Lead Opinion
after stating the -case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is not denied that the declaration sets out a- good cause of action. It alleges that the defendant was possessed of and operated a certain railway, by means of which it became and
The section of the statute referred to, being § 1553 of the Iowa Code as amended by the act of April 5, 1886, forbids any common carrier ■ to bring within the State of Iowa, for any person or persons or corporation, any intoxicating liquors from any other State or Territory of the United States, without first having been furnished with a certificate, under the seal of the county auditor of the county to which' said liquor is to be transported or is consigned for transportation, certifying that the consignee or person to whom said liquor-is to be transported, conveyed, or delivered is. authorized to sell intoxicating liquors in such county.
This statutory provision does not' stand alone, and must be considered with reference to the system of legislation of which it forms a part. The act of April 5; 1886, in which it is- contained, relates to the sale of intoxicating liquors within the State of Iowa, and is amendatory of chapter 143'of the acts of the twentieth General Assembly of that State “relating to intoxicating liquors and providing for the 'more effectual suppression of the illegal sale and transportation of intoxicating liquors and abatement of nuisances.” The original § 1553 of the Iowa Code contains a similar provision in respect to common carriers. By § 1523 -of the Code, the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors,- except as. thereinafter provided, is made unlawful, and the keeping of intoxicating liquor with intent to sell the same within the State, contrary to the provisions of the аct, is prohibited, and the intoxicating liquor so kept, together with the vessels in which it is contained, is declared to be a nuisance, to be forfeited and dealt with as
¥e have had recent occasion to consider state legislation of this character in its relation to the Constitution of the United States. In the case of Mugler v. Kansas,
From a review of all the opinions the following conclusions are to be deduced as the result of the judgment in those cases:
1. All the Justices concurred in the proposition that the statutes in question were not made void by the mere existence
2. They all concurred in the proposition that there was no legislation by Congress in pursuance of that power with which these statutes were in conflict.
3. Some, including the Chief Justice, held that the matter of the importation and sale of articles of commerce was subject to the exclusive regulation of Congress, whenever it chose to exert its power, and that any statute of the State on the same subject in conflict with such positive provisions of law enacted by Congress would be void.
4. Others maintained the view that the power of Congress to regulate commerce did not extend to or include the subject of the sale of such articles of commerce after th¿y had been introduced into a State, but that when the act of importation ended, by a delivery to the consignee, the exclusive power over the subject belonged to the States as a part of their police power.
From this analysis it is apparent that the question presented in this case was not decided in The License Oases. The point •in judgment in them was strictly confined to the right of the States to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquor after it had been brought within their territorial limits. The right to bring it within the States was not questioned; and the reasoning which justified the right to prohibit sales admitted, by implication, the right to introduce intoxicating liquor, as merchandise, from foreign countries, or from other States of the Union, free from the control of the several States, and subject to the exclusive power of Congress over commerce.
