The Volokh Conspiracy
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Abortion and the Wayfair Case
How a use tax on mifepristone might scramble abortion debates.
Yesterday in my conflict of laws class I taught South Dakota v. Wayfair, the 2018 case which lets states force out-of-state sellers to collect and remit use taxes. This morning I wondered why it hasn't been invoked more in the debates over interstate restrictions on abortion.
Wayfair involved a South Dakota requirement that businesses pay sales taxes on the products they sell into the state. If they don't, their customers are supposed to pay a use tax at the same rate, which of course they rarely do. The Court held that South Dakota could, under the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause and the "dormant" Commerce Clause, require Wayfair to collect and remit the tax itself, even if Wayfair didn't have any physical presence in South Dakota. Instead, due process would be satisfied so long as Wayfair was subject to South Dakota's personal jurisdiction—which they were, purposefully availing themselves of the South Dakota market by shipping products there. And dormant commerce would be satisfied through a multiprong test, focusing in particular on whether Wayfair's activity had "a substantial nexus with the taxing State," and noting that it's "'long been settled' that the sale of goods or services 'has a sufficient nexus to the State in which the sale is consummated,' i.e., that 'a sale is attributable to its destination.'"
I mention all this because Wayfair might scramble current debates over abortion pills like mifepristone. Suppose an out-of-state entity—a pharmacy, an abortion-rights nonprofit, etc.—ships abortion pills to a user in a state where abortion is illegal. Right now the Supreme Court is considering a case asking whether this use of the mails is illegal under the Comstock Act (though it might well be resolved on standing grounds instead). And a state that made such shipments illegal might have trouble enforcing its laws across state lines; one state's "penal judgments" typically aren't enforced by another, as a longstanding exception to judgment recognition.
So what if the state follows the Al Capone strategy and uses tax law instead? Say that Alabama imposes a use tax on mifepristone, which it would ordinarily require the user to pay, but which it also requires the provider to report, collect, and remit. There'd be a sufficient nexus, insofar as a sale is attributable to its destination. The tax would apply equally to in-state and out-of-state mifepristone providers, eliminating any claim of discrimination against interstate commerce. And while the Court in Wayfair emphasized the amount of business being done, it didn't endorse a strict minimum of how many shipments are needed to satisfy the commerce clause; after all, why should an out-of-state provider be allowed to evade a tax which an in-state provider would be obligated to pay? (The other parts of the dormant commerce test, derived from the Complete Auto case, could likely be satisfied too; and there's no rule against taxing illegal activities—cf. how they got Capone.)
If a state did tax mifepristone, it could probably get that tax enforced. While the general doctrine is that foreign tax judgments are only enforceable by the sovereign imposing the tax, the Supreme Court changed course as to state tax judgments in 1935, holding that every other state owed these judgments full faith and credit. So if Alabama had someone purchase mifepristone from an out-of-state pharmacy, and if it didn't receive a payment on time, it could initiate tax proceedings against the pharmacy in its own courts, and then potentially pursue recovery in other states—all the while imposing penalties for nonpayment. The various shield laws that states have enacted, purporting to bar enforcement of out-of-state laws or judgments restricting abortion, wouldn't necessarily stand up against a judgment entitled to full faith and credit. (Or a state might use the Supreme Court's original jurisdiction against an out-of-state citizen; or, depending on the amounts involved, a county or city might be able to use diversity jurisdiction to enforce its tax judgment in federal court.)
The point of all this isn't necessarily to outline a strategy for restricting abortion, but to note some reasons why we should feel less confident about Wayfair! It's very strange that an out-of-state actor might be obliged to look up and follow other states' tax laws, reporting on transactions and so on, even if we think those states lack power to regulate the actor in general. It's just that the strangeness is easy to miss when the issue is competition between online and brick-and-mortar purveyors of office supplies, and a lot easier to see when the issue is having to report your shipments of abortion pills (names, addresses, etc). The natural regulator for interstate shipments is Congress, which may have already banned interstate shipment of abortion pills in the Comstock Act, but which generally allows office supplies to move across state lines. But because the Biden Administration has "interpreted" the Act in an extraordinarily narrow way, we have neither an effective federal entitlement to send pills through the mails nor an effective federal prohibition either. Yet so long as each state can require out-of-state actors to collect and remit taxes, each state can further entangle itself in the abortion debate too.
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Hopefully Wafer is another experiment where the Court will perform an about-face.
That seems doubtful.
