNEDY and THOMAS, JJ.,
joined, post, p. 319. WHITE, J., filed an opinion concurring in part
and dissenting in part, post, p. 321.
[504
U.S. 298, 300]
John E. Gaggini argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the
briefs were Don S. Harnack, Richard A. Hanson, James H. Peters, Nancy
T. Owens, and William P. Pearce.
Nicholas J. Spaeth, Attorney General of North Dakota, argued the
cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Laurie J. Loveland,
Solicitor General, Robert W. Wirtz, Assistant Attorney General, and
Alan H. Friedman, Special Assistant Attorney General.
*
[
Footnote * ] Briefs of amici curiae urging reversal were filed for
the State of New Hampshire et al. by John P. Arnold, Attorney General
of New Hampshire, and Harold T. Judd, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Charles M. Oberly III, Attorney General of Delaware, and John
R. McKernan, Jr., Governor of Maine; for the American Bankers
Association et al. by John J. Gill III, Michael F. Crotty, and Frank
M. Salinger; for the American Council for the Blind et al. by David C.
Todd and Timothy J. May; for Arizona Mail Order Co., Inc., et al. by
Maryann B. Gall, Timothy B. Dyk, Michael J. Meehan, Frank G. Julian,
David J. Bradford, George S. Isaacson, Martin I. Eisenstein, and
Stuart A. Smith; for Carrot Top Industries, Inc., et al. by Charles A.
Trost and James F. Blumstein; for the Clarendon Foundation by Ronald
D. Maines; for the Coalition for Small Direct Marketers by Richard J.
Leighton and Dan M. Peterson; for the Direct Marketing Association by
George Isaacson, Martin I. Eisenstein, and Robert J. Levering; for the
National Association of Manufacturers et al. by Bruce J. Ennis, Jr.,
David W. Ogden, Jan S. Amundson, and John Kamp; for Magazine
Publishers of America, Inc., et al. by Eli D. Minton, James R. Cregan,
Ian D. Volner, and Stephen F. Owen, Jr., and for the Tax Executives
Institute, Inc., by Timothy J. McCormally.
Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed for the State
of Connecticut et al. by Richard Blumenthal, Attorney General of
Connecticut, and Paul J. Hartman, Charles W. Burson, Attorney General
of Tennessee, Daniel E. Lungren, Attorney General of California,
Winston Bryant, Attorney General of Arkansas, Robert A. Butterworth,
Attorney General of Florida, Michael J. Bowers, Attorney General of
Georgia, Larry EchoHawk, Attorney General of Idaho, Roland W. Burris,
Attorney General of Illinois, Bonnie J. Campbell, Attorney General of
Iowa, Frederic J. Cowan, Attorney General of Kentucky, William J.
Guste, Jr., Attorney General of Louisiana, J. Joseph Curran, Jr.,
Attorney General of Maryland, Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General of
Massachusetts, Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General of Michigan, Mike
Moore, Attorney General of Mississippi, Frankie Sue Del Papa, Attorney
General of Nevada, Robert
[504 U.S. 298, 301] Abrams, Attorney General of New
York, Lee Fisher, Attorney General of Ohio, Susan B. Loving, Attorney
General of Oklahoma, Ernest D. Preate, Jr., Attorney General of
Pennsylvania, T. Travis Medlock, Attorney General of South Carolina,
Dan Morales, Attorney General of Texas, Paul Van Dam, Attorney General
of Utah, Jeffrey L. Amestoy, Attorney General of Vermont, Mary Sue
Terry, Attorney General of Virginia, Ken Eikenberry, Attorney General
of Washington, Mario J. Palumbo, Attorney General of West Virginia,
and John Payton; for the State of New Jersey by Robert J. Del Tufo,
Attorney General, Sarah T. Darrow, Deputy Attorney General, Joseph L.
Wannotti, Assistant Attorney General, Richard G. Taranto, and Joel I.
Klein; for the State of New Mexico by Tom Udall, Attorney General, and
Frank D. Katz, Special Assistant Attorney General; for the City of New
York by O. Peter Sherwood, Edward F. X. Hart, and Stanley Buchsbaum;
for the International Council of Shopping Centers, Inc., et al. by
Charles Rothfeld; for the Multistate Tax Commission by James F. Flug
and Martin Lobel; for the National Governors' Association et al. by
Richard Ruda; and for the Tax Policy Research Project by Rita Marie
Cain. [504 U.S. 298,
301]
JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case, like National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
of Ill.,
386 U.S. 753 (1967), involves a State's attempt to require an
out-of-state mail-order house that has neither outlets nor sales
representatives in the State to collect and pay a use tax on goods
purchased for use within the State. In Bellas Hess, we held that a
similar Illinois statute violated the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment and created an unconstitutional burden on
interstate commerce. In particular, we ruled that a "seller whose only
connection with customers in the State is by common carrier or the
United States mail" lacked the requisite minimum contacts with the
State. Id., at 758.
In this case, the Supreme Court of North Dakota declined to follow
Bellas Hess, because "the tremendous social, economic, commercial, and
legal innovations" of the past quarter-century have rendered its
holding "obsole[te]." 470 N.W.2d 203, 208 (1991). Having granted
certiorari,
502 U.S. 808 , we must either reverse the State Supreme Court
[504
U.S. 298, 302]
or overrule Bellas Hess. While we agree with much of the state
court's reasoning, we take the former course.
I
Quill is a Delaware corporation with offices and warehouses in
Illinois, California, and Georgia. None of its employees work or
reside in North Dakota, and its ownership of tangible property in that
State is either insignificant or nonexistent.
1 Quill sells office equipment and supplies; it solicits business
through catalogs and flyers, advertisements in national periodicals,
and telephone calls. Its annual national sales exceed $200 million, of
which almost $1 million are made to about 3,000 customers in North
Dakota. It is the sixth largest vendor of office supplies in the
State. It delivers all of its merchandise to its North Dakota
customers by mail or common carrier from out-of-state locations.
As a corollary to its sales tax, North Dakota imposes a use tax
upon property purchased for storage, use, or consumption within the
State. North Dakota requires every "retailer maintaining a place of
business in" the State to collect the tax from the consumer and remit
it to the State. N.D. Cent. Code 57-40.2-07 (Supp. 1991). In 1987,
North Dakota amended the statutory definition of the term "retailer"
to include "every person who engages in regular or systematic
[504
U.S. 298, 303]
solicitation of a consumer market in th[e] state."
57-40.2-01(6). State regulations in turn define "regular or systematic
solicitation" to mean three or more advertisements within a 12-month
period. N.D. Admin.Code 81-04.1-01-03.1 (1988). Thus, since 1987,
mail-order companies that engage in such solicitation have been
subject to the tax even if they maintain no property or personnel in
North Dakota.
Quill has taken the position that North Dakota does not have the
power to compel it to collect a use tax from its North Dakota
customers. Consequently, the State, through its Tax Commissioner,
filed this action to require Quill to pay taxes (as well as interest
and penalties) on all such sales made after July 1, 1987. The trial
court ruled in Quill's favor, finding the case indistinguishable from
Bellas Hess; specifically, it found that, because the State had not
shown that it had spent tax revenues for the benefit of the mail-order
business, there was no "nexus to allow the state to define retailer in
the manner it chose." App. to Pet. for Cert. A41.
