after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court:
Such being the situation, we have no hesitancy in holding that the State statute in question is a valid exercise of the police power of the State in so far as its speed limit provisions are involved in this case, and should have been obeyed by the accused.
The mere fact that the provisions of the State statute in question affect a Federal employee or instrumentality is immaterial. And certainly where the statute does not attempt to control and does not in its operation even incidentally interfere in any way with the performance of duty of the Federal employee, it is valid.
As said in C. & A. Ry. Co. v. City of Carlinville,
As held in Gladson v. State of Minnesota,
In Commonwealth v. Closson,
“The designated streets or ways are not, however, instrumentalities created by the general government, where ‘exemption from State control is essential to the independent .sovereign authority of the United States within the sphere of their delegated powers.’ If they were, the defendant has •committed no offense. Commonwealth v. Clary,
See also the note to last-quoted case L. R. A. 1918C, 940,. et seq.
A great number of Supreme Court and State decisions' are cited and relied on for the accused. Among them are' the following: McCullough v. Maryland, 4 Wheat, 316, 429,
In the case of Rhode Island v. Burton, it appears from the question certified by the trial court for decision by the appellate court, that the specific instruction tq the Federal officer, from his superior officer, was “to proceed with all possible dispatch, and assumed by the officer to necessitate the violation of the speed laws (of the State), and which instructions he was obliged to obey in a matter claimed by said officer to be of urgency and in a matter appertaining to the conduct of the war between the United States and Germany.” Here was a conflict between State and Fed
In the case of Johnson v. Maryland, the accused was convicted and fined for driving a government motor truck in the transportation of mails over a post road in Maryland without having passed the examination and paid the fee for and obtained the license to operate the motor truck as required by the State statute. The Supreme Court held in that case, it is true (Mr. Justice Pitney and Mr. Justice McReynolds dissenting), that the provisions of the State statute making such requirements are invalid; but it so held on the ground that such State statute required the “instruments of the United States * * * to desist from performance (of their duties) until they satisfy a State officer upon examination that they are competent for a necessary part of them, and pay a fee for permission to go on.” The court says: “Such requirement does not merely touch the government servants remotely by a general rule of conduct; it lays hold of them in their specific attempt to obey orders and requires qualifications in addition to those that the government has pronounced sufficient.” Here again was an actual conflict between State and Federal laws and of duty of action in obedience to those laws, which is not presented by the case before us.
As said in the course of the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case last cited: “Of course, an employee of the United States does not secure a general immunity from State law while acting in the course of his employment. That was decided long ago in United States v. Hart, Pet. C. C. 390, Fed. Cas. No. 15, 316, 5 Op. Attys. Gen. 554. It very well may be that when the United States has not spoken, the subjection to local law would extend to general rules that might affect incidentally the mode of carrying out the employment — as, for instance, a statute or ordinance
So far as appears from the record of the case before us, “the United States has not spoken” on the subject of the speed at which it was the duty of the accused to travel in such way as to make the provisions of the Virginia statute in question in any way interfere with the performance of the Federal duties of the accused.
The case will, therefore, be affirmed.
Affirmed.
