Reichman-Crosby Co. v. Stone, 37 So. 2d 22 (1948).
Reichman-Crosby Co. v. Stone, 37 So. 2d 22 (1948). Book View Copy Cite
Reichman-Crosby Co.
v.
Stone.
W.W. Venable and Creekmore Creekmore, for appellant. The statute as applied to appellant is so unreasonable as to amount to deprivation of property without due process of law. It is submitted that aside from all other objections and unconnected therewith, the duty imposed by the statute to collect the tax at the time of sale, when by the very provisions of the statute no tax is due and owing by the purchaser, is such an unreasonable and unfair regulation as to amount to deprivation of property without due process of law and as denying to appellant the equal protection of the law. The statute by its terms makes the tax which is levied upon the buyer a debt also of the seller, as being a person required to collect it. In effect, as we see it, it makes the foreign seller a surety for the payment of a debt, which the buyer will not owe until some time in the future and in fact may never owe. The foreign seller is made a debtor to the state before the buyer upon whom the tax is levied becomes a debtor, which buyer may never become such, because he may change his mind about using the property in the state. The duties imposed on the buyer to pay the use tax is for the privilege of using the property in Mississippi, but the obligation imposed on the seller as his surety is different and broader than the obligation of the principal, the buyer. The buyer's obligation is to pay the tax when transportation into Mississippi has ended and the goods have become commingled with the general mass of property within the state. The obligation of the seller is imposed at the time of the sale. The obligation sought to be imposed on appellant cannot be upheld as a tax because interstate commerce cannot be taxed by the state. Richardson v. State, 11 So. 934; Overton v. State, 70 Miss. 558 ; Miller v. Illinois Central R. Co., 146 Miss. 422 ; Adams Mfg. Co. v. Storen, 304 U.S. 307 ; Robbins v. Shelby County Taxing District, 120 U.S. 489 . If the regulation that the seller shall collect the tax is to be upheld at all, it must be upheld as being a reasonable regulation incidental to the collection of the state's revenues. Realistically, the statute is but a declaration of the obligation of the seller to pay the state the money it has collected, if it has collected it from the buyer, or it is in substance an obligation or penalty imposed for failure to collect or to remit if collected. If the buyer himself pays, there is no liability on the seller, though he did not collect from the buyer. If the buyer does not pay and the seller does not collect, the seller becomes liable to pay what is primarily the buyer's debt. It seems to us that this situation presents two questions. If construed as a penalty, can a person be penalized for failing to do that which he has no legal right or authority to do? Looked at as creating the relationship of principal and surety, can the surety be held to a larger and wider obligation than the principal and can the imposition of a liability upon a person as surety be fixed before there is any obligation existing as to the principal? Can such be considered reasonable? Under cases heretofore decided the test of due process as to statutes requiring one person to pay the tax due by and levied against another has been whether or not the person required to collect the tax had property of the taxpayer in its control out of which reimbursement could be made or could protect itself or himself by collecting the tax at the time of the sale. Citizens National Bank et al. v. Kentucky, 217 U.S. 443 ; First National Bank of Louisville v. Kentucky, 9 Wall. 353; Pierce Oil Company v. Hopkins, 264 U.S. 137 . This is an entirely different situation from the case at bar. In the case at bar, there is no tax due by the buyer at the time he purchases by the specific terms of the statute. He is under neither legal nor moral obligation to pay the tax and the seller cannot legally demand the payment of the tax when no tax is due. It is true, he could refuse to make the sale to the buyer and might be able to save himself from any obligation of the tax by so doing, but the seller is placed in the situation where it must lose the sale or extend credit, when he has no right to demand payment of the tax and no power to collect it, producing this result, that this sale in interstate commerce is burdened by an illegal exaction by the requirement of the doing of something, which the seller has no right to do and which he cannot do with legal right and authority, as a condition precedent to transacting interstate business. If he does make the sale and credits the buyer, if the buyer should refuse to pay it, he takes upon himself the onerous obligation of finding out whether or not the goods were actually shipped in Mississippi and became part of the mass of the property of the state, going to Mississippi and getting payment, or if there is refusal to