after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The validity of the act of Congress incorporating the North River Bridge Company rests upon principles of constitutional law, now established beyond dispute.
The Congress of the United States, being empowered by the Constitution to regulate commerce among the several States, and to pass all laws necessary or proper for carrying into execution any. of the powers specifically conferred, may make use of any appropriate means for this end. As said by Chief Justice Marshall, “The power of creating a corporation, though appertaining to sovereignty, is not, like the power of making war, or levying taxes, or of regulating commerce, a great substantive and independent power, which cannot be implied as incidental to other powers, .or used as a means of executing them. It is never the end for which other powers are exercised, but a means by which other objects are accomplished.” Congress, therefore, may create corporations as appropriate means of executing the powers of government, as, for instance, a bank for .the purpose of carrying on the fiscal operations of the United States, or a railroad corporation for the purpose of promoting commerce among the States.
McCulloch
v. Maryland,
From these premises, the conclusion appears to be inevitable that, although Congress may, if it sees fit and as it has often done, recognize and approve bridges erected by authority of two States across navigable waters between them, it may, at its discretion, use its sovereign powers, directly or through a corporation created for that object, to construct bridges for the accommodation of interstate commerce by land, as it undoubtedly may to improve the navigation of rivers for the convenience of interstate commerce by water. 1 Hare’s Constitutional Law, 248, 249. See acts of July 14, 1862, c. 167 ; 12 Stat. 569 ; February 17, 1865, c. 38 ; 13 Stat. 431; July 25, 1866, c. 246; 14 Stat. 244; March 3, 1871, c. 121,- § 5; 16 Stat. 572, 573;. June 16,1886, c. 417; 24 Stat. 78.
The judicial opinions cited in support of the opposite view are not, having regard to the facts of the cases in which they were uttered, of controlling weight.
Mr. Justice McLean, indeed, in an opinion delivered by him in the Circuit Court, by which a bill by the United States to restrain the construction of a bridge across the Mississippi River was dismissed, no injury to property of the United States and no substantial obstruction to navigation being shown, and there having been no legislation by Congress upon the subject, took occasion to remark that “ neither under the commercial power, nor under the power to establish post roads,- can Congress construct a bridge over a navigable water;” that “if Congress can construct a bridge over a navigable water, under the power to regulate commerce or to establish post roads, on the same principle it may make turnpike or railroads throughout the entire country; ” and that
“
the latter power has generally been considered as exhausted in the designation of roads on which the mails are to be transported ; and the former by the' regulation of commerce upon the high seas and upon our rivers and lakes.”
United States
v.
Railroad Bridge Co.,
*531
The same learned justice repeated and enlarged upon that idea in his dissenting opinion in
Pennsylvania
v.
Wheeling
Bridge,
But the majority of this court in that case held that
“
the act of Congress afforded full authority to the defendants to reconstruct the bridge.” .
In the cases, cited at the bar, of
The Passaic
Bridges, 3 Wall. appx. 782, decided by Mr. Justice Grier in the Circuit Court, and of
Gilman
v. Philadelphia,
But in Stockton v. Baltimore & New York Railroad, 32 Fed. Rep. 9, Mr. Justice Bradley, sitting in the Circuit Court, upheld the constitutionality of the act of Congress of June 16, 1886, c. 417, authorizing a corporation of New York and one of New Jersey to build .and maintain a bridge, as therein directed, across the Staten Island Sound or Arthur Kill. 24 Stat. 78.
The reasons upon which the decision in that case rested were, in substance, the same as were stated by that eminent judge in two opinions afterwards delivered by him in behalf of this court, in which the power of Congress, by its own legislation, to confer original authority to erect bridges over navigable waters, whenever Congress considers it necessary to do so to meet the demands of interstate commerce by land, is so clearly demonstrated, as to render further discussion of the subject superfluous.
In
Willamette Bridge
v.
Hatch,
In
California
v.
Pacific
Railroad,
The act of Congress now in question declares the construction of the North River Bridge between the States of New York and New Jersey to be “in order to facilitate interstate commerce; ” and it makes due provision for the condemnation of lands for the construction and maintenance of the bridge and its approaches, and for just compensation to the owners, which has been accordingly awarded to the plaintiff in error.
In the light of the foregoing principles and authorities, the objection made to the constitutionality of this act cannot be sustained.
Judgment affirmed.
