This is a suit at law to recover hack moneys paid under protest to the collector of the port of New York, by the plaintiffs. It has been tried before the court without a jury, on an agreed statement of facts, the material parts of which are as follows; The plaintiffs are partners in trade in the city of New York, and carry on a business of transporting passengers and freight on the high seas, between Holland and the United States, as consignees and agents. In October, 1882, there arrived at the port of New York, from Holland, a ship owned by citizens of Holland, carrying 382 persons, not citizens of the United States, among whom were 20 under the ageof one year, and 59 between the ages of one year and eight years. On the arrival of the ship, the master, in pursuance of section 9 of the passenger act of August 2, 1882, delivered to the proper officers the lists of passengers, with the specifications, required by that section, from which it appeared that said 382 persons were all subjects of Holland or other foreign powers in treaty with the United States. The collector, before allowing complete entry of the vessel, decided that the plaintiffs must pay a duty of 50 cents for each of said 382 passengers, being $191. By the regulations of the treasury department the non-payment of the $191 would have permitted the defendant to refuse the complete entry.'of the vessel, or to refuse to give her a clearance from the port of New York to her home port, and sucti imposition would have created an apparent lien on the vessel for that sum. On the demand- of the defendant the plaintiffs paid said sum under a protest, of which a copy is put in evidence, and appealed to the secretary of the treasury, who sustained the action of the defendant, and this suit was brought within 90 days after the rendering of such decision. The payment was levied and made under the act of August 3, 1882, entitled “An act to regulate immigration.” 22 St. at Large, c. 376, p. 214.
The principal question involved in this case is as to the constitutional validity of the said act. It provides as follows:
“That there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of fifty cents for each and every passenger not a citizen of the United States who shall come by steam or sail vessel from a foreign port to any port within the United States. The said duty shall be paid to the collector of customs of the port to which such passenger shall come, or if there be no collector at such port, then to the collector of customs nearest thereto, by the master, owner, agent, or consignee of every such vessel, within twenty-four hours after the entry thereof into such port. The money thus collected shall be paid into the United States treasury, and shall constitute a fund to be called the immi*137 grant fund, and shall he used, under the direction of the secretary of the treasury, to defray the expense of regulating immigration under this act, and for the care of immigrants arriving in the United States, for the relief of such as are in distress, and for the general purposes and expenses of carrying this act into effect. The duty imposed by this section shall he a lien upon the vessels which shall bring such passengers into the United States, and shall bo a debt in favor of the United States agaiiist the owner or owners of such vessels; and the payment of such duty may bo enforced by any legal or equitable remedy; provided, that no greater sum shall be expended for the purposes hereinbefore mentioned, at any port, than shall have been collected at such port.
“ Sec. 2. That the secretary of the treasury is hereby charged with the duty of executing the provisions of this act and with supervision over the business of immigration to the United states, and for that purpose he shall have power to enter into contracts with such state commission, board, or officers as may bo designated for that purpose by the governor of any state to take charge of the local affairs of immigration in the ports within said state, and to provide for the support and relief of such immigrants therein landing as may fall into distress or need public aid, under the rules and regulations to be prescribed by said secretary; and it shall be the duty of such state commission, board, or officers so designated to examine into the condition of passengers arriving at tlio ports within such state in any ship or vessel, and for that purpose all or any of such commissioners or officers, or such other person or persons as they shall appoint, shall he authorized to go on board of and through any such ship or vessel; and if, on such examination, there shall be found among such passengers any convict, lunatic, idiot, or any person unable to take care of himself or herself without becoming a public charge, they shall report the same in writing to the collector of such port, and such persons shall not be permitted to land.
“ Sec. 3. That the secretary of the treasury shall establish such regulations and rules and issue from time to time such instructions not inconsistent with law as ho shall deem best calculated to protect the United States and immigrants into the United States from fraud and loss, and for carrying out the provisions of this act and the immigration laws of the United States; and he shall prescribe all forms of bonds, entries, and other papers to be used under and in the enforcement of the various provisions of this act.
