THE UNITED STATES ex rel. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES v. DELAWARE AND HUDSON COMPANY.
Nos. 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Argued January 19, 20, 1909. Decided May 3, 1909.
213 U. S. 366
ERROR TO THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA. APPEALS FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA.
THE UNITED STATES ex rel. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES v. DELAWARE AND HUDSON COMPANY.
SAME v. ERIE RAILROAD COMPANY.
SAME v. CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY.
SAME v. DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA AND WESTERN RAILROAD COMPANY.
SAME v. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY.
SAME v. LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD COMPANY.
ERROR TO THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA.
THE UNITED STATES, APPELLANT, v. DELAWARE AND HUDSON COMPANY.
SAME v. ERIE RAILROAD COMPANY.
SAME v. CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY.
SAME v. DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA AND WESTERN RAILROAD COMPANY.
SAME v. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY.
SAME v. LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD COMPANY.
APPEALS FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Nos. 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570. Argued January 19, 20, 1909.—Decided May 3, 1909.
Although a limitation to its operation might be reasonable and thus assuage the radical results of a prohibitory statute, if it is not expressed in the statute, to engraft such a limitation would be pure
The duty of this court in construing a statute which is reasonably susceptible of two constructions, one of which would render it unconstitutional and the other valid, to adopt that construction which saves its constitutionality (Knights Templar Indemnity Co. v. Jarman, 187 U. S. 197) includes the duty of avoiding a construction which raises grave and doubtful constitutional questions if the statute can be reasonably construed so as to avoid such questions. Harriman v. Interstate Com. Comm., 211 U. S. 407.
This rule applied to the commodities clause of the Hepburn Act so as to avoid deciding the constitutional questions which would arise if the clause were construed so as to prohibit the carrying of commodities owned by corporations of which the carrier is a shareholder, or which it had mined, manufactured or produced at some time prior to the transportation.1
A prohibition in an act of Congress will not be extended to include a subject where the extension raises grave constitutional questions as to the power of Congress, where one branch of that body rejected an amendment specifically including such subject within the prohibition.
In the construction of a statute the power of the lawmaking body to enact it, and not the consequences resulting from the enactment is the criterion of constitutionality.
The provision contained in the Hepburn Act approved June 29, 1906,
The provision of the commodities clause relating to interest, direct or indirect, does not embrace an interest which a carrier may have in a producing corporation as the result of the ownership by the carrier of stock in such corporation provided the corporation has been organized in good faith.
Rejecting the construction placed by the Government upon the commodities clause, it is decided that that clause, when all its provisions are harmoniously construed, has solely for its object to prevent carriers engaged in interstate commerce from being associated in
a. When the commodity has been manufactured, mined or produced by a railway company or under its authority and at the time of transportation the railway company has not in good faith before the act of transportation parted with its interest in such commodity;
b. When the railway company owns the commodity to be transported in whole or in part;
c. When the railway company at the time of transportation has an interest direct or indirect in a legal sense in the commodity, which last prohibition, does not apply to commodities manufactured, mined, produced, owned, etc., by a corporation because a railway company is a stockholder in such corporation. Such ownership of stock in a producing company by a railway company does not cause it as owner of the stock to have a legal interest in the commodity manufactured, etc., by the producing corporation.
As thus construed the commodities clause is a regulation of commerce inherently within the power of Congress to enact. New Haven Railroad v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 200 U. S. 361. The contention that the clause if applied to preexisting rights will operate to take property of railroad companies and therefore violate the due process provision of the Fifth Amendment, having been based upon the assumption that the clause prohibited and restricted in accordance with the construction which the Government gave that clause is not tenable as to the act as now construed which merely enforces a regulation of commerce by which carriers are compelled to dissociate themselves from the products which they carry and does not prohibit where the carrier is not associated with the commodity carried.
The constitutional power of Congress to make regulations for interstate commerce is not limited by any requirement that the regulations should apply to all commodities alike, nor does an exception of one commodity from a general regulation of interstate commerce necessarily render a statute unconstitutional as discriminating between carriers; and the exception of timber in the commodities clause of the Hepburn Act does not render the act unconstitutional, nor can the question of the expediency of such an exception affect the question of power.
Where, as in this instance, the provision for penalties is separable from the provisions for regulations, the court will not consider the question of the constitutionality of the penalty provisions in a suit brought
As the construction now given the act differs widely from the construction which the Government gave to the act and which it was the purpose of these suits to enforce, it is not necessary in reversing and remanding, to direct the character of decrees, which shall be entered, but simply to reverse and remand the case with directions to enforce and apply the statute as it is now construed.
Although the Delaware and Hudson Company may originally, have been chartered principally for mining purposes, as it is now engaged as a common carrier by rail in the transportation of coal in the channels of interstate commerce, it is a railroad company within the purview of the commodities clause and is subject to the provisions of that clause as they are now construed.
164 Fed. Rep. 215, reversed.
THE facts which involve the constitutionality and construction of the commodities clause of the Hepburn Act, § 1,
The Attorney General and The Solicitor General, with whom Mr L. Allison Wilmer and Mr. Thomas C. Spelling were on the brief, for the United States:
The question of the reasonableness of a statute is for the legislature, but the clause in question is a reasonable exercise of the power of Congress.
If a statute pertains to a subject exclusively committed to Congress, the statute is within the scope of constitutional power; this statute is within the scope of power conferred by the Con
Congressional non-action lends no color of authority or validity to state regulations of anything properly pertaining to interstate commerce. Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100, 109, 110-122; Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. United States, 175 U. S. 211, 229, 232; Crandall v. Nevada, 6 Wall. 35, 48, 49; Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat. 23; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364, 386. When the Federal power has been exercised, it is, by the express terms of the Constitution, the exercise of the supreme will, and the state regulation must, in so far as there is a conflict, give way. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 196, 199; McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 422; Asbell v. Kansas, 209 U. S. 251, 254; Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100, 109; Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat. 1, 23; Brown v. Maryland, 12 Pet. 446; Groves v. Slaughter, 15 Pet. 448, 510, 511; New York v. Miln, 11 Pet. 102, 157-159.
Not even a State, still less one of its artificial creations, can stand in the way of the enforcement of an act of Congress constitutionally passed under its authority to regulate commerce. Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U. S. 197, 333; McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 427, 429; 432, 435; Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, 385, 414.
Corporations created by the States are as much subordinate to the powers of Congress, in the regulation of interstate commerce, as if they had been created by acts of Congress. Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S. 43, 75.
If a State can by the creation of a corporation and by conferring upon the corporation certain powers forestall the operation of subsequent Federal laws before their enactment, the provision in the Constitution that laws made pursuant to its provisions shall be the supreme law of the land, may be at any time nullified. See Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364; Henderson v. Mayor of New York, 92 U. S. 259, 272; Railroad Co. v. Husen, 95 U. S. 471.
Congressional power over commerce among the States is analogous to the same power over foreign commerce. Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U. S. 57; Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 622, 630; Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 192.
The recognized powers as to foreign commerce, such as laying an embargo as to products of other nations in a time of peace, and the power to forbid and punish introductions of coins of foreign nations, illustrate Congressional power to forbid transportation of commodities from State to State, under circumstances requiring such prohibition in the national interest. United States v. Marigold, 9 How. 560, 566.
Interstate railroads are peculiarly subject to regulation, by reason of their performance of public functions and duties. They are vested with public rights to enable them to serve public interests as common carriers, and Congress has the power to divorce their public duties as such public servants from their private interest in carrying their own products. New Haven R. R. v. Interstate Com. Comm., 200 U. S. 361; Cherokee Nation v. South Kansas R. R. Co., 135 U. S. 657.
