Mr. Justice Jackson,
dissenting:
State taxation of transfer by death of intangible property is in something of a jurisdictional snarl, to the solution of which this Court owes all that it has of wisdom and power. The theoretical basis of some decisions in the very practical matter of taxation is not particularly satisfying. But a switch of abstract concepts is hardly to be expected without at least careful consideration of its impact on the very practical and concrete problems of States and taxpayers. Weighing the highly doctrinaire reasons advanced for this decision against its practical effects on our economy and upon our whole constitutional law of state taxation, I can see nothing in the Court’s decision more useful than the proverbial leap from the frying pan into the fire.
I
There is little persuasion and certainly no compulsion in the authorities mustered by the Court’s present opinion, which are either admittedly overruled cases, such as Blackstone v. Miller, 188 U. S. 189, or admittedly distinguishable ones, such as Curry v. McCanless, 307 U. S. 357; Graves v. Elliott, 307 U. S. 383; Wisconsin v. J. C. Penney Co., 311 U. S. 435. Such authorities are not impressive in vindication of such a judgment. Without discussion of the academic merits of the decision that is being overruled, I am willing to proceed on the estimate of it made at the time of its pronouncement by the present Chief Justice, who said in his dissent: “Situs of an intangible, for taxing purposes, as the decisions of this Court, including the present one, abundantly demonstrate, is not a dominating reality, but a convenient fiction which may be judicially employed or discarded, according to the result desired.” First National Bank v. Maine, 284 U. S. 312, 332. The Court now discards this fiction in favor of one calling for a different result.
This older rule ascribed a fictional consequence to the domicile of a natural person; it is overruled by ascribing a fictional consequence to the domicile of an artificial corporation. The older rule emphasized dominance by the individual over his intangible property, the tax situs of which followed the domicile of its owner. Today’s new rule emphasizes the dominance of the corporation, a crea ture of the legal imagination. To this fictional personality it ascribes a hypothetical “domicile” in a place where it has but a fraction of its property and conducts only its formal corporate activities; and on the union of these two fictions it permits the chartering State to tax the estates of persons who never lived or did business therein. The reasoning back of the holding is this: Because Utah issued a charter to a corporation, which issued stock to a nonresident, which changed hands at his death, which required a transfer on the corporation’s books, which transfer was permitted by Utah law, Utah got jurisdiction to tax succession to the stock. It is really as remote as that.
No one questions that a State which charters a corporation, even though it amounts to no more than giving “to airy nothing a local habitation and a name,” has the right to exact a charter fee, an incorporation tax, or a franchise tax from the artificial entity it has created. But that such chartering enables the taxing arm of the State to reach the estate of every stockholder, wherever he lives, and to tax the entire value of the stock because of “opportunities which it has given,” “protection which it has afforded,” or “benefits which it has conferred” is quite another matter. Utah is permitted to tax the full value of each share of Union Pacific stock passing by death. Any conceivable “opportunity,” “protection,” or “benefit” derived by the Union Pacific stockholders from Utah is negligible in proportion to the values Utah is authorized to tax.
It would be hard to select a case that would better demonstrate the fictional basis of the Court’s doctrine of benefits and protection than this case of Utah and the Union Pacific Railroad. When Utah was admitted to statehood in 1896, the Union Pacific Railroad was already old as a national institution. The first white settlement in Utah made by the Mormons was in its second year when President Taylor recommended to Congress consideration of a railroad to the Pacific as a “work of great national importance and of a value to the country which it would be difficult to estimate.” In 1853, Congress appropriated $150,000 to make explorations and surveys to “ascertain the most practical and economical route.” In 1860, both the leading political parties in their platforms declared in favor of building such a road. President Lincoln, on July 1, 1862, signed the war measure creating the Union Pacific Railroad Company and subsidizing the construction of the road, which opened on May 10, 1869.* * The story of the Union Pacific has been a part of our national history. Not even its scandals were local. Its Credit Mobilier scandal rocked the Nation.