It cannot be doubted that the law of Iowa now under examination, regarded as a rule for the transportation of merchandise, operates as a regulation of commerce among the States. “Beyond all question, the transportation of freight, or of the subjects of commerce, for the purpose of exchange or sale, is a constituent of commerce itself. This has never been doubted, and probably the transportation of articles of trade from one State to another was the prominent idea in the minds of the framers of the Constitution when' to Congress
The distinction between cases in which Congress has exerted its power over commerce, and those in which it has abstained from its exercise, as bearing upon state legislation touching the subject was first plainly pointed out by Mr. Justice Curtis in the case of Cooley v. Port Wardens,
It may be argued, however, that, aside from such regulations as these, which are purely local, the inference to be drawn from the. absence of legislation by Congress on the subject excludes state legislation affecting commerce with foreign nations more strongly than that affecting commerce among the States. Taws which concern the exterior relations of the United States with other nations, and governments are general in their nature, and should proceed exclusively from the legislative authority of the nation. The organization of our state and Federal system of government is such that the people of the several States can have no relations with foreign powers in respect to commerce or any other subject, except through the government of the United States and its laws and treaties. Henderson v. Mayor of New York,
The same necessity perhaps does not exist equally in reference to commerce among the States. The power conferred upon Congress to regulate commerce among the States is indeed contained in the same clause of the Constitution which confers upon .it' power to regulate commerce with foreign nations. The grant‘ is conceived in the same terms, and the two powers are undoubtedly of the same class and character and equally extensive. The actual exercise of its power over either subject is equally and necessarily exclusive of that of the States, and paramount over- all the powers of the States; so that- state legislation, however legitimate in its origin or object, when it conflicts with the positive legislation of Congress, or its intention reasonably implied from its ..silence, in respect to the subject of commerce of both kinds, must fail. And yet in respect to commerce among the States, it may be for the reason already assigned, that the same inference is not. always to be drawn from the absence of congressional legislation as might be'- in the case of commerce with foreign
We have seen that in the case of the State Freight Tax,
It may be material also to state in this connection that Congress had legislated on the general subject of interstate commerce by means of railroads prior to the date of the transaction
Congress had also legislated on the subject of the transportation of passengers and merchandise in chapter 6, title 48 of the Revised Statutes; §§ 4252 to 4289, inclusive, having reference, however, mainly to transportation in vessels by water. 'But §§ 4278 and 4279 relate also to the transportation of nitro-glycerine and other similar explosive substances by land or water, and either as a matter óf commerce with foreign countries or among the several States. Section 4280 provides' that “ the two preceding sections shall not be so construed as to prevent any State, Territory, district, city or town within the United States from regulating or from prohibiting the traffic in or transportation of those substances between persons or
.So far as these regulations made by Congress extend, they are certainly indications of its intention that- the transportation of commodities between the States shall be free, except where it is positively restricted by Congress itself, or by the States in particular cases by the express permission of Congress. On this point the language of this court in the case of County of Mobile v. Kimball,
The principle thus announced has a more obvious application to the circumstances of such a case as the present, when it is considered that the law; of the State of Iowa under consideration, while it professes to regulate the conduct of carriers engaged in transportation within the limits of that’ State, nevertheless, materially affects, if allowed to operate, the conduct of such carriers, both as respects their rights and obligations, in every other-State into or through which they pass in the prosecution of their business of. interstate transportation. In the present case, the defendant is sued as a common carrier in the State of Illinois, and -the breach of duty alleged against it is a violation of the law .of that State in refusing to receive and transport goods which, as a common carrier, by that law, it was bound to accept and carry. It interposes as a-defence a law of the State of Iowa, which forbids the delivery of such goods within that State. 'Has the law of Iowa any extra territorial force which does not belong to the law of the State of Illinois % If the law of. Iowa forbids the delivery, and- .the law of Illinois requires the transportation, which of the two shall prevail ? How can the former make void the latter % In view of this necessary operation of the law of Iowa, if it be valid, the language of this court in the case of Hall v. De Cuir,
For similar reasons the statute of. Iowa under consideration ca.nnot be regarded as a regulation of quarantine or a sanitary provision for the purpose of protecting the physical health of the community, or a law to prevent the introduction into the State of disease, contagious, infectious, or otherwise.' Doubtless the States have power to provide by law suitable measures to prevent the introduction into the States of articles of- trade, which, on account of their existing condition, would bring in and spread disease, pestilence, and death, such as rags of other substances infected with the germs of yellow fever or the virus of small-pox, or cattle or meat or other provisions that are diseased or decayed, or otherwise, from their condition and quality, unfit for human use or consumption. Such articles are not merchantable; they are not legitimate subjects of trade and commerce. They may be rightly outlawed as intrinsicаlly and directly the immediate sources and causes of destruction to human health and life. The self-protecting power of each State, therefore, may be rightfully exerted against their introduction, and such exercises of power cannot be considered regulations of commerce prohibited by the Constitution. Upon this point, th¿ observations of .Mr. Justice Catron in The License Gases,
This question was considered in the case of Railroad Co. v. Husen,
The same principles were declared, in Henderson, v. The Mayor of New York,
It is conceded, as we have already shown, that for.the purposes of its policy a State has legislative control, exclusive of Congress, within its territory, of all persons, things, and transactions of strictly internal concern. For the purpose of protecting its people against the evils of intemperance it has the right to prohibit the manufacture within its limits of intoxicating liquors; it may also prohibit all domestic commerce in them between its own inhabitants, whether the articles are introduced from other States or from foreign countries; it may punish those who sell them in violation of its laws; it may adopt any measures tending, even indirectly and remotely, to make the policy effective until it passes the line of power delegated to Congress under the Constitution. It cannot, without the consent of Congress, express or implied, regulate commerce between its people and those of the other States of the Union in order to effect its end, however desirable such a regulation might be..