The question of the reasonableness or of the wisdom of the enactment is not for the courts but for the legislature. Silz v. Hesterberg, 211 U. S. 31, 40; State v. Hyman, 98 Maryland, 618, 619; City of Baltimore v. Radecke, 49 Maryland, 217, 229, 230.
Arguments ab inconvenienti are not to be considered unless the language of the act be ambiguous. Ex parte Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38, 44; Beardstown v. Virginia, 76 Illinois, 34; Greencastle v. Black, 5 Indiana, 557; Smith v. Thursby, 28 Maryland, 244; Henshaw v. Foster, 9 Pick. (Mass.) 312, 316; Gage v. Currier, 4 Pick. (Mass.) 399.
The courts are not at liberty to declare an act void because in their opinion it is opposed to a spirit supposed to pervade the Constitution but not expressed in its words. Cooley,
The presumption is in favor of validity, and only when the question is free from reasonable doubt will the Supreme Court hold an act of Congress to be in violation of the Constitution. Nicol v. Ames, 173 U. S. 509; Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 126.
For protection against unjust or unwise legislation, within the limits of recognized legislative power, the people must look to the polls and not to the courts. It would be an abuse of judicial power for the courts to attempt to interfere with the constitutional discretion of the legislature. Covington Bridge Case, 105 U. S. 470, 482; The Lottery Case, 188 U. S. 321; Joint Traffic Association Case, 171 U. S. 505, 573; Northern Securities Case, 193 U. S. 337; Beebe v. State, 6 Indiana, 501, 528; Johnston v. Commonwealth, 1 Bibb, 603; Flint River Steamboat Co. v. Foster, 5 Georgia, 194; State v. Kruttschnitt, 4 Nevada, 178; Walker v. Cincinnati, 21 Ohio St. 14; Hills v. Chicago, 60 Illinois, 86; Ballentine v. Mayor &c., 15 Lea, 633; State v. Traders’ Bank, 6 So. Rep. 582.
If power exists, it is to be assumed that legislative discretion has been properly exercised. Cooley, Const. Lim. (6th ed.,) 220; People v. Lawrence, 36 Barb. 177; People v. N. Y. Cent. R. Co., 34 Barb. 123; Baltimore v. State, 15 Maryland, 376; Goddin v. Crump, 8 Leigh, 154; Soon Hing v. Crowley, 113 U. S. 703.
The prevention of monopoly has long been a legitimate object of legislation. Pearsall v. Great Northern R. R. Co., 161 U. S. 646, 676; Northern Securities Case, 193 U. S. 341. Far stronger reasons, referable to a well-founded fear of monopoly, exist for prevention of a union of ordinary occupations, such as trading and producing, with transportation, by railroad corporations, than can be urged against consolidations such as were forbidden in the Northern Securities Case.
The term “commerce,” as used in the Constitution, embraces the instrumentalities by which commerce is carried on.
The highways of commerce are, in a sense, the public property of the Nation and subject to all the requisite legislation by Congress, which necessarily includes the power to keep them open and free from any obstruction, and Congress has, in this regard, all the powers that existed in the States before the adoption of the Constitution. Gilman v. Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713, 724; In re Debs, 158 U. S. 564, 586
These combinations between state corporations, one or more being industrial and the other a common carrier, would be amenable to a state law formulated in like terms as the Anti-Trust Act. People v. Chicago Gas Trust Co., 130 Illinois, 294; People v. North Riv. Sug. Ref. Co., 54 Hun (N. Y.), 377. And if such combinations interfere with the laws of free competition in interstate commerce, and cannot be effectively dealt with under the anti-trust act, Congress, can provide another and more effective remedy. Sturgis v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122; McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat, 315; United States v. Fisher, 2 Cranch, 358, 396; Juilliard v. Greenman, 110 U. S. 440, 441; In re Jackson, 14 Blatch. 250.
It cannot be said that that this statute is on its face a deprivation of life, liberty or property without due process of law, in the sense in which the phrase is ordinarily used. It is as proper an exercise of power under the commerce clause to forbid, conditionally, shipments of a certain class or description as to forbid discrimination: See Joint Traffic Association Case, 171 U. S. 571; Addyston Pipe Case, 175 U. S. 211. When the fundamental law has not limited, either in terms or by necessary implication, the general powers conferred upon the legislature, the court cannot declare a limitation under the notion of having discovered something in the spirit of the Constitution which is not even mentioned in the instrument. People v. Fisher, 24 Wend. 215, 220. To the same effect are State v. Staten, 6 Coldw. (Tenn.) 238; Walker v. Cincinnati, 21 Ohio St. 14; State v. Smith, 44 Ohio St. 348; People v. Rucker, 5 Colorado, 455; Whallon v. Ingham, 51 Michigan, 503; Wooten v. State, 5 So. Rep. 39; Cochran v. Van Surlay, 20 Wend. 365, 381, 383; People v. Gallagher, 4 Michigan, 244; Benson v. Mayor &c., 24 Barb. 248; Grant v. Courter, 24 Barb. 232.
The clause does not violate the provision that no person shall be deprived of property without due process of law. When it is claimed that a legislative act is inhibited by the due process clause, as applied to property, there must be an interest amounting to a vested right of property. If a right claimed is not of that character, then it is merely an inchoate right—a privilege. Rights are vested when the right to enjoyment, present or prospective, has become the property of
Retrospective Federal laws, unless ex post facto, are not within the due process clause or any other prohibition of the Constitution, however repugnant to the principles of sound legislation. Stephens v. Cherokee Nation, 174 U. S. 445; Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420; Satterlee v. Matthewson, 2 Pet. 380; Bonaparte v. Camden, Baldw. 205; Bennett v. Baggs, Baldw. 60; Albee v. May, 2 Paine, 74.
No valid argument can be based upon long acquiescence in the use made of their coal lands and their output by the railroads on the part of the United States; for no estoppel can be asserted against constitutional legislation. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Kentucky, 161 U. S. 677, 689; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364; Bridge Company v. United States, 105 U. S. 470.
Not only is the Government not barred by acquiescence in what the defendants have done, whether with or without state authority, but Congress could not have bartered away or estopped itself to exercise any of its constitutional powers. Monongahela Nav. Co. v. Coons, 6 W. & S. (Pa.) 101; Susquehanna Canal Co. v. Wright, 9 W. & S. (Pa.) 9; New York & Erie Railroad Co. v. Young, 33 Pa. St. 175; McKeen v. Delaware Canal Co., 49 Pa. St. 424; Freeland v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 66 Pa. St. 91; Bailey v. Phil., Wilm. & Balt. Railroad, 4 Harr. (Del.) 389; Rundle v. Del. & Raritan Canal Co., 14 How. 80.
The clause does not violate the provision that private prop-
The commodities clause is not open to the objection that the penalties imposed for violations thereof are of such magnitude and so unduly excessive and extortionate as to be substantially destructive of the property and franchises of the carriers affected thereby, nor does it, in respect to such carriers, constitute a denial of the equal protection of the law. Cooley, Const. Lim. 402; Coffey v. Harlan County, 204 U. S. 659, 665.
