delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе bill of complaint in this case was filed by the appellants in the Circuit .Court, of Baltimore City - to restrain •Charles IT. Stanley, comptroller of the State, from collecting a charge of one cent per bushel upon all oysters unloaded from vessels at the place where oysters are to be no further shipped in vessels, which charge is imposed by section 69'of Article 72 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland as re-enacted by Chapter 413 of 1910. This charge is levied “to help defray the expenses” of the system of inspection provided by that article, of all oysters taken from the waters of the State for sale, and sold by commission merchants or others, and “the other expenses of the State Fishery Force,” upon which the duty of making such inspection is laid by that article. During the period for which the charges were *337 made, the collection of which is here sought to be rеstrained, the appellants have received at their several places of business 494,260 bushels of Maryland oysters, and 243,935 bushels of Virginia and New Jersey oysters.
In the case of
Foot & Co.
v.
Wm. B. Clagett,
Comptroller of the State, in which the opinion was filed June 23, 1911, and reported in
Three of the other grounds alleged in the former case against Chapter 735 are renewed here as against Chapter 413, and they are these:
, (c) Because it is repugnant to Article 1, section 8, of the Constitution of the United States, which vests the Congress of the United States with exclusive power to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several States.
(6) Because it is repugnant to Article 1, section 10 of the Constitution of the United States which forbids any State to lay any duties on imports or exports except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws; “in that said charge is used for purposes other than the execution of the inspection law of Maryland, and that the .charge therein prescribed is far in excess of what is needed for the execution of the inspection laws of said State.”
(c) “Because it is repugnant to Article 15 of the Bill of Eights of the Constitution of the State of Maryland' which provides That every person in the State, or persons holding property therein, ought to contribute his proportion of pub-lio taxes for the support of the Grovemment according to his actual worth in real or personal property; yet fines, duties or taxes, may properly, or justly be imposed or laid, with a political viеw for the good government and benefit of the community,’ in that said act imposes a • direct tax upon property, and not upon the owner thereof, and that, quite irrespective of the value of said property, the said tax is not laid with a political view for the good government and benefit of the community.”
*339 Tbo Circuit Court held the law to be constitutional and valid, and dismissed the bill, and this appeal is from that decree.
We shall consider these three objections of the appellants to the constitutionality of this law in the following order, somewhat different from that in which they are stated in the bill:
1. That based upon Art. 1, sec. 10, Constitution of the United States. It is quite clear, in our opinion, that this section of the Constitution can have no application to this case. There is no allegation in the bill, nor in the agreed statement of facts filed in the case, that these appellants, or any оf them, are dealers in oysters brought from any foreign country, or that any of the oysters for the inspection of which the charge is imposed in this case, were brought from any foreign country. On the contrary the only allegation of the bill as to the places from which the oysters in which they deal are brought, is that they are brought “from the oyster beds located within the States of Maryland, Virginia, and New Jersey,” respectively, and the agreed statement of fаcts shows that all the' oysters in respect to which this charge is laid, came from the three States above named, and in the proportions stated in the agreed statement of facts.
In
Woodruff
v.
Parham,
That case has been approvеd and followed in later cases, notably in
Pittsburg & Southern Coal Co.
v.
Louisana,
If the law now before us is repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, such repugnancy niust be found in some other clause of the Constitution. It may be observed before passing from the consideration of this clause of the Constitution, that even as to imports from foreign countries, the right of the States to lay such imposts or duties as are absolutely necessary for executing their inspection laws, is exprеssly declared in that clause, thus recognizing by clear implication the right of the States to pass inspection laws as distinguished from revenue measures.
2. We will now turn to section 8 of Article 1 of the Constitution of the United States which vests Congress with exclusive power “to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes,” and which is the only other clause of that Constitution to which this law is alleged to he repugnant.
In
Robbins
v.
Taxing District of Shelby County,
In
Pittsburg & Southern, Coal Co.
v.
La.,
In
Patapsco Guano Co.
v.