The statute of Iowa under consideration falls within this prohibition. It is not an inspection law; it is not a quarantine or sanitary law. It is essentially a regulation of commerce among the States within any definition heretofore given to that term, or which can be given; and although its motive and purpose are to perfect the policy of the State of Iowa in protecting Its citizens against the evils of intemiperance, it is none the less on that account a regulation of commerce. If it had extended' its provisions so as to prohibit the introduction into the State from foreign countries of all importations of intoxicating liquors produced abroad, no one would doubt the nature of the provision as a regulation of foreign commerce. Its nature is not changed by its application to commerce among the States.
Can it be supposed, that by omitting any express declarations on the subject, Congress has intended to submit to the several States the decision of the question in each locality of
In Brown v. Houston,
The present case is concluded, we think, by the judgment of this court in Walling v. Michigan,
It would be error to. lay any stress on the fact that -the statute passed'upon in that case made a discrimination between citizens and products of other States in favor of those of the State of Michigan, notwithstanding the intimation oh that point in the foregoing extract from the opinion. This appears plainly from what was decided in the case of Robbins v. Shelby Taxing District,
In answer to another suggestion in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Michigan, that the regulation contained in the act did not amount to a prohibition, this court said: “We are unable to adopt the views' of that learned tribunal" as here expressed. It is the power to regulate commerce among the several States which the Constitution in- terms confers upon Congress; and this power, as we have seen, is exclusive in pases like the present; where the subject of regulation is one that admits аnd requires uniformity, -and where any regulation afr fects the freedom of traffic among the States.”
The relation of the'police powers of the State to the powers'
The section of the statute of Iowa, the validity of which is drawn in question in tliis case, does not fall within this enumeration of legitimate exertions of the pofice power. It is not an exercise of the jurisdiction of the State over persons and property within its limits. On the contrary, it is an-attempt to exert that jurisdiction over persons and property within the limits of other States. It seeks to prohibit and stop their passage and importation into its own limits, and is designed as a regulation for the conduct of commerce before the merchandise is brought to its border. It is not one of those local regulations designed to aid and facilitate commerce; it is not an inspection law'to secure the. due quality and measure of a commodity; it is not a law to' regulate or restrict the sale of an article deemed injurious to the health and morals of the community; it is not a regulation confined to the purely internal and domestic commerce of the State; it is not a restrict tion which only operates, upon property after it has become mingled with and forms part of the mass of the property within the State. It is, on the other hand, a regulation directly affecting interstate commerce in an essential- and vital point. If authorized, in the present instance, upon the grounds and motives of the policy which have dictated it, the same reason would justify any and every other state regulation of interstate commerce upon any grounds and reasons which might prompt in particular cases their adoption. It is, therefore, a regulation of that character which constitutes an unauthorized interference with the power given to Congress over the subject. If not in contravention of any positive legislation by Congress, it is nevertheless' a breach and interruption of that liberty of trade which Congress ordains as'the national policy, by willing that it shall be free fpom restrictive regulations.
