Lottery tickets are subjects of traffic among those who choose
to buy and sell them, and their carriage by independent carriers
from one state to another is therefore interstate commerce which
Congress may prohibit under its power to regulate commerce among
the several states.
Legislation under that power may sometimes and properly assume
the form, or have the effect, of prohibition.
Legislation prohibiting the carriage of such tickets is not
inconsistent with any limitation or restriction imposed upon the
exercise of the powers granted to Congress.
The general question arising upon this appeal involves the
constitutionality of the first section of the Act of Congress of
March 2, 1895, c. 191, entitled
"An Act for the Suppression of Lottery Traffic through National
and Interstate Commerce and the Postal Service, Subject to the
Jurisdiction and Laws of the United States."
28 Stat. 963.
The appeal was from an order of the circuit court of the United
States for the Northern District of Illinois dismissing a writ of
habeas corpus sued out by the appellant Champion, who in his
application complained that he was restrained of his liberty by the
Marshal of the United States in violation of the Constitution and
laws of the United States.
Page 188 U. S. 322
It appears that the accused was under indictment in the District
Court of the United States for the Northern District of Texas for a
conspiracy under section 5440 of the Revised Statues, providing
that
"if two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense
against the United States, or to defraud the United States in any
manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such parties do any
act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all the parties to such
conspiracy shall be liable to a penalty of not less than one
thousand dollars and not more than ten thousand dollars, and to
imprisonment not more than two years."
He was arrested at Chicago under a warrant based upon a
complaint in writing, under oath, charging him with conspiring with
others at Dallas, in the Northern District of Texas, to commit the
offense denounced in the above act of 1895, and the object of the
arrest was to compel his appearance in the federal court in Texas
to answer the indictment against him.
The first section of the act 1895, upon which the indictment was
based, is as follows:
"§ 1. That any person who shall cause to be brought within the
United States from abroad, for the purpose of disposing of the
same, or deposited in or carried by the mails of the United States,
or carried from one state to another in the United States, any
paper, certificate, or instrument purporting to be or represent a
ticket, chance, share, or interest in or dependent upon the event
of a lottery, so-called gift concert, or similar enterprise,
offering prizes dependent upon lot or chance, or shall cause any
advertisement of such lottery, so-called gift concert, or similar
enterprise, offering prizes dependent upon lot or chance, to be
brought into the United States, or deposited in or carried by the
mails of the United States, or transferred from one state to
another in the same, shall be punishable in [for] the first offense
by imprisonment for not more than two years, or by a fine of not
more than one thousand dollars, or both, and in the second and
after offenses by such imprisonment only."
28 Stat. 963.
The indictment charged, in its first count, that, on or about
the first day of February, A.D. 1899, in Dallas County, Texas,
"C. F. Champion, alias W. W. Ogden, W. F. Champion, and
Page 188 U. S. 323
Charles B. Park did then and there unlawfully, knowingly, and
feloniously conspire together to commit an offense against the
United States, to-wit, for the purpose of disposing of the same, to
cause to be carried from one state to another in the United States,
to-wit, from Dallas, in the State of Texas, to Fresno, in the State
of California, certain papers, certificates, and instruments
purporting to be and representing tickets, as they then and there
well knew, chances, shares, and interests in and dependent upon the
event of a lottery, offering prizes dependent upon lot and chance,
that is to say, caused to be carried, as aforesaid, for the purpose
of disposing of the same, papers, certificates, or instruments
purporting to be tickets to represent the chances, shares, and
interests in the prizes which by lot and chance might be awarded to
persons, to these grand jurors unknown, who might purchase said
papers, certificates, and instruments representing and purporting
to be tickets, as aforesaid, with the numbers thereon shown and
indicated and printed, which by lot and chance should, on a certain
day, draw a prize or prizes at the purported lottery or chance
company, to-wit at the purported monthly drawing of the so-called
Pan-American Lottery Company, which purported to draw monthly at
Asuncion, Paraguay, which said Pan-American Lottery Company
purported to be an enterprise offering prizes dependent upon lot
and chance, the specific method of such drawing being unknown to
the grand jurors, but which said papers, certificates, and
instruments purporting to be and representing tickets upon their
face purporting to be entitled to participation in the drawing for
a certain capital prize amounting to the sum of thirty-two thousand
dollars, and which said drawings for said capital prize, or the
part or parts thereof allotted or to be allotted in conformity with
the scheme of lot and chance, were to take place monthly, the
manner and form of which is to the grand jurors unknown, but that
said drawing and lot and chance by which said prize or prizes were
to be drawn was purported to be under the supervision and direction
of Enrigue Montes de Leon, manager, and Bernardo Lopez, intervener,
and which said papers, certificates, and instruments purporting to
be tickets of the said Pan-American Lottery Company were so divided
as
Page 188 U. S. 324
to be called whole, half, quarter, and eighth tickets, the whole
tickets to be sold for the sum of two dollars, the half tickets for
the sum of one dollar, the quarter tickets for the sum of fifty
cents and the eighth tickets for the sum of twenty-five cents."
The indictment further charged that,
"in pursuance to said conspiracy, and to effect the object
thereof, to-wit, for the purpose of causing to be carried from one
state to another in the United States, to-wit from the State of
Texas to the State of California aforesaid, for the purpose of
disposing of the same, papers, certificates, and instruments
purporting to be and representing tickets, chances, and shares and
interests in and dependent upon lot and chance, as aforesaid, as
they then and there well knew, said W. F. Champion and Charles B.
Park did then and there, to-wit, on or about the day last
aforesaid, in the year 1899, in the county aforesaid, in the Dallas
Division of the Northern District of Texas aforesaid, unlawfully,
knowingly, and feloniously, for the purpose of being carried from
one state to another in the United States, to-wit, from Dallas, in
the State of Texas, to Fresno, in the State of California, for the
purpose of disposing of the same, deposit and cause to be deposited
and shipped and carried with and by the Wells-Fargo Express
Company, a corporation engaged in carrying freight and packages
from station to station along and over lines of railway, and from
Dallas, Texas, to Fresno, California, for hire, one certain box or
package containing, among other things, two whole tickets or papers
or certificates of said purported Pan-American Lottery Company, one
of which said whole tickets is hereto annexed by the grand jury to
this indictment and made a part hereof."
It thus appears that the carrying in this case was by an
incorporated express company, engaged in transporting freight and
packages from one state to another.
The commissioner who issued the warrant of arrest, having found
that there was probable cause to believe that Champion was guilty
of the offense charged, ordered that he give bond for his
appearance for trial in the District Court of the United States for
the Northern District of Texas, or in default thereof, to be
committed to jail. Having declined to give the required bond, the
accused was taken into custody. Rev.Stat. § 1014.
Page 188 U. S. 325
Thereupon he sued out the present writ of habeas corpus upon the
theory that the act of 1895, under which it was proposed to try
him, was void under the Constitution of the United States.
Page 188 U. S. 344
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant insists that the carrying of lottery tickets from
one state to another state by an express company engaged in
carrying freight and packages from state to state, although such
tickets may be contained in a box or package, does not constitute,
and cannot by any act of Congress be legally made to constitute,
commerce among the states within the meaning of the clause of the
Constitution of the United States providing that Congress shall
have power "to regulate commerce with
Page 188 U. S. 345
foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the
Indian tribes;" consequently, that Congress cannot make it an
offense to cause such tickets to be carried from one state to
another.
The government insists that express companies, when engaged, for
hire, in the business of transportation from one state to another,
are instrumentalities of commerce among the states; that the
carrying of lottery tickets from one state to another is commerce
which Congress may regulate, and that, as a means of executing the
power to regulate interstate commerce, Congress may make it an
offense against the United States to cause lottery tickets to be
carried from one state to another.