pay, instituting legal proceedings to recover the money, which might or might not be efficacious. The seller must lose the sale or if he does not collect the tax, he is subject to all sorts of pains and penalties, fines, imprisonment, injuries, ex parte levies, attachments of goods, etc. Under the statutes where the tax is due at the time of sale, the seller can protect himself or itself by refusing sale if the tax is not paid. He has the choice of doing so or not as he sees fit. If he extends credit to the buyer he does so voluntarily and free from legal coercion. Under the Mississippi statute he must demand payment of that which is not legally due, lose the sale if payment is not made, or else in many instances extend credit that he does not wish to extend and take upon himself the payment of the tax or the coming into Mississippi for purposes of collection. The statute of Mississippi is to be sharply distinguished from the Iowa statute involved in the case of General Trading Co. v. State Tax Commission, 332 U.S. 355 , 88 L.Ed. 1309. Under the Iowa statute, the tax was due at the time of sale. It did not contain the provisions that it should not be due until the goods had been received in and become part of the mass of the property in the state. If the statute is unreasonable, it is a direct and hampering burden on interstate commerce. Public Utilities Commission v. Attleboro Steam and Electric Co., 273 U.S. 83 . To impose on the seller as a condition for a sale of goods in interstate commerce a debt not due and that he has no legal right to demand or collect, in effect amounts to a tax on interstate commerce. Henderson v. Mayor of the City of New York, 92 U.S. 259 . To impose a liability on the privilege of carrying on interstate commerce is a tax on it and is invalid. Southern Pacific Company v. Gallagher, 306 U.S. 167 ; Dixie Ohio Express Company v. State Revenue Commission of Georgia, 306 U.S. 72 ; Weeks v. United States, 245 U.S. 618 , 62 L.Ed. 513; Sonneborn Bros. v. Cureton, 262 U.S. 506 , 67 L.Ed. 1095; Doll Implement Lumber Co. v. Campbell, 45 N.D. 239 , 178 N.W. 197; Dahnke-Walker Mill Co. v. Bondurant, 257 U.S. 282 , 66 L.Ed. 239; Federal Trade Commission v. Pacific States Paper Trade Association, 273 U.S. 52 , 71 L.Ed. 537; Cooney v. Mountain States Telephone Telegraph Company, 294 U.S. 384 , 79 L.Ed. 934; Baldwyn v. G.A.F. Seelig, Inc., 294 U.S. 511 , 79 L.Ed. 1032. It is respectfully submitted that waiving all other considerations in this case, the statute is invalid and unconstitutional, as applied to appellant. As applied to appellant, appellant was not transacting business within Mississippi and, therefore, the state lacked jurisdiction to impose a personal liability under the facts of the case. Legislative jurisdiction is confined to the territory of the sovereign enacting the law. Since the power of a state is supreme within its own territory, no other state can exercise power there and, of course, the state can confer upon its legislature no greater power than it has. Rose v. Himely, 4 Cranch 421, 279; St. Louis v. The Ferry Co., 11 Wall. 423, 430; Schooner Exchange v. McFadden. 7 Cranch 116; The Appollon, 9 Wheat. 362, 370. For the legislature to impose a personal obligation upon a person, it must have jurisdiction of the person. It appears that jurisdiction over a person may be based upon the actual presence of the person within the territorial limits of the state, domicile within the state, because of allegiance which the person owes thereto, or consent to the jurisdiction. Jurisdiction in certain instances may be based upon the nature of the activity of the person in a given state in relation to the fair and orderly administration of the laws, which it was the purpose of the due process clause to insure. However, that clause of the constitution does not contemplate that a state may make binding a judgment in personnam against an individual or corporation with which the state has no contacts, ties or relations. It has been uniformly held that casual acts of a non-resident or isolated acts do not confer jurisdiction. It remains to inquire what is the test of the substantiality of the activity of the foreign corporation or foreign citizen with reference to establishing jurisdiction. With respect to a foreign corporation, of which appellant is one, the test seems to be whether or not the activities of the foreign corporation are of such a character as to warrant the inference that the corporation is present in the state. International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 U.S. 579 ; Philadelphia and Reading R. Co. v. McKibbin, 243 U.S. 264 ; Rosenberg Bros. Co. v. Curtis Bros. Mfg. Co., 260 U.S. 516 ; Bank of America v. Whitney National Bank, 261 U.S. 171 . Mr. Justice Brandeis in Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company v. McKibbin, 243 U.S. 264 , summarized the doctrine as follows: \A foreign corporation is amenable to enforcing a personal liability
McGehee, Montgomery, Griffith.
in the absence of consent

