158 Iowa 42 | Iowa | 1912
The case was tried below upon an agreed statement of facts. The issues were so framed and the facts so stated as to enable the plaintiff to challenge the constitutionality of the anti-pass law, being chapter 112 of the Laws 32d General Assembly. This chapter now appears in the Code Supplement as sections 2157-f, 2157-g, 2157-h, 2157-i, and 2157-j.
For convenience of reference, we quote section 1 and a portion of section 2 thereof, as follows:
*45 Section 1. No common carrier of passengers shall, directly or indirectly, issue, furnish or give any free ticket, free pass or free transportation for the carriage or passage of any person within this state except as permitted in the second section hereof. Nor shall any common carrier, in the sale of tickets for transportation at reduced rates, discriminate between persons purchasing the same, except the persons described in said sections. Nor shall any person accept or use any free ticket, free pass or free transportation except the persons described in said section. The words ‘free ticket,’ ‘free pass,’ ‘free transportation’ as used in this act shall include any ticket, pass, contract, permit or transportation issued, furnished or given to any person, by any common carrier of passengers, for carriage or passage for any other consideration than money, paid in the usual way at the rate, fare or charge open to all who desire to purchase.
Sec. 2. The persons to whom free tickets, free passes, free transportation and discriminating reduced rates may be issued, furnished, or given are the following, to-wit: (a) the officers, agents, employees, attorneys, physicians, and surgeons, of such common carriers of passengers whose chief and principal occupation is to render service to common carriers of passengers.
This law went into effect on July 4, 1907. It is agreed that on July 9, 1907, the plaintiff received from the Illinois Central Railroad Company an annual pass good on all lines of the railroad within and without the state of Iowa. This pass was issued in pursuance of a contract entered into on the same date whereby the plaintiff as an attorney at law, residing at Storm Lake, Iowa, agreed to act as “local attorney” for such company, and to perform certain usual services for the railroad company pertaining to litigation then existing, or which might thereafter arise, in Buena Yista county. Such contemplated services were occasional and casual rather than usual or general, and might be much or little according to the contingencies of the future. The annual pass in question was to be received in full compensation for such prospective services. It is agreed, also, that the agreement for the services of plaintiff did not contemplate that he should become an attorney for the railroad company within the meaning of sec
In his petition for the writ, the plaintiff challenged the validity of the act referred to 'as being violative of the Constitution of the United States in the following respects:. (1) The said act deprives the defendant of the right to make a contract in a lawful way, and for a lawful purpose. (2) It is class legislation, and not equal or uniform in its provisions. (3) It deprives the defendant of the equal protection of the laws. (4) It abridges the privileges and immunities of the defendant as a citizen of the United States. (5) It deprives the defendant of his property and liberty without due process of the law. (6) It is repugnant to and inconsistent with section 1 of the act of Congress to regulate commerce approved February 4, 1887, as amended by the act approved June 29, 1906. (7) It is repugnant to and inconsistent with section 22 of the act of Congress to regulate commerce, approved February 4,1887, as amended March 2, 1889, and February 8, 1895, and as amended June 29, 1906. (8) It is repugnant to the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States. (9) It is repugnant to the fifth amendment to the Constitution of the United States. (10) It is repugnant to section 2. art. 4, of the Constitution of the United States, (il) It is repugnant to section 8 of article 1, which provides that Congress shall have power “to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states and with Indian tribes. ’ ’
He also challenged the same as violative of the Constitution of Iowa in the following respects: (1) It deprives the defendant of the right to make a lawful contract in a lawful way for a lawful purpose. (2) It is class legislation, and not equal or uniform in its provisions. (3) It deprives the defend
The plaintiff has filed here a brief presenting scores of points and hundreds of authorities. We shall not be able to consider them all in detail within the limits at our command. The brief, however, presents a succinct résumé of the substance of the-points especially emphasized, and we avail ourselves of it as presenting his general line of argument as follows:
Part 1. There is a vital difference between a ‘free pass’ and one obtained for valuable consideration other than money. While the Iowa act directs the Iowa Legislature to ignore the distinction, it prohibits nothing but ‘free’ transportation; and Schulz has no such transportation. And by reason of this distinction the title of the act is fatally defective, because it advised that it is a prohibition of free passes, without indicating that the term is made to include such as are not free.