The questions presented by these opposing contentions are of
great moment, and are entitled to receive, as they have received,
the most careful consideration.
What is the import of the word "commerce" as used in the
Constitution? It is not defined by that instrument. Undoubtedly,
the carrying from one state to another by independent carriers of
things or commodities that are ordinary subjects of traffic, and
which have in themselves a recognized value in money, constitutes
interstate commerce. But does not commerce among the several states
include something more? Does not the carrying from one state to
another, by independent carriers, of lottery tickets that entitle
the holder to the payment of a certain amount of money therein
specified, also constitute commerce among the states?
It is contended by the parties that these questions are answered
in the former decisions of this Court, the government insisting
that the principles heretofore announced support its position,
while the contrary is confidently asserted by the appellant. This
makes it necessary to ascertain the import of such decisions. Upon
that inquiry we now enter, premising that some propositions were
advanced in argument that need not be considered. In the
examination of former judgments it will be best to look at them
somewhat in the order in which they were rendered. When prior
adjudications have been thus collated the particular grounds upon
which the judgment in the present case must necessarily rest can be
readily determined. We may
Page 188 U. S. 346
here remark that some of the cases referred to may not bear
directly upon the questions necessary to be decided, but attention
will be directed to them as throwing light upon the general inquiry
as to the meaning and scope of the commerce clause of the
Constitution.
The leading case under the commerce clause of the Constitution
is
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 189,
22 U. S. 194.
Referring to that clause, Chief Justice Marshall said:
"The subject to be regulated is commerce, and our Constitution
being, as was aptly said at the bar, one of enumeration, and not of
definition, to ascertain the extent of the power it becomes
necessary to settle the meaning of the word. The counsel for the
appellee would limit it to traffic, to buying and selling, or the
interchange of commodities, and do not admit that it comprehends
navigation. This would restrict a general term, applicable to many
objects, to one of its significations. Commerce, undoubtedly, is
traffic, but it is something more; it is intercourse. It describes
the commercial intercourse between nations and parts of nations, in
all its branches, and is regulated by prescribing rules for
carrying on that intercourse. . . . It has been truly said that
commerce, as the word is used in the Constitution, is a unit, every
part of which is indicated by the term. If this be the admitted
meaning of the word, in its application to foreign nations, it must
carry the same meaning throughout the sentence, and remain a unit,
unless there be some plain, intelligible cause which alters it. The
subject to which the power is next applied is to commerce 'among
the several states.' The word 'among' means intermingled with. A
thing which is among others is intermingled with them. Commerce
among the states cannot stop at the external boundary line of each
state, but may be introduced into the interior. It is not intended
to say that these words comprehend that commerce which is
completely internal, which is carried on between man and man in a
state, or between different parts of the same state, and which does
not extend to or affect other states. Such a power would be
inconvenient, and is certainly unnecessary. Comprehensive as the
word 'among' is, it may very properly be restricted to that
commerce which concerns more states than one. . . .
Page 188 U. S. 347
The genius and character of the whole government seem to be that
its action is to be applied to all the external concerns of the
nation, and to those internal concerns which affect the states
generally, but not to those which are completely within a
particular state, which do not affect other states, and with which
it is not necessary to interfere, for the purpose of executing some
of the general powers of the government. . . ."
Again:
"We are now arrived at the inquiry, what is this power? It is
the power to regulate -- that is, to prescribe the rule by which
commerce is to be governed. This power, like all others vested in
Congress, is
complete in itself, may be exercised
to
its utmost extent, and acknowledges
no limitations, other
than are prescribed in the Constitution. These are expressed
in plain terms, and do not affect the questions which arise in this
case, or which have been discussed at the bar. If, as has always
been understood, the sovereignty of Congress, though limited to
specific objects, is plenary as to those objects, the power over
commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, is
vested in Congress
as absolutely as it would be in a single
government, having in its constitution the same restrictions on the
exercise of the power as are found in the Constitution of the
United States."
Mr. Justice Johnson, in the same case, expressed his entire
approbation of the judgment rendered by the Court, but delivered a
separate opinion indicating the precise grounds upon which his
conclusion rested. Referring to the grant of power over commerce,
he said:
"My opinion is founded on the application of the words of the
grant to the subject of it. The 'power to regulate commerce' here
meant to be granted was that power to regulate commerce which
previously existed in the states. But what was that power? The
states were unquestionably supreme, and each possessed that power
over commerce which is acknowledged to reside in every sovereign
state. . . . The law of nations, regarding man as a social animal,
pronounces all commerce legitimate in a state of peace until
prohibited by positive law. The power of a sovereign state over
commerce therefore amounts to nothing more than a power to limit
and restrain it at pleasure. And since the power to prescribe
Page 188 U. S. 348
the limits to its freedom necessarily implies the power to
determine what shall remain unrestrained, it follows that the power
must be exclusive; it can reside but in one potentate, and hence
the grant of this power carries with it the whole subject, leaving
nothing for the state to act upon."
The principles announced in
Gibbons v. Ogden were
reaffirmed in
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 446.
After expressing doubt whether any of the evils proceeding from the
feebleness of the federal government contributed more to the
establishing of the present constitutional system than the deep and
general conviction that commerce ought to be regulated by Congress,
Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for the Court, said:
"It is not, therefore, matter of surprise that the grant should
be as extensive as the mischief, and should comprehend all foreign
commerce, and all commerce among the states."
Considering the question as to the just extent of the power to
regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several
states, the Court reaffirmed the doctrine that the power was
"complete in itself, and to acknowledge no limitations other
than are prescribed by the Constitution. . . . Commerce is
intercourse; one of its most ordinary ingredients is traffic."
In the
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283, the Court adjudged certain
statutes of New York and Massachusetts, imposing taxes upon alien
passengers arriving in the ports of those states, to be in
violation of the Constitution and laws of the United States. In the
separate opinions delivered by the Justices, there will not be
found any expression of doubt as to the doctrines announced in
Gibbons v. Ogden. Mr. Justice McLean said:
"Commerce is defined to be 'an exchange of commodities.' But
this definition does not convey the full meaning of the term. It
includes 'navigation and intercourse.' That the transportation of
passengers is a part of commerce is not now an open question."
Mr. Justice Grier said:
"Commerce, as defined by this Court, means something more than
traffic -- it is intercourse, and the power committed to Congress
to regulate commerce is exercised by prescribing rules for carrying
on that intercourse."
The same views were expressed by Mr. Justice Wayne in his
separate opinion. He regarded the question then before the
Page 188 U. S. 349
Court as covered by the decision in
Gibbons v. Ogden,
and in respect to that case he said:
"It [the case] will always be a high and honorable proof of the
eminence of the American bar of that day, and of the talents and
distinguished ability of the judges who were then in the places
which we now occupy."
Mr. Justice Catron and Mr. Justice McKinley announced
substantially the same views.
In
Almy v.
California, 24 How. 169, a statute of California
imposing a stamp duty upon bills of lading for gold or silver
transported from that state to any port or place out of the state
was held to be a tax on exports, in violation of the provision of
the Constitution declaring that "
no tax' or duty shall be laid
on articles exported from any state." But in Woodruff
v. Parham, 8 Wall. 123, 75 U. S. 138,
this Court, referring to the Almy case, said it was well
decided upon a ground not mentioned in the opinion of the Court,
namely, that, although the tax there in question was only on bills
of lading,
"such a tax was a regulation of commerce, a tax imposed upon the
transportation of goods from one state to another, over the high
seas, in conflict with that freedom of transit of goods and persons
between one state and another, which is within the rule laid down
in
Crandall v. Nevada, and with the authority of Congress
to regulate commerce among the states."