The North Dakota Supreme Court reversed, concluding that "wholesale
changes" in both the economy and the law made it inappropriate to
follow Bellas Hess today. 470 N.W.2d, at 213. The principal economic
change noted by the court was the remarkable growth of the mail-order
business "from a relatively inconsequential market niche" in 1967 to a
"goliath" with annual sales that reached "the staggering figure of
$183.3 billion in 1989." Id., at 208, 209. Moreover, the court
observed, advances in computer technology greatly eased the burden of
compliance with a "`welter of complicated obligations'" imposed by
state and local taxing authorities. Id., at 215 (quoting Bellas Hess,
386 U.S., at 759 -760).
Equally important, in the court's view, were the changes in the
"legal landscape." With respect to the Commerce Clause, the court
emphasized that Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady,
430 U.S. 274 (1977), rejected the line of cases holding that the
direct taxation of interstate commerce was
[504 U.S. 298, 304]
impermissible
and adopted instead a "consistent and rational method of inquiry [that
focused on] the practical effect of [the] challenged tax." Mobil Oil
Corp. v. Commissioner of Taxes of Vt.,
445 U.S. 425, 443 (1980). This and subsequent rulings, the court
maintained, indicated that the Commerce Clause no longer mandated the
sort of physical-presence nexus suggested in Bellas Hess.
Similarly, with respect to the Due Process Clause, the North Dakota
court observed that cases following Bellas Hess had not construed
"minimum contacts" to require physical presence within a State as a
prerequisite to the legitimate exercise of state power. The state
court then concluded that "the Due Process requirement of a `minimal
connection' to establish nexus is encompassed within the Complete Auto
test," and that the relevant inquiry under the latter test was whether
"the state has provided some protection, opportunities, or benefit for
which it can expect a return." 470 N.W.2d, at 216.
Turning to the case at hand, the state court emphasized that North
Dakota had created "an economic climate that fosters demand for"
Quill's products, maintained a legal infrastructure that protected
that market, and disposed of 24 tons of catalogs and flyers mailed by
Quill into the State every year. Id., at 218-219. Based on these
facts, the court concluded that Quill's "economic presence" in North
Dakota depended on services and benefits provided by the State, and
therefore generated "a constitutionally sufficient nexus to justify
imposition of the purely administrative duty of collecting and
remitting the use tax." Id., at 219.
2
[504 U.S. 298,
305]
II
As in a number of other cases involving the application of state
taxing statutes to out-of-state sellers, our holding in Bellas Hess
relied on both the Due Process Clause and the Commerce Clause.
Although the "two claims are closely related," Bellas Hess,
386 U.S., at 756 , the Clauses pose distinct limits on the taxing
powers of the States. Accordingly, while a State may, consistent with
the Due Process Clause, have the authority to tax a particular
taxpayer, imposition of the tax may nonetheless violate the Commerce
Clause. See, e.g., Tyler Pipe Industries, Inc. v. Washington State
Dept. of Revenue,
483 U.S. 232 (1987).
The two constitutional requirements differ fundamentally, in
several ways. As discussed at greater length below, see Part IV,
infra, the Due Process Clause and the Commerce Clause reflect
different constitutional concerns. Moreover, while Congress has
plenary power to regulate commerce among the States, and thus may
authorize state actions that burden interstate commerce, see
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
326 U.S. 310, 315 (1945), it does not similarly have the power to
authorize violations of the Due Process Clause.
Thus, although we have not always been precise in distinguishing
between the two, the Due Process Clause and the Commerce Clause are
analytically distinct.
"Due process' and
`commerce clause' conceptions are not always sharply separable in
dealing with these problems. . . . To some extent, they overlap. If
there is a want of due process to sustain the tax, by that fact alone,
any burden the tax imposes on the commerce among the states becomes
`undue.' But, though overlapping, the two conceptions are not
identical. There may be more than sufficient factual connections, with
economic and legal effects, between the transaction and the taxing
state to sustain the tax as against due process
[504
U.S. 298, 306]
objections. Yet it may fall because of its burdening effect upon the
commerce. And, although the two notions cannot always be separated,
clarity of consideration and of decision would be promoted if the two
issues are approached, where they are presented, at least tentatively
as if they were separate and distinct, not intermingled ones."
International Harvester Co. v. Department of Treasury,
322 U.S. 340, 353 (1944) (Rutledge, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part).
Heeding Justice Rutledge's counsel, we consider
each constitutional limit in turn.
III
The Due Process Clause "requires some definite link, some minimum
connection, between a state and the person, property or transaction it
seeks to tax," Miller Brothers Co. v. Maryland,
347 U.S. 340, 344 -345 (1954), and that the "income attributed to
the State for tax purposes must be rationally related to `values
connected with the taxing State,'" Moorman Mfg. Co. v. Bair,
437 U.S. 267, 273 (1978) (citation omitted). Here, we are
concerned primarily with the first of these requirements. Prior to
Bellas Hess, we had held that that requirement was satisfied in a
variety of circumstances involving use taxes. For example, the
presence of sales personnel in the State
3 or the maintenance of local retail stores in the State
4 justified the exercise of that power because the seller's local
activities were "plainly accorded the protection and services of the
taxing State." Bellas Hess,
386 U.S., at 757 . The furthest extension of that power was
recognized in Scripto, Inc. v. Carson,
362 U.S. 207 (1960), in which the Court upheld a use tax despite
the fact that all of the seller's in-state solicitation was performed
by independent contractors. These cases all involved some sort of
physical presence within the State, and in Bellas Hess,
[504
U.S. 298, 307] the Court suggested that such presence was not
only sufficient for jurisdiction under the Due Process Clause, but
also necessary. We expressly declined to obliterate the "sharp
distinction . . . between mail-order sellers with retail outlets,
solicitors, or property within a State, and those who do no more than
communicate with customers in the State by mail or common carrier as a
part of a general interstate business."
386 U.S., at 758 .
Our due process jurisprudence has evolved substantially in the 25
years since Bellas Hess, particularly in the area of judicial
jurisdiction. Building on the seminal case of International Shoe Co.
v. Washington,
326 U.S. 310 (1945), we have framed the relevant inquiry as
whether a defendant had minimum contacts with the jurisdiction "such
that the maintenance of the suit does not offend `traditional notions
of fair play and substantial justice.'" Id., at 316 (quoting Milliken
v. Meyer,
311 U.S. 457, 463 (1940)). In that spirit, we have abandoned more
formalistic tests that focused on a defendant's "presence" within a
State in favor of a more flexible inquiry into whether a defendant's
contacts with the forum made it reasonable, in the context of our
federal system of Government, to require it to defend the suit in that
State. In Shaffer v. Heitner,
433 U.S. 186, 212 (1977), the Court extended the flexible approach
that International Shoe had prescribed for purposes of in personam
jurisdiction to in rem jurisdiction, concluding that "all assertions
of state court jurisdiction must be evaluated according to the
standards set forth in International Shoe and its progeny."
Applying these principles, we have held that, if a foreign
corporation purposefully avails itself of the benefits of an economic
market in the forum State, it may subject itself to the State's in
personam jurisdiction even if it has no physical presence in the
State. As we explained in Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
471 U.S. 462 (1985):
"Jurisdiction in these
circumstances may not be avoided merely because the defendant did not
physically
[504 U.S. 298,
308] enter the forum State. Although territorial presence
frequently will enhance a potential defendant's affiliation with a
State and reinforce the reasonable foreseeability of suit there, it is
an inescapable fact of modern commercial life that a substantial
amount of business is transacted solely by mail and wire
communications across state lines, thus obviating the need for
physical presence within a State in which business is conducted. So
long as a commercial actor's efforts are "purposefully directed"
toward residents of another State, we have consistently rejected the
notion that an absence of physical contacts can defeat personal
jurisdiction there." Id., at 476 (emphasis in original).
Comparable reasoning justifies the imposition of
the collection duty on a mail-order house that is engaged in
continuous and widespread solicitation of business within a State.
Such a corporation clearly has "fair warning that [its] activity may
subject [it] to the jurisdiction of a foreign sovereign." Shaffer v.
Heitner,
433 U.S., at 218 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment). In "modern
commercial life," it matters little that such solicitation is
accomplished by a deluge of catalogs, rather than a phalanx of
drummers: The requirements of due process are met irrespective of a
corporation's lack of physical presence in the taxing State. Thus, to
the extent that our decisions have indicated that the Due Process
Clause requires physical presence in a State for the imposition of
duty to collect a use tax, we overrule those holdings as superseded by
developments in the law of due process.