Part 2. A statute which, in effect, declares it to be a crime for a railroad carrier to pay wages except in money, or its employee to accept wages unless paid in money, which compels self-incrimination and puts the burden on the accused to prove himself innocent, and which mates criminality depend upon whether the pass holder has it for his main and chief occupation to give services to some common carrier or carriers of passengers, and which permits passes to some who are and some who are not employees of such corporations, though they do not meet shell occupation test, is void for being in conflict with both the federal and state Constitutions, and with elementary natural justice, because (a) it denies*48 due process of law and the equal protection of the laws; (b) it does this by arbitrarily interfering with the right to make contracts; (c) by enacting arbitrary and oppressive class legislation; (d) by compelling the accused to incriminate himself, and especially by putting on him the burden of proving himself innocent, it takes from him elementary rights inherent in the social compact, in natural justice, trial in accord with common law, and rights that existed before the United States adopted a Constitution; (e) punishing one for disobeying a definition forced by the Legislature upon the courts is not due process because, in effect, it tries the accused before the Legislature without any of the sanctioned forms of procedure and without notice and hearing.
Part 3. At all events, this statute is an invasion of the province of Congress to regulate interstate commerce, because, Congress having declared what passes such common carriers may issue, the state may neither conflict with nor complement that declaration.
Part 4. The unconstitutional parts so manifestly induced the passage of the act that it is void in toto.
If acts of the Legislature are to be overturned or ignored by the judiciary as unconstitutional, it should be for substance of reason, and not for nicety of distinction in the use of terms.
But the appellant argues that by the last sentence of seotion 1 of the act a pass furnished for any other consideration than money was defined to be a “free pass,” and that the title of the act gave no notice of such definition.
The real question at this point is whether the Legislature has adequate power in a constitutional sense to deal with the pass evil. That it was an evil of great magnitude none will deny. It permeated the departments of government. It threatened the purity of legislation and the integrity of administration. It was growing with acceleration. Even those who had nurtured it, and those who fed upon it, were suing, helpless, for release. Such being the evil universally recognized, was the Legislature constitutionally helpless to deal with it? We cannot think so. We think the Legislature had power under the Constitution to enact adequate legislation for the general public welfare on this subject. The liberties abridged and the classifications adopted and now complained of were purely incidental to such exercise of power. The exercise of the power was clearly reasonable, and the abridgment of private rights was manifestly unavoidable, and no ground of complaint is available to the appellant at this point. This question, including the question of classification, is fully discussed in our previous cases above cited; the latest cases being Hubbell v. Higgins, supra, and State v. Fairmont Creamery Co., supra. No useful purpose can be served by repeating the discussion contained in such previous eases,
6. Same : appeal reviewable questions. IV. The appellant complains of section 3 of the act which is as follows: “No person within the purview of this act shall be privileged from testifying in relation to anything herein prohibited, but no person having testilled shall be liable to any prosecution or . . , „ „ . , .' . punishment tor any offense concerning which he was required to give his testimony.” The complaint is made on the ground that it compels a defendant to become, a witness against himself. Further complaint is made of a portion of the act, in that it lays a certain burden of proof upon the defendant. These points are argued extensively. They are not fairly involved in this case. We will not go beyond the facts of the case in search of constitutional questions. This casé was tried upon an agreed statement of facts. No question of burden of proof appears. Nor did appellant, testify in the ease.
7 Same : conflictof statutes. It is also argued that the act in question was an interference with an act of Congress upon the same subject. The act of Congress known as the Hepburn Act (Act June 29, 1906, case 3591, (34 Stat. 584, U. S. Comp, gt. Supp. 1911, p. 1284) forbids common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to issue directly or indirectly any interstate free pass, except to its attorneys, etc. The act of Congress only purports to apply to interstate transportation. Our legislative act does not in terms purport to deal with interstate transportation. The information under ’ which the appellant is prosecuted charged him with using his pass only between points within the state of Iowa. It appears from the agreed statement of facts that he did so use it. It is true that it also appears from such agreed state-' ment that the appellant used his pass between a point in the state of Iowa, and the city of Chicago, but such fact adds nothing to the case. No charge of violation of the law is based
The foregoing points considered comprise the principal
If it were legally necessary to sustain its contentions, little, if any, legislation could ever clear the hurdles thus set up.
The petition for the writ was properly dismissed, and the judgment-below is accordingly Affirmed.