77 Minn. 483 | Minn. | 1899
Habeas corpus proceedings originally instituted in Eamsey county, and coming here on appeal; the purpose being to test the constitutionality of Laws 1899, c. 225. The court below sustained the act, and remanded the prisoner, Bedpath. The same questions were raised in another proceeding (State v. Megaarden), and the cases have been argued as one by eminent counsel, who have ably and exhaustively presented their views, — orally as well as upon briefs.
The title of the act assailed as unconstitutional for a number of reasons is as follows:
“An act to license and regulate and define business of commission*492 merchants or persons selling agricultural products and farm produce on commission, and to require them to give a bond to the state of Minnesota for the benefit of their consignors, and prescribing a penalty for the violation of any of the provisions of this act”
It consists of eight sections, the first declaring it shall be unlawful from and after June 1, 1899, for any person, firm, or corporation to engage in the business of selling agricultural products and farm produce on commission in this state without first obtaining a license from the state railroad and warehouse commission. A bond with sufficient surety is required for the benefit of consignors, the amount of the penalty to be fixed by the commission; and, if the principal therein is to receive grain for sale, the condition of this bond is that he will faithfully account and report to all persons intrusting him with grain, and will pay over to them all proper proceeds. If grain is not received for sale on commission, the bond is to be conditioned for the faithful performance of the commission merchant’s duty. By the second section the -merchant who sells grain is required to render a certain statement to his consignor within 24 hours after a sale of all or a portion of such grain. The third section relates to products and produce other than grain. If a consignor shall not receive report of a sale or a remittance therefor after demand, or if, after a report is made, he is dissatisfied with it or the sale, he may complain to the railroad and warehouse commission, whose duty it is to investigate the case, and after such investigation to make a written report to the complainant; and this report is made prima facie evidence of the- matters therein contained. In making this investigation power is conferred upon the commission,, in express terms, to compel the merchant “to produce his record or memoranda of such sale, and give them all information .in his possession' regarding the report and sale so complained of.”
Section 4 provides for the machinery of the act. A commission merchant desiring to procure a license must make application in writing to the railroad and warehouse commission, the application to contain certain information in respect to the nature of the business to be done by the applicant, his proposed place of busi
It is urged by counsel for the relator that this act is unconstitutional on several grounds. It is argued that under its provisions the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States are abridged; that persons may be deprived of their liberty and property without due process of law; that it denies to certain persons within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the law; that it deprives certain people of the right to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures; that it compels certain persons in criminal cases to be witnesses against themselves; that it interferes with and attempts to regulate commerce between the state of Minnesota and other states; and, further, that it exceeds the power conferred by the state constitution, in that it attempts to delegate legislative powers, vested solely and exclusively in the legislative body.
2. Obviously, the act was not intended as a measure for the accumulation of a public revenue, and, if sustained at all, it must be upon the ground that it is a lawful regulation for the public good, —a legitimate exercise of the police power of the state.
The design seems to have been to protect a large class of people, engaged in agricultural pursuits, and more or less remote from market, from imposition and actual fraud when intrusting their products and produce into the hands of commission men for sale. And it is no argument against the statute to say that commission men are engaged in a legitimate business, and for that reason are not subject to police regulation, if the public good demands it. The operation of railways, the conducting of banks, the loaning of money at interest, the insurance business, the operation of custom gristmills, or grain elevators and warehouses, peddling from house to house, and the keeping of bakeries, butcher shops, hotels, restaurants, and saloons, are each legitimate and lawful occupations in this jurisdiction; but all may be subject to police regulation, and most of them are. But, of course, the right of the state to exercise police power over its citizens and their occupations is not unlimited.
The term “police power,” as understood in American constitutional law, means simply the power to impose such restrictions upon private rights as are practically necessary for the general welfare of all. Rippe v. Becker, 56 Minn. 100, 57 N. W. 331. And it must be confined to such restrictions and burdens as are thus necessary to promote the public welfare, or, in other words, to prevent the infliction of public injury. State v. Chicago, M. & St.
The inquiry, then, is as to how and to what extent the business in question had become affected with public interests. What evils or supposed evils did the members of the legislature have in mind, and were attempting to remedy, when enacting this law?
