When a state tax authorized by the legislature pursuant to the
state constitution and upheld by the highest state court is called
in question under the Fourteenth Amendment upon the ground that the
purposes for which it is imposed are not of a public nature, every
presumption must be indulged in its favor, and the united judgments
of the people, legislature, and court of the state that the
purposes are public will be accepted unless clearly unfounded. P.
253 U. S. 239.
Jones v. City of Portland, 245 U.
S. 217.
When a state sees fit, for the promotion of the public welfare,
to enter into activities which in the past have been considered as
entirely within the domain of private enterprise and to assist them
by taxation, the wisdom of its legislation or the soundness of the
economic policy involved cannot be considered by this Court in
passing upon the constitutionality of the taxation. P.
253 U. S.
240.
Under the peculiar conditions existing in North Dakota,
described in the opinion of its Supreme Court in this case,
held that legislation which provides for engaging the
state in the businesses of manufacturing and marketing farm
products, and of providing homes for the people, and which
appropriates money, creates a state banking system, and authorizes
bond issues and taxation for carrying the scheme into effect is not
unconstitutional as respects taxpayers. P.
253 U. S.
242.
176 N.W. Rep. 11, affirmed.
TE case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action by taxpayers of the State of North Dakota
against Lynn J. Frazier, Governor, John N.
Page 253 U. S. 234
Hagan, Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor, William Langer,
Attorney General, and Obert Olson, state Treasurer, and the
Industrial Commission of that state to enjoin the enforcement of
certain state legislation. The defendants Lynn J. Frazier, as
Governor, William Langer, as Attorney General, and John Hagan, as
Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor constitute the Industrial
Commission, created by the Act of February 25, 1919, [Laws 1919, c.
151] of the Sixteenth Legislative Assembly of the state of North
Dakota.
The laws involved were attacked on various grounds, state and
federal. The Supreme Court of North Dakota sustained the
constitutionality of the legislation. So far as the decision rests
on state grounds, it is conclusive, and we need not stop to inquire
concerning it.
Davis v. Hildebrant, 241 U.
S. 565. The only ground of attack involving the validity
of the legislation which requires our consideration concerns the
alleged deprivation of rights secured to the plaintiffs by the
Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution. It is contended
that taxation under the laws in question has the effect of
depriving plaintiffs of property without due process of law.
The legislation involved consists of a series of acts passed
under the authority of the state constitution, which are: (1) an
act creating an Industrial Commission of North Dakota, which is
authorized to conduct and manage on behalf of that state certain
utilities, industries, enterprises, and business projects to be
established by law. The act gives authority to the commission to
manage, operate, control, and govern all utilities, enterprises,
and business projects owned, undertaken, administered, or operated
by the State of North Dakota except those carried on in penal,
charitable, or educational institutions. To that end, certain
powers and authority are given to the commission, among others: the
right of eminent domain; to fix the buying price of things
bought,
Page 253 U. S. 235
and the selling price of things sold, incidental to the
utilities, industries, enterprises, and business projects, and to
fix rates and charges for services rendered, having in mind the
accumulation of a fund with which to replace in the general funds
of the state the amount received by the commission under
appropriations made by the act; to procure the necessary funds for
such utilities, industries, enterprises, and business projects by
negotiating the bonds of the state in such amounts and in such
manner as may be provided by law. $200,000 of the funds of the
state are appropriated to carry out the provisions of the act. (2)
The Bank of North Dakota Act [Laws 1919, c. 147], which establishes
a bank under the name of "The Bank of North Dakota," operated by
the state. The Industrial Commission is placed in control of the
operation and management of the bank, and is given the right of
eminent domain to acquire necessary property. Public funds are to
be deposited in the bank, and the deposits are guaranteed by the
State of North Dakota. Authority is given to transfer funds to
other departments, institutions, utilities, industries,
enterprises, or business projects and to make loans to counties,
cities, or political subdivisions of the state or to state or
national banks on such terms as the commission may provide. Loans
to individuals, associations, and private corporations are
authorized when secured by duly recorded first mortgages on lands
in the State of North Dakota. An appropriation of $100,000 is made
immediately available to carry out the provisions of the act. (3)
An act [Laws 1919, c. 148] providing for the issuing of bonds of
the state in the sum of $2,000,000, the proceeds of which are to
constitute the capital of the Bank of North Dakota. The earnings of
the bank are to be paid to the State Treasurer. Tax levies are
authorized sufficient to pay the interest on the bonds annually.