The clause does not give a preference to the ports of one State over those of another, contrary to
The clause does not deny full faith and credit to the public acts of a State contrary to
This clause did not confer any power or jurisdiction upon the States, but merely assured the recognition of their acknowledged jurisdiction over persons and things within the respective territory of each of them. Story, Const., § 1313; Bissell v. Briggs, 9 Massachusetts, 462, 467; Shunway v. Stillman, 4 Cowen, 292; Borden v. Fitch, 15 Johns. 121; Story, Confl. of Laws, § 609; McElmoyle v. Cohen, 13 Pet. 312; D‘Arcy v. Ketchum, 11 How. (U. S.) 165. The States of New York and Pennsylvania could no more diminish or increase or forestall Federal regulation of interstate commerce than they could bind the Nation by a treaty with a foreign government, or by a declaration of war against a friendly nation.
The clause does not deny persons any privileges or immunities of citizens of the States contrary to
A corporation acquires by its charter no extraterritorial powers, immunities, or privileges, even if it were clear that this constitutional provision was intended to apply to corporations. In fact this constitutional provision has been always held a
The clause does not invade the reserved rights of the people or of the States contrary to the
This objection is yet another form of saying that the people have never conferred upon Congress the power to enact the commodities clause, or that it is not on its face a constitutional exercise of the power to regulate interstate commerce: It is only where Congressional power is claimed upon an inherent sovereignty theory, or under the general welfare clause, that such an objection can be pertinent, as, for example, in a case like Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S. 46, where power was claimed for Congress to interpose in the distribution of the inland waters of a State for irrigation purposes
No right not under protection of the prohibitions or guarantees of the Federal Constitution can be set up against an authorized regulation of interstate commerce, even if such right be given in terms by a state law. If the court finds constitutional authority for the commodities clause then no state charter can furnish to the defendant any protection or defense in an action brought for its enforcement.
No relations assumed by individuals, nor rules governing such relations inter sese, whether made by the individuals themselves or by a State, can stand in the way, where an issue arises between them and the Government, to prevent the enforcement of a constitutional law. The right of a State to create a corporation and vest it with certain powers does not carry with it the right to project either the powers of the State or of the corporation across state lines, and thus invade the domain of interstate commerce, which it is the sole province of Congress
Each State has plenary local powers over its own territory and its own corporations. But a State, while exercising state sovereignty over a corporation of its creation, cannot prevent or embarrass the exercise by Congress of any power intrusted to it by the Constitution. Railroad Co. v. Maryland, 21 Wall. 456, 473; Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U. S. 197, 347. See also Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419; Passenger Cases, 7 How. 283; In re Debs, 158 U. S. 564; Lottery Case, 188 U. S. 321; Stockton v. Baltimore & N. Y. R. Co., 32 Fed. Rep. 11, 16.
The clause does not impair the obligation of contracts. Without going so far as to say that such obligations as are set forth in the answers are invalid, notwithstanding the authority and sanction of state laws, defendants will not be heard to set them up to defeat a Federal law, passed in the exercise of power constitutionally conferred. Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U. S. 197, 347; New Haven R. R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 200 U. S. 361; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364; United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Assn., 166 U. S. 290; United States v. Joint Traffic Assn., 171 U. S. 505, 569, 571.
All the defendant companies have an “interest” in the coal transported, within the meaning of the word “interest” as used in the statute. The interest of the companies, or any one of them, may not be a legal interest, but it is none the less real and substantial. Humphreys v. McKissock, 140 U. S. 304, 312; Burton v. United States, 202 U. S. 344.
The exception in the statute of “timber and the manufactured products thereof” from the prohibition contained in the statute, does not render the statute unconstitutional: Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184. U. S. 540; discussed, and distinguished from this phase of the case at bar.
The contention of the defendants that they have no interest, within the meaning of the clause in question, in the coal trans-
The purpose to be attributed to Congress in enacting the statute, as well as the language of the statute itself, precludes the view that a legal interest only was referred to. The purpose of the statute, which was to be gathered from the history of the times and the conditions that were to be remedied, was to prevent discrimination on the part of railroads engaged in interstate commerce against the shippers of the country in the interest of themselves or persons or corporations under their control or in which they were interested. The idea of Congress was to free interstate transportation from the dangers arising from self-interest on the part of the carriers. The temptation to indulge in secret rebating in the transportation of coal in interstate commerce, and in other favoritism, is as great where the carrier owns a majority of the stock of a coal mining company as where it is itself directly engaged in the mining of coal. In the one, case its interest in the coal is direct, in the other it is indirect, but in both cases its interest is substantially the same so far as the purpose which Congress may be presumed to have had in view is concerned. Burton v. United States, 202 U. S. 344.
A railroad company has an interest in a corporation or the property of a corporation whose stock it holds. It is true it is not such an interest as it can mortgage or assign (Humphreys v. McKissock, 140 U. S. 304, 312); it is not a legal interest, but it is none the less real and substantial. See Pullman Car Co. v. Missouri Pacific Co., 115 U. S. 587, 597; 4 Words and Phrases
As to the Delaware and Hudson‘s claim, it is argued on behalf of that company that the statute should be read as if the word “or” in the expression “any article or commodity other than timber and the manufactured products thereof, manufactured, mined, or produced by it or under its authority, or which it may own in whole or in part,” should be read as if it were “and,” so that it would not apply to the transportation by a railroad company of coal mined by it, but the title to which had passed from it. Otherwise, it is argued, it would be impossible for a railroad company to transport any coal mined by it, although title to it may have passed through several purchasers. This amounts merely to saying that the statute, as drawn, is impolitic, but the statute is to be given a reasonable construction to accomplish the purpose of Congress in its enactment. The interest that a railroad might have in transporting for the vendee, at less than the published tariff rate, coal mined by it and sold at the mines, is apparent. But ordinarily it would have no such interest in respect to the transportation of such coal for any subsequent purchaser from its vendee. The latter case would not be within the spirit and purpose of the act, although it might come within its letter.
Mr. John G. Johnson, Mr. Robert W. De Forest and Mr. Walker D. Hines for defendants in error and appellees. (Mr. Johnson and Mr. De Forest for defendants in error and appellees generally, Mr. Hines for the Delaware and Hudson Company.)
Mr. Johnson and Mr. De Forest:
The commodities clause is not applicable in the case of carriers who do not own or mine coal, but simply own shares of stock in coal companies. Under the statutes of Pennsylvania and under the decisions of that State, a railroad company does not have an interest in the coal because of its ownership of shares of stock of coal companies. See act of assembly of
The commodities clause is unconstitutional because its penalties are so prescribed as practically to amount to a denial of an opportunity by railroad companies to obtain a judicial determination of the questions involved. See Ex parte Young, 209 U. S. 123; Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 157 U. S. 429; Chicago Railway Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418, 456.
The commodities clause is unconstitutional because, making illegal discriminations, it is not due process of law. If the act is improperly discriminating in any vital part, it is invalid as to the whole. All the vital portions of an act constituting a whole, have mutual relation, and any failure in any one vital part destroys the entire enactment. Non-uniformity cannot be sustained because sought to be effected under the guise of a classification of that which cannot be classified. A statute of the United States, establishing a public policy, in the matter of uniformity must stand upon the same basis as a statute of a State. Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U. S. 560.
The commodities clause discriminates in three important particulars: between different owners of coal, without justification; between carriers of timber and its manufactured products; between different classes of common carriers.
The commodities clause is unconstitutional because it forbids a railroad company, obeying every rule of transportation prescribed by Congress, to transport an article of commerce which not only is harmless, but is one of the necessaries of life. The act is not a regulation but a prohibition. In discussing this proposition, there is no difference between the rights of
Whilst prohibition of the transportation of articles injurious to health or morals is included within the idea of a regulation of commerce, a prohibition of such transportation, where the articles are necessaries of life, is not within such idea. A requirement that transportation shall be conducted without favoritism, or discrimination, and not at excessive rates, is included within a regulation. Congress may forbid contracts in restraint of trade, because such contracts interfere with commerce and indirectly regulate the same. The Addyston Case, 175 U. S. 211, 226.