In
Henderson v. Mayor, 92 U. S.
259,
92 U. S. 270,
which involved the constitutional validity of a statute of New York
relating to vessels bringing passengers to that port, this Court,
speaking by Mr. Justice Miller, said:
"As already indicated, the provisions of the Constitution of the
United States, on which the principal reliance is placed to make
void the statute of New York, is that which gives to Congress the
power 'to regulate commerce with foreign nations.' As was said in
United States v.
Holliday, 3 Wall. 417, 'commerce with foreign
nations means commerce between citizens of the United States and
citizens or subjects of foreign governments.' It means trade, and
it means intercourse. It means commercial intercourse between
nations, and parts of nations, in all its branches. It includes
navigation, as the principal means by which foreign intercourse is
effected. To regulate this trade and intercourse is
Page 188 U. S. 350
to prescribe the rules by which it shall be conducted. 'The
mind,' says the great Chief Justice,"
"can scarcely conceive a system for regulating commerce between
nations which shall exclude all laws concerning navigation, which
shall be silent on the admission of the vessels of one nation into
the ports of another,"
"and he might have added, with equal force, which prescribed no
terms for the admission of their cargo or their passengers.
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 190."
The question of the scope of the commerce clause was again
considered in
Pensacola Tel. Co. v. Western Union Tel.
Co., 96 U. S. 1,
96 U. S. 9,
96 U. S. 12,
involving the validity of a statute of Florida, which assumed to
confer upon a local telegraph company the exclusive right to
establish and maintain lines of electric telegraph in certain
counties of Florida. This Court held the act to be
unconstitutional. Chief Justice Waite, delivering its judgment,
said:
"Since the case of
Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
it has never been doubted that commercial intercourse is an element
of commerce which comes within the regulating power of Congress.
Post offices and post roads are established to facilitate the
transmission of intelligence. Both commerce and the postal service
are placed within the power of Congress because, being national in
their operation, they should be under the protecting care of the
national government. The powers thus granted are not confined to
the instrumentalities of commerce or the postal service known or in
use when the Constitution was adopted, but they keep pace with the
progress of the country, and adapt themselves to the new
developments of time and circumstances. They extend from the horse
with its rider to the stage coach, from the sailing vessel to the
steamboat, from the coach and the steamboat to the railroad, and
from the railroad to the telegraph, as these new agencies are
successively brought into use to meet the demands of increasing
population and wealth. They were intended for the government of the
business to which they relate at all times and under all
circumstances. As they were entrusted to the general government for
the good of the nation, it is not only the right, but the duty, of
Congress to see to it that intercourse among the states and the
transmission of intelligence are not
Page 188 U. S. 351
obstructed or unnecessarily encumbered by state legislation. The
electric telegraph marks an epoch in the progress of time. In a
little more than a quarter of a century, it has changed the habits
of business and become one of the necessities of commerce. It is
indispensable as a means of intercommunication, but especially is
it so in commercial transactions."
In his dissenting opinion in that case, Mr. Justice Field speaks
of the importance of the telegraph "as a means of intercourse," and
of its constant use in commercial transactions.
In
Mobile County v. Kimball, 102 U.
S. 691, Mr. Justice Field, delivering the judgment of
the Court, said:
"Commerce with foreign countries and among the states, strictly
considered, consists in intercourse and traffic, including in these
terms navigation and the transportation and transit of persons and
property, as well as the purchase, sale, and exchange of
commodities."
This principle was expressly reaffirmed in
Gloucester Ferry
Co. v. Pennsylvania, 114 U. S. 196,
114 U. S.
203.
Applying the doctrine announced in
Pensacola Tel. Co. v.
Western Union Tel. Co., it was held in
Telegraph Co. v.
Texas, 105 U. S. 460,
that the law of a state imposing a tax on private telegraph
messages sent out of the state was unconstitutional as being in
effect a regulation of interstate commerce.
In
Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 630,
it was declared by the Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Bradley,
that
"the power to regulate commerce among the several states is
granted to Congress in terms as absolute as is the power to
regulate commerce with foreign nations."
The same thought was expressed in
Bowman v. Chicago &c.
Railway Co., 125 U. S. 482;
Crutcher v. Kentucky, 141 U. S. 47,
141 U. S. 58,
and
Pittsburg Coal Co. v. Bates, 156
U. S. 587.
In
Pickard v. Pullman Southern Car Company,
117 U. S. 34, it
was said to be settled by the adjudged cases that to tax "the
transit of passengers from foreign countries or between the states
is to regulate commerce."
In
Western Union Tel. Co. v. Pendleton, 122 U.
S. 347,
122 U. S. 356,
the Court recognized the commerce with foreign countries and among
the states which Congress could regulate as including not only the
exchange and transportation of commodities, or
Page 188 U. S. 352
visible, tangible things, but the carriage of persons and the
transmission by telegraph of ideas, wishes, orders, and
intelligence.
See also Ratterman v. Tel. Co., 127 U.
S. 411, and
Leloup v. Port of Mobile,
127 U. S. 640.
In
Covington &c. Bridge Company v. Kentucky,
154 U. S. 204,
154 U. S. 218,
the question was as to the validity, under the commerce clause of
the Constitution, of an act of the Kentucky Legislature relating to
tolls to be charged or received for passing over the bridge of the
Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Company, a corporation of both
Kentucky and Ohio, erected between Covington and Cincinnati. A
state enactment prescribing a rate of toll on the bridge was held
to be unconstitutional as an unauthorized regulation of interstate
commerce. The Court, reaffirming the principles announced in
Gloucester Ferry Company v. Pennsylvania, 114 U.
S. 196, and in
Wabash &c. Railway Company v.
Illinois, 118 U. S. 557,
said, among other things:
"Commerce was defined in
Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 189, to be
'intercourse,' and the thousands of people who daily pass and
repass over this bridge may be as truly said to be engaged in
commerce as if they were shipping cargoes of merchandise from New
York to Liverpool. While the bridge company is not itself a common
carrier, it affords a highway for such carriage, and a toll upon
such bridge is as much a tax upon commerce as a toll upon a
turnpike is a tax upon the traffic of such turnpike, or the charges
upon a ferry a tax upon the commerce across a river."
At the present term of the Court, we said that
"transportation for others, as an independent business, is
commerce, irrespective of the purpose to sell or retain the goods
which the owner may entertain with regard to them after they shall
have been delivered."
Hanley v. Kansas City Southern Railway, 187 U.
S. 617.
This reference to prior adjudications could be extended if it
were necessary to do so. The cases cited, however, sufficiently
indicate the grounds upon which this Court has proceeded when
determining the meaning and scope of the commerce clause. They show
that commerce among the states embraces navigation, intercourse,
communication, traffic, the transit of persons,
Page 188 U. S. 353
and the transmission of messages by telegraph. They also show
that the power to regulate commerce among the several states is
vested in Congress as absolutely as it would be in a single
government having in its constitution the same restrictions on the
exercise of the power as are found in the Constitution of the
United States; that such power is plenary, complete in itself, and
may be exerted by Congress to its utmost extent, subject
only to such limitations as the Constitution imposes upon
the exercise of the powers granted by it, and that, in determining
the character of the regulations to be adopted, Congress has a
large discretion which is not to be controlled by the courts simply
because, in their opinion, such regulations may not be the best or
most effective that could be employed.
We come, then, to inquire whether there is any solid foundation
upon which to rest the contention that Congress may not regulate
the carrying of lottery tickets from one state to another, at least
by corporations or companies whose business it is, for hire, to
carry tangible property from one state to another.