It may be said, however, that the right of the State to restrict or prohibit sales of intoxicating liquor within-its limits, conceded to exist as a part of its police power, implies the
It is easier to think that the right of importation from abroad, and of transportation from one State to another, includes, by necessary implication, the right of-the importer to sell in unbroken packages at the place where the transit terminates ; for the very -.purpose .and motive of that branch of commerce which -consists in transportation, is that other and consequent act of commerce which consists in the sale and exchange of .the commodities transported. Such, indeed, was the point decided in the case of Brown v. Maryland,
For these reasons, we are constrained to -pronounce against the validity of the section of the statute of Iowa involved in this case. The judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois is therefore
Reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the plea, and to take further proceedings ' therein in conformity with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the judgment of the court in this case, and in the greater part of the opinion upon which it is founded.
The opinion clearly shows, as I think, that the law of Iowa prohibiting the importation into that State of intoxicating liquors is an encroachment on the power of Congress over interstate commerce. That commerce is a subject of vast extent. It embraces intercourse between citizens of different States for purposes of trade in any and all its forms, including the transportation, purchase, sale and exchange of commodities. The power to regulate it, which is vested in Congress in the same clause with the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations, is general in its terms. And to regulate this commerce is to prescribe the conditions under which it shall be conducted; that is, how far it shall be free, and how far subject to restrictions. The defendant is a common carrier engaged in the transportation of freight by railway, not only between places in the State of Illinois, but also between places in different States. In the latter business it is, therefore, engaged in interstate commerce. Whatever is an article of commerce it may carry, subject to such regulations as may be necessary for the convenience and safety of the community through whicji its cars pass, and to insure safety in the carriage of the freight. The law of Iowa prescribing the condi
"What is an article of commerce is determinable by the usages of. the. commercial world, and does- not depend upon the declaration of any State.' The State possesses the power to prescribe all such regulations with respect to the possession, use, and sale of property within its limits as may be necessary to protect the health, lives, and morals of its people; and that power may be applied to all kinds of property, even that which in its nature is harmless. But the power of regulation for that purpose is one thing, and the po-wer to exclude an article from commerce by a declaration that it shall not thenceforth be the subject of use and sale, is another and very different thing. If the State could thus take an article from commerce, its power over interstate commerce would be superior to that of Congress, where the Constitution has vested it. The language, of Mr. Justice Catron on this subject in The License Oases, quoted in the opinion of the court, is instructive.
In Mugler v. Kansas, recently decided, (
A statute of Iowa contains a prohibition, similar to that of the Kansas statute, upon the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors within its limits, with the additional exception of permission to use them for pulinary purposes, and to sell foreign liquors imported under a law of Congress, in the original casks or packages In which they are imported. The law under consideration in this case, prohibiting the importa^ tion into Iowa of such liquоrs from other States, without a license for that purpose, was passed to carry out the policy of the State to suppress the sale of such liquors within its limits. And the argument is pressed with much force that if the State cannot prohibit the importation its policy to suppress the sale will be defeated, and if legislation establishing such policy is not in conflict with the Constitution of the United States, this additional measure to carry the legislation into successful operation must be permissible. The argument assumes that the right of importation carries with it the right to sell the article imported, a position hereafter considered.
The reserved powers of the States in the regulation of their internal affairs must be exercised consistently with'the exercise of the powers delegated to the United States. If there be a conflict, the powers 'delegated must prevail, being so much authority taken from the States by the express sanction of their people; for the Constitution itself declares that laws made in pursuance of it shall be the supreme law of the land. But those powers which -authorize legislation touching the health, morals, good order, and peace of their people were not delegated, and are so essential to the existence and prosperity of the States that it is not to be presumed that they will be encroached upon so as to impair their reasonable exercise.