Lead Opinion

[*145] McGehee, J.

This is a suit to recover, in the manner provided by law, the sum of seventy-five dollars in Use Taxes paid, under protest, to the appellee, A. H. Stone, Chairman of the Tax Commission of Mississippi, by the appellant, Reichman-Crosby Company, non-resijdent corporation of Tennessee. A demurrer filed by the Tax Commission was sustained by the trial court to the declaration of the appellant, and upon failure of the plaintiff to amend, the suit was dismissed and final judgment was entered denying the recovery sought.

On this appeal the constitutional power and authority of the state to levy tax against the user of the tangible personal property purchased by residents of this state upon orders taken by the non-resident seller’s travelling salesmen, who resided in Memphis where the orders were sent for acceptance or rejection, is not questioned.

The appellant challenges only the right of this state to require such a non-resident seller of tangible personal property to collect from its purchasers and pay the tax to the appellee “at the time of making sales,” which are consumated at Memphis, Tennessee by delivery of the property to a common carrier for transportation to the purchasers in this state, since, according to the provisions of our Use Tax Law, it is declared that the tax “shall not apply with respect to the . . . use . . . of any article of tangible personal property sold . . . outside of this state until the transportation thereof has finally ended and such article has become commingled with the general mass of property within this state.” Code 1942, Sec. 10148.

The power of the state to require the non-resident seller to act as its tax collector in the premises is further challenged on the ground that such seller in the ease at bar is not doing business in this state under the principles announced by any prior decision of this [*146] Court where the seller has no office, place of business or resident agent in this state, and has not qualified to do business here under our laws, and has not appointed a resident agent for the service of process here, and is engaged in no local activity in Mississippi within the meaning of our previous decisions as to what constitutes doing business in this state; that is to say, the appellant questions the constitutional power and authority of the state to make a tax collector out of a non-resident seller over which it has no territorial jurisdiction, since the seller is not present here within the contemplation of our own legal jurisprudence and within the meaning of all the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, except that which was rendered in the case of General Trading Company, doing business as Minneapolis Iron Store v. State Tax Commission of the State of Iowa, 322 U. S. 335, 64 S. Ct. 1028, 88 L. Ed. 1309, which is deemed not to be controlling in the instant case for the reasons to be hereinafter stated.

The property for the use of which the tax was demanded and paid by the appellant is alleged in the declaration to have been sold on orders taken by the non-resident salesman, who were soliciting agents of the appellant, and which had been delivered to a common carrier at Memphis for transportation to purchasers residing in Mississippi, resulting in the completion of such sales in Tennessee.

The tax is levied against the user of the property in Mississippi, and our Use Tax Law, Chapter 120, Laws of 1942, Secs. 10146 to 10167, both inclusive, Code of 1942, provides that the same “shall not apply with respect to the . . . use ... of any article of tangible personal property sold . . . outside of this state until the transportation thereof is finally ended and such article has become commingled with the general mass of property within the state . . .”