The road continued to be a national problem as well as a national enterprise. President Cleveland recommended to Congress in his message of December 3, 1894 consideration of reorganization. The steps taken by the Government were reported to the Congress by President McKinley in his annual messages of 1897, 1898, and 1899. He reported the sale of the Union Pacific main line under the decree of the United States Court for the District of Nebraska on November 1 and 2,1897. Utah, on July 1,1897, granted a charter to the present Union Pacific Railroad Company, as the Federal Government or any one of several state governments might have done. It has become one of the great and stable transportation systems of the United States.
If it had only the “opportunities” and “benefits” conferred by Utah and only the properties protected by her laws, the Union Pacific would cut little figure either in transportation or finance. It holds its stockholders’ meetings in that State. But it maintains no executive office or stock transfer office in Utah. Its executive and stock transfer offices are in New York City. Its stocks are listed on the New York, Boston, London, and Amsterdam stock exchanges. Over 200,000 shares of its stock were traded on the New York Stock Exchange in 1939. Its western operating office is not in Utah, but in Omaha, Nebraska. It is stipulated that less than 9% of its 9877 miles of trackage are in Utah and that, during 1939, the railway operating revenue from Utah intrastate business plus the Utah proportion on a mileage basis of its interstate business was 8.97% of the entire gross operating revenues of the company.
What gives the Union Pacific stock its value, all of which is appropriated by this decision to Utah’s taxing power, is its operation in interstate commerce, a privilege which comes from the United States and one which Utah does not give or protect and could not deny. The Union Pacific system itself is in interstate operation, embracing thirteen states and drawing its business from the whole country. Approximately 37% of its total tonnage was received from connecting lines. If the values derived from privileges extended by the National Government and from rendering national transportation were to be allocated to any single State for tax purposes, a realistic basis would entitle the five States of Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, and Washington to some consideration, for each embraces, authorizes, and protects by its laws more miles of trackage than does Utah.
These facts leave nothing of Utah’s claim to tax the full value of Union Pacific shares when transferred by death of a nonresident stockholder, and no basis for the Court’s decision that it may do so, except the metaphysics of the corporate charter.
II
The theories on which this case is decided contrast sharply with certain hard facts which measure the decision’s practical wisdom or lack of it.
1. The effect of the Court’s decision is to intensify the already unwholesome conflict and friction between the States of the Union in competitive exploitation of intangible property as a source of death duties.
The practical issue underlying this case is not whether the Harkness estate shall pay or avoid a transfer tax. The issue is whether Utah or New York will collect this tax. It is admitted that if this Court breathes constitutionality into this Utah tax, all that Utah gets will be credited to the Harkness estate on its tax payable in New York as the State of domicile. The right of a State to tax succession to corporate stock by death of one domiciled therein, while not abrogated, is now subjected to an interfering and overlapping right of the State which chartered the corporation to tax the same stock transfer on a different and inconsistent principle. Since the chartering State has apparently been empowered to exact its tax as a condition of permitting the transfer, the taxing power of the State of the stockholder’s domicile is really subordinated and deferred to the taxing power of the chartering State. By laying its tax on the gross value transferred, irrespective of the net value of the decedent’s estate, the chartering State may give its tax an effective priority of payment over the taxes laid by the domiciliary State and may collect what amounts to an inheritance tax even when there is no net estate to transfer. Thus, through the corporate charter fiction, the chartering State may thrust its own tax with extraterritorial effect between the taxing power of the State of domicile and tax resources to which that State has had, and I think should have, first and, under ordinary circumstances, exclusive resort.