“ Sec. 4. That all foreign convicts except those convicted of political offenses, upon arrival, shall be sent back to tlio nations to which they belong and from whence they came. The secretary of the treasury may designate tlio state board of charities of any state in which such board shall exist by law, or any commission in any state, or any person or persons in any state whose duty it shall be to execute the provisions of this section without compensation. The secretary of the treasury shall prescribe regulations for the return of the aforesaid persons io the countries from whence they came, and shall furnish instructions to the board, commission, or persons charged with the execution of the provisions of this section as to the mode of procedure in respect thereto, and may change such instructions from time to time. The expense of such return of the aforesaid persons not permitted to land shall be borne by the owners of the vessels in which they came.”
In view of decisions made by the supreme court there can be no doubt that this act is a regulation of commerce with foreign nations.
In Henderson v. Mayor,
In the case of People v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, — Sup. Ct.,
But it is contended that because the act of congress, now in question, in regulating commerce, imposes a duty of 50 cents for each passenger, not a citizen of the United States, who comes by steam or sail vessel from a foreign port to a port within the United States, it violates several provisions of the constitution.
It is said that the duty is a capitation tax, and that article 1, § 9, of the -constitution requires that “no capitation or other direct tax shall be laid, unless in proportion to the census.” But the act is manifestly, in its general purpose and effect, an act regulating commerce. It was passed because state laws of the same character had been held void. It applies to all the sea-ports of the United States, and to all steam-vessels and all sail-vessels coming from a foreign port. Having power to prohibit the commerce in question, congress had power to authorize it on conditions to be observed. Such conditions are regulations. The permission to bring in alien passengers in steam or sail vessels from foreign ports, on paying the duty, is, in fact, the granting of a license to carry on such commerce, and the duty is a license fee, measured by the number of passengers. Grant
Besides, this tax is not within the definition of a capitation tax, as always recognized. It is not a tax on the poll, without regard to property, business, or oilier circumstances. Hylton v. U. S.
It is also said that the act violates the following provisions of article 1, § 8, of the constitution: “The congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United Slates; but all duties, imposts, and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States.” The argument is that this is a tax or duty; that it is not collected to provide for the general welfare of the United States; and that it is not uniform throughout the United States, because aliens may come to the United States from a foreign port by other vessels than steam or sail vessels, and by other means than by a vessel, and no duty is imposed for them.
The answer to this view is, that the act is not passed in the exercise of the power of laying taxes. As before said, the business of bringing aliens in these vessels, instead of being prohibited, as it might have been lawfully, is permitted on payment of this license fee, and the moneys collected are made a special fund, to be devoted exclusively to the purposes named in the act, — the expense of regulating immigration, the care of immigrants, the relief of such as are in distress, and the general purposes and expenses of carrying the act into effect. These expenses are fairly limited, and to be limited, to purposes which are within the regulation of commerce, and to objects fairly made necessary by the exercise of the privilege or license granted. It is not, for the purpose of invalidating the act, to be intended that the objects specified in the act go beyond what is constitutional, or that abuses wall be allowed in executing the act. None are alleged. If any shall appear, it is to be presumed that congress will so legislate on the subject as to avoid all excess of power. No such excess appears in the act.
Aside from this, the tax applies uniformly to all steam and sail vessels coming to all ports in the United States, from all foreign ports, with all alien passengers. The tax being a license tax on the business, the rule of uniformity is sufficiently observed if the tax extends to all persons of the class selected by congress; that is, to all
The case is not one where a court can say the tax is not laid for the general welfare of the United States. No court can say that it is not for the general welfare of the United States to lay such a tax as this to defray the expense of regulating the immigration of aliens, and of caring for immigrants as they arrive, and of relieving such as are in distress when they arrive, and of supervising the business, and of supporting and relieving such immigrants as may fall into distress or need public aid, and of protecting the United States and the immigrants from fraud and loss. As the ship-owners have the privilege of bringing the immigrants here, and setting before them the inducements to come, it is for the general welfare of the United States that those who come shall be directed to their destinations, and guarded from being defrauded and robbed on arrival, and kept from becoming at once a public charge through want of means, if needy. It is a tax laid to create a fund to be so used, which it must be assumed congress has said is a tax laid to provide for the general welfare of the United States; and it is not the province of a court to say to the contrary. The course of legislation and judicial decision shows that the objects specified in this act are objects which can be attained only through enactment by congress, which shall operate equally throughout the states, and are thus for the general welfare of the United States.