Where articles are forbidden to be transported because the owner is engaged in the carriage of like commodities for itself as well as for others, such forbidding goes beyond the province of regulation and introduces something not within the grant of a power to regulate, i. e., a condemnation of a duality of ownership and transportation which had resulted from legislation by the States, in a matter over which they had control. It practically takes away property, or at least destroys the value of property, vested in its owner by the law of the only country which can control it, i. e., the State in which it is located.
Commerce does not result from any grant in the Constitution, to Congress, of power to permit or disallow the same, nor from any permission, by Congress. It is an inherent right, possessed by every citizen. A prohibition, therefore, which does not regulate the right, but denies and destroys it, must rest upon a power different from that granted by a permission to regulate.
The right of property is one secured to every citizen of the United States, under and against the Government, by the Constitution of the United States. This right, which, as will be probably conceded, includes that of commerce, is taken away by the commodities clause. Countless hundreds of millions of dollars of property values are destroyed at a stroke of the Congressional pen, without evidence of the existence of any necessity for such destruction.
The interstate commerce which is forbidden by the commodities clause is (1) transportation of its own products by a railroad company; and (2) sales by the citizens of one State, of their property, to citizens of another State, under certain circumstances.
Conceding the right to regulate the transportation in such way and manner as to compel it to conform to all such reasonable rules as the legislature may prescribe, the right does not exist to prohibit it where such rules are complied with. Included in this denial, is a denial of the conclusion that duality of ownership and transportation, ex necessitate, amounts to violation of such rules of transportation.
Neither intercourse between the States, involving a carriage of persons or of property, nor transactions of sale and purchase, involving a delivery, can be forbidden, unless the person against whom the prohibition goes, violates some law enacted properly in exercise of the power to regulate. See Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U. S. 197, 199; Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 196; Adair v. United States, 208 U. S. 161; Dobbins v. Los Angeles, 195 U. S. 223, 236; Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U. S. 447; Ex parte Jackson, 96 U. S. 727; Chicago Ry. Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S. 418, 455. Case of Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364, discussed and distinguished. The case of New Haven Ry. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 200 U. S. 361, is not an authority in
Foreign commerce is the intercourse between two countries, which, often, may be hostile. In determining the extent of, and limitations upon, foreign commerce, we have recourse to the law of nations. We find that one nation, for the protection of its citizens and its property, may put an embargo upon trade and fetter the intercourse. Were it otherwise, the nation itself might be destroyed, because of its inability to protect itself against the danger of unlimited intercourse. When, therefore, Congress regulates foreign commerce, it regulates something which has inherent limitations. The nation‘s protection may be involved in the exercise of a power, under certain circumstances, to bar all communication. There is no need, and no right, to forbid the citizens of one State from transferring their possessions and their persons to another.
The theory of the Government is, that Congress may destroy the existence of several branches of commerce, and regulate what remains.
Domestic commerce is very different in its nature, scope and extent. It is the intercourse between the citizens of the different States in the transportation of persons and property from one to the other. This intercourse between citizens of the different States is an intercourse of persons, all of whom are citizens of a Union, which was largely created in order to bring about unlimited intercourse, saving only to such extent as it should be found necessary to regulate the same.
It is a fundamental right of every owner of property in one State, to sell it to citizens of another State, and to have the same, when thus sold, transported. This right cannot be forbidden by Congress. However the intercourse may be regulated; such regulation must proceed upon the concession of the inability to deprive, altogether, of the right.
If Congress may forbid commerce between the States in the sense of transactions in trade in harmless articles, it may forbid intercourse between persons. It may forbid the carrier to
transport its shareholders or its directors, because it may be tempted to give them greater privileges in their carriage. Buttfield v. Stranahan, 192 U. S. 492; Lawton v. Steele, 152 U. S. 133; Railroad Co. v. Richmond, 19 Wall. 584.
The commodities clause is unconstitutional because it was intended to violate, and does actually violate, a right reserved to the States.
Any Federal statute which has for its purpose the destruction of title to property or of the enjoyment of property, title to which is vested by the law of the State in a third person, trenches upon the reserved right under the
The commodities clause is unconstitutional because, in violation of constitutional restrictions upon the exercise of the right to regulate commerce, it deprives of liberty and property.
The power possessed by Congress to regulate commerce must be so exercised as not to destroy the right to dispose of property, or to make legal contracts concerning the use, or transportation, thereof.
To forbid a coal company to sell its coal to the citizens of another State, or to cause the same to be transported into such State, is to deprive it of its “liberty,” because of the deprivation of the power to use its property, in accordance with its legal right. McCray v. United States, 195 U. S. 27; Carroll v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 199 U. S. 401; Butchers’ Union Co. v. Crescent City Co., 111 U. S. 746; Powell v. Pennsylvania, 127 U. S. 678; Monongahela Nav. Co. v. United States, 148 U. S. 336; Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U. S. 578.
The commodities clause is unconstitutional because it is in effect a taking of private property for public use without compensation.
An ownership of coal shares, involves the right to receive whatever benefit may result from the exercise of powers conferred by the law of the State which incorporated. Practically, to destroy the exercise of its franchises by the company, is to take its property as completely as though it was physically
Mr. William S. Opdyke, Mr. James M. Beck and Mr. Walker D. Hines filed a separate brief on behalf of the Delaware and Hudson Company. The first point of their brief relates only to the case of the Delaware and Hudson Company.
The Delaware and Hudson Company being organized primarily to produce and handle anthracite coal, and possessing its railroad powers merely as an incident to such primary purpose, is not embraced in the prohibition of the commodity clause. The Delaware and Hudson Company is a corporation whose railroad powers were granted as an incident to its industrial powers. It is a corporation organized to acquire land and mine therefrom anthracite coal and supply the same to consumers, and its railroad powers are incidental to that particular purpose. Clearly the term “railroad company” as used in the commodity clause does not apply to every corporation which operates a railroad. There are numerous industries throughout the country which operate, as incidental to their business, more or less railroad mileage. As to such mileage these corporations may be charged with the duties of a common carrier; and as business may be handled on through bills of lading such corporations would be with respect to such matters, carriers subject to the act to regulate commerce. Yet such corporations could not, in any just sense, be regarded as railroad companies within the meaning of the commodity clause. In this class the Delaware and Hudson Company is included. The legislative history of this company shows that it is a coal company with incidental railroad functions. Unless, therefore, the expression “railroad company” in the commodity clause is to be taken as meaning every corporation of an industrial character which merely as an incident to its industrial functions operates a railroad, then the clause should not apply to this appellee. It is perfectly legitimate for an industrial corporation to promote the efficiency and economy
Another grave reason for not construing the clause to apply to this appellee is that such construction unnecessarily overturns a deliberate and long-settled policy jointly entered upon with respect to this appellee by the States of Pennsylvania and New York. The legislation of those two States with respect to this appellee shows a clear purpose to provide for the acquisition and mining of coal in Pennsylvania by a corporation formed for that purpose, and to provide further for the transportation of that coal to the State of New York by the same corporation. The commodity clause, if construed to apply to this company, does not merely impair, and to a large extent destroy, the rights of the individuals who have invested as bondholders and stockholders in the Delaware and Hudson, and the rights of individuals who may have contracted with that company, but the clause utterly nullifies the policy of the States of Pennsylvania and New York with reference to this corporation. An act of Congress ought not unnecessarily to be so construed as to nullify such a policy deliberately adopted and carried out by two States of the Union. The original legislation is now irrepealable by either of the two States.