How can these reserved powers be reconciled with the conceded power of Congress to.regulate interstate commerce ? As said above,-the State cannot exclude an article from commerce, and conséquently from importation, simply by declaring that its policy requires such ■ exclusion; and yet its regulations respecting the possession, use, and sale of any article of com
' In the opinion of the court it is stated that the effect of the right of importation upon the asserted right, as á consequence thereof, to sell the article imported is not involved in this case, and therefore it is not necessary to express any opinion on the subject. The case, it is true, can be decided, and has been decided, without expressing an opiniоn on' that subject; but. with great deference to my associates, I must say that I think its consideration is presented, and to some extent required, to meet the argument that the right of importation, because carrying the right to sell the article imported, is inconsistent with the right of the State to prohibit the sale of the article absolutely, as held in the Kansas case. With respect to most subjects of commerce, regulations may be adopted touching- their use and sale when imported, which will afford all the protection and security desired, without going to the extent of absolute prohibition. It is not found difficult, even with the most, dangerous articles, to provide such minute and stringent regulations as will guard the public from all harm from them. Arsenic, dynamite powder, and nitro-glycerine are imported into every State under such restrictions, as' to their transportation and sale, as to render it safe to deal in them. There may be greater difficulty in regulating the use and sale of intoxicating liquors; and I admit that whénever the use of an article cannot be regulated and controlled so as to insure the health and safety of society, it may be prohibited and the article destroyed.
That the right of importa don carries with it the right to sell the article imported does not appear to me doubtful. Of course I am speaking of an article that is in a healthy condition, for when it has become putrescent or diseased it has ceased to be an article of commerce, and it may be destroyed or its use prohibited. To assert that, under the Constitution of the United States, the importation of an article of commerce cannot' be prohibited by the States, and yet to hold that when imported its use and sale can be prohibited, is to declare
Assuming, therefore,, as correct doctrine that the right of importation carries the right to sell the article imported, the
There is great difficulty in drawing the line precisely where the commercial power of Congress ends and the power of the State begins. The same difficulty was experienced in Brown v. Maryland, in drawing a line between the restriction on the States to lay a’ duty on imports and their acknowledged power to tax persons and property. In that case the court said that the two, the power and the restriction, though distinguishable when they did not approach each other, might, like the intervening colors between white and black, approach so nearly as to perplex the understanding as colors perplex the vision, in marking the distinction between them : but as the distinction existed, it must be marked as the cases arise. And after observing that it -might be premature to state any rule as being universal in its application, the court held as sufficient for that case that when the importer had so acted upon the thing imported, that it had become incorporated and mixed up with the mass of property in the country, it had lost its distinctive character as an import, and had become subject to the taxing power of the state ; but that while remaining the property of the importer, in his warehouse in the original form or package in which it was imported, a tax upon it was plainly a duty on imports.
So in the present case it is perhaps impossible to state any rule which would determine in all cases where the right to sell an imported article under the commercial power of the Federal government ends and the power of the state to restrict
In The License Oases, reported in 5 Howard, this court held that the States could not only regulate the sales of imported liquors, but could prohibit their sale. • The judges differed in their views in some particulars, but the majority were of opinion that the States had authority to legislate upon subjects of interstate commerce until Congress had acted upon them; and as Congress had not acted, the regulation of the States was valid. The doctrine thus declared has been modified since by repeated decisions. The doctrine now firmly established, is, that where the subject upon which Congress can act under its commercial power is local in its nature or. sphere of operation, such as harbor pilotage, the improvement of harbors, the establishment of beacons and buoys to guide vessels in and out of port, the construction of bridges over navigable rivers, the erection of wharves, piers, and docks, and the like, which can be property regulated only by special provisions adapted to their localities, the State can act until Congress interferes and supersedes its authority; but where the subject is national in its character, and admits and requires uniformity of regulation, affecting alike all the States, such as transportation between the States, including the importation of goods from one State into another, Congress can alone act upon it and provide the.
It is a matter of history that one of the great objects of the formation of the Constitution was to secure uniformity of commerсial regulations, and thus put an end to restrictive and hostile discriminations by one State against the products of other States, and against their importation and sale. “ It may be doubted,” says Chief Justice Marshall, “ whether any of the evils proceeding from the feebleness of the Federal government contributed more to that great revolution which introduced the present system than the deep and general conviction that commerce ought to be regulated by Congress. It is not, therefore, matter of surprise that the grant should be as extensive as the mischief, and should comprehend all foreign commerce and all commerce among the States.- To construe the power so as to impair its efficacy would tend to defeat an object, in the attainment of which the American government took, and justly took, that strong interest which arose drom a full conviction .cf its necessity.” Brown v. Maryland,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom concurred The Chief Justice, and Mr. Justice Gray, dissenting.