It was said in argument that lottery tickets are not of any real
or substantial value in themselves, and therefore are not subjects
of commerce. If that were conceded to be the only legal test as to
what are to be deemed subjects of the commerce that may be
regulated by Congress, we cannot accept as accurate the broad
statement that such tickets are of no value. Upon their face, they
showed that the lottery company offered a large capital prize, to
be paid to the holder of the ticket winning the prize at the
drawing advertised to be held at Asuncion, Paraguay. Money was
placed on deposit in different banks in the United States to be
applied by the agents representing the lottery company to the
prompt payment of prizes. These tickets were the subject of
traffic; they could have been sold, and the holder was assured that
the company would pay to him the amount of the prize drawn. That
the holder might not have been able to enforce his claim in the
courts of any country making the drawing of lotteries illegal, and
forbidding the circulation of lottery tickets, did not change the
fact that
Page 188 U. S. 354
the tickets issued by the foreign company represented so much
money payable to the person holding them and who might draw the
prizes affixed to them. Even if a holder did not draw a prize, the
tickets, before the drawing, had a money value in the market among
those who chose to sell or buy lottery tickets. In short, a lottery
ticket is a subject of traffic, and is so designated in the act of
1895. 28 Stat. 963. That fact is not without significance in view
of what this Court has said. That act, counsel for the accused well
remarks, was intended to supplement the provisions of prior acts
excluding lottery tickets from the mails and prohibiting the
importation of lottery matter from abroad, and to prohibit the act
of causing lottery tickets to be carried, and lottery tickets and
lottery advertisements to be transferred from one state to another
by any means or method. 15 Stat.196; 17 Stat. 302; 19 Stat. 90;
Rev.Stat. § 3894; 26 Stat. 465; 28 Stat. 963.
We are of opinion that lottery tickets are subjects of traffic,
and therefore are subjects of commerce, and the regulation of the
carriage of such tickets from state to state, at least by
independent carriers, is a regulation of commerce among the several
states.
But it is said that the statute in question does not regulate
the carrying of lottery tickets from state to state, but by
punishing those who cause them to be so carried. Congress in effect
prohibits such carrying; that, in respect of the carrying from one
state to another of articles or things that are, in fact or
according to usage in business, the subjects of commerce, the
authority given Congress was not to
prohibit, but only to
regulate. This view was earnestly pressed at the bar by learned
counsel, and must be examined.
It is to be remarked that the Constitution does not define what
is to be deemed a legitimate regulation of interstate commerce. In
Gibbons v. Ogden, it was said that the power to regulate
such commerce is the power to prescribe the rule by which it is to
be governed. But this general observation leaves it to be
determined, when the question comes before the court, whether
Congress, in prescribing a particular rule, has exceeded its power
under the Constitution. While our government
Page 188 U. S. 355
must be acknowledged by all to be one of enumerated powers,
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 405,
17 U. S. 407,
the Constitution does not attempt to set forth all the means by
which such powers may be carried into execution. It leaves to
Congress a large discretion as to the means that may be employed in
executing a given power. The sound construction of the
Constitution, this Court has said,
"must allow to the national legislature that discretion, with
respect to the means by which the powers it confers are to be
carried into execution, which will enable that body to perform the
high duties assigned to it in the manner most beneficial to the
people. Let the end be legitimate, let it be within the scope of
the Constitution, and all means which are appropriate, which are
plainly adapted to that end, which are not prohibited, but consist
with the letter and spirit of the Constitution, are
constitutional."
4 Wheat.
17 U. S.
421.
We have said that the carrying from state to state of lottery
tickets constitutes interstate commerce, and that the regulation of
such commerce is within the power of Congress under the
Constitution. Are we prepared to say that a provision which is, in
effect, a prohibition of the carriage of such articles from state
to state is not a fit or appropriate mode for the regulation of
that particular kind of commerce? If lottery traffic, carried on
through interstate commerce, is a matter of which Congress may take
cognizance and over which its power may be exerted, can it be
possible that it must tolerate the traffic, and simply regulate the
manner in which it may be carried on? Or may not Congress, for the
protection of the people of all the states and under the power to
regulate interstate commerce, devise such means, within the scope
of the Constitution and not prohibited by it, as will drive that
traffic out of commerce among the states?
In determining whether regulation may not under some
circumstances properly take the form or have the effect of
prohibition, the nature of the interstate traffic which it was
sought by the Act of May 2, 1895, to suppress cannot be overlooked.
When enacting that statute, Congress no doubt shared the views upon
the subject of lotteries heretofore expressed by this Court.
Page 188 U. S. 356
In
Phalen v.
Virginia, 8 How. 163,
49 U. S. 168,
after observing that the suppression of nuisances injurious to
public health or morality is among the most important duties of
government, this Court said:
"Experience has shown that the common forms of gambling are
comparatively innocuous when placed in contrast with the widespread
pestilence of lotteries. The former are confined to a few persons
and places, but the latter infests the whole community; it enters
every dwelling; it reaches every class; it preys upon the hard
earnings of the poor; it plunders the ignorant and simple."
In other cases, we have adjudged that authority given by
legislative enactment to carry on a lottery, although based upon a
consideration in money, was not protected by the contract clause of
the Constitution -- this for the reason that no state may bargain
away its power to protect the public morals, nor excuse its failure
to perform a public duty by saying that it had agreed, by
legislative enactment, not to do so.
Stone v. Mississippi,
101 U. S. 814;
Douglas v. Kentucky, 168 U. S. 488.
If a state, when considering legislation for the suppression of
lotteries within its own limits, may properly take into view the
evils that inhere in the raising of money in that mode, why may not
Congress, invested with the power to regulate commerce among the
several states, provide that such commerce shall not be polluted by
the carrying of lottery tickets from one state to another? In this
connection, it must not be forgotten that the power of Congress to
regulate commerce among the states is plenary, is complete in
itself, and is subject to no limitations except such as may be
found in the Constitution. What provision in that instrument can be
regarded as limiting the exercise of the power granted? What clause
can be cited which in any degree countenances the suggestion that
one may of right carry or cause to be carried from one state to
another that which will harm the public morals? We cannot think of
any clause of that instrument that could possibly be invoked by
those who assert their right to send lottery tickets from state to
state except the one providing that no person shall be deprived of
his liberty without due process of law. We have said that the
liberty protected by the Constitution
Page 188 U. S. 357
embraces the right to be free in the enjoyment of one's
faculties;
"to be free to use them in all lawful ways; to live and work
where he will; to earn his livelihood by any lawful calling; to
pursue any livelihood or avocation, and for that purpose to enter
into all contracts which may be proper."
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U.
S. 578,
165 U. S. 589.
But surely it will not be said to be a part of anyone's liberty, as
recognized by the supreme law of the land, that he shall be allowed
to introduce into commerce among the states an element that will be
confessedly injurious to the public morals.
If it be said that the act of 1894 is inconsistent with the
Tenth Amendment, reserving to the states respectively, or to the
people, the powers not delegated to the United States, the answer
is that the power to regulate commerce among the states has been
expressly delegated to Congress.
Besides, Congress, by that act, does not assume to interfere
with traffic or commerce in lottery tickets carried on exclusively
within the limits of any state, but has in view only commerce of
that kind among the several states. It has not assumed to interfere
with the completely internal affairs of any state, and has only
legislated in respect of a matter which concerns the people of the
United States. As a state may, for the purpose of guarding the
morals of its own people, forbid all sales of lottery tickets
within its limits, so Congress, for the purpose of guarding the
people of the United States against the "widespread pestilence of
lotteries" and to protect the commerce which concerns all the
states, may prohibit the carrying of lottery tickets from one state
to another. In legislating upon the subject of the traffic in
lottery tickets, as carried on through interstate commerce,
Congress only supplemented the action of those states -- perhaps
all of them -- which, for the protection of the public morals,
prohibit the drawing of lotteries, as well as the sale or
circulation of lottery tickets, within their respective limits. It
said, in effect, that it would not permit the declared policy of
the states, which sought to protect their people against the
mischiefs of the lottery business, to be overthrown or disregarded
by the agency of interstate commerce. We should hesitate long
before adjudging that an evil of such
Page 188 U. S. 358
appalling character, carried on through interstate commerce,
cannot be met and crushed by the only power competent to that end.