To apply the commodity clause in this unnecessary manner to the Delaware and Hudson is to work a destruction of property rights of great magnitude, which have existed for nearly a century. To exclude appellee‘s coal from the only practical channel of interstate transportation is confiscatory, because largely destroying the value of appellee‘s coal and coal lands. To exclude the interstate coal traffic from appellee‘s railways
Mr. George F. Brownell and Mr. Adelbert Moot filed a separate brief on behalf of the Erie Railroad Company:
It is undisputed that the first predecessor of the Erie Railroad Company was organized in 1832, and that it is a stockholder in the Pennsylvania Coal Company which was authorized by a statute of Pennsylvania, in 1838, to transact the usual business of companies engaged in mining, transporting to market and selling coal, with power to purchase or lease coal lands, and to construct railroads, and that said coal company did acquire coal lands, develop mines, and enter into authorized contract relations with defendant‘s predecessors for the construction of railroads and the transportation of its coal to market.
The Hillside Coal & Iron Company was organized under a statute of Pennsylvania in 1869, with similar powers; and into this corporation many other coal corporations were afterwards merged, under the laws of Pennsylvania.
“Solely” to furnish an outlet, by authority of Pennsylvania and New York, this defendant‘s predecessors and said coal corporations, built railroads and mine branches in connection with said coal companies, to transport their coal to interstate markets; the railroads so built being duly authorized, and aggregating, in lines, branches, yards and sidings very expensive to build in the mountainous country in which they were built, about 190 miles.
These railroads will be “substantially valueless” if the defendant can no longer haul their tonnage to the usual interstate markets over its tracks, and the mines of these companies will be deprived of their only outlet to these markets, such
These railroad lines, branches, sidings, and yards, built “solely” for the accommodation of this coal business, have little business except such coal business, and that coal business is of such magnitude that it constitutes over 22% of the entire freight tonnage of all the railway lines of the Erie Railroad Company, and brings it over 20% of its revenue for transportation, and to deprive the defendant of such coal tonnage would greatly impair, and in many cases wholly destroy, both mines and railways.
The bondholders of this defendant and its predecessors hold bonds aggregating upwards of $136,000,000 that rest upon these properties, which will be greatly impaired or destroyed if the authorized contract and stockholding relations of railroads and mining corporations above described are destroyed, as they will be if the commodities clause is upheld, and it is held to also apply to this defendant as a mere stockholder.
This defendant is a minority stockholder in the Temple Iron Company; some of the coal of which also reaches interstate markets over defendant‘s lines, but defendant has nothing to do with mining coal, or dealing in it, and is in no way interested in coal mining except as “a stockholder” in the three coal mining corporations named.
Anthracite coal is harmless and necessary fuel, and the investigation of the Anthracite Strike Commission shows there is nothing unnatural about the present status of the business, in view of the natural difficulties encountered, the capital necessary to develop and carry it on, and the authority necessarily given capital by the State of Pennsylvania, to cause the formation of corporations to develop the expensive coal mines, and, therefore, the present status of the business furnishes no reason whatever for such legislation as the commodities clause.
The present status of timber lands and lumbering, as compared with coal properties and mining, furnishes no reason to
The history of the commodities clause shows that it was enacted to prohibit mining according to the laws of that State, by corporations of Pennsylvania, by making it impossible for mining corporations of that State to sell in that State the coal mined, since the clause, if broadly construed, as the Government claims it should be, prohibits common carriers from carrying such coal to interstate markets upon any terms and conditions whatever, even for the lawful purchasers and consumers thereof.
The commodities clause not only vitally affects this defendant, and other railroad companies, if it is sustained as to stockholders, but it is vital to the interests of millions of citizens who are consumers of all necessary commodities, and also the stockholders and bondholders of all great industrial corporations, since they can no longer buy or sell the very necessaries of life without the consent of Congress.
That clause is unconstitutional because it is contrary to the fundamental and “unalienable” rights of citizens reserved to them by the Federal Constitution, by which they have the right to buy food, fuel, or other harmless necessaries of life, in any State they please, from anyone they choose, so long as their purchases are lawful in that State, although it is conceded the Federal Government can regulate, but not prohibit, the carriage of such necessaries to interstate markets.
Timber is a fuel, and Congress could not make a partial and unjust law discriminating between purchasers of timber fuel and purchasers of coal, or between stockholders and bondholders in common carriers owning timber lands and those owning coal lands, without violating the “due process of law” part of the
The only possible effect of the commodities clause upon coal is upon the mining or production thereof, if that clause is literally obeyed, hence it does not regulate interstate commerce,
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the court.
We dismiss for the present a contention made by one of the corporations that it is not a railroad company within the meaning of that term as used in the statute, which we shall have occasion to consider, because it is merely a coal company whose transporting operations are but incidental to its mining operations. With this contention put aside, it is true to say, speaking in a general sense, that the corporations, parties to this record, by means of railroads owned and operated by them, were engaged in transporting coal from the anthracite coal fields in Pennsylvania to points of market for ultimate delivery in other States. With much of the coal so transported the corporations had been or were connected by some relation distinct from the association which was necessarily engendered by the transportation of the commodity by the corporations as common carriers in interstate commerce. While the business of the corporations, generally speaking, had these characteristics, there were differences between them. Some of the corporations owned and worked mines and transported over their own rails in interstate commerce the coal so mined, either for their own account or for the account of those who had acquired title to the coal prior to the beginning of the transportation. Others, while operating railroads not only owned but also leased and operated coal mines, and carried the coal produced from such mines in the same way. Again, others of the railroad companies, although not operating mines, were the owners of stock in corporations engaged in mining coal, the coal so produced by such corporations being carried in interstate commerce by the railroad companies holding the stock in the producing coal companies, either for account of the producing corporations or for persons to whom the coal had been
“The fundamental and underlying question, however, which presents itself at the threshold of all the cases for our consideration is whether the so-called commodities clause amendatory to the act to regulate commerce, passed June 29, 1906, so far as its scope applies by the universality of its language to the cases here presented, is in excess of the legislative authority granted to Congress by the Constitution. This question must be considered with reference to the Constitution as a whole and in relation to the agreed facts of the several cases. It is therefore necessary to keep in mind the situation as presented by these defendants, the facts set forth in their individual answers as above briefly summarized and the relevant industrial conditions which being matters of common knowledge may be judicially noticed.”
The situation which it was considered should be kept in mind for the purpose of passing upon the constitutional question was thus stated:
“The general situation is that for half a century or more it has been the policy of the State of Pennsylvania, as evidenced by her legislative acts, to promote the development of her natural resources, especially as regards coal, by encouraging railroad companies and canal companies to invest their funds in coal lands, so that the product of her mines might be conveniently and profitably conveyed to market in Pennsylvania and other States. Two of the defendant corporations, as appears from their answers, were created by the legislature of Pennsylvania, one of them three-quarters of a century ago and the other half a century ago, for the expressed purpose that its coal lands might be developed and that coal might be transported to the people of Pennsylvania and of other States. It is not questioned that pursuant to this general policy investments were made by all the defendant companies in coal lands and mines and in the stock of coal-producing companies, and that coal production was enormously increased and its economies promoted by the facilities of transportation thus brought about. As appears from the answers filed, the entire distribution of anthracite coal in and into the different States of the Union and Canada for the year 1905 (the last year for which there is authoritative statistics) was 61,410,201 tons; that approximately four-fifths of this entire production of anthracite coal was transported in interstate commerce over the defendant railroads, from Pennsylvania to markets in other States and Canada, and of this four-fifths, from 70 to 75 per cent, was produced either directly by the defendant companies or through the agency of their subsidiary coal companies.”