The Chief Justice, Mr. Justice Gray, and myself are unable to assent to the opinion and judgment of the court.
The effect of the statutes of Iowa is to forbid the introduction of intoxicating liquors from other States- for sale, except for medicinal, mechanical,' culinary, or sacramental purposes. • They may be brought in for such purposes, by any person, or carrier, for- another person or corporation,. if consigned to some one authorized by the laws of Iowa to buy and sell intoxicating liquors. And these statutes permit the sale of foreign intoxicating liquors, imported under the laws' of the United States, provided such sale is- by the importer, in the original casks or packages, and in quantities not less than those in -which they are required to be imported.
It appears upon the face of the declaration that the plaintiffs— one of whom is a citizen of Iowa — made application to the board of supervisors of Marshall County, in that State, for permission, under the statute, to buy and sell in that сounty intoxicating liquors for medicinal, culinary, mechanical, and sacramental purposes, and that their application was rejected. They then resorted to the expedient of buying five thousand barrels of beer in Chicago, and tendering them to the railroad company for transportation to the same county, without furnishing the certificate required by the laws of Iowa. The refusal of the company to transport this beer into Iowa, in -violation of her laws, is the basis of the present suit. The plaintiffs claim damages upon the ground that they could' have sold this beer in that State at a price in advance of what
The fundamental question, therefore, is, whether Iowa may lawfully restrict the bringing of intoxicating liquors from other States into her limits, by any person or carrier, for another person or corporation, except such as are ■'consigned to persons authorized by her laws to buy and sell them for the special purposes indicated. In considering this question, we are not left to conjecture ■ as to the motives prompting the enactment of these statutes ; for, it is conceded, that the prohibition upon common carriers bringing intoxicating liquors from other States, except under the foregoing conditions, was adopted as subservient to the general design of protecting the health and morals and the peace and good order of the people of Iowa against the physical and moral -.evils resulting from the'’unrestricted manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors.
In Mugler v. Kansas,
But it is contended that a statute forbidding the introdnction of intoxicating liquors from other States, does infringe rights secured by the Constitution of the United States; and that view is sustained by the opinion and judgment in this case. The' decision is placed upon the broad ground that intoxicating liquors are merchantable commodities, or known articles of commerce, and that, consequently, the Constitution, by the mere grant to Congress of the power to regulate commerce operates, in. the absence of legislation, to establish unrestricted trade, among the States of the ‘Union, in such commodities or articles. To this view we cannot assent. In Mugler’s case the court said that it could not “shut out of view the fact, within the knowledge of all, that the public health, the public morals, and the public safety may be endangered by the general use of intoxicating drinks ; nor the fact, established by statistics accessible to every one, that the idleness, disorder, pauperism, and crime existing in the country are, in some degree at least, traceable to this evil.” The court also said, that “ if, in the judgment of the legislature [of a State] the manufacture of intoxicating liquors for the maker’s own use, as a beverage, would tend to cripple, if not
In Gibbons v. Ogden,
It seems to us that the decision just réndered does not conform to the doctrines of the foregoing cases, and may impair,
It is admitted that a State may prevent the. introduction within- her limits of rags or other goods infected with disease, or of cattle or meat, or other provisions which, from their condition, are unfit for human use or consumption; because, it is said, such articles are not merchantable or legitimate subjects of trade and commerce. But suppose the people of a State believe, upon reasonable grounds, that the general use of intoxicating liquors is dangerous to the public peace, the public health, and the public morals, what authority has Congress or the judiciary to review their .judgment upon that subject, and compel them to submit to a condition of things which they regard as destructive of their happiness and the peace and good order of society ? .If, consistently with the Constitution of the United States, a State can protect her sound cattle by prohibiting altogether the introduction within her limits of diseased cattle, she ought not to be deemed disloyal to that Constitution when she seeks by similar legislation to protect
It is not a satisfactory answer to these suggestions, to say that if the State may thus outlaw the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, as a beverage, and exclude them from her limits, she may adopt the samе policy with -reference to articles that confessedly have no necessary or immediate connection with the health, the morals, or the safety of the community, but are proper subjects of trade-the world-over. This possible abuse of legislative power was earnestly dwelt upon by the counsel in Mugler’s Case. The same argument can be, as it often is, made in reference to powers that all concede to be vital to the public safety. But it does not disprove their existence. This court said that the judicial tribunals were not to be misled by mere pretences, and were under a solemn duty to look at the substance of things whenever it became necessary to inquire whether the legislature had transcended the limits of its authority ; and that, “ if, therefore, a statute purporting to have been enacted to protect the public health, the public morals, or the public safety has no real or substantial relation to those objects, or is a palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law, it is the duty of the courts to so adjudge, and thereby give effect to the Constitution.”