2. To subject intangible property to many more sources of taxation than other wealth, prejudices its relation to other investments and other wealth by a discrimination which has no basis in the function that intangibles per form for our present society. Intangibles, except for government issues, are an outgrowth of our modern corporation system. Of relatively recent growth, the corporation has become almost the unit of organization of our economic life. Whether for good or ill, the stubborn fact is that in our present system the corporation carries on the bulk of production and transportation, is the chief employer of both labor and capital, pays a large part of our taxes, and is an economic institution of such magnitude and importance that there is no present substitute for it except the State itself. Except for the easy circulation and ready acceptability of pieces of paper characterized as stocks or bonds, this existing system could not function. It is these intangible symbols or tokens which give liquidity and mobility to otherwise fixed underlying plant assets, which give ready negotiability to fractional interests therein that would otherwise transfer with difficulty, and which divide among many both benefits and risks from aggregation of properties whose successful functioning for society requires unified management of the bulk. The amount of plant and material and goods in process, working capital, good will, and organization at any time devoted to enterprise substantially will depend upon the willingness of the public to stand in the position of stockholder or bondholder. When this Court determines that the effect of owning this type of circulating medium is to subject the estate of the owner to an inheritance tax from every State that chartered one of the companies in which he has invested, it imposes a handicap on such ownership that is substantial and influential upon our economy.
Not one substantial evil is said by the opinion in this case to flow from the rule being upset, and evils of some magnitude admittedly follow from the one being reinstated. These consequences the Court declines even to consider, although they bear upon a segment of our economy bigger than the national debt and affect more persons than are now in the armed forces. Intangibles constitute well above 50% of all property transferred by death, and an even greater proportion of that transferred by gift, which I assume is equally vulnerable to this tax. The gravity of subjecting such extensive interests to complex, confusing, and overlapping tax jurisdictions should be weighed against the reasons advanced for the change.
The revenue that the States may collect in consequence of this decision is not the measure of the burden it imposes on taxpayers. The ascertainment of taxes of this type is costly and wasteful. Such taxation frequently requires taking out ancillary letters in the State of the corporation’s domicile, the hiring of local counsel, the furnishing of affidavits to local probate courts and inheritance tax officials, and the payment of various fees, costs, and expenses. For the assurance of local creditors, bonds are sometimes required and long kept in force. Realization upon assets and distribution of estates is delayed by inability to get waivers or consents to transfer until after extensive proceedings have been conducted. The seriousness of these burdens is increased if the decedent owns stock in consolidated corporations incorporated in several States; and under this decision stocks of some consolidated railroads would be subject to tax on their full values by five or six States. One need not be unduly soft-hearted towards taxpayers to doubt whether the exhaustion of estates through multiplication of reports, returns, appraisals, litigation, counsel fees, and expenses ultimately makes for a sound fiscal policy or an enlightened social policy.
Moreover, the burdens imposed by this type of taxation are unequal and capricious and in inverse order to the ability of the estate to pay. I suppose we need have little anxiety about Mr. Harkness’s $87,000,000 net estate with its $1,000,000 investment in Union Pacific stock. As we have pointed out, it is not he, but the State of New York, that will pay this tax to the State of Utah. And if New York had no provision in its statutes for credit and Mr. Harkness could have foreseen the shift of position of this Court, it is not likely that he would have been caught with the tax. Those who have large estates and watchful lawyers will find ways of minimizing these burdens. But Mr. Harkness is not a typical Union Pacific stockholder. In 1939, the Union Pacific had 50,131 stockholders. The many small stockholders can not afford professional counsel or evasion-devices. The burden of reports and appraisals and foreign tax proceedings bears heavily upon them because of the relatively small amount involved in their transfers. The new tax we have authorized undermines the principle of graduation of tax burdens in proportion to ability to pay. No tax laid on anything less than the total net worth of the estate can be graduated even roughly according to the principle which progressive modern taxation strives to heed. The imposition of unpredictable assessments from many sources makes it impossible for the State of domicile to make intelligent use of its own taxing power as an instrument of enlightened social policy. Chaos serves no social end.
