The statute under which the petitioner was convicted, (Stats, of 1871,142) requires the affixing of a stamp to such a bill as that drawn by him. It levies upon foreign bills the same rate of duty imposed upon inland bills; but it does not extend to the former the exemption accorded to the latter.
The statute is not a regulation of commerce between this and other states, nor does it lay an impost or duty on-exports, within the meaning of Secs. 8 and 10 of Art. I of the constitution of the United States. Though this may not have been directly decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, it follows from and is the necessary result of the reasoning of that court in Nathan v. Louisiana,
A bill of exchange is neither an export nor an import, but it would make no difference if it were; for the term “ export,” in