The bonds shall mature in periods of five years, and the board of
equalization is authorized to levy a tax in an amount
Page 253 U. S. 236
equal to one-fifth of the amount of their principal. The State
Treasurer is required to establish a bank bond payment fund into
which shall be paid moneys received from taxation, from
appropriations, and from bank earnings. $10,000 is appropriated for
the purpose of carrying the act into effect. (4) An act [Laws 1919,
c. 154] providing for the issuing of bonds in the sum of not
exceeding $10,000,000, to be known as "Bonds of North Dakota, Real
Estate Series." These bonds are to be issued for the purpose of
raising money to procure funds for the Bank of North Dakota to
replace such funds as may have been employed by it from time to
time in making loans upon first mortgages upon real estate. The
faith and credit of the State of North Dakota are pledged for the
payment of the bonds. Moneys derived from the sale of the bonds are
to be placed by the Industrial Commission in the funds of the bank,
and nothing in the act is to be construed to prevent the purchase
of the bonds with any funds in the Bank of North Dakota. It is
further provided that the state board of equalization shall, if it
appears that the funds in the hands of the State Treasurer are
insufficient to pay either principal or interest accruing within a
period of one year thereafter, make a necessary tax levy to meet
the indicated deficiency. Provision is made for the repeated
exercise of the powers granted by the act for the purposes stated.
An appropriation of $10,000 is made for carrying into effect the
provisions of this act. (5) An act [Laws 1919, c. 152] declaring
the purpose of the State of North Dakota to engage in the business
of manufacturing and marketing farm products, and to establish a
warehouse, elevator, and flour mill system under the name of "North
Dakota Mill & Elevator Association," to be operated by the
state. The purpose is declared that the state shall engage in the
business of manufacturing farm products, and, for that purpose,
shall establish a system of warehouses, elevators, flour mills,
factories, plants, machinery
Page 253 U. S. 237
and equipment, owned, controlled, and operated by it under the
name of the "North Dakota Mill & Elevator Association." The
Industrial Commission is placed in control of the association, with
full power, and it is authorized to acquire by purchase, lease, or
right of eminent domain, all necessary property or properties,
etc.; to buy, manufacture, store, mortgage, pledge, sell, and
exchange all kinds of raw and manufactured farm products and
byproducts, and to operate exchanges, bureaus, markets, and
agencies within and without the state and in foreign countries.
Provision is made for the bringing of a civil action against the
State of North Dakota on account of causes of action arising out of
the business. An appropriation is made out of state funds, together
with the funds procured from the sale of state bonds, to be
designated as the capital of the association. (6) An act [Laws
1919, c. 153] providing for the issuing of bonds of the State of
North Dakota in a sum not exceeding $5,000,000, to be known as
"Bonds of North Dakota, Mill & Elevator Series," providing for
a tax and making other provisions for the payment of the bonds, and
appropriations for the payment of interest and principal thereof.
The bonds are to be issued and sold for the purpose of carrying on
the business of the Mill & Elevator Association. The faith and
credit of the State of North Dakota are pledged for the payment of
the bonds, both principal and interest. These bonds may be
purchased with funds in the Bank of North Dakota. Taxes are
provided for sufficient to pay the bonds, principal and interest,
taking into account the earnings of the association. The sum of
$10,000 is appropriated from the general funds of the state to
carry the provisions of the act into effect. (7) The Home Building
Act [Laws 1919, c. 150] declares the purpose of the state to engage
in the enterprise of providing homes for its residents, and, to
that end, to establish a business system operated by it under the
name of the "Home Building Association
Page 253 U. S. 238
of North Dakota," and defines its duties and the extent of its
powers. The Industrial Commission is placed in control of the "Home
Building Association," and is given the power of eminent domain and
the right to purchase and lease the requisite property. Provision
is made for the formation of home building unions. The price of
town homes is placed at $5,000, and of farm homes at $10,000. A
bond issue of $2,000,000, known as "Bonds of North Dakota, Home
Building Series," is provided for.