3. A large majority of the States, by experience prior to the First National Bank v. Maine decision, found the system of taxation which this Court imposes on all States today to be unworkable and to constitute a threat to the death tax on intangibles as a State source of revenue. Competitive use by the States of death taxation and immunities invited federal invasion of the field, one phase of which was the enactment by Congress of § 301, Revenue Act of 1926, sustained by this Court in Florida v. Mellon, 273 U. S. 12. There the Federal Government had laid an estate tax, but retained only 20% of the revenue and used an 80% credit provision to equalize the demands of the States. There was an uneasy premonition among the States that overlapping, capricious, and multiple taxation would lead to Federal occupation of the field. Appearing in the First National Bank case as amicus curiae, the New York State Tax Commission urged that both principle and policy prevent the levying of taxes by more than one jurisdiction, and added: “The New York Tax Commission believes that the present is a crucial period in the development of death taxation in this country and that a false step may make it difficult for the states to retain the death tax as a source of substantial revenue.” We revive their difficulties.
Farsighted States saw that the total revenue resources practically available to the States was not increased by overlapping their taxation and invading each other’s domiciliary sources of taxation. Many felt that justice required credits to their own domiciled decedents’ estates for taxes exacted elsewhere, and the credits granted offset largely the revenue derived from the tax. The multiple taxation added substantially to the cost of administration and to the annoyance of taxpayers. Because of these considerations, at the time of argument of First National Bank v. Maine, thirty-seven States had enacted reciprocity statutes which voluntarily renounced revenues from this type of taxation. The Court was urged to stay the hand of sister States which would not cooperate. The restraint laid by this Court in response to those appeals is now withdrawn at the behest of a State which has at no time enacted a reciprocity statute or given a credit for such taxes paid by its domiciled decedents elsewhere. We have not heard the views of any other State nor considered their concern about retaining the source of taxation opened to them. I do not doubt that today’s decision will give a new impetus to Federal absorption of this revenue source and to Federal incorporation of large enterprises.
4. An unfortunate aspect of this decision is that, in common with other judge-made law, it has retroactive effect. Consequently, inequalities and injustices will be suffered by States as well as by individuals. For example, the State of New York has written into its own Constitu tion the limitations on its taxing power which this Court had established by the decision we now overrule. Until it can adjust its constitutional provisions, such a State may not take advantage of the tax privileges the Court confers today, although other States may do so. We have not been advised as to the number of States which have repealed or modified reciprocity or credit provisions in their own statutes or constitutions in reliance upon the decision we overrule. Credit provisions contained in statutes may be the foundation for claims for refund against domiciliary States as chartering States proceed to take advantage of the privilege of retroactive taxation accorded them by this decision. Estates closed and distributed under existing laws become indebted by force of this decision to chartering States on claims for transfer tax that may have existed in the state statutes but had never been suspected of having constitutional validity. Eor what periods these claims may have vitality depends on state statutes of limitation. Whether personal liability may be asserted against executors and administrators for failure to pay taxes that our decisions did not tolerate at the time the estates were closed, likewise depends on the laws of the chartering States. With confidence we may anticipate that this decision will produce much confusion, some controversy between the States, and a lusty crop of litigation.
Ill
The Court casts aside former limitations on state power to tax nonresidents in such terms as to leave doubt whether any legal limitations are hereafter to be recognized or applied. The opinion of the Court says that the State may “constitutionally id ake its exaction” “which can demonstrate ‘the practical fact of its power.’ ” The concurring opinion adds that “Each State of the Union has the same taxing power as an independent country, except insofar as that power has been curtailed by the federal Constitution,” and it enumerates three limitations, each of which prohibits a kind of tax or protects kinds of business from tax; but none of them restrains taxation by reference to what we have usually expressed by “jurisdiction.” It is true that the concurring opinion says that “the Due Process Clause has its application to the taxing power of the States,” but we are not told what it may be, and it is difficult to conceive of a situation where it will ever be useful if it may not be considered as a test of jurisdiction to impose a tax.