“It also appears from the answers filed that enormous sums of money have been expended by these defendants to enable them to mine and prepare their coal and to transport it to any
point where there may be a market for it. It is not denied that the situation thus generally described is not a new one, created since the passage of the act in question, but has existed for a long period of years prior thereto, and that the rights and property interests acquired by the said defendants in the premises have been acquired in conformity to the constitution and laws of the State of Pennsylvania, and that their right to enjoyment of the same has never been doubted or questioned by the courts or people of that Commonwealth, but has been fully recognized and protected by both.”
It was decided that, as applied to the defendants, the commodities clause was not within the power of Congress to enact as a regulation of commerce. 164 Fed. Rep. 215. A member of the court dissented and expressed his reasons in a written opinion. Without adverting to all the reasoning expounded in that opinion, we think it accurate to say that in a large and ultimate sense it proceeded upon the assumption that, as the commodities clause provided, to quote the summing up of the opinion, for “the divorce of the dual relation of public carrier and private transporter,” it was a regulation of commerce, and as such was within the power of Congress to enact, and when enacted was operative upon the defendants, and therefore required them to conform to the regulation, even although to do so might in some way indirectly affect valid rights derived from prior state legislation.
Judgments and decrees were entered denying the applications for mandamus and dismissing the bills of complaint.
The text of the commodities clause upon which the cases depend is as follows:
“From and after May first, nineteen hundred and eight, it shall be unlawful for any railroad company to transport from any State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, to any other State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, or to any foreign country, any article or commodity, other than timber and the manufactured products thereof, manufactured, mined, or produced by it, or under its authority, or which it may own in
whole or in part, or in which it may have any interest direct or indirect except such articles or commodities as may be necessary and intended for its use in the conduct of its business as a common carrier.”
The Government insists that this provision prohibits railroad companies from transporting in interstate commerce articles or commodities other than the excepted class, which have been manufactured, mined or produced by them or under their authority, or which they own or may have owned in whole or in part, or in which they have or may have had any interest, direct or indirect. These prohibitions, it is further insisted, apply to the transportation by a railroad company in interstate commerce of a commodity which has been manufactured, mined or produced by a corporation, in which the transporting railroad company is a stockholder, irrespective of the extent of such stock ownership. This construction of the provision rests not only upon the meaning which the Government insists should be given to its text, but on the significance of the text as illumined by what it is insisted was the result intended to be accomplished by the enactment of the clause. The purpose, it is contended, was not merely to compel railroad companies to dissociate themselves before transportation from articles or commodities manufactured, mined, produced or owned by them, etc., but moreover to divorce the business of transporting commodities in interstate commerce from their manufacture, mining, production, ownership, etc., and thus to avoid the tendency to discrimination, forbidden by the act to regulate commerce, which, it is insisted, necessarily inheres in the carrying on by a railroad company of the business of manufacturing, mining, producing or owning, in whole or in part, etc., commodities which are by it transported in interstate commerce.
The construction relied on is thus summed up in the argument of the Government: “It (the clause) forbids the carrier, who owns the mines and sells coal, to transport that coal in interstate commerce. This is not trifling with the question. It states the exact fact and the reality.” And, in
Let us as a prelude to an analysis of the clause, for the purpose of fixing its true construction and determining the constitutional power to enact it when its significance shall have been rightly defined, point out the questions of constitutional power which will require to be decided if the construction relied upon by the Government is a correct one.
We at once summarily dismiss all the elaborate suggestions made in argument as to the alleged wrong to result from the enforcement of the clause, if it be susceptible of the construction which the Government has placed upon it. We do this because obviously mere suggestions of inconvenience or harm are wholly irrelevant, as they cannot be allowed to influence us in determining the question of the constitutional power of Congress to enact the clause.
Let it be conceded at once that the power to regulate com-
With these concessions in mind, and despite their far-reaching effect, if the contentions of the Government as to the meaning of the commodities clause be well founded, at least a majority of the court are of the opinion that we may not avoid determining the following grave constitutional questions: 1. Whether the power of Congress to regulate commerce embraces the authority to control or prohibit the mining, manufacturing, production or ownership of an article or commodity, not because of some inherent quality of the commodity, but simply because it may become the subject of interstate commerce. 2. If the right to regulate commerce does not thus extend, can it be impliedly made to embrace subjects which it does not control, by forbidding a railroad company engaged in
While the grave questions thus stated must necessarily, as we have said, arise for decision, if the contention of the Government, as to the meaning of the commodities clause be correct, we do not intend, by stating them, to decide them, or even in the slightest degree to presently intimate, in any respect whatever, an opinion upon them. It will be time enough to approach their consideration if we are compelled to do so hereafter, as the result of the further analysis, which we propose to make in order to ascertain the meaning of the commodities clause.
It is elementary when the constitutionality of a statute is assailed, if the statute be reasonably susceptible of two interpretations, by one of which it would be unconstitutional and by the other valid, it is our plain duty to adopt that construction which will save the statute from constitutional infirmity.
Recurring to the text of the commodities clause, it is apparent that it disjunctively applies four generic prohibitions, that is, it forbids a railroad carrier from transporting in interstate commerce articles or commodities, 1, which it has manufactured, mined or produced; 2, which have been so mined, manufactured or produced under its authority; 3, which it owns in whole or in part, and, 4, in which it has an interest, direct or indirect.
It is clear that the two prohibitions which relate to manufacturing, mining, etc., and the ownership resulting therefrom, are, if literally construed, not confined to the time when a carrier transports the commodities with which the prohibitions are concerned, and hence the prohibitions attach and operate upon the right to transport the commodity because of the antecedent acts of manufacture, mining or production. Certain also is it that the two prohibitions concerning ownership, in whole or in part, and interest, direct or indirect, speak in the present and not in the past; that is, they refer to the time of the transportation of the commodities. These last prohibitions, therefore, differing from the first two, do not control the commodities if at the time of the transportation they are not owned in whole or in part by the transporting carrier, or if it then has no interest, direct or indirect, in them. From this it follows that the construction which the Government places upon the clause as a whole is in direct conflict with the literal meaning
But it is said, on behalf of the Government, in view of the purpose of Congress to prohibit railroad companies engaged in
Nor is there force in the contention that because the going into effect of the clause was postponed for a period of nearly two years, therefore the far-reaching and radical effects which the Government attributes to the clause must have been contemplated by Congress. We think, on the contrary, it is reasonable to infer, in view of the facts disclosed in the statement which we have previously excerpted, that the delay accorded
It remains to determine the nature and character of the interest embraced in the words “in which it is interested directly or indirectly.” The contention of the Government that the clause forbids a railroad company to transport any commodity manufactured, mined or produced, or owned in whole or in part, etc., by a bona fide corporation in which the transporting carrier holds a stock interest, however small, is based upon the assumption that such prohibition is embraced in the words we are considering. The opposing contention, however, is that interest, direct or indirect, includes only commodities in which a carrier has a legal interest, and therefore does not exclude the right to carry commodities which have been manufactured, mined, produced or owned by a separate and distinct corporation, simply because the transporting carrier may be interested in the producing, etc., corporation as an owner of stock therein. If the words in question are to be taken as embracing only a legal or equitable interest in the commodities to which they refer they cannot be held to include commodities manufactured, mined, produced or owned, etc., by a distinct corporation merely because of a stock ownership of the carrier. Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Missouri Pacific R. R., 115 U. S. 587; Conley v. Mathieson Alkali Works, 190 U. S. 406. And that this is well settled also in the law of Pennsylvania is not questioned. It is unnecessary to pursue the subject in more detail, since it is conceded in the argument for the Government that if the clause embraces only a legal interest in an article or commodity it cannot be held to include a prohibition against carrying a commodity simply because it had been manufactured, mined or produced, or is owned by a corporation in
We then construe the statute as prohibiting a railroad company engaged in interstate commerce from transporting in such commerce articles or commodities under the following circumstances and conditions: (a) When the article or commodity has been manufactured, mined or produced by a carrier or under its authority, and at the time of transportation the carrier has not in good faith before the act of transportation dissociated itself from such article or commodity; (b) When the carrier owns the article or commodity to be transported in whole or in part; (c) When the carrier at the time of transportation has an interest, direct or indirect, in a legal or equitable sense in the article or commodity, not including, therefore, articles or commodities manufactured, mined, produced or owned, etc., by a bona fide corporation in which the railroad company is a stockholder.