There are certain principles which must be borne in mind in this
connection, and which must control the decision of this Court upon
the federal question herein involved. This legislation was adopted
under the broad power of the state to enact laws raising by
taxation such sums as are deemed necessary to promote purposes
essential to the general welfare of its people. Before the adoption
of the Fourteenth Amendment, this power of the state was
unrestrained by any federal authority. That amendment introduced a
new limitation upon state power into the federal Constitution. The
states were forbidden to deprive persons of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law. What is meant by due process
of law this Court has had frequent occasion to consider, and has
always declined to give a precise meaning, preferring to leave its
scope to judicial decisions when cases from time to time arise.
Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U. S. 78,
211 U. S.
100.
The due process of law clause contains no specific limitation
upon the right of taxation in the states, but it has come to be
settled that the authority of the states to tax does not include
the right to impose taxes for merely private purposes.
Fallbrook Irrigation District v. Bradley, 164
U. S. 155. In that case, the province of this Court in
reviewing the power of state taxation was thoroughly discussed by
the late Mr. Justice Peckham, speaking
Page 253 U. S. 239
for the Court. Concluding the discussion of that subject (p.
164 U. S.
158), the Justice said:
"In the Fourteenth Amendment, the provision regarding the taking
of private property is omitted, and the prohibition against the
state is confined to its depriving any person of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law. It is claimed, however, that
the citizen is deprived of his property without due process of law
if it be taken by or under state authority for any other than a
public use, either under the guise of taxation or by the assumption
of the right of eminent domain. In that way, the question whether
private property has been taken for any other than a public use
becomes material in this Court, even where the taking is under the
authority of the state, instead of the federal, government."
Accepting this as settled by the former adjudications of this
Court, the enforcement of the principle is attended with the
application of certain rules equally well settled.
The taxing power of the states is primarily vested in their
legislatures, deriving their authority from the people. When a
state legislature acts within the scope of its authority, it is
responsible to the people, and their right to change the agents to
whom they have entrusted the power is ordinarily deemed a
sufficient check upon its abuse. When the constituted authority of
the state undertakes to exert the taxing power, and the question of
the validity of its action is brought before this Court, every
presumption in its favor is indulged, and only clear and
demonstrated usurpation of power will authorize judicial
interference with legislative action.
In the present instance, under the authority of the constitution
and laws prevailing in North Dakota, the people, the legislature
and the highest court of the state have declared the purpose for
which these several acts were passed to be of a public nature, and
within the taxing authority of the state. With this united action
of people,
Page 253 U. S. 240
legislature, and court we are not at liberty to interfere unless
it is clear beyond reasonable controversy that rights secured by
the federal Constitution have been violated. What is a public
purpose has given rise to no little judicial consideration. Courts,
as a rule, have attempted no judicial definition of a "public," as
distinguished from a "private," purpose, but have left each case to
be determined by its own peculiar circumstances. Gray, Limitations
of Taxing Power, ยง 176.
"Necessity alone is not the test by which the limits of state
authority in this direction are to be defined, but a wise
statesmanship must look beyond the expenditures which are
absolutely needful to continue the existence of organized
government, and embrace others which may tend to make that
government subserve the general wellbeing of society, and advance
the present and prospective happiness and prosperity of the
people."
Cooley, Justice, in
People v. Salem, 20 Mich. 452.
Questions of policy are not submitted to judicial determination,
and the courts have no general authority of supervision over the
exercise of discretion which, under our system, is reposed in the
people or other departments of government.