If you have enough revenue in a state to qualify for reporting it, you're not looking for a legal battle over sales tax.
And if eBay is collecting on your behalf, your transactions are small enough that you're not going to make a federal case about it.
I'd love to see Wayfair overturned. I'm not holding my breath, though.
South Dakota v. Wayfair was the about-face. It overruled National Bellas Hess v. Illinois, 386 U.S. 753 (1967) and Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. 298 (1992).
I liked Quill because they would give a free tin of premium cookies with an office supply products order. Everyone loved those cookies.
The Quill decision was almost as good as the cookies. Certainly better than Wayfair. I sometimes wonder if Amazon's rise to the top could be repeated today without all of those years of tax free ordering. Now Amazon taxes me even if I order from a direct-from-china seller on amazon marketplace that ships from beijing via yunexpress.
It would be hard for supporters of the ACA to argue against a Penaltax ...
I haven't researched this, so perhaps someone can enlighten me on how the out of state taxes are enforced? Collection is an easy matter, with databases of taxes by state/zip that are remitted to a central state authority when above a pretty high threshold.
But how would it be enforced if a pharmacy in Massachusetts shipped pills to Texas? How would Texas know what is owed? Would Massachusetts enforce a subpoena of retail sales records for tax enforcement under the full faith and credit doctrine?
I am thinking that non profits would spring up to provide the pills to people in restrictive abortion states for free (perhaps charging only for shipping or something). The non profit would presumably pay the sales tax for purchasing the pills in their own state.
Or maybe the non profit sets up a telemedicine visit via zoom or whatever and charges for that but then the pills are free. I am just spitballing ideas of ways groups will try to get around any roadblocks that are set up. Whether they be financial/tax or otherwise.
If the war on drugs taught us anything; its that if there is sufficient demand for a product, there will be a supply. Legal or otherwise. The spice must (and will) flow.
Sure, but sales tax doesn't *have* to be a percentage of sale, does it? They could tax each pill $1,000?
Regardless, how would they enforce that?
I don't think the courts would allow big tax just on one type of pill instead of a general one. You can tax newspapers like any other business but not have a special newspaper only tax.
There are lots of sin taxes. Why would this be any different?
Cigars and cigarettes, for example, are just dried leaves. Why do they get a special tax but McCormack's herbs do not?
By the way, I think that sin taxes generally are both unjust and ineffective and would gladly see them all gone. But regardless of our normative opinions about what sin tax policy should be, the legal question is how do you differentiate the above-proposed tax on abortificants from other sin taxes which are apparently allowed?
Why wouldn't it be upheld on the same basis as the NFA?
That's because of the 1A. Absent Roe/Casey, abortion-seekers and providers aren't a suspect class, so rational basis would apply.
Why don't you tell the rest of the story: Huey Long was taxing newspapers as an attempt to silence them and THAT is why this came up.
That is not in fact the story. That case held that a tax targeted at newspapers based on their speech was unconstitutional. But the Minneapolis Star case — which is the one I had in mind — held that any tax that singles out the press regardless of motive violates the 1A.
Well I was thinking of Grosjean v. American Press Co., 297 U.S. 233 (1936). I neglected to mention that the tax only applied to newspapers with circulations over 20,000 and was intended to punish the student newspaper at Louisiana State University which had long been critical of Long.
Ammunition, General; don't forget ammunition.
But the state with the $1,000 per pill tax wouldn't collect anything on a sale that took place 15states away and where the sale happened (and where the tax is minimal). I don't think they could tax the receipt of a free pill for $1,000. Not that some idiots in Texas or Idaho or whatever wouldn't try.
Seeing states attempt to penalize clearly constitutional actions (like traveling out of the State to get an abortion) makes me think they don't really care about constitutional constraints. So if they want to play hard ball, people will do the same to get around the stupid rules. And it will be a giant game of whack a mole. By the time one scheme ends up in court and is resolved one way or another, three other schemes will already be proceeding. Courts are always slow to react.
First, who says the state has to accept payment of the tax?
Wasn't something like that done a century ago by the Feds with one of the narcotic or gun control acts?
Second, failure to pay a state's sales tax is often a criminal violation of its laws -- a felony in Massachusetts. See: https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleIX/Chapter62C/Section73
So it isn't just suing civilly for unpaid taxes -- a state can prosecute criminally and I fail to see why Mayfair wouldn't permit CRIMINAL prosecution of out of state vendors.
Third, who says that the tax can't be $100,000? The state could use it to fund support for single mothers...