Board of Agriculture of North Carolina,
*342 Tbe appellant sought to enjoin the cоllection of this charge on the ground, that the law was in violation of section 8, and also of section 10 of Article 1 of the Constitution of the United States. The Circuit Court dismissed the bill, and on appeal the Supreme Court affirmed the decision.
The appellants contended, as the appellants in the present case contend, that the chaige required to be paid was so excessive that the act could not be sustained as a legitimate inspection law, or as a valid exercise of the police power.
In thqt case Chibe Justice Eulleb, speaking of the essential character of inspection laws said: “Inspection laws are not in themselves regulations of commerce, and while their object frequently is to improve the quality of articles produced by the labor of a country and fit them for exportation, yet they (are quite as often aimed at fitting them, or determining their fitness, for domestic use, and in so doing
protecting the citizen from fraud.
Necessarily, in the latter aspect, such laws are applicable to articles imported into, as well as to articles produced-within, a State, * * * Whenever inspection laws act on the- subject before it becomes an article of commerce, they are confessedly valid, and also when, although operating on articles brought from one State into another, thеy provide for inspection in the exercise of that power of self-protection commonly called the police power. No doubt can be entertained of this where the inspection is manifestly intended and calculated in good faith to protect the public health, the public morals, or the public safety,
and it has noiv been determined that this is so, if the object o^f inspection is the prevention of imposition upon the public generally,
* * *
to protect the citizens from being cheated
generally citing
Plumley
v.
Massachusetts,
In
New Mexico
v.
Denver and Rio Grande R. R. Co.,
The appellants in the present case have earnestly contended thаt the charge imposed by the law is excessive in fact, because it appears from the statements of receipts and disbursements of the oyster fund contained in the agreed statement of facts that the charge is, much more than sufficient to pay the mere salaries of the special inspectors provided for by section 69 of Chapter 413 of 1910, Article 72 of the Code, and that the Court in the previous case of Foote & Co. v. Clagett, supra, said that “the Courts are to judge of the reasonableness of the tax.”
When that ease was before us the law we were then considering imposed a charge of two cents per bushel, one-half of which only was applicable to inspection, and the other half was applied to increasing the productivity of the oyster beds of the State. It thus showed upon its face that it was in fact, to the extent of one-half the charge, a revenue measurе, and that the whole charge was for that reason both unreasonable and illegel. Tn that case therefore, we were warranted in holding that the Court should judge of the rea *344 sonableness of that charge, but the language may be conceded to be too broad when applied to a case like the present where the reasonableness of the tax as to the amount merely, is involved.
In
Turner
v.
Maryland,
In Patapsco Guano Co. v. Board of Agriculture, supra, the Court quotes at length from Neilson v. Garza, supra, in which Justice Bead-ley said, “it seems to me that Congress' is the proper tribunal to decide the question whether a charge or duty is or is not excessive * * *. If therefore the law is really an inspection law the duty must stand until Congress shall see fit to alter it,” and thus he, apрarently, adopts Justice Beadley’s view, though he had just previously said:
“It does not appear to us, that evidence tending to show that money collected from this source was applied to other than the purposes for which it was received should be entered into on this inquiry into' the validity of this act. If the 'receipts are found to average largely more than enough to pay the expenses, the presumption would be that the legislature would moderate the charge. But treating the question whether twenty-five cents per ton was shown to be so excessive as to demonstrate a purpose other than that which "the law declared, as a judicial question, we are satisfied that comparing the receipts from this charge with the necessary expenses such as cost of analyses, salaries of inspectors, cost of tags, express charges, miscellaneоus expenses of the department in tins connection, and so forth, we cannot conclude that the charge is so seriously in excess of what is- necessary for the objects designed to be effected as to *345 justify the imputation of had faith and change the character of the act.”
In New Mexico v. Denver and Rio Grande R. R. Co., supra, Justice Day flatly says “the law being otherwise valid, the amount of the inspection fee is not a judicial question. It rests with the legislature to fix the amount, and it can only present a valid objection when it is shown that it is so unreasonable and disрroportionate to the services rendered as to aMaclc the good faith of the law.”