Chicago, Burlington
& Quincy R. Co. v. McGuire, 219 U.
S. 549,
219 U. S. 569;
German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Kansas, 233 U.
S. 389.
With the wisdom of such legislation and the soundness of the
economic policy involved we are not concerned. Whether it will
result in ultimate good or harm it is not within our province to
inquire.
We come now to examine the grounds upon which the Supreme Court
of North Dakota held this legislation not to amount to a taking of
property without due process of law. The questions involved were
given elaborate consideration in that court, and it held,
concerning what may in general terms be denominated the "banking
legislation," that it was justified for the purpose of
providing
Page 253 U. S. 241
banking facilities, and to enable the state to carry out the
purposes of the other acts, of which the Mill & Elevator
Association Act is the principal one. It justified the Mill &
Elevator Association Act by the peculiar situation in the State of
North Dakota, and particularly by the great agricultural industry
of the state. It estimated from facts of which it was authorized to
take judicial notice that 90% of the wealth produced by the state
was from agriculture, and stated that upon the prosperity and
welfare of that industry other business and pursuits carried on in
the state were largely dependent; that the state produced
125,000,000 bushels of wheat each year. The manner in which the
present system of transporting and marketing this great crop
prevents the realization of what are deemed just prices was
elaborately stated. It was affirmed that the annual loss from these
sources (including the loss of fertility to the soil and the
failure to feed the byproducts of grain to stock within the state)
amounted to fifty-five millions of dollars to the wheat raisers of
North Dakota. It answered the contention that the industries
involved were private in their nature by stating that all of them
belonged to the State of North Dakota, and therefore the activities
authorized by the legislation were to be distinguished from
business of a private nature having private gain for its
objective.
As to the Home Building Act, that was sustained because of the
promotion of the general welfare in providing homes for the people,
a large proportion of whom were tenants moving from place to place.
It was believed and affirmed by the Supreme Court of North Dakota
that the opportunity to secure and maintain homes would promote the
general welfare, and that the provisions of the statutes to enable
this feature of the system to become effective would redound to the
general benefit.
As we have said, the question for us to consider and
determine
Page 253 U. S. 242
is whether this system of legislation is violative of the
federal Constitution because it amounts to a taking of property
without due process of law. The precise question herein involved,
so far as we have been able to discover, has never been presented
to this Court. The nearest approach to it is found in
Jones v.
City of Portland, 245 U. S. 217, in
which we held that an act of the State of Maine authorizing cities
or towns to establish and maintain wood, coal, and fuel yards for
the purpose of selling these necessaries to the inhabitants of
cities and towns did not deprive taxpayers of due process of law
within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. In that case, we
reiterated the attitude of this Court towards state legislation,
and repeated what had been said before, that what was or was not a
public use was a question concerning which local authority,
legislative and judicial, had especial means of securing
information to enable them to form a judgment, and particularly
that the judgment of the highest court of the state, declaring a
given use to be public in its nature, would be accepted by this
Court unless clearly unfounded. In that case, the previous
decisions of this Court sustaining this proposition were cited with
approval, and a quotation was made from the opinion of the Supreme
Court of Maine justifying the legislation under the conditions
prevailing in that state. We think the principle of that decision
is applicable here.
This is not a case of undertaking to aid private institutions by
public taxation, as was the fact in
Citizens' Saving &
Loan Association v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 665. In many
instances, states and municipalities have in late years seen fit to
enter upon projects to promote the public welfare which in the past
have been considered entirely within the domain of private
enterprise.
Under the peculiar conditions existing in North Dakota, which
are emphasized in the opinion of its highest court,
Page 253 U. S. 243
if the state sees fit to enter upon such enterprises as are here
involved, with the sanction of its Constitution, its legislature
and its people, we are not prepared to say that it is within the
authority of this Court, in enforcing the observance of the
Fourteenth Amendment, to set aside such action by judicial
decision.
Affirmed.