The fact is that the public generally- looked with distrust upon the methods of merchants engaged in selling agricultural products and farm produce upon commission, perhaps without good reason. It had become a matter of common talk among the people that those who handled wheat imposed upon their consignors by reporting sales and accounting for the proceeds at the lowest prices at which that article had been sold within the period of time during which the sale could have been made, and without regard to the prices actually obtained. With prices fluctuating at all times, as is the fact in the wheat market, and rarely remaining station
Without wishing to intimate that fraud of this nature had actually become so prevalent as to justify the accusation made, we do say that a majority of the people in this state had become convinced of the truth of these charges,, and in great numbers besieged the legislature in behalf of the suppression of the alleged evil practices. This was a matter of common knowledge. It was publicly believed that the business of selling agricultural products and farm produce on commission had become saturated with false and fraudulent methods, to the great injury of a large class of our citizens, who were compelled to deal with commission men, and who were powerless to detect or prevent the wrong, and that the business had thus become sufficiently affected with public interests to be the proper subject of police regulation. We are of opinion that the legislature did not exceed its powers when, under the circumstances, it enacted a measure having relation to, and a tendency to accomplish, the desired end, such as is the law now before us.
This enactment was designed to prevent false and fraudulent practices of the character complained of, to correct the evils generally believed to prevail, and to compel the merchant to whom property was consigned for sale on commission to deal honestly and to be faithful to his trust. Such a law is not unusual. It only requires a consignee to render an account of his management of a consignor’s property. “He holds himself out as a factor for the
3. But it is strenuously argued that this statute is void because it is discriminating or class legislation. In State v. Cooley, 56 Minn. 540, 550, 58 N. W. 153, it was said that class legislation is
“Legislation which selects particular individuals from a class, and imposes upon them special burdens, from which others of the same class are exempt, and thus denies them the equal protection of the laws.”
But the class here created consists of those who engage in the business of receiving agricultural products and farm produce for sale, or receive or solicit the same for sale; in short, those who are engaged in the business of selling the same. The class is as broad as it need be. The peculiar characteristics of the agricultural products and farm produce already referred to, and the liability to peculiar abuses resulting from a sale thereof on commission, are such as to suggest the practical necessity for distinctive legislation on the subject, — different from what would be expedient or necessary in the case of other property sold on commission, — and to justify the legislature, in its discretion, in putting those who sell such articles on commission in a class by themselves. It was the evils which were thought incident to the sale of agricultural products and farm produce which evoked the law. Here was a class' of merchants who for certain reasons, hereinbefore specified, had peculiar opportunities to defraud, not common to other merchants, although they might sell on commission, and it was this class that the legislature proposed to put under restraint.
Nothing is proven by arguing that there are other lines of business conducted in quite as objectionable a manner; for, if the argument had merit, it would follow that all kinds of business which.
One point made against this statute is that it distinguishes and discriminates as between the persons it seeks to operate upon, in that it arbitrarily requires those who sell grain to give bonds containing certain stated conditions, and to render certain statements and reports at once, while- other persons brought within its influence must give bonds with wholly different conditions, and are not compelled to make these statements or reports. But there is an apparent and just reason for this distinction, as there is for distinguishing between the commission merchants mentioned in the law and other commission merchants; and it arises out of the peculiar conditions which surround the selling of grain, and to Ivhich we have before alluded.
The law was framed to meet the crying evils which it was believed had grown up in connection with this branch of business. The treatment of consignors was frequently most exasperating and injurious to them. Sometimes reports were never made of sales, and on other occasions were purposely delayed so that it would be difficult, if not impossible, for the consignor to ascertain the real facts of a given sale. Prices of grain fluctuated, not only from day to day, but from hour to hour. It might make a great difference to the consignor whether his grain was sold in the morning or near the close of the day. And for these reasons the law has therefore
Counsel for relator assume that the statute is objectionable because the farmer who consigns cattle, wool, or hides is not protected at all, while his neighbor who ships wheat or potatoes is. Admitting that cattle, wool and hides are not agricultural products or farm produce, and therefore not covered by the law, we have no hesitation in saying that the conditions which surround the consignment and sale upon commission of those articles are radically different from those pertaining to the consignment and sale of grain or other property strictly within the act, and this difference justified the distinction, if one there be. The market price of cattle, wool, or hides does not fluctuate from hour to hour, as does that of wheat, nor are they as perishable in their nature as the ordinary products of the farm, and therefore the opportunity for imposition is not so great. There is good ground in many ways for the distinction, if it has been made by the law. This statute treats all persons subject to it alike under similar circumstances and conditions in respect both of the privileges conferred and the liabilities imposed.