The question then arises whether, as thus construed, the statute was inherently within the power of Congress to enact as a regulation of commerce. That it was, we think is apparent, and if reference to authority to so demonstrate is necessary it is afforded by a consideration of the ruling in the New Haven case, to which we have previously referred. We do not say this upon the assumption that by the grant of power to regulate commerce the authority of the Government of the United States has been unduly limited on the one hand and inordinately extended on the other, nor do we rest it upon the hypothesis that the power conferred embraces the right to absolutely prohibit the movement between the States of lawful commodities or to destroy the governmental power of the States as to subjects within their jurisdiction, however remotely and indirectly the exercise of such powers may touch interstate commerce. On the contrary, putting these considerations en-
We think it unnecessary to consider at length the contentions based upon the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. In form of statement those contentions apparently rest upon the ruinous consequences which it is assumed would be operated upon the property rights of the carriers by the enforcement of the clause interpreted as the Government construed it. For the purpose of our consideration of the subject it may be conceded, as insisted on behalf of the United States, that these contentions proceed upon the mistaken and baleful conception that inconvenience, not power, is the criterion by which to test the constitutionality of legislation. When, however, mere forms of statement are put aside and the real scope of the argument at bar is grasped, we think it becomes clear that in substance and effect the argument really asserts that the clause as construed by the Government is not a regulation of commerce, since it transcends the limits of regulation and embraces absolute prohibitions, which, it is insisted, could not be exerted in virtue of the authority to regulate. The whole support upon which the propositions and the arguments rest hence disappear as a result of the construction which we have given the statute. Through abundance of caution we repeat that our ruling here made is confined to the question before us. Because, therefore, in pointing out and applying to the statute the true rule of construction, we have indicated the grave constitutional questions which would be presented if we departed from that rule, we must not be considered as having decided those questions. We have not entered into their consideration, as it was unnecessary for us to do so.
Without elaborating, we hold the contention that the clause
With reference to the contention that the commodities clause is void because of the nature and character of the penalties which it imposes for violations of its provisions, within the ruling in Ex parte Young, 209 U. S. 123, we think it also suffices to say that even if the delay which the clause provided should elapse between its enactment and the going into effect of the same does not absolutely exclude the clause from the ruling in Ex parte Young, a question which we do not feel called upon to decide, nevertheless the proposition is without merit, because, (a) no penalties are sought to be recovered in these cases, and, (b) the question of the constitutionality of the clause relating to penalties is wholly separable from the remainder of the clause, and, therefore, may be left to be determined should an effort to enforce such penalties be made.
There is a contention as to one of the defendants, the Delaware and Hudson Company, to which we, at the outset, referred, which requires to be particularly noticed. Under the charters granted to the company by the States of New York and Pennsylvania it was authorized to secure coal lands and mine coal, and, without going into detail, was originally authorized to construct a canal, and, ultimately, a railroad for the purpose of transporting, for its own account, the products of its mines, and, undoubtedly, vast sums of money have been in-
As the court below held the statute wholly void for repugnancy to the Constitution, it follows from the views which we have expressed that the judgments and the decrees entered below must be reversed. As, however, it was conceded in the discussion at bar that in view of the public and private interests which were concerned, the United States did not seek to enforce the penalties of the statute, but commenced these proceedings with the object and purpose of settling the differences between it and the defendants, concerning the meaning of the commodities clause and the power of Congress to enact it as correctly interpreted, and upon this view the proceedings were heard below by submission upon the pleadings, we are of opinion that the ends of justice will be subserved, not by reversing and remanding with particular directions as to each of the defendants, but by reversing and remanding with directions for such further proceedings as may be necessary to apply and enforce the statute as we have interpreted it.
And it is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
As these cases have been determined wholly on the construction of those parts of the Hepburn Act which are here in ques-
Notes
1. Whether the power of Congress to regulate commerce embraces the authority to control or prohibit the mining, manufacturing, production or ownership of an article or commodity, not because of some inherent quality of the commodity, but simply because it may become the subject of interstate commerce.
2. If the right to regulate commerce does not thus extend, can it be impliedly made to embrace subjects which it does not control, by forbidding a railroad company engaged in interstate commerce from carrying lawful articles or commodities because, at some time prior to the transportation, it had manufactured, mined, produced or owned them, etc.?
Also as necessarily involved in the determination of the foregoing questions:
a. Did the adoption of the Constitution and the grant of power to Congress to regulate commerce have the effect of depriving the States of the authority to endow a carrier with the attribute of producing as well as transporting particular commodities, a power which the States from the beginning have freely exercised, and by the exertion of which governmental power the resources of the several States have been developed, their enterprises fostered, and vast investments of capital have been made possible?