Despite today’s decision, I trust this Court does not intend to say that might always makes right in the matter of taxation. I hope there is agreement, though unexpressed, that there are limits, and that our problem is to search out and mark those limits. One way to go about it is to say that those States can tax which have the physi cal power to do so and have conferred some benefits or protection on the taxpayer. Of course there is nothing in the Constitution about this, but that is a criticism that can be directed at any test that I can think of. My difficulty is that on its face—and as so far applied—this test comes out to the point where might does make right. For in a very real sense every State and Territory in the Union has conferred very real benefits upon every inhabitant of the Union. Some States have seen to it that our food is properly produced and inspected; others have fostered and protected the industry upon which we are utterly dependent for the ordinary conveniences of life and for life itself. All of them have yielded up men to provide government at home and to repel the enemy abroad. I am the very real debtor, but am frank enough to say I hope not a potential taxpayer, of all.
Certain it is that while only corporate stock is expressly mentioned in the opinion or involved in the judgment today, the fiction of benefits and protection is capable of as ready adaptability to other intangible property. Our tomorrows will witness an extension of the taxing power of the chartering or issuing State to corporate bonds and bonds of States and municipalities (by overruling Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. Minnesota, 280 U. S. 204), to bank credits for cash deposited (by overruling Baldwin v. Missouri, 281 U. S. 586), and to choses in action (by overruling Beidler v. South Carolina, 282 U. S. 1). And while today the Court sustains only a death transfer tax, its theories are equally serviceable to sustain an income or excise tax, on dividends from such stock or interest on bonds, or a sales tax, or a gift tax. Whether each chartering or issuing State will be permitted to calculate its tax on some formula that will consider the total property owned by the decedent, I do not know, but in the present trend of decision there is little restraint on such formulas. I therefore take today’s decision to mean that any State may lay substantially any tax on any transfer of intangible property toward which it can spell out a conceivable legal relationship.
And since the Due Process Clause speaks with no more clarity as to tangible than as to intangible property, the question is opened whether our decisions as to taxation of tangible property are not due to be overhauled. And if the State of Utah is not denied jurisdiction over the transfer of this stock owned by a New York resident, it is difficult to see where the Court could find a basis for denying it jurisdiction to prescribe the rule of succession to it.
The Court, it seems to me, will be obliged to draw the line at which state power to reach nonresidents’ estates and extraterritorial transactions comes to an end. I find little difficulty in concluding that exaction of a tax by a State which has no jurisdiction or lawful authority to impose it is a taking of property without due process of law. The difficulty is that the concept of jurisdiction is not defined by the Constitution. Any decision which accepts or rejects any one of the many grounds advanced as jurisdictional for state taxing purposes will read into the Constitution an inclusion or an exclusion that is not found in its text. To read into the Constitution the Court’s present concept of jurisdiction through charter granting, and to hold that it follows that the Constitution does not prohibit this tax, is to make new law quite as certainly as to adhere to the concept of jurisdiction ac cording to the decedents domicile and to hold that the Constitution therefore does prohibit it.
I am content with existing constitutional law unless it appears more plainly that it is unsound or until it works badly in our present day and society.
Mr. Justice Roberts concurs in this opinion.
Of one of them, Mr. Justice Holmes said: “It seems to me that the result reached by the Court probably is a desirable one, but I hardly understand how it can be deduced from the Fourteenth Amendment . . .” Union Refrigerator Transit Co. v. Kentucky, 199 U. S. 194, 211.
A corporation is defined by John Marshall as “an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in contemplation of law.” Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518, 636. The New York Court of Appeals has said: “A corporation, however, is a mere conception of the legislative mind. It exists only on paper through the command of the legislature that its mental conception shall be clothed with power.” People v. Knapp, 206 N. Y. 373, 381, 99 N. E. 841, 844. “It took half a century of litigation in this Court finally to confer on a corporation, through the use of a fiction, citizenship in the chartering state for jurisdictional purposes. . . . Throughout, the mode of thought was metaphorical.” Mr. Justice Frankfurter, in Neirbo Co. v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 308 U. S. 165, 169. Compare the cases where courts are obliged to disregard the corporate entity to avoid a variety of injustices. See Wormser, Disregard of the Corporate Fiction (1927).