■ Now, can it .be possible that the framers of the Constitution intended — whether Congress chose or not to act upon the subject — to withhold from a State authority to prevent the introduction into her midst of articles or commodities, the manufacture of which, within' her limits, she could prohibit, Without impairing the constitutional rights of her own people ? If a State may declare a place where intoxicating liquors are sold fоr use as a beverage to be a common nuisance,-subjecting the person' maintaining the same to fine and imprisonment, can her people be compelled to submit to the sale of such liquors, when brought there from another State for that purpose ? This court has often declared that the most important function of government was -to preserve the public health,' morals, and safety; that it could not divest itself of that power, nor, by contract, limit its exercise; and that even the constitutional prohibition upon laws impairing the obligation of contracts does not restrict the power of the State to protect the health, the morals, or the safety of the community, as the one or the other may be involved in the execution of such contracts. Stone v. Mississippi,
These views are sustained by Walling v. Michigan,
At the argument it was insisted that the contention of the plaintiffs was supported by Brown v. Maryland,
In Gibbons v. Ogden, it was said by counsel that the Constitution does not confer the right of intercourse between State and State, and that such', right' has its source in those laAvs Avhose authority is acknowledged by civilized man throughout
But if this be-not. a sound interpretation of the Constitution; if intoxicating liquors are entitled to the same - protection by the National Government as ordinary merchandise entering into commerce among, the States; if Congress, under the power to regulate commerce, may, in its discretion,. permit or prohibit commerce among the States in intoxicating liquors; and, if, therefore, state .police power, as the health,
But, perhaps, the language of this court — all the judges concurring — which most directly bears upon the question before us, is found in County of Mobile v. Kimball,
In harmony with these principles the court affirmed at the present term, in Smith v. State of Alabama,
•It would seem that if.the Constitution of the United States does not, by its own force,'displace or annul a state law, authorizing the construction of bridges or dams across public navigable waters of the United States, thereby wholly preventing the passage of vessels engaged in interstate commerce upon such waters, the same Constitution ought not to be held to annul- or displace a law of one. of the States which, by its operation, forbids the bringing within her limits, from other States, articles which that State, in the most solemn manner, has declared to be injurious to the health, morals, and safety of her people. The-silence .of Congress upon the subjeet of interstate commerce, as affected by the police laws of the States, enacted in.good faith- to promote the public health, the public morals, and the public safety, and to that end prohibiting the manufacture and sale, within'their limits, of intoxicating liquors to be used as a beverage,-ought to have, at least, as much effect as the silence of Congress in reference to physical obstructions placed, under the authority of a State, in a navigable water of the United States. The reserved power of the States to guard the health,'morals, and safety'of their people is more vital to the existence of society, than their power in respect to trade and commerce having no possible connection with those subjects.
For these reasons, we feel constrained to' dissent from the opinion and judgment of the court.