In this case, there is no question that Quill has purposefully
directed its activities at North Dakota residents, that the magnitude
of those contacts is more than sufficient for due process purposes,
and that the use tax is related to the benefits Quill receives from
access to the State. We therefore agree with the North Dakota Supreme
Court's conclusion that the Due Process Clause does not bar
enforcement of that State's use tax against Quill.
[504
U.S. 298, 309]
IV
Article I, 8, cl. 3, of the Constitution expressly authorizes
Congress to "regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the
several States." It says nothing about the protection of interstate
commerce in the absence of any action by Congress. Nevertheless, as
Justice Johnson suggested in his concurring opinion in Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 231-232, 239 (1824), the Commerce Clause is more
than an affirmative grant of power; it has a negative sweep as well.
The Clause, in Justice Stone's phrasing, "by its own force" prohibits
certain state actions that interfere with interstate commerce. South
Carolina State Highway Dept. v. Barnwell Brothers, Inc.,
303 U.S. 177, 185 (1938).
Our interpretation of the "negative" or "dormant" Commerce Clause
has evolved substantially over the years, particularly as that clause
concerns limitations on state taxation powers. See generally P.
Hartman, Federal Limitations on State and Local Taxation 2:9-2:17
(1981). Our early cases, beginning with Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat.
419 (1827), swept broadly, and in Leloup v. Port of Mobile,
127 U.S. 640, 648 (1888), we declared that "no State has the right
to lay a tax on interstate commerce in any form." We later narrowed
that rule and distinguished between direct burdens on interstate
commerce, which were prohibited, and indirect burdens, which generally
were not. See, e.g., Sanford v. Poe, 69 F. 546 (CA6 1895), aff'd sub
nom. Adams Express Co. v. Ohio State Auditor,
165 U.S. 194, 220 (1897). Western Live Stock v. Bureau of Revenue,
303 U.S. 250, 256 -258 (1938), and subsequent decisions rejected
this formal, categorical analysis and adopted a "multiple-taxation
doctrine" that focused not on whether a tax was "direct" or
"indirect," but rather on whether a tax subjected interstate commerce
to a risk of multiple taxation. However, in Freeman v. Hewit,
329 U.S. 249, 256 (1946), we embraced again the formal distinction
between direct and indirect taxation, invalidating Indiana's
imposition of a gross receipts tax on a
[504
U.S. 298, 310]
particular transaction because that application would "impos[e] a
direct tax on interstate sales." Most recently, in Complete Auto
Transit, Inc. v. Brady,
430 U.S. 285 , we renounced the Freeman approach as "attaching
constitutional significance to a semantic difference." We expressly
overruled one of Freeman's progeny, Spector Motor Service, Inc. v.
O'Connor,
340 U.S. 602 (1951), which held that a tax on "the privilege of
doing interstate business" was unconstitutional, while recognizing
that a differently denominated tax with the same economic effect would
not be unconstitutional. Spector, as we observed in Railway Express
Agency, Inc. v. Virginia,
358 U.S. 434, 441 (1959), created a situation in which "magic
words or labels" could "disable an otherwise constitutional levy."
Complete Auto emphasized the importance of looking past "the formal
language of the tax statute [to] its practical effect,"
430 U.S., at 279 , and set forth a four-part test that continues
to govern the validity of state taxes under the Commerce Clause.
5
Bellas Hess was decided in 1967, in the middle of this latest rally
between formalism and pragmatism. Contrary to the suggestion of the
North Dakota Supreme Court, this timing does not mean that Complete
Auto rendered Bellas Hess "obsolete." Complete Auto rejected Freeman
and Spector's formal distinction between "direct" and "indirect" taxes
on interstate commerce because that formalism allowed the validity of
statutes to hinge on "legal terminology," "draftsmanship and
phraseology."
430 U.S., at 281 . Bellas Hess
[504
U.S. 298, 311] did not rely on any such labeling of taxes,
and therefore did not automatically fall with Freeman and its progeny.
While contemporary Commerce Clause jurisprudence might not dictate
the same result were the issue to arise for the first time today,
Bellas Hess is not inconsistent with Complete Auto and our recent
cases. Under Complete Auto's four-part test, we will sustain a tax
against a Commerce Clause challenge so long as the "tax 1. is applied
to an activity with a substantial nexus with the taxing State, 2. is
fairly apportioned, 3. does not discriminate against interstate
commerce, and 4. is fairly related to the services provided by the
State."
430 U.S., at 279 . Bellas Hess concerns the first of these tests,
and stands for the proposition that a vendor whose only contacts with
the taxing State are by mail or common carrier lacks the "substantial
nexus" required by the Commerce Clause.
Thus, three weeks after Complete Auto was handed down, we cited
Bellas Hess for this proposition and discussed the case at some
length. In National Geographic Society v. California Bd. of
Equalization,
430 U.S. 551, 559 (1977), we affirmed the continuing vitality of
Bellas Hess' "sharp distinction . . . between mail-order sellers with
[a physical presence in the taxing] State and those . . . who do no
more than communicate with customers in the State by mail or common
carrier as part of a general interstate business." We have continued
to cite Bellas Hess with approval ever since. For example, in Goldberg
v. Sweet,
488 U.S. 252, 263 (1989), we expressed "doubt that termination of
an interstate telephone call, by itself, provides a substantial enough
nexus for a State to tax a call. See National Bellas Hess . . .
(receipt of mail provides insufficient nexus)." See also D.H. Holmes
Co. v. McNamara,
486 U.S. 24, 33 (1988); Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Montana,
453 U.S. 609, 626 (1981); Mobil Oil Corp. v. Commissioner of
Taxes,
445 U.S., at 437 ; National Geographic Society,
430 U.S., at 559 . For these reasons, we disagree with the State
Supreme Court's conclusion
[504
U.S. 298, 312]
that our decision in Complete Auto undercut the Bellas Hess rule.
The State of North Dakota relies less on Complete Auto and more on
the evolution of our due process jurisprudence. The State contends
that the nexus requirements imposed by the Due Process and Commerce
Clauses are equivalent, and that, if, as we concluded above, a
mail-order house that lacks a physical presence in the taxing State
nonetheless satisfies the due process "minimum contacts" test, then
that corporation also meets the Commerce Clause "substantial nexus"
test. We disagree. Despite the similarity in phrasing, the nexus
requirements of the Due Process and Commerce Clauses are not
identical. The two standards are animated by different constitutional
concerns and policies.
Due process centrally concerns the fundamental fairness of
governmental activity. Thus, at the most general level, the due
process nexus analysis requires that we ask whether an individual's
connections with a State are substantial enough to legitimate the
State's exercise of power over him. We have, therefore, often
identified "notice" or "fair warning" as the analytic touchstone of
due process nexus analysis. In contrast, the Commerce Clause and its
nexus requirement are informed not so much by concerns about fairness
for the individual defendant as by structural concerns about the
effects of state regulation on the national economy. Under the
Articles of Confederation, state taxes and duties hindered and
suppressed interstate commerce; the Framers intended the Commerce
Clause as a cure for these structural ills. See generally The
Federalist Nos. 7, 11 (A. Hamilton). It is in this light that we have
interpreted the negative implication of the Commerce Clause.
Accordingly, we have ruled that that Clause prohibits discrimination
against interstate commerce, see, e.g., Philadelphia v. New Jersey,
437 U.S. 617 (1978), and bars state regulations that unduly burden
interstate commerce, see, e.g., Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways
Corp. of Del.,
450 U.S. 662 (1981).
[504
U.S. 298, 313]
The Complete Auto analysis reflects these concerns about the
national economy. The second and third parts of that analysis, which
require fair apportionment and nondiscrimination, prohibit taxes that
pass an unfair share of the tax burden onto interstate commerce. The
first and fourth prongs, which require a substantial nexus and a
relationship between the tax and state-provided services, limit the
reach of state taxing authority so as to ensure that state taxation
does not unduly burden interstate commerce.