We say competent to that end because Congress alone has the power
to occupy, by legislation, the whole field of interstate commerce.
What was said by this Court upon a former occasion may well be here
repeated:
"The framers of the Constitution never intended that the
legislative power of the nation should find itself incapable of
disposing of a subject matter specifically committed to its
charge."
In re Rahrer, 140 U. S. 545,
140 U. S. 563.
If the carrying of lottery tickets from one state to another be
interstate commerce, and if Congress is of opinion that an
effective regulation for the suppression of lotteries carried on
through such commerce is to make it a criminal offense to cause
lottery tickets to be carried from one state to another, we know of
no authority in the courts to hold that the means thus devised are
not appropriate and necessary to protect the country at large
against a species of interstate commerce which, although in general
use and somewhat favored in both national and state legislation in
the early history of the country, has grown into disrepute and has
become offensive to the entire people of the nation. It is a kind
of traffic which no one can be entitled to pursue as of right.
That regulation may sometimes appropriately assume the form of
prohibition is also illustrated by the case of diseased cattle
transported from one state to another. Such cattle may have,
notwithstanding their condition, a value in money for some
purposes, and yet it cannot be doubted that Congress, under its
power to regulate commerce, may either provide for their being
inspected before transportation begins or, in its discretion, may
prohibit their being transported from one state to another. Indeed,
by the Act of May 29, 1884, c. 60, Congress has provided:
"That no railroad company within the United States, or the
owners or masters of any steam or sailing or other vessel or boat,
shall receive for transportation or transport, from one state or
territory to another or from any state into the District of
Columbia or from the District into any state, any livestock
affected with any contagious, infectious, or communicable disease,
and especially the disease known as
Page 188 U. S. 359
pleuro-pneumonia, nor shall any person, company, or corporation
deliver for such transportation to any railroad company or master
or owner of any boat or vessel any livestock knowing them to be
affected with any contagious, infectious, or communicable disease,
nor shall any person, company, or corporation drive on foot or
transport in private conveyance from one state or territory to
another, or from any state into the District of Columbia, or from
the District into any state, any livestock knowing them to be
affected with any contagious, infectious, or communicable disease,
and especially the disease known as pleuro-pneumonia."
Reid v. Colorado, 187 U. S. 137.
The Act of July 2, 1890, known as the Sherman Anti-Trust Act,
and which is based upon the power of Congress to regulate commerce
among the states, is an illustration of the proposition that
regulation may take the form of prohibition. The object of that act
was to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and
monopolies. To accomplish that object Congress declared certain
contracts to be illegal. That act in effect prohibited the doing of
certain things, and its prohibitory clauses have been sustained in
several cases as valid under the power of Congress to regulate
interstate commerce.
United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight
Association, 166 U. S. 290;
United States v. Joint Traffic Association, 171 U.
S. 505;
Addyston Pipe & Steel Company v. United
States, 175 U. S. 211. In
the case last named the Court, referring to the power of Congress
to regulate commerce among the states, said:
"In
Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
the power was declared to be complete in itself, and to acknowledge
no limitations other than are prescribed by the Constitution. Under
this grant of power to Congress, that body, in our judgment, may
enact such legislation as shall declare void and prohibit the
performance of any contract between individuals or corporations
where the natural and direct effect of such a contract will be,
when carried out, to directly, and not as a mere incident to other
and innocent purposes, regulate to any substantial extent
interstate commerce. (And when we speak of interstate, we also
include in our meaning foreign commerce.) We do not assent to the
correctness
Page 188 U. S. 360
of the proposition that the constitutional guaranty of liberty
to the individual to enter into private contracts limits the power
of Congress and prevents it from legislating upon the subject of
contracts of the class mentioned. The power to regulate interstate
commerce is, as stated by Chief Justice Marshall, full and complete
in Congress, and there is no limitation in the grant of the power
which excludes private contracts of the nature in question from the
jurisdiction of that body. Nor is any such limitation contained in
that other clause of the Constitution which provides that no person
shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process
of law."
Again:
"The provision in the Constitution does not, as we believe,
exclude Congress from legislating with regard to contracts of the
above nature while in the exercise of its constitutional right to
regulate commerce among the states. On the contrary, we think the
provision regarding the liberty of the citizen is, to some extent,
limited by the commerce clause of the Constitution, and that the
power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce comprises the
right to enact a law
prohibiting the citizen from entering
into those private contracts which directly and substantially, and
not merely indirectly, remotely, incidentally, and collaterally,
regulate to a greater or less degree commerce among the
states."
That regulation may sometimes take the form or have the effect
of prohibition is also illustrated in the case of
In re
Rahrer, 140 U. S. 545. In
Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623, it
was adjudged that state legislation prohibiting the manufacture of
spirituous, malt, vinous, fermented, or other intoxicating liquors
within the limits of the state, to be there sold or bartered for
general use as a beverage, does not necessarily infringe any right,
privilege, or immunity secured by the Constitution of the United
States or by the amendments thereto. Subsequently, in
Bowman v.
Chicago &c. Railway Co., 125 U. S. 465,
this Court held that ardent spirits, distilled liquors, ale, and
beer were subjects of exchange, barter, and traffic, and were so
recognized by the usages of the commercial world, as well as by the
laws of Congress and the decisions of the courts. In
Leisy v.
Hardin, 135 U. S. 100,
135 U. S. 110,
135 U. S. 125,
the
Page 188 U. S. 361
Court again held that spirituous liquors were recognized
articles of commerce, and declared a statute of Iowa prohibiting
the sale within its limits of any intoxicating liquors, except for
pharmaceutical, medicinal, chemical, or sacramental purposes, under
a state license, to be repugnant to the commerce clause of the
Constitution if applied to the sale, within the state, by the
importer, in the original, unbroken packages, of such liquors
manufactured in and brought from another state. And, in determining
whether a state could prohibit the sale within its limits, in
original, unbroken packages, of ardent spirits, distilled liquors,
ale, and beer, imported from another state, this Court said that
they were recognized by the laws of Congress as well as by the
commercial world as "subjects of exchange, barter, and traffic,"
and that,
"whatever our individual views may be as to the deleterious or
dangerous qualities of particular articles, we cannot hold that any
articles which Congress recognized as subjects of commerce are not
such."
Then followed the passage by Congress of the Act of August 8,
1890, 26 Stat. 313, c. 728, providing
"that all fermented, distilled, or other intoxicating liquors or
liquids transported into any state or territory, or remaining
therein for use, consumption, sale, or storage therein, shall, upon
arrival in such state or territory, be subject to the operation and
effect of the laws of such state or territory enacted in the
exercise of its police powers, to the same extent and in the same
manner as though such liquids or liquors had been produced in such
state or territory, and shall not be exempt therefrom by reason of
being introduced therein in original packages or otherwise."
That act was sustained in the
Rahrer case as a valid
exercise of the power of Congress to regulate commerce among the
states.
In
Rhodes v. Iowa, 170 U. S. 412,
170 U. S. 426,
that statute -- all of its provisions being regarded -- was held as
not causing the power of the state to attach to an interstate
commerce shipment of intoxicating liquors "whilst the merchandise
was in transit under such shipment, and until its arrival at the
point of destination and delivery there to the consignee."