Actually, it was a lot more recent than that, (The case is Rock Island Armory) and the upshoot was that if they won’t let you pay the tax, it ceases to constitutionally be a tax law.
Which got a lot of people excited, until they learned that the government had stopped relying on tax laws to ban machine guns some time earlier, and had just charged the defendant under the wrong law.
Control out of state for taxes? Yes!
Contol out of state for drugs? No!
Heavily tax out of state for drugs? Yes, I mean no, I mean yes, I mean no! (Fotzzz!) Captain Kirk sat back, another robot killed.
Presuambly the tax would be like the NFA: a (large) flat amount on each pill transferred, not a percentage of the sale price (since the goal would to discourage distribution, not to raise revenue).
Edit: Actually, Prof. Sachs makes this point explicitly:
"Say that Alabama imposes a use tax on mifepristone, which it would ordinarily require the user to pay, but which it also requires the provider to report, collect, and remit."
What would prohibit Alabama from then having something similar to Massachusetts' "Operation Intercept"?
Fireworks are illegal in Massachusetts. You can order them from out of state companies except what happens is that they get delivered to the State Fire Marshal's Office instead of you. You still pay, but don't get them.
If Alabama was told that Slutty Suzie was getting a shipment of mifepristone -- which it would be -- what would prevent it from using its police powers to seize what is an illegal substance in Alabama?
Fireworks are explosive and as such must be labeled. This is not the case with drugs.
Check the DOT regs on that, I don't think you are right, and labeling requirements depend on the quantity. ORM-D has been discontinued and I'm not sure what the new DOT regs are.
Bear in mind that ATF & DOT regs are not always the same. Of course your Federal government can't agree with itself...
What a noxious little shit you are.
She is the criminal, not me.
"I am thinking that non profits would spring up to provide the pills to people in restrictive abortion states for free (perhaps charging only for shipping or something). The non profit would presumably pay the sales tax for purchasing the pills in their own state."
They could do that for an "Over The Counter" (OTC) drug, but the problem here is that this is a prescription drug. Hence it has to be dispensed by a pharmacist to the user who has a valid prescription for it. This sorta explains that: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK582130/
The relevant portion:
"The FDCA defines two main classes of medications: OTC and prescription medications. Prescription medications are drugs that require a prescription and specific labeling and directions to be deemed safe. These drugs are limited to disbursement solely by prescription because they are considered habit-forming, toxic, carry a potential for harm, or their approval under the FDA is limited [21 U.S.C.§ 321].
Furthermore, the Durham-Humphrey Amendment established guidelines for all pharmacists dispensing prescription medications. These guidelines require a written or oral prescription by a licensed practitioner, a refill to be authorized by a licensed prescriber, and all prescription medication dispensing to be overseen by a prescriber. Additionally, prescription drugs must be labeled with the statement "Caution: Federal law prohibits dispensing medication without a prescription."
There are a lot of other laws and regs involved, but basically as long as it is a PRESCRIPTION drug, it has to be prescribed by someone licensed under state law and then dispensed by someone also licensed under state law, and you can't have third parties getting involved.
It's not actually all that easy, because in some states taxes vary in a much more fine grained manner than just zip codes, and they're continually changing.
In fact, the requirement to collect out of state taxes was a major driver centralizing online commerce, due to the complexity being insupportable for mom and pop outfits. It's dirt simple to set up an online store otherwise, but the moment you introduce this tax complication it becomes nightmarish.
So a lot of outfits are forced to go through Amazon or Ebay, or just ignore it and hope to fly under the radar.
I used to deal with sales taxes. Every month we got a file with 100,000 lines of tax data, 9 values for each of use and sales tax. This was incomplete as hell, since it only listed taxes by state, county, city, zip code, and taxing jurisdiction name (mosquito abatement districts, Denver's "science and technology arena" aka football stadium, hospitals, you name it). Then there were vaguely defined tax holidays, such as "school supplies" during August. We got many complaints from customers who knew that extra nickel of taxes did not apply to them.
100% agreement on this. Wayfair was a poor decision that overruled reasonable precedents and is incredibly burdensome on interstate commerce.
As Brett points out, it is particularly challenging for small operations and drives businesses to a small set of clearinghouses that know how to do this right.
Wow! I am impressed: this is perhaps the best & most through-provoking discussion of _Wayfair_ I have seen.
They got Capone for evading a generally applicable law that happened to apply to illegal activity too. My state's court effectively neutered a tax on illegal drugs and only illegal drugs. It was just piling on the existing criminal penalties and therefore had to be included in the indictment for possession or distribution.