6 Thus, the "substantial nexus" requirement is not, like due
process' "minimum contacts" requirement, a proxy for notice, but
rather a means for limiting state burdens on interstate commerce.
Accordingly, contrary to the State's suggestion, a corporation may
have the "minimum contacts" with a taxing State as required by the Due
Process Clause, and yet lack the "substantial nexus" with that State
as required by the Commerce Clause.
7
[504 U.S. 298,
314]
The State Supreme Court reviewed our recent Commerce Clause
decisions and concluded that those rulings signaled a "retreat from
the formalistic constrictions of a stringent physical presence test in
favor of a more flexible substantive approach," and thus supported its
decision not to apply Bellas Hess. 470 N.W.2d, at 214 (citing Standard
Pressed Steel Co. v. Department of Revenue of Wash.,
419 U.S. 560 (1975), and Tyler Pipe Industries, Inc. v. Washington
State Dept. of Revenue,
483 U.S. 232 (1987)). Although we agree with the state court's
assessment of the evolution of our cases, we do not share its
conclusion that this evolution indicates that the Commerce Clause
ruling of Bellas Hess is no longer good law.
First, as the state court itself noted, 470 N.W.2d, at 214, all of
these cases involved taxpayers who had a physical presence in the
taxing State, and therefore do not directly conflict with the rule of
Bellas Hess or compel that it be overruled. Second, and more
importantly, although our Commerce Clause jurisprudence now favors
more flexible balancing analyses, we have never intimated a desire to
reject all established "bright-line" tests. Although we have not, in
our review of other types of taxes, articulated the same physical
presence requirement that Bellas Hess established for sales and use
taxes, that silence does not imply repudiation of the Bellas Hess
rule.
Complete Auto, it is true, renounced Freeman and its progeny as
"formalistic." But not all formalism is alike. Spector's formal
distinction between taxes on the "privilege of doing business" and all
other taxes served no purpose within our Commerce Clause
jurisprudence, but stood "only as a trap for the unwary draftsman."
Complete Auto,
430 U.S., at 279 . In contrast, the bright-line rule of Bellas
Hess furthers the ends of the dormant Commerce Clause. Undue
[504 U.S.
298, 315]
burdens on interstate commerce may be avoided not only by a
case-by-case evaluation of the actual burdens imposed by particular
regulations or taxes, but also, in some situations, by the demarcation
of a discrete realm of commercial activity that is free from
interstate taxation. Bellas Hess followed the latter approach and
created a safe harbor for vendors "whose only connection with
customers in the [taxing] State is by common carrier or the United
States mail." Under Bellas Hess, such vendors are free from
state-imposed duties to collect sales and use taxes.
8
Like other bright-line tests, the Bellas Hess rule appears
artificial at its edges: Whether or not a State may compel a vendor to
collect a sales or use tax may turn on the presence in the taxing
State of a small sales force, plant, or office. Cf. National
Geographic Society v. California Bd. of Equalization,
430 U.S. 551 (1977); Scripto, Inc. v. Carson,
362 U.S. 207 (1960). This artificiality, however, is more than
offset by the benefits of a clear rule. Such a rule firmly establishes
the boundaries of legitimate state authority to impose a duty to
collect sales and use taxes, and reduces litigation concerning those
taxes. This benefit is important, for as we have so frequently noted,
our law in this area is something of a "quagmire" and the application
of constitutional principles to specific state statutes leaves much
room for controversy and confusion and little in the way of precise
guides to the States in the exercise of their indispensable power of
[504 U.S. 298, 316]
taxation."
Northwestern States Portland Cement Co. v. Minnesota,
358 U.S. 450, 457 -458 (1959).
Moreover, a bright-line rule in the area of sales and use taxes
also encourages settled expectations and, in doing so, fosters
investment by businesses and individuals.
9 Indeed, it is not unlikely that the mail-order industry's
dramatic growth over the last quarter century is due in part to the
bright-line exemption from state taxation created in Bellas Hess.
Notwithstanding the benefits of bright-line tests, we have, in some
situations, decided to replace such tests with more contextual
balancing inquiries. For example, in Arkansas Electric Cooperative
Corp. v. Arkansas Pub. Serv. Comm'n,
461 U.S. 375 (1983), we reconsidered a bright-line test set forth
in Public Util. Comm'n of R.I. v. Attleboro Steam & Electric Co.,
273 U.S. 83 (1927). Attleboro distinguished between state
regulation of wholesale sales of electricity, which was constitutional
as an "indirect" regulation of interstate commerce, and state
regulation of retail sales of electricity, which was unconstitutional
as a "direct regulation" of commerce. In Arkansas Electric Cooperative
Corp., we considered whether to
[504
U.S. 298, 317]
"follow the mechanical test set out in Attleboro, or the
balance-of-interests test applied in our Commerce Clause cases."
461 U.S., at 390 -391. We first observed that "the principle of
stare decisis counsels us, here as elsewhere, not lightly to set aside
specific guidance of the sort we find in Attleboro." Id., at 391. In
deciding to reject the Attleboro analysis, we were influenced by the
fact that the "mechanical test" was "anachronistic," that the Court
had rarely relied on the test, and that we could "see no strong
reliance interests" that would be upset by the rejection of that test.
461 U.S., at 391 -392. None of those factors obtains in this case.
First, the Attleboro rule was "anachronistic" because it relied on
formal distinctions between "direct" and "indirect" regulation (and on
the regulatory counterparts of our Freeman line of cases); as
discussed above, Bellas Hess turned on a different logic, and thus
remained sound after the Court repudiated an analogous distinction in
Complete Auto. Second, unlike the Attleboro rule, we have, in our
decisions, frequently relied on the Bellas Hess rule in the last 25
years, see supra at 311, and we have never intimated in our review of
sales or use taxes that Bellas Hess was unsound. Finally, again unlike
the Attleboro rule, the Bellas Hess rule has engendered substantial
reliance and has become part of the basic framework of a sizable
industry. The "interest in stability and orderly development of the
law" that undergirds the doctrine of stare decisis, see Runyon v.
McCrary,
427 U.S. 160, 190 -191 (1976) (STEVENS, J., concurring), therefore
counsels adherence to settled precedent.
In sum, although in our cases subsequent to Bellas Hess and
concerning other types of taxes we have not adopted a similar
bright-line, physical presence requirement, our reasoning in those
cases does not compel that we now reject the rule that Bellas Hess
established in the area of sales and use taxes. To the contrary, the
continuing value of a bright-line rule in this area and the doctrine
and principles of stare decisis indicate that the Bellas Hess rule
remains good law. For
[504
U.S. 298, 318]
these reasons, we disagree with the North Dakota Supreme Court's
conclusion that the time has come to renounce the bright-line test of
Bellas Hess.
This aspect of our decision is made easier by the fact that the
underlying issue is not only one that Congress may be better qualified
to resolve,
10 but also one that Congress has the ultimate power to resolve.
No matter how we evaluate the burdens that use taxes impose on
interstate commerce, Congress remains free to disagree with our
conclusions. See Prudential Insurance Co. v. Benjamin,
328 U.S. 408 (1946). Indeed, in recent years, Congress has
considered legislation that would "overrule" the Bellas Hess rule.
11 Its decision not to take action in this direction may, of
course, have been dictated by respect for our holding in Bellas Hess
that the Due Process Clause prohibits States from imposing such taxes,
but today we have put that problem to rest. Accordingly, Congress is
now free to decide whether, when, and to what extent the States may
burden interstate mail-order concerns with a duty to collect use
taxes.
Indeed, even if we were convinced that Bellas Hess was inconsistent
with our Commerce Clause jurisprudence, "this very fact [might] giv[e
us] pause and counse[l] withholding our hand, at least for now.