The act further provides that “Every person- maintaining a place of business in this state and making [*147] sales of tangible personal property for nse in this state, . . . shall at the time of making the sales . . . whether within or without the state, collect the tax imposed by this act from the purchaser . . . [and] receipt therefor in the manner and in the form prescribed by the commissioner if the commissioner shall, by regulation, require such receipt; ’ ’ that ‘ ‘ the term ‘ retailer maintaining a place of business in this state’ or any similar term, shall mean and include any retailer, distributor, wholesaler or manufacturer . . . having or maintaining within this state ... an office, distribution house, salesroom or house, warehouse or other place of business, or any agent operating within this state under the authority of the retailer, distributor, wholesaler or manufacturer . . ., irrespective of whether such place of business or agent is located within this state permanently or temporarily, or whether such retailer, distributor, wholesaler or manufacturer . . ., is admitted to do business within this state under its general laws.” (Italics ours.)

The act assesses and levies by a general' provision a tax upon “any person who uses, . . . any property upon which a tax, is herein imposed . . . upon which the tax has not been paid to the commissioner, as herein provided,” and declares that such person shall be liable therefor and shall pay the tax upon notice and demand by the commissioner as therein provided.

The act also provides that, “The tax herein imposed, . . . in addition to being a tax against the property, business, trade or occupation, it shall constitute a debt due the state by the person owing the tax, or the person required or authorised to collect it.” (Italics ours.)

It is further provided in the act that, “It shall be unlawful for any person subject to the provisions of this act to fail or refuse ... to pay the tax herein imposed . . and that “any person violating any of the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misde [*148] meanor, and on conviction thereof shall be fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500.00) or if he be an individual, imprisoned not exceeding six months in the county jail, or punished by both such fine and imprisonment, at the- discretion of the court;” and it is further provided that anyone failing or refusing to comply with provisions of the act "may be proceeded against by injunction to prevent the continuance of his business in this state.”

The use tax imposed is equal to two per cent of the purchase price of the property, and it does not apply where the property has already been included in the measure of our Two Per Cent Sales Tax Law or the sales tax imposed by some other state in an amount equal to or greater than such Use Tax.

It is declared that the primary purpose of the tax is "to protect, insofar as may be proved practicable the merchants, dealers, manufacturers . . . who meet the requirements of the Mississippi sales tax laws, against the unfair competition of importations of goods . . . into Mississippi without the payment of the retail sales tax imposed for the sale of goods, wares or merchandise usually carried for sale in this state ...”

As hereinbefore stated, it is not contended that the tax is unconstitutional as against the user of tangible personal property purchased outside of the state over whom the state has jurisdiction and who enjoys the protection of its laws in the use and enjoyment thereof, but that as to the seller it is unconstitutional (1) for the reason that it violates the commerce clause as a burden on interstate commerce, in that the non-resident seller is required to become a surety or be responsible for the collection of the tax before any liability therefor has become fixed against the purchaser, and is not in a position to protect himself in the manner available to a local retail merchant in the state, who is able to collect the tax when the sale is being consummated by placing the goods back on the shelf if the purchaser fails to pay a two per cent sales tax; that [*149] is to say, that he must credit the purchaser and run the risk as to being reimbursed after the property comes to rest in this state and the liability of the user accrues, or he must forego making the sale; and (2) that he is denied the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Federal Constitution for the reasons stated under numeral No. one; and (3) that the requirement as to him violates the due process clause of the Federal Constitution, Amendment 14, in that although he is not present in the taxing state subject to its jurisdiction, he is required to take notice of the statutes of a foreign state at the time of making a sale in his own state and collect the proper amount imposed by the Use Tax Law, notwithstanding that such taxing state has not conferred upon him the right to engage in interstate commerce— a right guaranteed by the federal government, and which the state government is prevented from withholding, in the exercise of which right the law of the state affords no protection as a local activity.

It is unnecessary that we emphasize these contentions, because to merely state them is to show their correctness, unless their force is negatived by decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, since under our own decisions a non-resident seller engaged exclusively in interstate commerce in the maimer hereinbefore mentioned is neither subject to the state’s taxing power nor to the state’s jurisdiction to subject it to personal liability for failure to collect and pay a tax levied against the citizens of this state.