I don’t think that there would likely be a problem with ordinary sales tax. I think there could be serious litigation if :
1. The tax was a penalty level tax.
2. The state used the delivery information to investigate illegal abortions.
I think a state that passed a systematic measure addressing the issue and thought carefully about how to do it might be able to structure things to pass muster with both.
For example, perhaps a state could provide for an inititially high tax with a significant reduction or waiver/refund if one has a doctor’s certificate (perhaps an in-state doctor’s certificate) that the abortion is legal in the state of delivery and justifying the legality. That way, the penalty-level tax would occur only for abortions not certified to be legal. And the state could then periodically inspect the doctors providing certifications.
Why?
The NFA imposed a very severe penalty level tax on certain firearms, in spite of being an explicit constitution right, unlike abortion even when Roe was valid.
$300 in 1937 would be $6,645.36 today....
Sonzinsky v. United States, 300 U.S. 506 (1937)
At stake was a tax scheme which on some articles, such as silencers, might reach as high as several thousand percent of the price. The Court flatly refused to even consider if the tax was a disguised penalty, so long as it was actually possible somebody might pay the tax, and thus it might produce some tiny amount of revenue.
I agree that the AHM suit is extremely unlikely to result in a decision on anything other than standing.
In addition, while the GenBioPro v. Scorcaia lawsuit was initially a very possible vehicle for a decision on the Comstock Act, GenbioPro dissmissed its claims that West Virginia’s ban on prescription by telemedicine and mail order violated federal law. It won on these claims in District Court. It dropped them to enable it to appeal the overall decision immediately, as the overall decision, that West Virginia’s abortion restrictions do not violate federal law, was mostly against it.
The case is now known as GenBioPro v. Raynes.
I don’t think West Virginia’s brief was the best it could do. The district court was a Clinton appointee who started out quite hostile to West Virginia’s position but ended concluding, somewhat reluctantly, that after Dobbs West Virginia prevails. I think they should have stuck more closely to the judge’s reasoning, which ruled for West Virginia on relatively mundane, narrow grounds.
The reply brief did anything but. It started out with a major questions doctrine argument and proceeded to make a general argument for narrow preemption of state laws. It addressed the specific statutory grounds for non-preemption almost in passing. Rather than repeating the judges statements on these points in a couple of sentences, in passing, the brief should have devoted at least a page or two each to justifying:
1. The district judge’s holding that the FD&C Act’s language on the requirements for a REMS applies only to the FDA itself. The judge said this language merely identifies the principles the FDA should be guided by in issuing its own decisions, and does not articulate rules applicable to non-FDA parties.
2. The district judge’s holding that the FD&C Act’s express anti-preemption provision controls and requires finding against preemption.
In both cases, the brief simply quickly repeated the district court’s position after making its preferred arguments. West Virginia should have taken the hint, relied on the narrow grounds the judge used, and spent its main effort justifying why the judge was correct, rather than focusjng on the very aweeping arguments that the district judge had rejected.
West Virginia was the prevailing party. It should have acted like one. Its brief mostly reads like the district judge’s reasoning should be rejected for not going far enough.
Would the state have the option to tax Mifepristone used for abortions, but not for non-abortion indications (like ulcers)? It could matter more than you think. If the answer is "no, the state would be taxing the drug, not the use of it, so it would have to tax it regardless of why it were being prescribed", then there's a simple solution: do non-surgical abortions with methotrexate, not Mifepristone. Methotrexate is used in SO many contexts for SO many indications, that taxing it would be very unpopular and would cause a lot of collateral damage. It's the first choice for treating rheumatoid arthritis, many many cancers, psoriasis, ectopic (tubal) pregnancy (if you spot it in time, before the tube ruptures), ... the list goes on and on.
There is nothing preventing a state from taxing both and then issuing rebates when it isn't used for abortions. This would be particularly easy to do with managed pharmacy benefit plans where the plans would cut the state a large check and the state would cut them an equally large check back. They probably could figure out how to do this without even having to cut checks.
The big thing is the state being told it's being sent into the state.
States should have passed an abortion tax long ago -- it's for the children and Democrats LOVE themselves some taxes!!!!
They love making other people pay taxes then going "See what a good person I am!!"
An abortion tax? That would mean the state would get richer by promoting abortions. Right-to-lifers would call that a perverse ncentive!
Hmmmm ... sin is healthy for the government bottom line -- hence all the taxes on it.