Congress has the power to protect interstate commerce from intolerable
or even undesirable burdens." Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Montana,
453 U.S., at 637 (1981) (WHITE, J., concurring). In this
situation, it
[504
U.S. 298, 319]
may be that "the better part of both wisdom and valor is to respect
the judgment of the other branches of the Government." Id., at 638.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of North Dakota is reversed, and
the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] In the trial court, the State argued that, because
Quill gave its customers an unconditional 90-day guarantee, it
retained title to the merchandise during the 90-day period after
delivery. The trial court held, however, that title passed to the
purchaser when the merchandise was received. See App. to Pet. for
Cert. A40-A41. The State Supreme Court assumed for the purposes of its
decision that that ruling was correct. 470 N.W.2d 203, 217, n. 13
(1991). The State Supreme Court also noted that Quill licensed a
computer software program to some of its North Dakota customers that
enabled them to check Quill's current inventories and prices and to
place orders directly. Id., at 216-217. As we shall explain, Quill's
interests in the licensed software does not affect our analysis of the
due process issue, and does not comprise the "substantial nexus"
required by the Commerce Clause. See n. 8, infra.
[
Footnote 2 ] The court also suggested that, in view of the fact
that the "touchstone of Due Process is fundamental fairness," and that
the "very object" of the Commerce Clause is protection of interstate
business against discriminatory local practices, it would be ironic to
exempt Quill from this burden and thereby allow it to enjoy a
significant competitive advantage over local retailers. 470 N.W.2d, at
214-215.
[
Footnote 3 ] Felt & Tarrant Mfg. Co. v. Gallagher,
306 U.S. 62 (1939).
[
Footnote 4 ] Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
312 U.S. 359 (1941).
[
Footnote 5 ] Under our current Commerce Clause jurisprudence,
"with certain restrictions, interstate commerce may be required to pay
its fair share of state taxes." D.H. Holmes Co. v. McNamara,
486 U.S. 24, 31 (1988); see also Commonwealth Edison Co. v.
Montana,
453 U.S. 609, 623 -624 (1981) ("[I]t was not the purpose of the
commerce clause to relieve those engaged in interstate commerce from
their just share of [the] state tax burden even though it increases
the cost of doing business") (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted).
[
Footnote 6 ] North Dakota's use tax illustrates well how a state
tax might unduly burden interstate commerce. On its face, North Dakota
law imposes a collection duty on every vendor who advertises in the
State three times in a single year. Thus, absent the Bellas Hess rule,
a publisher who included a subscription card in three issues of its
magazine, a vendor whose radio advertisements were heard in North
Dakota on three occasions, and a corporation whose telephone sales
force made three calls into the State, all would be subject to the
collection duty. What is more significant, similar obligations might
be imposed by the Nation's 6,000 plus taxing jurisdictions. See
National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue of Ill.,
386 U.S. 753, 759 -760 (1967) (noting that the "many variations in
rates of tax, in allowable exemptions, and in administrative and
recordkeeping requirements could entangle [a mail-order house] in a
virtual welter of complicated obligations") (footnotes omitted); see
also Shaviro, An Economic and Political Look at Federalism in
Taxation, 90 Mich.L.Rev. 895, 925-926 (1992).
[
Footnote 7 ] We have sometimes stated that the "Complete Auto
test, while responsive to Commerce Clause dictates, encompasses as
well . . . due process requirement[s]." Trinova Corp. v. Michigan
Dept. of Treasury,
498 U.S. 358, 373 (1991). Although such comments might suggest
that every tax that passes contemporary Commerce Clause analysis is
also valid under the Due Process Clause, it does not follow that the
converse is as well [504
U.S. 298, 314] true: A tax may be consistent with due process
and yet unduly burden interstate commerce. See, e.g., Tyler Pipe
Industries, Inc. v. Washington State Dept. of Revenue,
483 U.S. 232 (1987).
[
Footnote 8 ] In addition to its common carrier contacts with the
State, Quill also licensed software to some of its North Dakota
clients. See n. 1, supra. The State "concedes that the existence in
North Dakota of a few floppy diskettes to which Quill holds title
seems a slender thread upon which to base nexus." Brief for Respondent
46. We agree. Although title to "a few floppy diskettes" present in a
State might constitute some minimal nexus, in National Geographic
Society v. California Bd. of Equalization,
430 U.S. 551, 556 (1977), we expressly rejected a "`slightest
presence' standard of constitutional nexus." We therefore conclude
that Quill's licensing of software in this case does not meet the
"substantial nexus" requirement of the Commerce Clause.
[
Footnote 9 ] It is worth noting that Congress has, at least on one
occasion, followed a similar approach in its regulation of state
taxation. In response to this Court's indication in Northwestern
States Portland Cement Co. v. Minnesota,
358 U.S. 450, 452 (1959), that, so long as the taxpayer has an
adequate nexus with the taxing State, "net income from the interstate
operations of a foreign corporation may be subjected to state
taxation," Congress enacted Pub.L. 8272, codified at 15 U.S.C. 381.
That statute provides that a State may not impose a net income tax on
any person if that person's "only business activities within such
State [involve] the solicitation of orders [approved] outside the
State [and] filled . . . outside the State." Ibid. As we noted in
Heublein, Inc. v. South Carolina Tax Comm'n,
409 U.S. 275, 280 (1972), in enacting 381, "Congress attempted to
allay the apprehension of businessmen that `mere solicitation' would
subject them to state taxation. . . . Section 381 was designed to
define clearly a lower limit for the exercise of [the State's power to
tax]. Clarity that would remove uncertainty was Congress' primary
goal. (Emphasis supplied.)
[
Footnote 10 ] Many States have enacted use taxes. See App. 3 to
Brief for Direct Marketing Association as Amicus Curiae. An overruling
of Bellas Hess might raise thorny questions concerning the retroactive
application of those taxes and might trigger substantial unanticipated
liability for mail-order houses. The precise allocation of such
burdens is better resolved by Congress, rather than this Court.
[
Footnote 11 ] See, e.g., H.R. 2230, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. (1989);
S. 480, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. (1989); S. 2368, 100th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1988); H.R. 3521, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. (1987); S. 1099, 100th
Cong., 1st Sess. (1987); H.R. 3549, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. (1985); S.
983, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. (1979); S. 282, 93d Cong., 1st Sess.
(1973).
JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE KENNEDY and JUSTICE THOMAS join,
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue of Ill.,
386 U.S. 753 (1967), held that the Due Process and Commerce
Clauses of the Constitution prohibit a State from imposing the duty of
use tax collection and payment upon a seller whose only connection
with the State is through common carrier or the United States mail. I
agree with the Court that the Due Process Clause holding of Bellas
Hess should be overruled. Even before Bellas Hess, we had held,
correctly I think, that state regulatory jurisdiction could be
asserted on the basis of contacts with the State through the United
States mail. See Travelers Health Assn. v. Virginia ex rel. State
Corp. Comm'n,
339 U.S. 643, 646 -650 (1950) (blue sky laws). It is difficult to
discern any principled basis for distinguishing between jurisdiction
to regulate and jurisdiction to tax. As an original matter, it might
have been possible to distinguish between jurisdiction to tax and
jurisdiction to compel collection of taxes as agent for the State, but
we have rejected that. National Geographic Society v. California Bd.
of Equalization,
430 U.S. 551, 558 (1977); Scripto, Inc. v. Carson,
362 U.S. 207, 211 (1960). I agree with the Court, moreover, that
abandonment of Bellas Hess' due process holding is compelled by
reasoning "[c]omparable" to that contained in our post-1967 cases
dealing with state jurisdiction to adjudicate. Ante, at 308. I do not
understand this to mean that the due process standards for
[504
U.S. 298, 320]
adjudicative jurisdiction and those for legislative (or
prescriptive) jurisdiction are necessarily identical; and on that
basis, I join Parts I, II, and III of the Court's opinion. Compare
Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court of Cal., Solano Cty.,
480 U.S. 102 (1987), with American Oil Co. v. Neill,
380 U.S. 451 (1965).
I also agree that the Commerce Clause holding of Bellas Hess should
not be overruled. Unlike the Court, however, I would not revisit the
merits of that holding, but would adhere to it on the basis of stare
decisis. American Trucking Assns., Inc. v. Smith,
496 U.S. 167, 204 (1990) (SCALIA, J., concurring in judgment).
Congress has the final say over regulation of interstate commerce, and
it can change the rule of Bellas Hess by simply saying so. We have
long recognized that the doctrine of stare decisis has "special force"
where "Congress remains free to alter what we have done." Patterson v.