The right of a state to assess a Use Tax against a resident thereof for the use therein of property which has been transported to him in interstate commerce is clearly upheld by the Federal Supreme Court in the following cases:

Monamotor Oil Co. v. Johnson, 292 U. S. 86, 54 S. Ct. 575, 78 L. Ed. 1141; Henneford v. Silas Mason Co., 300 U. S. 577, 57 S. Ct. 524, 81 L. Ed. 814; Felt v. Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher, 306 U. S. 62, 59 S. Ct. 376, 83 L. Ed. [*150] 488; Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 312 U. S. 359, 61 S. Ct. 586, 85 L. Ed. 888, 132 A. L. R. 475; Nelson v. Montgomery Ward Co., 312 U. S. 373, 61 S. Ct. 593, 85 L. Ed. 897; McLeod v. J. E. Dilworth Co., 320 U. S. 728, 64 S. Ct. 87, 88 L. Ed. 430; and General Trading Company v. Tax Commission, 322 U. S. 335, 64 S. Ct. 1028, 88 L. Ed. 1309. The above enumerated cases were cited in the majority opinion rendered in the General Trading Co. v. State Tax Commission, supra, to support the decision therein rendered.

In some of the cases above mentioned, the right of the state to require the Use Tax to be collected by the nonresident seller was not involved. In the case of Mona-motor Oil Co. v. Johnson, supra, the oil distributor, who was required to collect the tax, had itself received the oil in the taxing state for distribution there, and the state, of course, had territorial jurisdiction to require it to collect and pay the tax. In Henneford v. Silas Mason Co., supra, the right to require the seller to collect and pay the tax was not involved. In Felt & Tarrant Co. v. Gallagher, supra, the right to require the seller to collect the Use Tax was involved, but the non-resident seller had two general agents in two separate areas of the taxing state for whom it rented offices under leases in its own name, paying the rent therefor, and to which agents it shipped its comptometers for delivery to the respective purchasers there, and into which state it sent demonstrators for the machines; and the seller was therefore held to have maintained places of business within the state and to be doing business there.

In the cases of Nelson v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., and Nelson v. Montgomery Ward & Co., supra, the non-resident sellers were maintaining retail stores in the taxing state, and the precise question involved, was whether the sellers were required to collect and pay the Use Tax on its mail order business from customers throughout the state who did not purchase through the local stores. The right to require the seller to collect and pay the Use [*151] Tax was upheld (1) for the reason that the court considered that the mail order business was a part of the general business being done as a whole through its local stores and otherwise in the state; and (2) for the obvious reason that since the sellers were doing business in the state, they were subject to its territorial jurisdiction.

In McLeod v. J. E. Dilworth Co., supra, the Arkansas sales tax was held not to be collectible from a non-resident seller, on the ground that the sale made in Memphis on orders received from Arkansas was not taxable on account of the commerce clause. No Use Tax was involved, but the court distinguished a sales tax from a use tax by saying that the former is a tax on the freedom of purchase, while the Use Tax is a tax on the enjoyment of that which is purchased.