Thus, under its power to regulate interstate commerce, as
involved
Page 188 U. S. 362
in the transportation, in original packages, of ardent spirits
from one state to another, Congress, by the necessary effect of the
act of 1890, made it impossible to transport such packages to
places within a prohibitory state and there dispose of their
contents by sale, although it had been previously held that ardent
spirits were recognized articles of commerce and, until Congress
otherwise provided, could be imported into a state and sold in the
original packages despite the will of the state. If, at the time of
the passage of the act of 1890, all the states had enacted liquor
laws prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors within their
respective limits, then the act would have had the necessary effect
to exclude ardent spirits altogether from commerce among the
states, for no one would ship, for purposes of sale, packages
containing such spirits to points within any state that forbade
their sale at any time or place, even in unbroken packages, and, in
addition, provided for the seizure and forfeiture of such packages.
So that we have in the
Rahrer case a recognition of the
principle that the power of Congress to regulate interstate
commerce may sometimes be exerted with the effect of excluding
particular articles from such commerce.
It is said, however, that if in order to suppress lotteries
carried on through interstate commerce, Congress may exclude
lottery tickets from such commerce, that principle leads
necessarily to the conclusion that Congress may arbitrarily exclude
from commerce among the states any article, commodity, or thing, of
whatever kind or nature or however useful or valuable, which it may
choose, no matter with what motive, to declare shall not be carried
from one state to another. It will be time enough to consider the
constitutionality of such legislation when we must do so. The
present case does not require the court to declare the full extent
of the power that Congress may exercise in the regulation of
commerce among the states. We may, however, repeat in this
connection what the Court has heretofore said -- that the power of
Congress to regulate commerce among the states, although plenary,
cannot be deemed arbitrary, since it is subject to such limitations
or restrictions as
Page 188 U. S. 363
are prescribed by the Constitution. This power, therefore, may
not be exercised so as to infringe rights secured or protected by
that instrument. It would not be difficult to imagine legislation
that would be justly liable to such an objection as that stated and
be hostile to the objects for the accomplishment of which Congress
was invested with the general power to regulate commerce among the
several states. But, as often said, the possible abuse of a power
is not an argument against its existence. There is probably no
governmental power that may not be exerted to the injury of the
public. If what is done by Congress is manifestly in excess of the
powers granted to it, then upon the courts will rest the duty of
adjudging that its action is neither legal nor binding upon the
people. But if what Congress does is within the limits of its
power, and is simply unwise or injurious, the remedy is that
suggested by Chief Justice Marshall in
Gibbons v. Ogden
when he said:
"The wisdom and the discretion of Congress, their identity with
the people, and the influence which their constituents possess at
elections are, in this as in many other instances -- as that, for
example, of declaring war -- the sole restraints on which they have
relied to secure them from its abuse. They are the restraints on
which the people must often rely solely in all representative
governments."
The whole subject is too important, and the questions suggested
by its consideration are too difficult of solution, to justify any
attempt to lay down a rule for determining in advance the validity
of every statute that may be enacted under the commerce clause. We
decide nothing more in the present case than that lottery tickets
are subjects of traffic among those who choose to sell or buy them;
that the carriage of such tickets by independent carriers from one
state to another is therefore interstate commerce; that, under its
power to regulate commerce among the several states, Congress --
subject to the limitations imposed by the Constitution upon the
exercise of the powers granted -- has plenary authority over such
commerce, and may prohibit the carriage of such tickets from state
to state, and that legislation to that end, and of that character,
is not inconsistent
Page 188 U. S. 364
with any limitation or restriction imposed upon the exercise of
the powers granted to Congress.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, with whom concur MR. JUSTICE BREWER,
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, dissenting:
Although the first section of the Act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat.
963, c. 191, is inartificially drawn, I accept the contention of
the government that it makes it an offense (1) to bring lottery
matter from abroad into the United States; (2) to cause such matter
to be deposited in or carried by the mails of the United States;
(3) to cause such matter to be carried from one state to another in
the United States, and further, to cause any advertisement of a
lottery or similar enterprise to be brought into the United States,
or be deposited or carried by the mails, or transferred from one
state to another.
The case before us does not involve in fact the circulation of
advertisements and the question of the abridgment of the freedom of
the press; nor does it involve the importation of lottery matter,
or its transmission by the mails. It is conceded that the lottery
tickets in question, though purporting to be issued by a lottery
company of Paraguay, were printed in the United States, and were
not imported into the United States from any foreign country.
The naked question is whether the prohibition by Congress of the
carriage of lottery tickets from one state to another by means
other than the mails is within the powers vested in that body by
the Constitution of the United States. That the purpose of Congress
in this enactment was the suppression of lotteries cannot
reasonably be denied. That purpose is avowed in the title of the
act, and is its natural and reasonable effect, and by that its
validity must be tested.
Henderson v. New York,
92 U. S. 268;
Minnesota v. Barber, 136 U. S.
320.
The power of the state to impose restraints and burdens on
persons and property in conservation and promotion of the
public
Page 188 U. S. 365
health, good order, and prosperity is a power originally and
always belonging to the states, not surrendered by them to the
general government, nor directly restrained by the Constitution of
the United States, and essentially exclusive, and the suppression
of lotteries as a harmful business falls within this power,
commonly called, of police.
Douglas v. Kentucky,
168 U. S. 488.
It is urged, however, that, because Congress is empowered to
regulate commerce between the several states, it therefore may
suppress lotteries by prohibiting the carriage of lottery matter.
Congress may indeed make all laws necessary and proper for carrying
the powers granted to it into execution, and doubtless an act
prohibiting the carriage of lottery matter would be necessary and
proper to the execution of a power to suppress lotteries; but that
power belongs to the states, and not to Congress. To hold that
Congress has general police power would be to hold that it may
accomplish objects not entrusted to the general government, and to
defeat the operation of the Tenth Amendment, declaring that
"the powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to
the states respectively, or to the people."
The ground on which prior acts forbidding the transmission of
lottery matter by the mails was sustained was that the power vested
in Congress to establish post offices and post roads embraced the
regulation of the entire postal system of the country, and that,
under that power, Congress might designate what might be carried in
the mails and what excluded.
In re Rapier, 143 U.
S. 110 Ex Parte Jackson, 96 U. S.
727.
In the latter case, Mr. Justice Field, delivering the unanimous
opinion of the Court, said:
"But we do not think that Congress possesses the power to
prevent the transportation in other ways, as merchandise, of matter
which it excludes from the mails. To give efficiency to its
regulations and prevent rival postal systems, it may perhaps
prohibit the carriage by others for hire over postal routes of
articles which legitimately constitute mail matter in the sense in
which those terms were used when the Constitution was adopted,
consisting of letters, and of newspapers
Page 188 U. S. 366
and pamphlets, when not sent as merchandise, but, further than
this, its power of prohibition cannot extend."
And this was repeated in the case of
Rapier.
Certainly the act before us cannot stand the test of the rule
laid down by Mr. Justice Miller in the
Trade-Mark Cases,
100 U. S. 96,
when he said:
"When, therefore, Congress undertakes to enact a law which can
only be valid as a regulation of commerce, it is reasonable to
expect to find on the face of the law or from its essential nature
that it is a regulation of commerce with foreign nations or among
the several states or with the Indian tribes. If not so limited, it
is in excess of the power of Congress."
But, apart from the question of
bona fides, this act
cannot be brought within the power to regulate commerce among the
several states unless lottery tickets are articles of commerce, and
therefore, when carried across state lines, of interstate commerce,
or unless the power to regulate interstate commerce includes the
absolute and exclusive power to prohibit the transportation of
anything or anybody from one state to another.