McLean Credit Union,
491 U.S. 164, 172 -173 (1989). See also Hilton v. South Carolina
Public Railways Comm'n,
502 U.S. 197, 202 (1991); Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
431 U.S. 720, 736 (1977). Moreover, the demands of the doctrine
are "at their acme . . . where reliance interests are involved," Payne
v. Tennessee,
501 U.S. 808, 828 (1991). As the Court notes, "the Bellas Hess
rule has engendered substantial reliance, and has become part of the
basic framework of a sizable industry." Ante, at 317.
I do not share Justice WHITE's view that we may disregard these
reliance interests because it has become unreasonable to rely upon
Bellas Hess. Post, at 331-332. Even assuming for the sake of argument
(I do not consider the point) that later decisions in related areas
are inconsistent with the principles upon which Bellas Hess rested, we
have never acknowledged that, but have instead carefully distinguished
the case on its facts. See, e.g., D.H. Holmes Co. v. McNamara,
486 U.S. 24, 33 (1988); National Geographic Society, supra, at
559. It seems to me important that we retain our ability - and, what
comes to the same thing, that
[504 U.S. 298, 321]
we
maintain public confidence in our ability - sometimes to adopt new
principles for the resolution of new issues without abandoning clear
holdings of the past that those principles contradict. We seemed to be
doing that in this area. Having affirmatively suggested that the
"physical presence" rule could be reconciled with our new
jurisprudence, we ought not visit economic hardship upon those who
took us at our word. We have recently told lower courts that, "[i]f a
precedent of this Court has direct application in a case, yet appears
to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of decisions, [they]
should follow the case which directly controls, leaving to this Court
the prerogative of overruling its own decisions." Rodriguez de Quijas
v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
490 U.S. 477, 484 (1989). It is strangely incompatible with this
to demand that private parties anticipate our overrulings. It is my
view, in short, that reliance upon a square, unabandoned holding of
the Supreme Court is always justifiable reliance (though reliance
alone may not always carry the day). Finally, the "physical presence"
rule established in Bellas Hess is not "unworkable," Patterson, supra,
at 173, to the contrary, whatever else may be the substantive pros and
cons of the rule, the "bright-line" regime that it establishes, see
ante, at 314, is unqualifiedly in its favor. Justice WHITE's concern
that reaffirmance of Bellas Hess will lead to a flurry of litigation
over the meaning of "physical presence," see post, at 331, seems to me
contradicted by 25 years of experience under the decision.
For these reasons, I concur in the judgment of the Court and join
Parts I, II, and III of its opinion.
JUSTICE WHITE, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Today the Court repudiates that aspect of our decision in National
Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue of Ill.,
386 U.S. 753 (1967), which restricts, under the Due Process Clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment, the power of the States to impose use tax
collection responsibilities on
[504 U.S. 298, 322]
out-of-state mail-order businesses that do not have a "physical
presence" in the State. The Court stops short, however, of giving
Bellas Hess the complete burial it justly deserves. In my view, the
Court should also overrule that part of Bellas Hess which justifies
its holding under the Commerce Clause. I, therefore, respectfully
dissent from Part IV.
I
In Part IV of its opinion, the majority goes to some lengths to
justify the Bellas Hess physical-presence requirement under our
Commerce Clause jurisprudence. I am unpersuaded by its interpretation
of our cases. In Bellas Hess, the majority placed great weight on the
interstate quality of the mail-order sales, stating that "it is
difficult to conceive of commercial transactions more exclusively
interstate in character than the mail order transactions here
involved." Id., at 759. As the majority correctly observes, the idea
of prohibiting States from taxing "exclusively interstate"
transactions had been an important part of our jurisprudence for many
decades, ranging intermittently from such cases as Case of State
Freight Tax, 15 Wall. 232, 279 (1873), through Freeman v. Hewit,
329 U.S. 249, 256 (1946), and Spector Motor Service, Inc. v.
O'Connor,
340 U.S. 602 (1951). But though it recognizes that Bellas Hess was
decided amidst an upheaval in our Commerce Clause jurisprudence, in
which we began to hold that "a State, with proper drafting, may tax
exclusively interstate commerce so long as the tax does not create any
effect forbidden by the Commerce Clause, "Complete Auto Transit, Inc.
v. Brady,
430 U.S. 274, 285 (1977), the majority draws entirely the wrong
conclusion from this period of ferment.
The Court attempts to paint Bellas Hess in a different hue from
Freeman and Spector because the former "did not rely" on labeling
taxes that had "direct" and "indirect" effects on interstate commerce.
See ante, at 310. Thus, the Court concludes, Bellas Hess "did not
automatically fall with Freeman
[504
U.S. 298, 323]
and its progeny" in our decision in Complete Auto. See ante, at 311. I
am unpersuaded by this attempt to distinguish Bellas Hess from Freeman
and Spector, both of which were repudiated by this Court. See Complete
Auto, supra, at 288-289, and n. 15. What we disavowed in Complete Auto
was not just the "formal distinction between `direct' and `indirect'
taxes on interstate commerce," ante, at 310, but also the whole notion
underlying the Bellas Hess physical presence rule - that "interstate
commerce is immune from state taxation," Complete Auto, supra, at 288.
The Court compounds its misreading by attempting to show that
Bellas Hess "is not inconsistent with Complete Auto and our recent
cases." Ante, at 311. This will be news to commentators, who have
rightly criticized Bellas Hess.
1 Indeed, the majority displays no small amount of audacity in
claiming that our decision in National Geographic Society v.
California Bd. of Equalization,
430 U.S. 551, 559 (1977), which was rendered several weeks after
Complete Auto, reaffirmed the continuing vitality of Bellas Hess. See
ante, at 311.
Our decision in that case did just the opposite. National
Geographic held that the National Geographic Society was liable for
use tax collection responsibilities in California. The Society
conducted an out-of-state mail-order business similar to the one at
issue here and in Bellas Hess, and, in addition, maintained two small
offices in California that solicited advertisements for National
Geographic Magazine. The Society argued that its physical presence in
California was unrelated to its mail-order sales, and thus that the
[504
U.S. 298, 324]
Bellas Hess rule compelled us to hold that the tax collection
responsibilities could not be imposed. We expressly rejected that
view, holding that the "requisite nexus for requiring an out-of-state
seller [the Society] to collect and pay the use tax is not whether the
duty to collect the use tax relates to the seller's activities carried
on within the State, but simply whether the facts demonstrate "some
definite link, some minimum connection, between (the State and) the
person . . . it seeks to tax."
430 U.S., at 561 , (citation omitted).
By decoupling any notion of a transactional nexus from the inquiry,
the National Geographic Court in fact repudiated the free trade
rationale of the Bellas Hess majority. Instead, the National
Geographic Court relied on a due process-type minimum contacts
analysis that examined whether a link existed between the seller and
the State wholly apart from the seller's in-state transaction that was
being taxed. Citations to Bellas Hess notwithstanding, see
430 U.S., at 559 , it is clear that, rather than adopting the
rationale of Bellas Hess, the National Geographic Court was instead
politely brushing it aside. Even were I to agree that the free trade
rationale embodied in Bellas Hess' rule against taxes of purely
interstate sales was required by our cases prior to 1967, therefore, I
see no basis in the majority's opening premise that this substantive
underpinning of Bellas Hess has not since been disavowed by our cases.