This review of these cases, which we think are clearly distinguishable from the case at bar, brings us to a consideration of the only case in the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States which upheld the right of a state to require a Use Tax to be paid by a non-resident seller which was only shipping goods into the taxing state on orders taken by its travelling salesmen there and later filled by delivery of the articles to a common carrier at Minneapolis to be shipped to the purchasers in Iowa, and where the seller was not doing business in the taxing state within the meaning of the Mississippi decisions, but was doing business in Iowa according to a decision of the Supreme Court in that state. State Tax Commission of the State of Iowa v. General Trading Co., 233 Iowa 877, 10 N. W. (2d) 659, 153 A. L. R. 602; General Trading Co. v. State Tax Comm., 322 U. S. 335, 64 S. Ct. 1028, 88 L. Ed. 1309. Therein the state court had held that the General Trading Company was a “retailer” maintaining a place of business in Iowa under the same facts and circumstances as are present in the case at bar in regard to its method of conducting its interstate business. It had evidently so held on the sole ground that the legislature of Iowa had declared by stat [*152] ute that the term “ ‘retailer maintaining a place of business in this state,’ or any like term, shall mean and include any retailer having or maintaining within this state, . . . , an office, distribution house, sales house, warehouse or other places of business, or any agent operating within this state under the authority of the retailer . . . , irrespective of whether such place of business or agent is located here permanently or temporarily, or whether such retailer ... is admitted to do business within this state.” (Italics ours.) Code 1939, Sec. 6943.102, subd. 6. The distinction here is that the Supreme Court of the State of Mississippi has never held that a non-resident is a “retailer maintaining a place of business in this state” from the mere fact that it may have a soliciting agent operating within the state for the purpose of taking orders to be sent to his non-resident principal for acceptance or rejection and to be filled by shipments in interstate commerce where such non-resident seller maintains no office or other place of business here, and where such seller is engaged in no local activity under the protection of our laws, and where it is not qualified to do business within the state by appointing an agent for the service of process; that is to say, where it is not in fact doing business in this state in such a manner as to be present here. All of our decisions are directly to the contrary.

The provisions of our Use Tax Statute and those of the state of Iowa are substantially the same in all material respects, except that the Iowa statute does not contain the provision that the tax ‘ ‘ shall not apply with respect to the . . . use ... of any article of tangible personal property sold . . . outside of this state until the transportation thereof has finally ended and such article has become commingled with the general mass of property within this state . . . ”

In the case of General Trading Company v. State Tax Commission, etc., supra [322 U. S. 335, 64 S. Ct. 1029], the majority opinion by the United States Supreme Court [*153] appears to have been influenced by the fact noted therein that “The application by that Court (Iowa) of its local laws and the facts on which it founded its" judgment are of course controlling here. . . . Upon these facts and its holding that Trading Company was a ‘retailer maintaining a place of business in this state’ within the meaning of the Iowa Statute, the Iowa Supreme Court held that Iowa had not exceeded its powers in the imposition of this use tax on Iowa purchases, and that collection could validly be made through the Trading Com pany(Italics ours.) The Supreme Court of Mississippi would not have held, as did. the Iowa Court, that the state could require the trading company to collect and pay the taxes, since to do so would be contrary to all of the previous decisions of this Court as to what constitutes maintaining a place of business, or doing business in this state. Our decisions would have required that we should hold the question as what constitutes doing business in the state, territorial jurisdiction, and due process of law to be a judicial one, and that we were not bound by a legislative declaration or definition as to what would constitute doing business, territorial jurisdiction or due process of law, unless such declaration or definition was sanctioned or authorized by constitutional limitations.

In the case of Philadelphia & Reading R. R. Co. v. McKibbin, 243 U. S. 264, 37 S. Ct. 280, 61 L. Ed. 710, the Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Brandéis, announced the rule to be as follows: “A foreign corporation is amenable to process to enforce a personal liability, in the absence of consent, only if it is doing business within the state in such manner and to such extent as to warrant the inference that it is present there. ’ ’

The appellant in the case at bar was not doing business in this state and was not present here within the principles announced by this Court in the following cases: First National Bank v. Mississippi Cotton Seed Products Co., 171 Miss. 282, 157 So. 349; Item Co. v. Shipp et al., [*154] 140 Miss. 699, 106 So. 437; Smith et al. v. J. P. Seeburg Corporation, 129 Miss. 563, 6 So. (2d) 591; Stone v. General Contract Purchase Corporation, 193 Miss. 301, 7 So. (2d) 806, 140 A. L. R. 1029; Stone v. General Electric Contracts Corporation, 193 Miss. 317, 7 So. (2d) 811; A. H. Stone v. Memphis Natural Gas Co., 201 Miss. 670, 29 So. (2d) 268, affirmed 335 U. S. 80, 68 S. Ct. 1475; and the very recent case of Craig v. Mills, Miss., 33 So. (2d) 801. In the last four of the above cited cases, this Court upheld the right to collect an excise tax on, the sole ground that the non-residents involved were engaged in local activities in this state and were enjoying rights here under our laws which were conferred and protected by the state. However, a non-resident does not get from the state its right to engage exclusively in interstate commerce.

