delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case is here on appeal, under § 266 of the Judicial Code (28 U. S. C. § 380), to review the final decree of a three-judge District Court enjoining appellants, constituting the State Road Department of Florida, from enforcing against appellees relevant provisions of a Florida statute. Acts 1937, c. 18995, Fla. Comp. Gen. Laws, c. CVIII, § 4151 (512)-(519). The statute provides for the inspection of all imported cement and the payment for such inspection of a fee of fifteen cents per hundred pounds. A motion .to dismiss the bill having been overruled and appellants having elected to stand on the bill, a final decree was duly entered. '
At the threshold, a challenge to the jurisdiction of the District Court must be met. It derives from § 265 of the Judicial Code (28 U. S. C. § 379), for it is claimed that the injunction in effect stayed proceedings in the Supreme Court of Florida. Disposition of this claim entails a quick narrative of the course of litigation disclosed by the record..
On July 29, 1937, a petition for mandamus was filed in the Supreme Court of Florida by the State of Florida ex'
To invoke § 265 in these circumstances is to assert that a successful mandamus proceeding in a state court against state officials to enforce a challenged statute, bars injunc-tive relief in a United States district court against enforcement of the statute by state officials at the suit of
Appellants are in effect contending that no proceedings are here available to bring the constitutionality of the Florida statute before this Court, once the state court directed its enforcement. The Supreme Court of Florida itself manifested no such strangling conception of § 265. It did not deem the proceedings initiated below as a denial of the right of way of a state court through an obstructive exercise of authority by a United States court. On the contrary, in staying “all further proceedings and actions” until this Court had finally passed upon its constitutionality, the Supreme Court of Florida recognized the propriety of the present proceedings as an orderly mode for invoking the ultimate judicial voice on constitutional issues. Therefore, § 265 has no relevance here. That provision is an historical mechanism (Act of March 2, 1793, 1 Stat. 334, 335) for achieving, harmony in one phase of our complicated federalism by avoiding needless friction between two systems of courts having potential jurisdiction over the same subject-matter.
Wells Fargo & Co.
v.
Taylor,
We turn, therefore, to the merits.
After reciting that “during the past twelve months approximately thirty per centum (30%) of all cement sold and used in Florida was manufactured in foreign countries and imported”; that cement is “an integral part of the construction” of “large numbers” of buildings; that “much of the foreign manufactured cement . . . brought into the State of Florida has been of inferior
As grounds for this discrimination in the incidence of an obviously onerous exaction as between foreign and domestic cement, the preamble of the statute states that “it is of paramount importance to the public safety that only cement measuring up to a minimum standard should be offered for sale, sold or used in the State of Florida,”
Such assumption of national powers by a state has, ever since March 12, 1827,
(Brown v. Maryland,
The decree of the District Coürt is
Affirmed.