It would seem from these citations that this matter is still in an atmosphere of uncertainty, i. e., whether the Courts may consider the reasonableness of the charge; whether it must stand until the presumption that the legislature will moderate the charge is disappointed, or whether it must stand until Congress shall see fit to alter it.
If the question is not a judicial question, there is no need of prolonging the consideration of this branch of the case, since the charge must stand until it is altered, either by the legislature or by Congress.
If we follow the example of Chief Justice Fuller in Patapsco Guano Co. v. Board of Agriculture, supra, and treat it as a judicial question, we can not conclude that the charge is so seriously in excess of what is necessary for the objects designed to be effected, as to justify the imputation of bad faith, and chango the character of the act.
Section 69 is not an independent, isolated enactment, but a component part of a comprehensive system of law embodied in Article Y2 of the Code of Public General Laws, title “Oysters,” and containing 82 sections. Each section, therefore, must be read in connection with, and construed in reference to, all other sections.
State
v.
Popp,
*346 In addition to tbe twenty special inspectors provided for by section 69, section 68 provides for sixteen general meas-urers and inspectors for certain designated places, to be appointed by tbe Governor. Oysters are sold not only at tbe packing bouses throughout tbe State, but also upon tbe various waters of tbe State, to what are called “buy boats/’ and often as seed oysters for transportation beyond tbe State. To such buyers, tbe young and unmerchantable oysters are as desirable, if not more so, than tbe merchantable oysters, and the State Fishery Force is required to see to tbe inspection of oysters sold to “buy boats” as well as those sold at tbe packing houses.
Sections 7 to 14, inclusive, relate to -the culling out of small oysters, and require all mеasurers and inspectors, and all other officers of tbe State Fishery Force to supervise the operation of tbe whole article, and diligently to aid in tbe enforcement of all its provisions. _ Culling can only be enforced by inspection. Without it, tbe young oysters necessary for tbe preservation of tbe future food supply afforded by the oyster beds of tbe State, must soon be destroyed, and tbe people of tbe State will be deprived of this inestimable provision of nature, and tbe thousands who are engaged in that industry will be deprived of a valuable occupation. It is impossible to estimate accurately, in advance, tbe cost of this necessary inspection. In one season tbe charge imposed may produce a surplus, while tbe next season may result in a deficiency which will absorb tbe surplus of tbe preceding season or seasons.
But enough has been said to show that the expense of inspection mentioned in section 69 can not be separated from tbe wider inspection provided by other sections, or from the general expenses of tbe State Fishery Force which is charged with tbe whole duty of inspection, and if the question can be regarded as a judicial one, we have no hesitation in bolding that tbe charge imposed is not excessive for tbe purposes of inspеction. Tbe fact that tbe pro-
*347
coeds of this charge go into the general oyster fund can not affect the validity of the law. In
State
v.
Applegarth,
3. The contention that the charge is a direct tax upon property and for that reason repugnant to Article 15 of оur Bill of Rights can not be sustained.
In 2nd Cooley on Taxation, p. 1148, it is said: “Inspection fees are not taxes, but are to be referred to the police power.” An inspection charge laid in the honest exercise of the police power, is essentially a charge laid “with a political view for the good government and benefit of the community,” and is within the very terms of Article 15 of the Bill of Rights. The text of Judge Cooley is supported by the adjudged cases. Charlton v. Rogers, 2nd McCord, 495; O’Mally v. Freeport, 96 Pa. St. 24; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Phil., 148 Pa. St. 117.
The claim of the appellants to set off, or recouр, against the amount claimed by the State in this case, the excess payment made by them in the former case, can not be allowed, not being provided for by any statute. To allow such a claim would infringe upon the immunity of the State from suit in its own Courts. “It must be presented to another department of the government, the legislature.”
State
v.
B. & O. R. R.,
For the reasons stated the decree of the learned judge of the Circuit Court will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed, the appellants to pay the costs above and below.