It is true, of course, that a state in the exercise of its sovereign power may artificially define anything or any activity ivhich.is subject to its jurisdiction. But this Court held in the case of Lee v. Memphis Publishing Co., 195 Miss. 264, 14 So. (2d) 351, 152 A. L. R. 1423, that the defendant was not doing business in this state in such a manner as to be present and amenable to process and suit here, even though the legislature had declared that any corporation which “shall do any business or perform any character of work or service in the state shall by the doing of such business or the performance of such work or service” (italics ours) be deemed to have appointed the secretary of state as its agent for the service of process in any action growing out the doing of such business or the performance of such work. The said publishing company was engaged in distributing about forty thousand copies of its daily Commercial Appeals in this state, and even though its activities were immeasurably greater than those involved in the instant case, we held that it was not doing business here, notwithstanding the artificial definition given by the legis [*155] lature and that to subject it to suit in the State of Mississippi would be denying due process of law.

If the courts of the state have no jurisdiction over the appellant, Reichman-Crosby Company, in the case at bar, then how can it be said that the legislature would have jurisdiction over it to require the performance of the duties sought to be imposed by our Use Tax statute? Tax statutes are enacted upon the theory that the taxing authorities may invoke the aid of the courts to enforce compliance therewith, if need be, but in the instant case if the appellant had declined to pay the tax on demand, we know of no power vested in the courts of this state to enforce collection thereof, together with the penalties sought to be imposed for such default.

The remedy provided by the Use Tax Law of enjoining the seller from continuing in business in this state is not available because it is not doing business here according to our decisions; nor can its agents be prevented from soliciting orders for the purchase and transportation of goods exclusively in interstate commerce, since the Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution, article 1, Sec. 8, cl. 3, forbids the state taking such action.' Moreover, the seller is not shown to have any property, or liens on property, located in this state that are protected by our laws for their enforcement, as in the cases of Stone vl General Contract Purchase Corporation, supra, and other like cases; and being engaged in no local activity here, the seller is not present within the jurisdiction of either the courts or the Legislature of this state.

The dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Jackson, concurred in by Mr. Justice Roberts, in the case of General Trading Company v. State Tax Commission, supra, is at least a correct pronouncement of the law as applied to the case at bar where the Supreme Court of Mississippi has not construed its local laws in the manner in which the Iowa Supreme Court had construed its laws — a factor which the majority opinion in the General Trading [*156] Company case seems to have recognized as controlling there.

We are, therefore, of the opinion that while our Use Tax Law is constitutionally valid as applied to the user in this state of tangible personal property purchased outside of the state, it is unconstitutional as to its requirement that the non-resident seller shall collect and pay the tax under the facts and circumstances of this case; and that, therefore, the trial court was in error in sustaining the demurrer which admitted the facts alleged in the declaration as to the appellant’s sole method of doing business with its Mississippi customers, which was only in interstate commerce and involved no local activities, or its presence, such as to constitute doing business in this state, and that the case must therefore be reversed and remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Dissent

Griffith, C. J.

(dissenting).

So far as I can see there is no substantial difference between this case and State Tax Comm. v. General Trading Co. (Iowa), and although I think that case was incorrectly decided, it does remove any federal impediment to the legislative definition which we have here before us; and there being no impediment to it in the State Constitution, I concur in what Judge Montgomery has said in his dissent.

Dissent

Montgomery, J.

(dissenting).

