134 Ga. 178 | Ga. | 1910
Qn February 12, 1909, the City Council.of Augusta adopted an ordinance in -which they provided for the election of an officer to be known as the “inspector of meat and milk,” and the inspection by him of meat, milk, fish, vegetables, fruit, and other articles offered for sale for food in the city. The twelfth section was as follows: “Be it further ordained, that, on and after the passage of this ordinance, there shall be elected by the Citj' Council of Augusta, upon the nomination of the Board of Health, for a period ending the second Saturday in January, 1910, an Inspector to be known as ‘ Packing-House Inspector,’ whose duty it shall be to inspect all meats shipped into Augusta, or brought from outside Eichmond County and offered for food;, that the said Inspector shall visit all packing-houses daily and all other places or [of ?] importers of meat, stuff, not otherwise provided for, and secure from them their bills of lading for the purpose of determining whether or not the said shipments- have made proper time, and whether cars containing said meat stuff have been. properly iced during transit; that it shall be the duty of said inspector to open said cars and by proper inspection ascertain whether said meat stuff contained in said cars are in a healthful condition for sale; and that all meats and other foodstuff found not to be in a healthful condition shall be condemned and ordered out of the •city as condemned meat, at the expense of the packer; that the following fees shall be charged for. said inspection: Each beef carcass ,20c. . Each calf carcass 10c. Each sheep carcass 10c. Each hog •carcass 10c. All cuts of fresh meat, sausage, poultry, game, and fish, per hundredweight, 10c.” By section thirteen the salary of the inspector was fixed at seventy-five dollars per month.
Armour & Company, a New Jersey corporation, filed an equitable petition to enjoin the enforcement of this ordinance, alleging that it did a meat-packing business, with its principal office and place of business in Chicago, Illinois. It attacked the ordinance on the ground that the act of Congress ofl906 on the subject of inspection of packing-houses was exclusive, and the municipal authorities had no power to enact an ordinance.on the subject; that, if they had such power, the ordinance adopted was arbitrary, discriminatory,
The defendants denied the substantial allegations of the plaintiff. While denying discrimination, they admitted that the abattoir located near the city in South Carolina was considered as occupying a different position from the packer who had his products shipped thousands of miles after they were inspected. They admitted that the plaintiff’s meats were inspected before shipment from different parts of the United States, under the requirements of the act of Congress, but denied that this was the only inspection to which meats shipped into the City of Augusta could be subjected. They admitted an intention to enforce the ordinance. The 'presiding judge denied the injunction, and the plaintiff excepted.
It was contended that the act of Congress of June 30, 1906 (34 Statutes at Large, 669, 672, et seq.), was exhaustive of the subject of inspection of meats prejoared at packing-houses for shipment to other States, and consequently that a municipality, under its authority from the State, could not cause any inspection of meat to be made at a branch of a non-resident packing-house located within its jurisdiction, to which dressed meat was shipped from the packing-house in Illinois, for distribution and sale, save by agreement with the Federal meat inspector, approved by the bureau of animal industry, though the object of such ordinance should be to prevent meat which, by reason of diseased or decayed condition, or from some similar cause, was unfit to be sold to citizens. Carried to its legitimate conclusion, this argument would also exclude all State inspection laws. It was further contended that if this were not correct, nevertheless the ordinance of the City of Augusta providing for a “packing-house, inspector” and for such meat inspection was void.
