43 F. 761 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas | 1890
The facts in the caso are admitted, and are as follows: The Excelsior Brewery Company, a corporation of the state of Missouri, shipped from that state to Pella, in the state of Iowa, consigned to the petitioner, who was its agent at that place, a wooden ease containing two dozen quart bottles of beer manufactured by the. company at St. Louis, Mo. The case containing the bottles of beer was substantially made out of wood, and securely fastened with a metallic seal, and constituted an unbroken or original package. This ease of beer, in its original form, the petitioner, as agent for the brewery company, sold at Pella. For this sale he was arrested, tried before a justice of the peace, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment. On these facts he claims bis imprisonment is illegal, and in violation of the constitution of the United States. This claim is rested on two propositions. Stating them in the reverse order from that'in which the learned counsel for the petitioner presented them, they are — First, that the act of congress, approved August 8,1890, commonly known as the “Wilson Bill,” is unconstitutional and void; and, second, that the laws of the state of Iowa, under which the petitioner was tried and sentenced to be imprisoned, are unconstitutional and void.
In discussing the first question it is important to have a clear conception of what the law was, and on what it was grounded before the passage of the act, and what change the act makes in the old law. Before the passage of the act of congress, the right to transport liquor from one state to another included, by implication, the right of the importer to
“Under our decision in Bowman v. Railway Co., infra, they had the right to import this beer into that state, and, in the view which we have expressed, they had the right to sell it, by which act alone it would become mingled in the common mass of property within the state. Up to that point of time, we hold that, in the absence of congressional permission to do so, the state had no power to interfere by seizure, or any other action, in prohibition of importation and sale by the foreign or non-resident importer.”
It will be observed that the chief justice, speaking for the majority of the court, does not say that the state, under no conditions, can interfere with thé imported liquor, until it is sold by the importer or the package broken; but the statement of the law is that it' cannot do so “in the absence of congressional permission.” In another passage of the opinion, it is said:
“The responsibility is upon congress, so far as the regulation of interstate commerce is concerned, to remove the restriction upon the state in dealing with imported articles of trade within its limits, which have not been mingled with the common mass of property therein, if in its judgment the end to be secured justifies and requires such action.”
Again, it is said the imported article “is not within the jurisdiction of the police power of the state unless placed there by congressional action.” Again, it is said:
“Being thus articles of commerce, can a state, in the absence of legislation on the part of congress, prohibit their importation from abroad, or from a sister state, or, when imported, prohibit their sale by the importer?”
Again, the language of the court in Bowman v. Railway Co., 125 U. S. 485, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 689, 1062, is quoted approvingly where it is said—
“That the transportation of commodities between the states shall be free except where it is positively restricted by congress itself, or by the states in particular cases by the express permission of congress.”
But it is said the act is void, because it is a delegation of legislative power to the states to regulate interstate commerce, and for want of uniformity in its operation. It must be observed that the act does not deal with the liquor after its “arrival” in the state. Congress may regulate interstate commerce, but not intrastate commerce. It may regulate commerce “among the states,” but not in the states. The state may regulate purely internal, but not interstate, commerce. The act is drawn in view of these settled principles. In protects the interstate transportation of the liquor until its arrival in the state where the transit is to end, and no longer. . Upon its arrival in the state, the act of congress declares it shall be subject to the laws of the state enacted in the exercise of its police powers. Such laws are not regulations of interstate commerce, but have relation to the local and internal concerns of the state. The right of the state to pass such laws is not derived from the constitution of theUnited States, or any act of congress; it antedates both. Nor does the act of congress confer, or attempt to confer, on the states the right to regulate the liquor traffic within their jurisdiction. It terminates the privileges previously attaching to the interstate commerce transportation of the liquor, upon its arrival in the state to which it is consigned, instead of protecting these privileges until after the package is broken or sold by the importer. It does this by declaring the liquor shall, upon arrival in the state, be subject to its laws, not as regulations of commerce, but as police regulations.
It is said the supreme court declared these laws to be unconstitutional, in so far as they prohibited the sale of liquor by the importer or his agent in the original packages, and that congress could not, in the language of the learned counsel, “vivify a dead statute.” There are two answers to this contention. The first is, the act of congress relegates the original package of liquor, on its arrival in the state, to the laws of the state passed in the exercise of its police powers; and there is not now, and never has been, any doubt of the validity of those laws. It is not the laws of the state, but the original package, that is “dead.” No part of the Iowa law is “dead.” What was decided by the supreme court was this: That the Iowa law was broad enough in its terms to embrace all liquors and all sales of liquors by every person, but that this law, under the constitution of the United States, was inoperative on liquor imported into the state, as long as it remained in the original packages, and could not be applied to the sale of liquor in the original package by the importer, “in the absence of
“The meaning of the legislature may be extended beyond the precise words used in the law, from tho reason or motive upon which tho legislature proceeded, from the end in view, or the purposo which was designed.” U. S. v. Freeman, 3 How. 565.
In the construction of a statute it is always legitimate to look at the history of the times and examine the state of things ‘existing when it was framed and passed. The act of congress is not ambiguous or doubtful, but if it was, the application to it of these canons of construction would remove the ambiguity or doubt. It is undoubtedly true that the power to regulate commerce among the states rests with congress alone, and that any rule congress proscribes on the subject must be uniform in its operation. It is objected against the act of congress that it is not uniform in its operation, but adopts the varying liquor laws of the several states. In the constitutional grant of powers to congress to regulate commerce among the states, it is not said that such regulations shall be uniform. That requirement is implied from the nature of the subject. The constitution declares that congress shall have power to establish “uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States.” In reference to laws on the subject of bankruptcies, the constitution itself requires they shall be “uniform,” and does not leave that requirement to implication, as is done in the case of laws regulating commerce. The bankrupt act of 1867 adopted the exemption laws of the several states, and gave to the bankrupts in the several states the property exempt from execution, by the laws of the state of their residence. The bankrupt act was assailed as unconstitutional, because there was no uniformity in the amount of property exempted to bankrupts, tho amounts varying with the varying laws of the states. Tho point arose in this circuit, and the act was hold constitutional for reasons which are equally applicable to the “ Wilson Bill.” That opinion was concurred in by Mr. Justice Milleb, and was ultimately accepted as a sound exposition of the law by all the district courts of the United States, In re Beckerford, 1 Dill. 45. That case ought to be conclusive, in this circuit, of the question in the case at bar. There is no want of uniformity in the act of congress. It adopts one uniform rule, which is that the interstate transit shall end upon the arrival of the liquor in the state to which it is consigned and that thereafter it shall be subject to the state law. This rule prevails throughout the whole country, and is therefore a uniform rule. If the court entertained any reasonable doubt of the petitioner’s right to a discharge, it would not discharge him, but in the exercise of