This Court, in the decisions listed in the majority opinion, has heretofore, decided what does and does not constitute doing business in this State. In none of these cases had the Legislature defined what constituted doing business within the meaning of the act in question, and no decision was upon any such legislative definition.

[*157] In the case before ns, the Legislature has, under Section 2 of Chapter 120, Laws of 1942, defined the term “retailer maintaining a place of business in this state” as follows:

“The term 'retailer maintaining a place of business in this state’ . . . shall mean and include any retailer . . . having or maintaining within this state, directly or by a subsidiary . . '. any agent operating within this state under the authority of the retailer . . . irrespective of whether such . . . agent is located within this state permanently or temporarily, or whether such retailer ... is admitted to do business within this state under its general laws. ’ ’

This legislative definition is contrary to the former holdings of this Court on what constitutes doing business within the State. What the Legislature says, as above set out, shall constitute doing business within the State, would not, under the former decisions of this Court, come within the meaning of that term.

Is the Legislature bound by the decisions of this Court as to what shall constitute doing business in the State, and is its power limited to the definitions prescribed by this Court? With all deference to my brethren, I think not.

The state Constitution is not a grant but a limitation on legislative power. The Legislature may enact any law not expressly or inferentially prohibited by the Constitution of the State or Nation. State v. Edwards, 93 Miss. 704, 46 So. 964; St. Louis & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Benton County, 132 Miss. 325, 96 So. 689. Hence, the State Legislature has all political power not withheld by the State Constitution, or in conflict with the Constitution of the United States. Hinton v. Board of Supervisors of Perry County, 84 Miss. 536, 36 So. 565. Constitutional restriction by implication of the State’s sovereign power to enact unlimited legislation for the public good is not favored, and the inhibition must appear plain and certain before it will be implied by the courts. Miller v. [*158] State, 130 Miss. 564, 94 So. 706; State v. Board of Supervisors of Grenada County, 141 Miss. 701, 105 So. 541. Where, as here, the State Constitution is silent on the subject of legislation, the Legislature is supreme so long as the act is not in conflict with the Constitution of the United States. State v. Speakes, 144 Miss. 125, 109 So. 129.

The majority opinion does not hold that there is any conflict between the act and any section of the State Constitution. It holds that the provision conflicts with the Federal Constitution. But in construing an identical act, the Supreme Court of the United States has held to the contrary in the case of State Tax Commission of the State of Iowa v. General Trading Co., 233 Iowa 877, 10 N. W. (2d) 659, 153 A. L. R. 602; General Trading Co. v. State Tax Comm., 322 U. S. 335, 64 S. Ct. 1028, 88 L. Ed. 1309, where it holds that such an act does not conflict with the Federal Constitution.

Where a question is Federal in its nature, the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States are absolutely binding on the various state courts, and must be followed, regardless of the views of the latter courts, and even though such decisions are inconsistent with prior decisions of the state courts. 21 C. J. S , Courts, Sec. 206, p. 365; Chesapeake & O. Ry. Company v. Martin, 283 U. S. 209, 51 S. Ct. 453, 75 L. Ed. 983. So the decisions of the Federal Court are binding as to the construction of the Federal Constitution. State of South Carolina v. Bailey, 289 U. S. 412, 53 S. Ct. 667, 77 L. Ed. 1292; 21 C. J. S., Courts, Sec. 206, p. 366, and cases there cited under Note 32.

There is nothing in the State.Constitution to limit the power of the Legislature to act in this matter in the manner in which it has acted, and the Supreme Court of the United States has held in General Trading Company, etc., v. State Tax Commission of the State of Iowa, supra, that there is nothing in the Federal Constitution to restrict the power of the Iowa Legislature to so act and, [*159] it seems to me, therefore that the power of the Mississippi Legislature, as exercised, is supreme.

The effect of the majority opinion, in my humble judgment, amounts to a rejection of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in General Trading Company, etc., v. State Tax Commission of the State of Iowa, supra, and, as I comprehend the law, this Court does not have that power on a question of the construction of the Federal Constitution.