The States did not derive their police power from the constitution of the United States. It was a power existing in them as. sovereign States. Inspection laws are enacted in the exercise of such power of self-protection remaining in the States, and not surrendered to
In Bowman v. Chicago &c. Ry. Co., 125 U. S. 465, 489 (8 Sup. Ct. 689, 1062, 31 L. ed. 700), a statute of Iowa, forbidding common carriers to bring intoxicating liquors into the State from any other State or territory, without being first furnished with a cer
The mere fact that a legitimate police regulation of a State may incidentally affect interstate commerce, to a limited degree, does not render such State legislation obnoxious to the interstate-commerce clause of the Federal constitution, not being a needless intrusion upon the domain of Federal jurisdiction, or strictly a regulation of interstate commerce. Southern Flour & Grain Co. v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 127 Ga, 626 (56 S. E. 742, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 853, 119 Am. St. R. 356), and citations; Hennington v. Georgia, 163 U. S. 299 (16 Sup. Ct. 1086, 41 L. ed. 166) ; Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co. v. Ohio, 173 U. S. 285 (19 Sup. Ct. 465, 43 L. ed. 702), and cases cited supra. Nor does the fact that meat derived from cattle slaughtered in Chicago is shipped to an agency in Georgia, and is there kept for sale or distribution, necessarily render it exempt from inspection' at the point where it is thus received and kept. In General Oil Co. v. Crain, 209 U. S. 212 (28 Sup. Ct. 475, 52 L. ed. 754), it was said: "Merchandise may cease to be interstate commerce at an intermediate point between the place of shipment and ultimate destination ; and if kept at such point for the use and benefit of the owners and under the protection of the laws of the State, it becomes subject to the taxing and police power of the State.” It was accord
If it- will not be presumed that Congress intended to abrogate the power of the State to have meat or food inspected for the protection of its citizens, except in a plain case, certainly it will not be assumed that they intended to delegate such power to an administrative officer, or a bureau, or a meat inspector. An examination of that portion of the act of Congress of 1906 referring to the bureau of animal industry will show that it dealt principally with the inspection of cattle, sheep, swine, and goats before being slaughtered, of carcasses or parts of carcasses after being slaughtered, and of meat products at packing-houses and similar establishments where they were prepared for interstate commerce. Persons, firms, and corporations were prohibited from transporting or offering for transportation, and carriers of interstate or foreign commerce were prohibited from transporting or receiving for transportation in interstate or foreign commerce, any carcass, meat, or meat food products thereof which had not been inspected, examined, and marked as required by the act. The act did not undertake to' wholly destroy the right of local inspection by a State or a municipality under its authority, after the meat had been shipped to a warehouse or branch agency located in a State other than that where the packing-house was, and where it was kept for distribution and sale. It by no means follows, because meat has been inspected in Chicago and found to be in condition suitable for shipment, that, after being shipped into Georgia and there held, it still remains suitable for sale and use as food. The conferring of authority on the Secretary of Agriculture to make rules, and regulations necessary for the efficient execution of the act of Congress did not authorize him to go further and deny to the States their inherent right of passing legitimate inspection laws. Nor will a regulation by him directing inspectors to notify municipal authorities, and upon request to advise with such authorities with a view of preventing -the entry into the local market of diseased animals
Turning now to the particular portion of the ordinance involved, let us see if it is a proper and legitimate inspection law, or if it undertakes to regulate interstate commerce, and if it is discriminative in character. In Voight v. Wright, 141 U. S. 62 (11 Sup. Ct. 855, 35 L. ed. 638), an act of Virginia which provided that all flour brought into the State and offered for sale therein shall be reviewed, and have the Virginia inspection mark thereon, and imposed a penalty for offering such flour for sale without this, was held to be repugnant to the commerce clause of the constitution of .the United States, because it was a discriminatory law, requiring an inspection of flour brought from other States, and not also of that manufactured within the State. In Brimmer v. Rebman, 138 U. S. 78 (11 Sup. Ct. 213, 34 L. ed. 862), another Virginia -statute which provided that meat which had been slaughtered more than a hundred miles from the market should be inspected, and that the inspector should receive as his compensation one cent per hundred pounds to be paid by the owner of the meat, leaving other meat free from inspection, was also held to be invalid. Discrimination against products of other States can not be allowed; nor can a municipal ordinance undertake to regulate interstate commerce. Inspection laws must be confined to their legitimate purpose, and municipal ordinances must be reasonable. In the ordinance under consideration a special packing-house inspector was created, and it was provided that he should visit all packing-houses daily, and all other places of importers of meat-stuff, not otherwise provided for, and secure from them their bills of lading, “for the purpose of determining whether or not said shipments have made proper time, and whether cars containing said meat-stuff have been properly iced during transit.” These are matters of regulation, of interstate commerce, and the municipal authorities had.no power to deal with them. People v. Compagnie Gén. Transatlantique,
It was said in the bill of exceptions that the presiding judge, in refusing to grant the injunction prayed for, stated that he had very grave doubts as to the validity of the ordinance in question, and would resolve the doubt in favor of the defendants, and deny the injunction. We appreciate his doubt, but can not resolve it in the same way as he did. The ordinance, so far as here involved, is invalid, and the injunction should have been granted. _ What has been said above renders a discussion of other grounds of attack on the ordinance and its administration unnecessary.
Judgment reversed.