Mr. Justice Catron remarked in the
License
Cases, 5 How. 504,
46 U. S. 600,
that
"that which does not belong to commerce is within the
jurisdiction of the police power of the state, and that which does
belong to commerce is within the jurisdiction of the United
States,"
and the observation has since been repeatedly quoted by this
Court with approval.
In
United States v. E. C. Knight Company, 156 U.
S. 13, we said:
"It is vital that the independence of the commercial power and
of the police power, and the delimitation between them, however
sometimes perplexing, should always be recognized and observed, for
while the one furnishes the strongest bond of union, the other is
essential to the preservation of the autonomy of the states as
required by our dual form of government, and acknowledged evils,
however grave and urgent they may appear to be, had better be borne
than the risk be run, in the effort to suppress them, of more
serious consequences by resort to expedients of even doubtful
constitutionality. It will be perceived how far-reaching the
proposition is that the power of dealing with a monopoly directly
may be exercised by the
Page 188 U. S. 367
general government whenever interstate or international commerce
may be ultimately affected. The regulation of commerce applies to
the subjects of commerce, and not to matters of internal
police."
This case was adhered to in
Addyston Pipe and Steel Company
v. United States, 175 U. S. 211,
where it was decided that Congress could prohibit the performance
of contracts, whose natural effect, when carried out, would be to
directly regulate interstate and foreign commerce.
It cannot be successfully contended that either Congress or the
states can, by their own legislation, enlarge their powers, and the
question of the extent and limit of the powers of either is a
judicial question under the fundamental law.
If a particular article is not the subject of commerce, the
determination of Congress that it is cannot be so conclusive as to
exclude judicial inquiry.
When Chief Justice Marshall said that commerce embraced
intercourse, he added commercial intercourse, and this was
necessarily so, since, as Chief Justice Taney pointed out, if
intercourse were a word of larger meaning than the word "commerce,"
it could not be substituted for the word of more limited meaning
contained in the Constitution.
Is the carriage of lottery tickets from one state to another
commercial intercourse?
The lottery ticket purports to create contractual relations, and
to furnish the means of enforcing a contract right.
This is true of insurance policies, and both are contingent in
their nature. Yet this Court has held that the issuing of fire,
marine, and life insurance policies in one state, and sending them
to another, to be there delivered to the insured on payment of
premium, is not interstate commerce.
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168;
Hooper v.
California, 155 U. S. 648;
New York Life Insurance Company v. Cravens, 178 U.
S. 389.
In
Paul v. Virginia, Mr. Justice Field, in delivering
the unanimous opinion of the Court, said:
"Issuing a policy of insurance is not a transaction of commerce.
The policies are simple contracts of indemnity against loss by
fire, entered into between the corporations and the assured for a
consideration paid by the latter. These contracts are not articles
of commerce
Page 188 U. S. 368
in any proper meaning of the word. They are not subjects of
trade and barter offered in the market as something having an
existence and value independent of the parties to them. They are
not commodities to be shipped or forwarded from one state to
another and then put up for sale. They are like other personal
contracts between parties which are completed by their signature
and the transfer of the consideration. Such contracts are not
interstate transactions, though the parties may be domiciled in
different states. The policies do not take effect -- are not
executed contracts -- until delivered by the agent in Virginia.
They are, then, local transactions, and are governed by the local
law. They do not constitute a part of the commerce between the
states any more than a contract for the purchase and sale of goods
in Virginia by a citizen of New York whilst in Virginia would
constitute a portion of such commerce."
This language was quoted with approval in
Hooper v.
California, 155 U. S. 648, and
it was further said:
"If the power to regulate interstate commerce applied to all the
incidents to which said commerce might give rise, and to all
contracts which might be made in the course of its transaction,
that power would embrace the entire sphere of mercantile activity
in any way connected with trade between the states, and would
exclude state control over many contracts purely domestic in their
nature. The business of insurance is not commerce. A contract of
insurance is not an instrumentality of commerce. The making of such
a contract is a mere incident of commercial intercourse, and in
this respect there is no difference whatever between insurance
against fire and insurance against 'the perils of the sea.' Or, as
remarked in
New York Life Insurance Company v. Cravens,
'against the uncertainty of man's mortality.'"
The fact that the agent of the foreign insurance company
negotiated the contract of insurance in the state where the
contract was to be finally completed and the policy delivered did
not affect the result. As Mr. Justice Bradley said in the leading
case of
Robbins v. Shelby County Taxing District,
120 U. S. 489:
"The negotiation of sales of goods which are in another
Page 188 U. S. 369
state, for the purpose of introducing them into the state in
which the negotiation is made, is interstate commerce."
And see Collins v. New Hampshire, 171 U. S.
30, and other cases.
Tested by the same reasoning, negotiable instruments are not
instruments of commerce; bills of lading are, because they stand
for the articles included therein; hence, it has been held that a
state cannot tax interstate bills of lading because that would be a
regulation of interstate commerce, and that Congress cannot tax
foreign bills of lading, because that would be to tax the articles
exported, and in conflict with Article I, Section 9, cl. 5, of the
Constitution of the United States, that "no tax or duty shall be
laid on any articles exported from any state."
Fairbank v.
United States, 181 U. S. 283.
In
Nathan v.
Louisiana, 8 How. 73, it was held that a broker
dealing in foreign bills of exchange was not engaged in commerce,
but in supplying an instrumentality of commerce, and that a state
tax on all money or exchange brokers was not void as to him as a
regulation of commerce.
And in
Williams v. Fears, 179 U.
S. 270, that the levy of a tax by the State of Georgia
on the occupation of a person engaged in hiring laborers to be
employed beyond the limits of the state was not a regulation of
interstate commerce, and that the tax fell within the distinction
between interstate commerce or an instrumentality thereof, and the
mere incidents that might attend the carrying on of such
commerce.
In
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 440,
Congress had empowered the corporation of the City of Washington to
"authorize the drawing of lotteries for any improvement of the
city, which the ordinary funds or revenue thereof will not
accomplish." The corporation had duly provided for such lottery,
and this case was a conviction under a statute of Virginia for
selling tickets issued by that lottery. That statute forbade the
sale within the state of any ticket in a lottery not authorized by
the laws of Virginia.
The Court held, by Chief Justice Marshall, that the lottery was
merely the emanation of a corporate power, and "that the
Page 188 U. S. 370
mind of Congress was not directed to any provision for the sale
of the tickets beyond the limits of the corporation."
The constitutionality of the act of Congress, as forcing the
sale of tickets in Virginia, was therefore not passed on, but if
lottery tickets had been deemed articles of commerce, the Virginia
statute would have been invalid as a regulation of commerce, and
the conviction could hardly have been affirmed, as it was.
In
Nutting v. Massachusetts, 183 U.
S. 553,
183 U. S. 556,
Mr. Justice Gray said:
"A state has the undoubted power to prohibit foreign insurance
companies from making contracts of insurance, marine or other,
within its limits, except upon such conditions as the state may
prescribe, not interfering with interstate commerce. A contract of
marine insurance is not an instrumentality of commerce, but a mere
incident of commercial intercourse. The state, having the power to
impose conditions on the transaction of business by foreign
insurance companies within its limits, has the equal right to
prohibit the transaction of such business by agents of such
companies, or by insurance brokers, who are to some extent the
representatives of both parties."
If a state should create a corporation to engage in the business
of lotteries, could it enter another state, which prohibited
lotteries, on the ground that lottery tickets were the subjects of
commerce?
On the other hand, could Congress compel a state to admit
lottery matter within it, contrary to its own laws?