. In respect to this case, and other cases arising under the act, it is alleged that treaties existed before the act was passed between the llnited States and the various foreign countries of which the owners of the vessels bringing the passengers were citizens or subjects, and that the. act violates the treaties in imposing the tax.. The argument is, that the tax. is really a tax on the passenger, and that the treaties forbid the laying of the tax. Inasmuch as the tax is laid on owners who are citizens of the United States and their vessels, as well as on foreign owners and their vessels, engaged in the same business, and because of that business, it is not perceived how there is any violation of any provision of any treaty, or how any provision for freedom of commerce or navigation, properly construed, can require more than this. Otherwise, the one nation would be prevented, under such provisions, from imposing on any goods imported from the other any higher duties than those imposed by the latter on like goods coming from the former. There is all the freedom of commerce- and navigation which the treaties require, when all persons engaged in a given business are treated alike, in the way of license f.ee or taxation.. The passengers do not carry on the commerce or navigation by being passengers in the vessel, and there is no viola
But, aside from this, the act of congress, if in.conflict with tire prior treaties, supersedes them. It is provided as follows by article 6 of the constitution: “This constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land.” The constitution requires that judicial officers shall be bound by oath to support the constitution. This requires them to see that both laws and treaties shall be the supremo law in an equal degree, neither more than the other. By article 2, § 2, of the constitution, the president has power, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, to make treaties. So far, the treaties are only compacts, binding on the two contracting parties, as between themselves as nations. But, when it is further provided that all laws becoming such in the manner provided in the constitution, and all treaties, shall be the supreme law of the land, treaties become law, and laws become law, and judicial officers must treat both as of equal weight. A treaty is not the law of the land at all, and is nothing but a contract, except by virtue of the clause which makes treaties and laws equally the law. Without that clause a treaty would not supersede a prior conflicting statute. As it does, so it must itself be, as the supreme law of the land, superseded by a subsequent conflicting statute; otherwise, the clause as to laws and treaties being both of them the supreme law would have no operation. A treaty would, as against a prior conflicting statute, have no effect as the supreme law until a new statute had abrogated the old statute, and a statute would, as against a prior conflicting treaty, have no effect as the supreme law until a new treaty had superseded the old treaty. The judicial decisions are to that effect. Taylor v. Morton, 2 Curt. C. C. 454; The Cherokee Tobacco,
It is urged that children under one year of age are not passengers, under the provisions of the act, so as to be chargeable with the duty, because in section 1 of the act of August 2, 1882, (22 St. at Large, c. 374, p. 186,) “to regulate the carriage of passengers by sea,” it is provided that in calculating the number of cubic feet of space to be allowed for each passenger, in a vessel bringing passengers other than cabin passengers from a foreign port, children under one year of age shall not be included. It is also urged that two children between one and eight years of age should be counted as one passenger, because it is so provided in section 1 of the last-named act, in regard to the cubic feet of space. The two statutes have no relation to each other. Each of the children is a passenger, and is to count as one passenger unless expressly excluded. In respect to cubic feet of space for sanitary purposes, there is a special provision in the one statute
There must be a judgment .for the defendant, with costs. The same result is reached in regard to the other actions tried .by the court at the' same time, brought agaiust the same defendant, for like causes of action, the facts being of the same character as in this suit. Those suits are brought by the Liverpool & Great Western Steam Company, the Nord Deutscher Lloyd, Die Hamburg Amerikanische Packet Actien Gesellschaft, and De Koninglyk Nederlandsch Stoom-vaart Maatschappy. _
Powers of United States GoternmeNt. By the revolution the powers of government devolved upon the people of the United States;
Constitutional Constbuction. Like every other grant, the constitution is to have a reasonable construction, according to the import of its terms,
Execution op Poweiis AND Enfoboejient op Rights. The constitution does not profess to enumerate the means by which the powers it confers may be executed. If. the means are appropriate, the necessity for their use is to he determined by congress alone.
GÉNEral Power over' Commerce and Business. Congress has the general power to impose a tax on business, — such as 'distilling, — and to impose penalties and forfeitures.
