Page:Harvard Law Review Volume 32.djvu/433

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HARVARD LAW REVIEW
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INDIRECT ENCROACHMENT ON FEDERAL AUTHORITY 397 the interstate business. The gross-receipts tax before the court did not profess to be a property tax, whereas by another statute the franchise was subjected to an ad valorem tax as property.^* The state itself had chosen to call one a property tax and the other something else. It can hardly complain that the court accepts its designations in choosing which one to reject, and decides that it is less Hkely to effect injurious regulation of interstate commerce by the tax which it calls a property tax than by the one which is more directly on interstate receipts. This traditional theory, as Mr. Justice Holmes announces, posits two necessities that do not admit of logical reconciliation. This is because a tax on the value of the property as a going con- cern is a tax on the value of the going concern, and the value of the going concern is the value of the business. It would make for simpUcity and directness to recognize that a tax on the value of the business is a tax on the business. The business may be worth more or less than the reconstruction cost of the property less depreciation. Where the property has no alternative uses, its value, whatever its cost, cannot exceed the value of the business which it serves. In the case of that part of the property of a rail- road which is permanently and inseparably devoted to the business, it would be difficult if not impossible to find its value except through the value of the business. But this does not apply to migratory cars or to the wagons, horses and pouches owned by the express companies in Ohio. With respect to such property it is readily apparent that a tax on the value of the property as a going concern is a tax on the business. This conclusion is fortified rather than disguised by resort to the notion that what the state is taxing is " intangible property." Intangible property has a famihar connota- tion which is quite distinct from the enjoyment or anticipation of business profits. The logical nebule which the opinions have exhaled by insisting that taxes on business were taxes on something else was by no means inevitable. It must be dispelled before we can see clearly. It is a legal doctrine that a state cannot tax interstate business, but it is not on economic fact. We might have been saved from weari- some confusion if the court had long ago declared that under some cir- cumstances and by some methods a state may tax interstate business,

    • See note 76, supra.