60 S.E. 719 | N.C. | 1908
This is an action for the recovery of a penalty, under section 2632 of the Revisal, the plaintiff alleging an unreasonable delay in the transportation of a car-load of marble from Atlanta, in the State of Georgia, to Hickory, in this State. It did not appear from any (54) evidence in the case whether the alleged delay was in the State of Georgia, in the State of South Carolina, or in this State. Defendant moved to nonsuit the plaintiff. The motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted. There was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the penalty given by the statute, and judgment was entered thereon. Defendant excepted and appealed.
After stating the case: The section of the Revisal imposing the penalty which the plaintiff seeks to recover in this case is assailed by the defendant upon the ground that the Legislature has thereby attempted to regulate commerce between the States. Commerce between the States consists of intercourse between their citizens, and includes the transportation of persons and property and the navigation of public waters for that purpose, as well as the purchase, sale, and exchange of commodities, and the power to regulate that commerce *41
involves the right to prescribe rules by which it shall be governed — that is, the conditions upon which it shall be conducted. Gloucester FerryCo. v. Pennsylvania,
This Court, in McGwigan v. R. R.,
It is not necessary, in the view we take of section 2632 of the Revisal, to consider the question, so ably and learnedly discussed before us by counsel, as to the constitutional power of the Legislature to prescribe a penalty for delay in the shipment of freight from another State into this State, provided the exercise of the power, or the legislation itself, (57) is confined to delays occurring wholly within this State. If the section embraces any legislation which is not local in its nature, and, although in aid of commerce, is a regulation thereof, within the meaning of those terms as defined by the Court having final ultimate jurisdiction to decide such a question, the statute is void to the extent that it exceeds the proper limit of legislative power prescribed to the State by the Constitution of the United States, as construed by that Court. When the purpose of the legislation is of such a kind as to require uniformity, then, in order "to bring the transportation within the control of the State as part of its domestic commerce, the subject transported must be, within the entire voyage, under the exclusive jurisdiction of the State." This limitation of the power of the State to regulate commerce was stated in the words we have above quoted by Justice *43 Fields in Steamship Co. v. R. R., 9 Sawyer, 253, and afterwards adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States as a concise and accurate statement of the principle governing such cases, in Hanley v. R. R.,
Instead of entering upon a consideration of the question whether section 2632 comes within the class of legislation permissible to the State as not being a regulation of commerce, we have preferred to construe the section, according to its plain meaning, as intended to apply only to intrastate shipments, or those which do not require any departure from the territory of the State in order to execute the contract (58) of carriage. This meaning conforms to the elementary rules of interpretation and avoids the decision of any doubtful constitutional question.
The court should have sustained the motion to nonsuit at the close of the evidence, and erred in refusing the same.
We do not decide, or even undertake to consider, in this case, the question as to what is the duty and liability of the carrier at each end of the transit, under the law imposing penalties for delays in shipping and delivering goods, but only the question as to whether section 2632 affects interstate commerce or was intended to apply solely to commerce within the borders of the State. What we have said, therefore, must be construed as referring only to the actual transit of the goods from the initial to the terminal station.
The judgment is reversed and
Action dismissed.
Cited: Davis v. R. R., post, 72; Hardware Co. v. R. R.,