2
[504 U.S. 298,
325]
II
The Court next launches into an uncharted and treacherous foray
into differentiating between the "nexus" requirements under the Due
Process and Commerce Clauses. As the Court explains: "[D]espite the
similarity in phrasing, the nexus requirements of the Due Process and
Commerce Clauses are not identical. The two standards are animated by
different constitutional concerns and policies." Ante, at 312. The due
process nexus, which the Court properly holds is met in this case, see
ante, at Part III, "concerns the fundamental fairness of governmental
activity." Ante, at 312. The Commerce Clause nexus requirement, on the
other hand, is "informed not so much by concerns about fairness for
the individual defendant as by structural concerns about the effects
of state regulation on the national economy." Ibid.
Citing Complete Auto, the Court then explains that the Commerce
Clause nexus requirement is not "like due process' `minimum contacts'
requirement, a proxy for notice, but rather a means for limiting state
burdens on interstate commerce." Ante, at 313. This is very curious,
because parts two and three of the Complete Auto test, which require
fair apportionment and nondiscrimination in order that interstate
commerce not be unduly burdened, now appear to become the animating
features of the nexus requirement, which is the first prong of the
Complete Auto inquiry. The Court freely acknowledges that there is no
authority for this novel interpretation of our cases, and that we have
never before found, as we do in this case, sufficient contacts for due
process purposes but an insufficient nexus under the Commerce Clause.
See ante, at 313-314, and n. 6.
The majority's attempt to disavow language in our opinions
acknowledging the presence of due process requirements
[504
U.S. 298, 326]
in the Complete Auto test is also unpersuasive. See ante, at 313-314,
n. 7 (citing Trinova Corp. v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury,
498 U.S. 358, 373 (1991). Instead of explaining the doctrinal
origins of the Commerce Clause nexus requirement, the majority
breezily announces the rule and moves on to other matters. See ante,
at 313-314. In my view, before resting on the assertion that the
Constitution mandates inquiry into two readily distinct "nexus"
requirements, it would seem prudent to discern the origins of the
"nexus" requirement in order better to understand whether the Court's
concern traditionally has been with the fairness of a State's tax or
some other value.
The cases from which the Complete Auto Court derived the nexus
requirement in its four-part test convince me that the issue of
"nexus" is really a due process fairness inquiry. In explaining the
sources of the four-part inquiry in Complete Auto, the Court relied
heavily on Justice Rutledge's separate concurring opinion in Freeman
v. Hewit,
329 U.S. 249 (1946), the case whose majority opinion the Complete
Auto Court was in the process of comprehensively disavowing. Instead
of the formalistic inquiry into whether the State was taxing
interstate commerce, the Complete Auto Court adopted the more
functionalist approach of Justice Rutledge in Freeman. See Complete
Auto,
430 U.S., at 280 -281. In conducting his inquiry, Justice Rutledge
used language that by now should be familiar, arguing that a tax was
unconstitutional if the activity lacked a sufficient connection to the
State to give "jurisdiction to tax," Freeman, supra, at 271; or if the
tax discriminated against interstate commerce; or if the activity was
subjected to multiple tax burdens.
329 U.S., at 276 -277. Justice Rutledge later refined these
principles in Memphis Natural Gas Co. v. Stone,
335 U.S. 80 (1948), in which he described the principles that the
Complete Auto Court would later substantially adopt: "[I]t is enough
for me to sustain the tax imposed in this case that it is one clearly
within the state's power to lay insofar
[504 U.S. 298, 327]
as
any limitation of due process or "jurisdiction to tax" in that sense
is concerned; it is nondiscriminatory . . .; [it] is duly apportioned
. . . ; and cannot be repeated by any other state."
335 U.S., at 96 -97 (concurring opinion) (footnotes omitted).
By the time the Court decided Northwestern States Portland Cement
Co. v. Minnesota,
358 U.S. 450 (1959), Justice Rutledge was no longer on the Court,
but his view of the nexus requirement as grounded in the Due Process
Clause was decisively adopted. In rejecting challenges to a state tax
based on the Due Process and Commerce Clauses, the Court stated: "[T]he
taxes imposed are levied only on that portion of the taxpayer's net
income which arises from its activities within the taxing State. These
activities form a sufficient "nexus between such a tax and
transactions within a state for which the tax is an exaction." Id., at
464 (citation omitted). The Court went on to observe that "[i]t
strains reality to say, in terms of our decisions, that each of the
corporations here was not sufficiently involved in local events to
forge "some definite link, some minimum connection" sufficient to
satisfy due process requirements." Id., at 464-465 (quoting Miller
Brothers v. Maryland,
347 U.S. 340, 344 -345 (1954)). When the Court announced its
four-part synthesis in Complete Auto, the nexus requirement was
definitely traceable to concerns grounded in the Due Process Clause,
and not the Commerce Clause, as the Court's discussion of the
doctrinal antecedents for its rule made clear. See Complete Auto,
supra, at 281-282, 285. For the Court now to assert that our Commerce
Clause jurisprudence supports a separate notion of nexus is without
precedent or explanation.
Even were there to be such an independent requirement under the
Commerce Clause, there is no relationship between the
physical-presence/nexus rule the Court retains and Commerce Clause
considerations that allegedly justify it. Perhaps long ago a seller's
"physical presence" was a sufficient part of a trade to condition
imposition of a tax on
[504
U.S. 298, 328]
such presence. But in today's economy, physical presence frequently
has very little to do with a transaction a State might seek to tax.
Wire transfers of money involving billions of dollars occur every day;
purchasers place orders with sellers by fax, phone, and computer
linkup; sellers ship goods by air, road, and sea through sundry
delivery services without leaving their place of business. It is
certainly true that the days of the door-to-door salesperson are not
gone. Nevertheless, an out-of-state direct marketer derives numerous
commercial benefits from the State in which it does business. These
advantages include laws establishing sound local banking institutions
to support credit transactions; courts to ensure collection of the
purchase price from the seller's customers; means of waste disposal
from garbage generated by mail-order solicitations; and creation and
enforcement of consumer protection laws, which protect buyers and
sellers alike, the former by ensuring that they will have a ready
means of protecting against fraud, and the latter by creating a
climate of consumer confidence that inures to the benefit of reputable
dealers in mail-order transactions. To create, for the first time, a
nexus requirement under the Commerce Clause independent of that
established for due process purposes is one thing; to attempt to
justify an anachronistic notion of physical presence in economic terms
is quite another.
III
The illogic of retaining the physical-presence requirement in these
circumstances is palpable. Under the majority's analysis, and our
decision in National Geographic, an out-of-state seller with one
salesperson in a State would be subject to use tax collection burdens
on its entire mail-order sales even if those sales were unrelated to
the salesperson's solicitation efforts. By contrast, an out-of-state
seller in a neighboring State could be the dominant business in the
putative taxing State, creating the greatest infrastructure burdens
and undercutting the State's home companies by its comparative
[504 U.S. 298, 329]
price advantage
in selling products free of use taxes, and yet not have to collect
such taxes if it lacks a physical presence in the taxing State. The
majority clings to the physical-presence rule not because of any
logical relation to fairness or any economic rationale related to
principles underlying the Commerce Clause, but simply out of the
supposed convenience of having a bright-line rule. I am less impressed
by the convenience of such adherence than the unfairness it produces.
Here, convenience should give way. Cf. Complete Auto, supra, at 289,
n. 15 ("We believe, however, that administrative convenience . . . is
insufficient justification for abandoning the principle that
`interstate commerce may be made to pay its way.'").
Also very questionable is the rationality of perpetuating a rule
that creates an interstate tax shelter for one form of business -
mail-order sellers - but no countervailing advantage for its
competitors. If the Commerce Clause was intended to put businesses on
an even playing field, the majority's rule is hardly a way to achieve
that goal. Indeed, arguably even under the majority's explanation for
its "Commerce Clause nexus" requirement, the unfairness of its rule on
retailers other than direct marketers should be taken into account.