b. Although the Government of the United States, both within its spheres of national and local legislative power, has in the past for public purposes, either expressly or impliedly, authorized the manufacture, mining, production and carriage of commodities by one and the same railway corporation, was the exertion of such power beyond the scope of the authority of Congress, or, what is equivalent thereto, was its exercise but a mere license, subject at any time to be revoked and completely destroyed by means of a regulation of commerce? “From and after May first, nineteen hundred and eight, it shall be unlawful for any railroad company to transport from any State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, to any other State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, or to any foreign country, any article or commodity, other than timber and the manufactured products thereof, manufactured, mined, or produced by it, or under its authority, or which it may own in whole or in part, or in which it may have any interest direct or indirect except such articles or commodities as may be necessary and intended for its use in the conduct of its business as a common carrier.” It is admitted, generally, by the defendants, that the allegations in the bills and petitions, as to their corporate existence, are true, and that they own or operate railroads engaged in the interstate transportation of coal from the anthracite region of Pennsylvania. They also admit that this transportation has been carried on by the several defendants long prior to the 8th day of May, 1906, and in the case of some of them, for a period varying from a quarter to more than half a century prior thereto. In addition to these general admissions, detailed statements are made by the defendants, respectively, of the character and extent of the ownership or other interests possessed by them in the coal so transported, or in the lands or mines from which it is produced. It is only necessary to briefly summarize these statements:
(1) The Delaware & Hudson Company alleges that it directly owns its coal lands as it does its railroad; that it was incorporated by an act of the legislature of the State of New York, April 23, 1823, and was “authorized to construct a canal or water navigation from the anthracite coal district in Pennsylvania to the Hudson River in New York; to purchase lands in Pennsylvania containing stone or anthracite coal; and to employ its capital in the business of transporting to market coal mined from such lands.” That this authority was also expressly conferred by acts of the legislature of the State of Pennsylvania, between the years 1823 and 1871, and that these acts of the State of Pennsylvania resulted from the desire and policy of said State to create and foster the industry of mining such coal and developing the transportation thereof; that under the authority of these statutes of Pennsylvania and of New York, the said defendant, beginning as early as the year 1825, invested its capital
(2) “The answer of the Erie Railroad Company states that it was originally organized under the laws of the State of New York in 1832; that it has been reorganized from time to time under mortgage foreclosure; and finally, in November, 1895, under a foreclosure sale, it was reorganized under the statutes of New York, whereby it “became the lawful owner of the property, rights, privileges, immunities and franchises of all its predecessors aforesaid, including the shares of capital stock of coal companies and of railroad companies, as well as the railroads theretofore held and possessed by said predecessor companies, the railroads so owned by it and its said subsidiary companies having an aggregate mileage of over 2,100 miles in the States of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois;” that the Pennsylvania Coal Company was created a corporation by the laws of Pennsylvania in 1838, its charter giving it the right of “transacting the usual business of companies engaged in mining, transporting to market, and selling coal and the other products of coal mined;” and for that purpose it was given the power to purchase or lease coal lands in Pennsylvania; also the power to construct railroads with one or more tracks. In 1853 the said Pennsylvania Coal Company was authorized to extend its railroad to connect with the New York & Erie Railroad. The right of said Pennsylvania Coal Company to buy coal lands and build railroad connections was continued by acts of the legislature of Pennsylvania in 1857, 1864, 1867 and 1868; that in pursuance of these various acts of the legislature, the Pennsylvania Coal Company obtained capital, issued stock therefor, acquired coal lands, developed coal mines, produced, transported to markets, and sold coal; built and operated railroads, made railway connections as authorized, and did other like acts to promote the business of supplying all persons needing the same with anthracite coal. The Hillside Coal & Iron Company was organized by an act of the legislature of the State of Pennsylvania in 1869 for the purposes and with powers similar to those
(3) The Central Railroad Company of New Jersey avers that it was organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey, and by these laws was authorized to purchase and hold the stock or securities of any other corporation, of New Jersey or elsewhere, and that it was also so authorized by two acts of assembly of the State of Pennsylvania, one of which, approved April 15th, 1869, was entitled “An act to authorize railroad and canal companies to aid in the development of coal, iron, lumber and other material interests of this Commonwealth;” that pursuant to the authority of these several acts, it had, long prior to the said act of Congress, become the owner of a majority of the shares of the capital stock of the Honeybrook Coal Company and of the Wilkesbarre Coal & Iron Company, both companies now being merged into the Lehigh & Wilkesbarre Company, a large majority of whose shares are owned by it; that it also owns a minority of the shares of the Temple Iron Company; that in 1871 it became the lessee of the Lehigh & Susquehanna Railroad, a Pennsylvania corporation, which it has ever since operated under an obligation to pay a yearly rental of not less than $1,414,400, and not
(4) The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, like the Delaware & Hudson Company, admits that it is the owner of coal lands and mines coal which it sells; that it was organized under an act of the legislature of Pennsylvania in 1849; that all the lines of railroad owned by it are wholly within the State of Pennsylvania, extending from the Delaware River, at the boundary line of the State of New Jersey, in a northwesterly direction across the State of Pennsylvania to the boundary line between the State of Pennsylvania and the State of New York, with a branch line extending from Scranton, in the State of Pennsylvania, to Northumberland, in said State. Said defendant also admits and alleges that, under express authority of acts of the legislature of the States of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York, it, as lessee, now operates, and long prior to May 1st, 1908, has operated, various lines of railroad in the two last-mentioned States, by which it has direct traffic connection with the city of Buffalo and other cities in the said States. Defendant also admits that for many years it has owned in fee, extensive tracts of coal land in the State of Pennsylvania; that it has also leased large tracts of coal land in the said State, and is now engaged, and for many years last past has been engaged, in mining coal from the lands so owned and leased by it; that the holding of said lands, whether in fee or by lease, and the mining, manufacture, and interstate transportation of the coal therefrom, has been and continues to be, under and by virtue of the authority of the laws of the State of Pennsylvania.
That in addition to the foregoing, certain coal companies, organized from time to time under acts of assembly of the said State of Pennsylvania, have been merged into said defendant corporation; that by an act of the general assembly of the State of Pennsylvania, approved April 15th, 1869, entitled “An act to authorize railroad and canal companies
That by virtue of leases of railroads, to enable it to transport coal in interstate commerce, it has become bound to pay yearly, in interest charges, the sum of $5,155,697, and for taxes $1,163,916. That out of a total of about 8,700,000 tons of coal produced by it in the year 1907 from its lands owned in fee and leased, upwards of 6,700,000 tons were transported over its lines of railroad in interstate commerce; that from 40 per cent to 60 per cent of its annual transportation earnings, from the operation of leased lines, has been derived from the carriage of its own coal thereover.
That it uses, in the conduct of its business as a common carrier, approximately 1,700,000 tons of anthracite coal, of pea size or smaller, annually, and will require more for such use in the future; that to obtain this coal in these economic sizes it is necessary to break up coal, leaving the larger sizes, which must be disposed of otherwise; that great waste would result if it were forbidden to transport to market in interstate commerce these larger sizes thus resulting.
That defendant‘s rights to acquire its holding of coal land, its rights to own and mine coal and to transport the same to market in other States as well as in Pennsylvania, and its leases of other railroads, were acquired many years prior to the enactment of the so-called “Interstate Commerce Act,” and of the said amendment thereto known as the “commodities clause.”
(5) The answer of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company avers that it was incorporated under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania April 13th, 1846; that as early as 1871, under authority of two general statutes of the State of Pennsylvania, it became the owner of all the shares of the Susquehanna Coal Company, of all the shares of the Summit Branch Mining Company, and of one-third of the shares of the Mineral Railroad
(6) The answer of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company states that it was originally incorporated September 20th, 1847, under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania. Under the authority of various acts of assembly of the said State, other railroad and coal companies, prior to the year 1874, have been merged into it, some of which railroads were expressly authorized to construct railroads and to carry on the business of mining, transporting, and vending coal. It is also the lessee of railroads in Pennsylvania; that by means of its own and of said leased lines of railroad it conducts, and for many years has conducted, an interstate transportation of coal; that since 1872, pursuant to authority conferred by the laws of Pennsylvania, it has also owned the majority of the capital stock of the New York and Middle Coal Field Railroad and Coal Company, a corporation of the State of Pennsylvania; also the entire capital stock of Coxe Bros. & Company, a corporation of said State; a minority interest in the capital stock of the Highland Coal Company; a majority of the stock of the Locust Mountain Coal & Iron Company; a minority interest in the capital stock of the Packer Coal Company and of the Temple Iron Company, all corporations of the State of Pennsylvania, organized for the purpose of mining coal, some of them more than a half century ago; that it has constructed lines of railroad and branch railroads and terminal facilities for the purpose of transporting to market, in interstate commerce, the coal of the companies whose shares it owns, and this business has been conducted by it for many years; that practically said coal can be transported to market only by its railroads; that the capital stock of two of the coal companies owned by said defendant has been transferred to a trustee, to hold under a general mortgage executed by defend-