The discriminations which are open to objection are those where persons engaged in the same business are subjected to different restrictions, or are held entitled to different privileges under the same conditions. It is only then that the discrimination can be said to
Finally,, upon this point, it may be said that the requirement as to a bond does not affect the validity of the statute. Brass v. North Dakota, 153 U. S. 391, 14 Sup. Ct. 857, — an instructive case upon the subject herein involved; also Hawthorn v. People, supra.
4. It is objected that the statute is an unlawful and forbidden interference with interstate commerce.
It is well settled that a law cannot be deemed a regulation of commerce among the states merely because it may incidentally or indirectly affect it. Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Haber, 169 U. S. 613, 18 Sup. Ct. 488. At most, this statute regulates the business of certain classes of commission men within this state, and is nothing but an ordinary police regulation, enacted in good faith, and intended to promote the general welfare and prosperity of the people within our borders. As was said in Hennington v. Georgia, 163 U. S. 299, at page 318:
“Such a law, although in a limited degree affecting interstate commerce, is not for that reason a needless intrusion upon the domain of Federal jurisdiction, nor strictly a regulation of interstate commerce, but, considered in its own nature, is an ordinary police regulation designed to secure the well-being and to promote the general welfare of the people within the State by which it was established, and, therefore, not invalid by force alone of the Constitution of the United States.” See also Plumley v. Massachusetts, 155 U. S. 461, 15 Sup. Ct. 154; Gladson v. Minn., 166 U. S. 427, 17 Sup. Ct. 627.
And it may further be observed that the statute does not in terms apply to interstate business, and it will not be implied that the legislature intended to go beyond its lawful powers in enacting it. If, therefore, it be held that the legislature could not forbid one to engage in the business of a commission merchant, as to interstate shipments, without compliance with the provisions of the state statute, such statute should be construed to apply only to a local
5. It is further contended that in this statute there is a delegation of legislative authority, in open defiance of the provisions of our state constitution. This is predicated upon the provision that the railroad and warehouse commission may fix the amount of the bond arbitrarily, and upon the assertion that it may capriciously accept a straw bond in one case, and refuse the best possible bond in another.
It is true that the amount of the bond and the sufficiency of the surety are to be determined by the commission, but the presumption is that this will be done in a proper and just manner, not as counsel would seem to contend. Fixing the amount of such a bond, and the requirements as to sureties, are purely administrative duties. It is necessary to lodge discretion somewhere, as manifestly it would be impracticable for the statute to prescribe the amount of bond for each of the numberless cases which arise. The possibility that the commissioners may not always act justly is no objection to the statute. Cooley, Const. Lim. 197. Laws containing provisions of this nature are very common in this state, as well as in other jurisdictions, and need not be specified, nor need attention be directed to decisions elsewhere upholding them; for the subject involved is discussed and disposed of in State v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 38 Minn. 281, 37 N. W. 782.
6. It is also argued that section 3 is unconstitutional upon the ground that it violates the rights of the people of this state to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, and also that it violates the provision that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself. We express no opinion upon the question, for it is not in the case. Conceding that the objectionable portions of section 3 are in direct opposition to the constitutional rights referred to, the law may stand, without these portions, as a full, complete, and enforceable statute. To the complaint on which the prisoner was arrested it is no defense to say that portions of section 3 are unconstitutional.
The court below ruled correctly in the proceedings, and, as pro
The following opinion was filed November 10, 1899:
Counsel for relator in a petition for reargument urge two points to which brief reference should be made. The first is that, for the purpose of sustaining the classification as made in the law, the court announced that certain conduct on the part of persons who handled wheat on commission had become a matter of common talk among the people of the state, and this announcement, counsel insist, is wholly without foundation, and absolutely erroneous. Whether we were right or wrong in this is of no moment. The basis of the opinion, as is obvious from a reading, is that this particular business of selling agricultural products and farm produce is affected with a public interest, and is liable to abuse, and for these reasons is subject to police regulation by legislative act. Nothing more is necessary on -this point.
The second point relates to the alleged arbitrary action of the railroad and warehouse commission when prescribing what is required of those who apply for licenses', copies of a circular letter issued by the commission and of the bond demanded being attached to the petition. It is enough to say on this point that this action cannot affect the validity of the law; and, further, that, if arbitrary and oppressive, there is an adequate and complete remedy in the hands of those who have cause for complaint.
Petition denied.
BUCK, J., absent, took no part.