See ante, at 312 (stating that the Commerce Clause nexus requirement
addresses the "structural concerns about the effects of state
regulation on the national economy"). I would think that protectionist
rules favoring a $180-billion-a-year industry might come within the
scope of such "structural concerns." See Brief for State of New Jersey
as Amicus Curiae 4.
IV
The Court attempts to justify what it rightly acknowledges is an
"artificial" rule in several ways. See ante, at 315. First, it asserts
that the Bellas Hess principle "firmly establishes the boundaries of
legitimate state authority to impose a duty to collect sales and use
taxes and reduces litigation concerning those taxes." Ante, at 315. It
is very doubtful,
[504
U.S. 298, 330]
however, that the Court's opinion can achieve its aims. Certainly our
cases now demonstrate two "bright-line" rules for mail-order sellers
to follow: Under the physical-presence requirement reaffirmed here,
they will not be subjected to use tax collection if they have no
physical presence in the taxing State; under the National Geographic
rule, mail-order sellers will be subject to use tax collection if they
have some presence in the taxing State even if that activity has no
relation to the transaction being taxed. See National Geographic,
430 U.S., at 560 -562. Between these narrow lines lies the issue
of what constitutes the requisite "physical presence" to justify
imposition of use tax collection responsibilities.
Instead of confronting this question head on, the majority offers
only a cursory analysis of whether Quill's physical presence in North
Dakota was sufficient to justify its use tax collection burdens,
despite briefing on this point by the State.
3 See Brief for Respondent 45-47. North Dakota contends that, even
should the Court reaffirm the Bellas Hess rule, Quill's physical
presence in North Dakota was sufficient to justify application of its
use tax collection law. Quill concedes it owns software sent to its
North Dakota customers, but suggests that such property is
insufficient to justify a finding of nexus. In my view, the question
of Quill's actual physical presence is sufficiently close to cast
doubt on the majority's confidence that it is propounding a truly
"bright-line" rule. Reasonable minds surely can, and will, differ over
what showing is required to make out a "physical presence"
[504
U.S. 298, 331] adequate to justify imposing responsibilities
for use tax collection. And given the estimated loss in revenue to
States of more than $3.2 billion this year alone, see Brief for
Respondent 9, it is a sure bet that the vagaries of "physical
presence" will be tested to their fullest in our courts.
The majority next explains that its "bright-line" rule encourages
"settled expectations" and business investment. Ante, at 316. Though
legal certainty promotes business confidence, the mail-order business
has grown exponentially despite the long line of our post-Bellas Hess
precedents that signaled the demise of the physical-presence
requirement. Moreover, the Court's seeming but inadequate
justification of encouraging settled expectations in fact connotes a
substantive economic decision to favor out-of-state direct marketers
to the detriment of other retailers. By justifying the Bellas Hess
rule in terms of "the mail-order industry's dramatic growth over the
last quarter-century," ante, at 316, the Court is effectively imposing
its own economic preferences in deciding this case. The Court's
invitation to Congress to legislate in this area signals that its
preferences are not immutable, but its approach is different from past
instances in which we have deferred to state legislatures when they
enacted tax obligations on the States' shares of interstate commerce.
See, e.g., Goldberg v. Sweet,
488 U.S. 252 (1989); Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Montana,
453 U.S. 609 (1981).
Finally, the Court accords far greater weight to stare decisis than
was given to that principle in Complete Auto itself. As that case
demonstrates, we have not been averse to overruling our precedents
under the Commerce Clause when they have become anachronistic in light
of later decisions. See Complete Auto,
430 U.S., at 288 -289. One typically invoked rationale for stare
decisis - an unwillingness to upset settled expectations - is
particularly weak in this case. It is unreasonable for companies such
as Quill to invoke a "settled expectation" in conducting affairs
without being taxed. Neither Quill nor any of its amici point to any
investment decisions
[504
U.S. 298, 332]
or reliance interests that suggest any unfairness in overturning
Bellas Hess. And the costs of compliance with the rule, in light of
today's modern computer and software technology, appear to be nominal.
See Brief for Respondent 40; Brief for State of New Jersey as Amicus
Curiae 18. To the extent Quill developed any reliance on the old rule,
I would submit that its reliance was unreasonable because of its
failure to comply with the law as enacted by the North Dakota State
Legislature. Instead of rewarding companies for ignoring the studied
judgments of duly elected officials, we should insist that the
appropriate way to challenge a tax as unconstitutional is to pay it
(or, in this case, collect it and remit it or place it in escrow) and
then sue for declaratory judgment and refund.
4 Quill's refusal to comply with a state tax statute prior to its
being held unconstitutional hardly merits a determination that its
reliance interests were reasonable.
The Court hints, but does not state directly, that a basis for its
invocation of stare decisis is a fear that overturning Bellas Hess
will lead to the imposition of retroactive liability. Ante, at 317,
318, and n. 10. See James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
501 U.S. 529 (1991). As I thought in that case, such fears are
groundless, because no one can "sensibly insist on automatic
retroactivity for any and all judicial decisions in the federal
system." Id., at 546 (WHITE, J., concurring in judgment). Since we
specifically limited the question on which certiorari was granted in
order not to consider the potential retroactive effects of overruling
Bellas Hess, I believe we should leave that issue for another day. If
indeed fears about retroactivity are driving the Court's decision in
this case, we would be better served, in my view, to address
[504
U.S. 298, 333]
those concerns directly, rather than permit them to infect our
formulation of the applicable substantive rule.
Although Congress can and should address itself to this area of
law, we should not adhere to a decision, however right it was at the
time, that by reason of later cases and economic reality can no longer
be rationally justified. The Commerce Clause aspect of Bellas Hess,
along with its due process holding, should be overruled.
[
Footnote 1 ] See, e.g., P. Hartman, Federal Limitations on State
and Local Taxation 10.8 (1981); Hartman, Collection of Use Tax on
Out-of-State Mail-Order Sales, 39 Vand.L.Rev. 993, 1006-1015 (1986);
Hellerstein, Significant Sales and Use Tax Developments During the
Past Half Century, 39 Vand.L.Rev. 961, 984-985 (1986); McCray,
Overturning Bellas Hess: Due Process Considerations, 1985 B. Y. U. L.
Rev. 265, 288-290; Rothfeld, Mail Order Sales and State Jurisdiction
to Tax, 53 Tax Notes 1405, 1414-1418 (1991).
[
Footnote 2 ] Similarly, I am unconvinced by the majority's
reliance on subsequent decisions that have cited Bellas Hess. See
ante, at 311. In D. H. Holmes Co. v. McNamara,
486 U.S. 24, 33 (1988), for example, we distinguished Bellas Hess
on the basis of the company's "significant economic presence in
Louisiana, its many connections with the State, and the direct
benefits it receives from Louisiana in conducting its business." We
then went on to note that the situation presented was much more
analogous to that in National Geographic Society v. California Bd. of
Equalization,
430 U.S. 551 (1977). See
486 U.S., at 33 -34. In Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Montana,
453 U.S. 609, 626 (1981), the Court cited Bellas Hess not to
revalidate the physical-presence requirement, but rather to establish
that a "nexus" must exist to justify imposition of a state tax. And
finally, in [504 U.S.
298, 325] Mobil Oil Corp. v. Commissioner of Taxes of Vt.,
445 U.S. 425, 437 (1980), the Court cited Bellas Hess for the due
process requirements necessary to sustain a tax. In my view, these
citations hardly signal the continuing support of Bellas Hess that the
majority seems to find persuasive.
[
Footnote 3 ] Instead of remanding for consideration of whether
Quill's ownership of software constitutes sufficient physical presence
under its new Commerce Clause nexus requirement, the majority
concludes as a matter of law that it does not. See ante, at 315, n. 8.
In so doing, the majority rebuffs North Dakota's challenge without
setting out any clear standard for what meets the Commerce Clause
physical-presence nexus standard and without affording the State an
opportunity on remand to attempt to develop facts or otherwise to
argue that Quill's presence is constitutionally sufficient.
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