■ What not within the Power of Congress. The words “welfare of the .United States,” in the grant of power to congress to lay and collect taxes, do not authorize the taxation of means necessary for the exercise of the state government, nor for purposes which are within the exclusive power of the state;
Powers Conourrent. The power of taxation conferred on the general government does not operate as a prohibition on the states; it is a power concurrent in the national and state governments.
LIMITATION ON Power of Taxation. The only limitatation on tito power of taxation conferred on congress by the constitution is that “ duties, imposts, and excises” shall be “uniform.”
Kesteictionb ON tiie Power of CongRess. The power of congress to interfere with exports is taken away by the provision of the constitution that “ no tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any state;”
Treaties AND Acts of Congress as Supreme Law. A treaty is a solemn agreement between nations,
PASSENGER Tax. The provision of the United States constitution investing congress with the power to regulate commerce extends to persons as well as property.
Notes
McCulloch v. Maryland,
Penhallow v. Doane,
Scott v. Sandford,
Martin v. Hunter’s, Lessee,
U. S. v. Cruikshank,
Ohio Life Ins. & T. Co. v. Debolt,
Metrop. Bank v. Van Dyck,
Ableman v. Booth,
Brown v. Maryland,
Tarble’s Case,
Andrews v. Auditor, 28 Grat. 121.
Id.; Bank of Commerce v. N. Y. City,
Pacific Ins. Co. v. Soule,
Kilbourn v. Thompson,
Const. U. S. art. 1, § 8, subd. 1.
Id. subd. 13.
Id. subd. 1.
Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee,
Kunzler v. Kohaus,
Cohens v. Virginia,
Railroad Co. v. Peniston,
Martin v Hunter’s Lessee,
Sturges v. Crowninshield,
Aldrich v. Kinney,
Ex parte Griffin,
Martin v. Hunter's Lessee,
Holmes v. Jennison,
Curtis v. Gibbs, 2 N. J Law, 377.
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia,
U. S. v. Burr, 2 Wheeler, C. C. 573.
Aldrich v. Kinney,
Cohens v. Virginia,
McCulloch v. Maryland,
U. S. v. Cruikshank,
U. S. v. Cruikshank,
Legal-tender Cases, 12 Wall 534; Low v. Cent. Pac. R. Co.
Springer v. U. S.
U. S. v. McKinley, 4 Brewst. 246.
Veazie Bank v. Fenno,
U. S. v. Riley,
License Tax Cases,
Collector v. Day,
U. S. v. Railroad Co.
Whiteaker v. Haley,
Gibbons v. Ogden,
Sayles v. Davis,
Smith v. Short,
Fifield v. Close,
State v. Garton,
Dobbins v. Erie Co.
Com. v. Mann. 5 Watts & S. 403; New Orleans v. Lea,
City Council v. Lee,
Tax on Salaries, 13 Op. Attys. Gen. 161.
McCulloch v. Maryland,
Whiteaker v. Haley,
Whiteaker v. Haley,
Calder v. Bull.
Whiteaker v. Haley,
Hylton v. U. S.
Loughborough v. Blake, 5 Wheat 317. That the power of congress over taxation in the District of Columbia is unlimited, see, also, Kendall v. U. S.
State v. Winnebago L. & F. R. P. Co.
U. S. v. Riley,
Loughborouhh v. Blake,
Hylton v. U. S.
Const U. S. art. 1, § 9, subd. 4; License Tax Cases,
Providence Bank v. Billings,
Const. U. S. art. 1, § 9, subd. 5; Hylton v. U. S.
Pace v. Burgess,
Folsom v. U. S.
Barron v. Baltimore,
Kelly v. Pittsburgh,
Foster v. Neilson,
Ware’s Adm’rs v. Hylton,
Pollard’s Heirs v. Kibbe,
Foster v. Neilson,
Taylor v. Morton,
People v. Nagles,
Talbot v. Seeman, 1 Cranch. 1; Ware’s Adm’rs v. Hylton,
Foster v. Neilson,
Satterlee v. Matthewson,
Evans v. Eaton,
Lin Sing v. Washburn,
Passenger Cases,
Lin Sing v. Washburn,
People v. Pacific M. S. Co.
People v. Compagaie Generale Transatlantique, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 87; S. C. 10 Fed. Rep. 357; Henderson v. New York,
People v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 87; S. C. 10 Fed. Rep. 337.
Henderson v. New York,