6 Messages and Papers of the Presidents 2558, Message of December 4, 1849. President Buchanan also repeatedly recommended the road as a defense necessity to be constructed under the war power. Id. at 2988; Id., Vol. 7, at 3057,3103,3181.
10 Stat. 219.
Trottman, History of the Union Pacific (1923) 8.
Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln—The War Years, Vol. 1, 510. See also Vol. 2, 461, for an account of Lincoln’s selection of the location of its eastern terminal.
It granted a right of way across the public lands owned by the United States and a subsidy loan of $16,000 per mile for the construction on the plain, $48,000 per mile for one hundred and fifty miles over the Rocky Mountains, and $32,000 per mile for the remainder. The construction amounted to 1,034 miles, and the subsidy loan to $27,236,512. The Central Pacific, for 883 miles constructed from San Francisco to meet the Union Pacific, received nearly an equal amount. 12 Stat. 489. Further grants were made by an Act of July 2,1864,13 Stat. 356.
11 Messages and Papers of the Presidents 638.
Bowers, The Tragic Era (1929) 396 et seq.
13 Messages and Papers of the Presidents 5969.
13 Messages and Papers of the Presidents 6273, 6343, 6390.
Moody’s Steam Railroads (1940) 907.
Moody’s Steam Railroads (1940) 895.
Mileage of the system is as follows: (1) Idaho, 2051.12; (2) Nebraska, 1355.68; (3) Oregon, 1172.48; (4) Kansas, 1159.87; (5). Washington, 1047.04; (6) Utah, 888.47; (7) Wyoming, 717.32; (8) Colorado, 609.13; (9) California, 390.52; (10) Nevada, 358.12; (11) Montana, 143.46; (12) Iowa, 2.48; (13) Missouri, 2.16. Moody’s Steam Railroads (1940) 893.
The burdens imposed by the present decision are cumulative and must be considered in relation to taxation of intangibles in some circumstances by States other than that of domicile (Curry v. McCanless, 307 U. S. 357; Graves v. Elliott, 307 U. S. 383), and also in reference to the closing of the federal courts to both State and taxpayers where different state courts make inconsistent findings on domicile resulting in estate taxation by two or more States. Massachusetts v. Missouri, 308 U. S. 1; Texas v. Florida, 306 U. S. 398; Worcester County Trust Co. v. Riley, 302 U. S. 292; New Jersey v. Pennsylvania, 287 U. S. 580; Dorrance v. Pennsylvania, 287 U. S. 660 and 288 U. S. 617, certiorari denied to review Dorrance’s Estate, 309 Pa. 151; Hill v. Martin, 296 U. S. 393; Dorrance v. Martin, 298 U. S. 678, certiorari denied to review Dorrance v. Thayer-Martin, 116 N. J. L. 362; Sargent and Tweed, Death and Taxes are Certain—But What of Domicile?, 53 Harvard L. Rev. 68; cf. Treinies v. Sunshine Mining Co., 308 U. S. 66.
U. S. Treasury Statistics of Income for 1938, Part II, p. 4 (latest available) shows that 520,501 corporations filed returns. 169,884 of them reported net income aggregating $6,525,979,257, while 301,148 reported an aggregate loss for the year of $2,853,097,727.
The Commissioner computes dividends paid in cash or assets other than stock to have been $5,013,432,827. Id. at 22.
Balance sheets were submitted by 411,941 corporations showing total assets of $300,021,727,000. Id. at 28.
The volume of intangibles afloat as a result of corporate financing is not specifically calculated, but some idea of it is gleaned from the aggregate of items as follows:
Common stocks..............$74,791,662,000
Preferred stocks............ 18,108,066,000
Bonds, notes and mortgages— maturity 1 year or more.. 50,278,233,000 Ibid.