In
Alexander v. State, 86 Ga. 246, it was held that a
state statute prohibiting the business of buying and selling what
are commonly known as "futures," was not protected by the commerce
clause of the Constitution, as the business was gambling, and that
clause protected interstate commerce, but did not protect
interstate gambling. The same view was expressed in
State v.
Stripling, 113 Ala. 120, in respect of an act forbidding the
sale of pools on horse races conducted without the state.
In
Ballock v. State, 73 Md. 1, it was held that, when
the bonds of a foreign government are coupled with conditions and
stipulations that change their character from an
Page 188 U. S. 371
obligation for the payment of a certain sum of money to a
species of lottery tickets condemned by the police regulations of
the state, the prohibition of their sale did not violate treaty
stipulation or constitutional provision. Such bonds with such
conditions and stipulations ceased to be vendible under the
law.
So lottery tickets forbidden to be issued or dealt in by the
laws of Texas, the
terminus a quo, and by the laws of
California or Utah, the
terminus ad quem, were not
vendible, and for this reason also not articles of commerce.
If a lottery ticket is not an article of commerce, how can it
become so when placed in an envelope or box or other covering, and
transported by an express company? To say that the mere carrying of
an article which is not an article of commerce in and of itself
nevertheless becomes such the moment it is to be transported from
one state to another is to transform a noncommercial article into a
commercial one simply because it is transported. I cannot conceive
that any such result can properly follow.
It would be to say that everything is an article of commerce the
moment it is taken to be transported from place to place, and of
interstate commerce if from state to state.
An invitation to dine, or to take a drive, or a note of
introduction, all become articles of commerce under the ruling in
this case by being deposited with an express company for
transportation. This in effect breaks down all the differences
between that which is, and that which is not, an article of
commerce, and the necessary consequence is to take from the states
all jurisdiction over the subject so far as interstate
communication is concerned. It is a long step in the direction of
wiping out all traces of state lines, and the creation of a
centralized government.
Does the grant to Congress of the power to regulate interstate
commerce import the absolute power to prohibit it?
It was said in
Gibbons v. Ogden that the right of
intercourse between state and state was derived from "those laws
whose authority is acknowledged by civilized man throughout the
world;" but, under the Articles of Confederation, the states might
have interdicted interstate trade, yet
Page 188 U. S. 372
when they surrendered the power to deal with commerce as between
themselves to the general government, it was undoubtedly in order
to form a more perfect union by freeing such commerce from state
discrimination, and not to transfer the power of restriction.
"But if that power of regulation is absolutely unrestricted as
respects interstate commerce, then the very unity the Constitution
was framed to secure can be set at naught by a legislative body
created by that instrument."
Dooley v. United States, 183
U. S. 171.
It will not do to say -- a suggestion which has heretofore been
made in this case -- that state laws have been found to be
ineffective for the suppression of lotteries, and therefore
Congress should interfere. The scope of the commerce clause of the
Constitution cannot be enlarged because of present views of public
interest.
In countries whose fundamental law is flexible, it may be that
the homely maxim, "to ease the shoe where it pinches" may be
applied, but under the Constitution of the United States, it cannot
be availed of to justify action by Congress or by the courts.
The Constitution gives no countenance to the theory that
Congress is vested with the full powers of the British Parliament
and that, although subject to constitutional limitations, it is the
sole judge of their extent and application, and the decisions of
this Court from the beginning have been to the contrary.
"To what purpose are powers limited, and to what purpose is that
limitation committed to writing, if these limits may at any time,
be passed by those intended to be restrained?"
asked Marshall, in
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 176.
"Should Congress," said the same great magistrate in
McCulloch v. Maryland,
"under the pretext of executing its powers, pass laws for the
accomplishment of objects not entrusted to the government, it would
become the painful duty of this tribunal, should a case requiring
such a decision come before it, to say that such an act was not the
law of the land. "
Page 188 U. S. 373
And so Chief Justice Taney, referring to the extent and limits
of the powers of Congress:
"As the Constitution itself does not draw the line, the question
is necessarily one for judicial decision, and depending altogether
upon the words of the Constitution."
It is argued that the power to regulate commerce among the
several states is the same as the power to regulate commerce with
foreign nations, and with the Indian tribes. But is its scope the
same?
As in effect before observed, the power to regulate commerce
with foreign nations and the power to regulate interstate commerce,
are to be taken
diverso intuitu, for the latter was
intended to secure equality and freedom in commercial intercourse
as between the states, not to permit the creation of impediments to
such intercourse, while the former clothed Congress with that power
over international commerce, pertaining to a sovereign nation in
its intercourse with foreign nations, and subject, generally
speaking, to no implied or reserved power in the states. The laws
which would be necessary and proper in the one case would not be
necessary or proper in the other.
Congress is forbidden to lay any tax or duty on articles
exported from any state, and while that has been applied to exports
to a foreign country, it seems to me that it was plainly intended
to apply to interstate exportation as well; Congress is forbidden
to give preference by any regulation of commerce or revenue to the
ports of one state over those of another, and duties, imposts, and
excises must be uniform throughout the United States.
"The citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges
and immunities of citizens in the several states." This clause of
the second section of Article IV was taken from the Fourth Article
of Confederation, which provided that
"the free inhabitant of each of these states . . . shall be
entitled to all privileges and immunities of free citizens in the
several states, and the people of each state shall have free
ingress and regress to and from any other state, and shall enjoy
therein all the privileges of trade and commerce,"
while other parts of the
Page 188 U. S. 374
same article were also brought forward in Article IV of the
Constitution.
Mr. Justice Miller, in the
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 75, says
that there can be but little question that the purpose of the
Fourth Article of the Confederation, and of this particular clause
of the Constitution, "is the same, and that the privileges and
immunities intended are the same in each."
Thus it is seen that the right of passage of persons and
property from one state to another cannot be prohibited by
Congress. But that does not challenge the legislative power of a
sovereign nation to exclude foreign persons or commodities, or
place an embargo, perhaps not permanent, upon foreign ships or
manufactures.
The power to prohibit the transportation of diseased animals and
infected goods over railroads or on steamboats is an entirely
different thing, for they would be in themselves injurious to the
transaction of interstate commerce, and, moreover, are essentially
commercial in their nature. And the exclusion of diseased persons
rests on different ground, for nobody would pretend that persons
could be kept off the trains because they were going from one state
to another to engage in the lottery business. However enticing that
business may be, we do not understand these pieces of paper
themselves can communicate bad principles by contact.
The same view must be taken as to commerce with Indian tribes.
There is no reservation of police powers or any other to a foreign
nation or to an Indian tribe, and the scope of the power is not the
same as that over interstate commerce.
In
United States v. 43 Gallons of Whiskey, 93 U. S.
188,
93 U. S. 194,
Mr. Justice Davis said:
"Congress now has the exclusive and absolute power to regulate
commerce with the Indian tribes -- a power as broad and free from
restrictions as that to regulate commerce with foreign nations. The
only efficient way of dealing with the Indian tribes was to place
them under the protection of the general government. Their peculiar
habits and character required this, and the history of the country
shows the necessity of keeping them 'separate, subordinate, and
dependent.' Accordingly, treaties have been made and laws
passed
Page 188 U. S. 375
separating Indian territory from that of the states and
providing that intercourse and trade with the Indians should be
carried on solely under the authority of the United States."
I regard this decision as inconsistent with the views of the
framers of the Constitution, and of Marshall, its great expounder.
Our form of government may remain notwithstanding legislation or
decision, but, as long ago observed, it is with governments, as
with religions: the form may survive the substance of the
faith.
In my opinion, the act in question in the particular under
consideration is invalid, and the judgments below ought to be
reversed, and my brothers BREWER, SHIRAS and PECKHAM concur in this
dissent.