after stating the case, delivered the ' opinion of the court.
*101 The question presented by this record is this: Is the statute of Texas imposing a penalty for a failure to deliver goods on tender of the rate named in a bill of lading' applicable to interstate shipments ? While the amount in controversy is small, so small, indeed, that the case could not be taken from a lower to the Supreme Court of the State, the question is of no little importance.
At the time of this transaction the act of Congress, known as the Interstate Commerce Act, of February 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379, as amended by the act of March 2, 1889, c. 382, 25 Stat. 855, was in force. By section 6 every common carrier, subject to the provisions of the act, (and all railroads carrying interstate freight are subject to such provisions,) is, for the inspection and information of the public, required to print and publicly post at each, station upon its routes the schedules of fares and rates for carriage of passengers and property thereon. No advance in such fares and rates shall be made except after ten days’ public notice, such advance to be shown by printing and posting new schedules, or plainly indicated upon the schedules then in force, and duly posted, nor shall an}r reduction in such fares and rates be made except after three days’ previous public notice given in like manner. The section then reads:
“ And when any such common carrier shall have established and published its rates, fares, and charges in compliance with the provisions of this section, it shall be unlawful for such common carrier to charge, demand, collect or receive from any person or persons a greater or less compensation for the transportation of passengers or property, or for any services in connection therewith, than is specified in such published schedule of rates, fares, and charges as may at the time be in force.”
After this is a provision in respect to joint rates between connecting carriers. Such carriers are required to file with the Interstate Commerce Commission copies of their joint tariffs, which, shall be made public by the carriers when directed by the commission, in so far as in the judgment of the commission it is deemed practicable, the commission being *102 given power to prescribe the measure of publicity to be given and the places in which the joint tariffs shall be published. There is also a prohibition like to that quoted of any advance of such joint rates except after ten days’ notice, or any reduction except after three days’ notice, and a like declaration that it shall be unlawful for any common carrier, party to any such joint tariff, to charge, demand, collect, or receive from any person or persons a greater or less compensation than is specified in such schedules. Section 10 makes a violation of these provisions by any carrier, or any agent or person acting for the carrier, a penal offence, subject to fine not exceeding $5000, and, in case the offence amounts to an unlawful discrimination in rates, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or both such fine and imprisonment.
Clearly the state and the national acts- relate to the same-subject-matter and prescribe different rules. By the state act the bill’of lading is made controlling as to the rate collectible, and a failure to comply with that requirement exposes the delinquent carrier to its penalties, while the national statute ignores the bill of lading and makes the published tariff rate binding, and subjects the offender, both carrier and agent, to severe penalties. The carrier cannot obey one statute without sometimes exposing itself to the penalties prescribed by the other. Take the case before us: If, in disregard of the joint tariff established by the defendant and the St. Louis and San Francisco Bailway Company and filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, the latter company, as a matter of favoritism, had issued this bill of lading at a rate less than the tariff rate, both the defendant company and’ its agent would, by delivering the goods upon the receipt of only such reduced rate, subject themselves to the penalties of the national law, while, on the other hand, if the tariff rate was insisted upon, then the corporation would become liable for the damages named in the state act. In case of such a conflict the state law must yield. “This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof . . . shall be the supreme law of the land.” Constitution, Art. VI, clause 2. It is no answer to say that in this *103 case the defendant might have complied with both the state and the national statute; that it was a party to the reduction of the joint rate'; that, therefore, the bill of lading was properly issued at 69 cents per 100 pounds; that it should have promptly notified its agents at every station of such reduction; that if it had done so the agent at Cameron could have complied with the state as wrell as the national law, and that its negligence in this, respect is sufficient ground for holding it amenable to the state law. The question is hot whether, in any particular case,-operation may be given to both statutes, but whether their enforcement may expose a.party to a conflict of duties. It is enough that the two statutes operating upon the same subject-matter prescribe different rules. In such case one must yield, and that one is the state law.
It may be conceded .that were there no congressional legislation in respect to the mattér, the state act could be held applicable to interstate shipments as a police regulation.
Railroad Company
v. Fuller,
Generally it may be said in respect to laws-of this character that, though resting, upon the police power of the State, they must yield whenever Congress, in the exercise of the powers granted to it, legislates upon the precise subject-matter, for that power, like all other reserved powers of the States, is subordinate to those in terms conferred by the Constitution upon the nation. “No urgency for its use can authorize a State to exercise it in regard to a subject-matter which has been confided exclusively to the discretion óf Congress by the Constitution.”
Henderson
v.
New York,
It' is unnecessary to pursue this discussion further. The state statute ¿nd the national law operate upon the same subject-matter, and prescribe different rules concerning it. The national law is unquestionably one within the competency if Congress to enact under- the power given to regulate commerce between the States. .The state statute must, therefore, give way.
The judgment of the county court of Milam County is
Reversed, and the case remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