I know of no accurate calculation of the number of persons who hold stocks or bonds. Many estimates are extravagant and include an enormous amount of duplications—for example, the aggregate of stockholders’ lists of all corporations. I think the estimate of Berle and Means as of 1927 that between four and six million persons owned stocks, including an estimated two million employee or customer stockholders, is a reasonable one. The Modern Corporation and Private Property (1934) 374. Many are, of course, also bondholders, and the number to be added after allowing for duplication is difficult to estimate. It must also, of course, be borne in mind that this includes many very small holdings and that such statistics are of little value in considering the relative benefits from such holdings derived by those in different income brackets.
United States Treasury Statistics of Income for 1938, Part I, p. 220, shows that 15,221 estates filed returns showing total gross estates of $2,746,143,000, of which real estate was $433,487,000, tangible personal property, $34,637,000, and intangible personal property $2,278,019,000.
The intangibles so reported included:
Capital stock in corporations...........$1,079,231,000
State and municipal bonds.......... 242,537,000
Government bonds.................. 148,802,000
Other bonds....................... 164,796,000
Of course it does not follow that the same proportions hold good for estates too small to be reported under federal law. Because they would be more heavily weighted with farm and home owning, I am confident these statistics do not present proportions applicable to all transfers by death. They do, I believe, sustain the statement made in the text.
United States Treasury Statistics of Income for 1938, Part I, p. 264, show total gifts reported for taxation as—
Real Estate............................ $41,241,000
Stocks and Bonds....................... 214, 583,000
Cash ................................. 72, 390,000
Insurance ............................. 21,795,000
Miscellaneous......................---- 49,764,000
Moody’s Steam Kailroads (1940) 888.
Article XVI, § 3 of the New York State Constitution, adopted in 1938, provides:
“Moneys, credits, securities and other intangible personal property within the state not employed in carrying on any business therein by the owner shall be deemed to be located at the domicile of the owner for purposes of taxation, and, if held in trust, shall not be deemed to be located in this state for purposes of taxation because of the trustee being domiciled in this state, provided that if no other state has jurisdiction to subject such property held in trust to death taxation, it may be deemed property having a taxable situs within this state for purposes of death taxation. Intangible personal property shall not be taxed ad valorem nor shall any excise tax be levied solely because of the ownership or possession thereof, except that the income therefrom may be taken into consideration in computing any excise tax measured by income generally. Undistributed profits shall not be taxed.”
That decision apparently ended the necessity for reciprocal exemption and I know of none enacted since. Texas and Missouri appear to have omitted reciprocal exemption provisions in later revisions of their inheritance tax laws.
See Lowndes, State Taxation of Inheritances, 29 Michigan Law Review 850; Hine, Situs of Shares Issued under the Uniform Stock Transfer Act, 87 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 700.
But fear of legislating need not intimidate those of either view. The necessity of eventually finding some jurisdictional basis for state action affecting nonresidents presents a problem similar to that stated by Mr. Justice Holmes in Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U. S. 205, 221: “I recognize without hesitation that judges do and must legislate, but they can do so only interstitially; they are confined from molar to molecular motions.” And another candid jurist has said: “I will not hesitate in the silence or inadequacy of formal sources to indicate as the general line of direction for the judge the following: that he ought to shape his judgment of the law in obedience to the same aims which would be those of a legislator who was proposing to himself to regulate the question.” Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process (1932) 120.
Where prescribed sources of law fail to guide the judicial process, the Swiss Civil Code provides that the judge “must pronounce judgment according to the rule which he would set up if he were legislator himself.” Williams, Sources of Law in the Swiss Civil Code (1923) 34 et seq.; Schoch, The Swiss Conflict of Laws, 55 Harvard Law Review 738, 749, note 57. The Swiss may have thought a candid recognition of what necessarily is the practice would forestall judicial disclaimer of responsibility for the practical consequences of law announced.