1. The Court raises
sua sponte the question whether
jurisdictional amounts were in controversy in the District Court.
P.
306 U. S.
588.
2. When several plaintiffs assert separate and distinct demands
in a single suit, the amounts involved cannot be added together to
satisfy jurisdictional requirements; jurisdiction as to each
separate controversy depends upon the amount involved in that
controversy. P.
306 U. S.
589.
3. When several plaintiffs assert separate and distinct demands
in one suit, a general allegation in the bill that the amount
involved in the litigation is in excess of $3,000 and a finding of
the District Court that the amount involved in the suit exceeds the
jurisdictional amount give no indication that the amount in
controversy with respect to the claim of any single plaintiff
exceeds the jurisdictional amount, and are insufficient to show
that the District Court had jurisdiction of the cause. P.
306 U. S.
589.
4. The amount in controversy in a suit to restrain illegal
imposition of fees or taxes is the amount of the fees and taxes
which would normally be collected during the period of the
litigation. P.
306 U. S.
589.
5. The question whether the jurisdictional amount was involved
in the District Court is determined by the record of that court,
which cannot be supplemented by affidavits filed in this Court. P.
306 U. S.
590.
6. A suit by several plaintiffs, each bound to establish the
jurisdictional amount with respect to his own claim, should he
dismissed as to those who fail to do so. P.
306 U. S.
590.
7. The States have constitutional authority to exact reasonable
fees for the use of their highways by vehicles moving interstate,
and for that purpose they may classify the vehicles according to
the character of the traffic and the burden it imposes on the State
by
Page 306 U. S. 584
that use, and charge for the use a fee not shown to be
unreasonable or excessive. P.
306 U. S.
593.
8. Such classification is a legislative act, and is presumed to
be supported by facts known to the legislature, unless facts
judicially known or proved preclude that possibility. P.
306 U. S.
594.
9. In passing upon the validity of such a classification, the
function of the court is to determine whether it is possible to say
that the legislative decision is without rational basis. This is
equally the case where the classification, which is one which the
legislature was competent to make, is applied to vehicles using the
state highways in interstate commerce. P.
306 U. S.
594.
10. The California "Caravan" Act of 1937, defining "caravaning"
as the transportation of any vehicle operated on its own wheels, or
in tow of a motor vehicle, for the purpose of sale, exacts two
license fees, each of $7.50, for a six month's permit to "caravan"
a vehicle on the state highways. One of the fees is declared to be
to reimburse the State for expense incurred in administering police
regulations pertaining to the operation of vehicles moved pursuant
to such permits, and pertaining to public safety upon the highways
as affected by such operation; the other is declared to be
compensation for the privilege of using the public highways.
Vehicles moving wholly within either of two zones, which are
approximately the northern and southern halves of the State, are
excepted from the operation of the statute.
Held:
(1) That the tax is not an unconstitutional burden on interstate
commerce, nor an infraction of the due process and equal protection
clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, as applied to one engaged in
the distinct business of bringing motor cars into the State for
sale, in extensive caravans or convoys composed largely of cars
coupled in twos, each pair in control of a single driver.
Cf.
Morf v. Bingaman, 298 U. S. 407. Pp.
306 U. S.
594-595.
The evidence shows that coupled cars, under control of a single
driver, subject the highways to increased wear and tear because of
their tendency to skid and sway on curves and in passing other
traffic, and that the length of the caravans and the inefficiency
and irresponsibility of the drivers, casually employed, increase
traffic congestion and the inconveniences and hazards of automobile
traffic. These circumstances have caused the State to make
increased provision for the policing of the traffic.
(2) One engaged in this class of highway traffic has no ground
or status to complain of the discrimination involved in exacting
the fees where cars are transported into the State for sale singly,
and
Page 306 U. S. 585
not where they move singly intrazone or enter the State not for
purposes of sale. P. 595.
(3) No unconstitutional discrimination results from failure to
apply the statute to cars that move for sale intrazone in caravans,
it appearing that cars in that class are driven relatively short
distances, over highways of more than two lanes, as distinguished
from caravans coming from without the State, which move for long
distances over two-lane highways in mountain districts; that such
intrazone caravans or convoys as there are consist of two to four
cars; that coupling is negligible; that each car is in charge of a
regularly licensed driver, and that such intrazone movement is
subject to other licensing and taxing provisions, the differences
between which and the exactions here in question may bear a fair
relation to the differences in the burden of the traffic for which
the State must provide. P.
306 U. S. 596.
(4) The legislature having made its classification by the
establishment of zones, in the light of special conditions in the
State, courts are not free to set side its determination unless
they can say that it is without any substantial basis. P.
306 U. S.
596.
(5) The complainant has not sustained the burden of proving, and
the evidence does not show, that the fees exacted by the statute
are excessive for the purposes indicated. P.
306 U. S.
600.
23 F. Supp. 946 reversed.
Appeal from a final decree of the District Court of three judges
which enjoined the appellants, officers of the State of California,
from enforcing statutory provisions imposing license fees for the
use of the state highways in the transportation for sale of motor
vehicles in "caravans."
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The principal questions for decision are whether the California
Caravan Act of 1937, exacting fees aggregating
Page 306 U. S. 586
$15 for each automobile driven into the state for sale, imposes
a forbidden burden on interstate commerce or infringes the due
process or equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
This is an appeal under §§ 238(3), 266 of the Judicial Code, 28
U.S.C. §§ 345(3), 380, from a final decree of the district court
for southern California, three judges sitting, enjoining
appellants, officers of the California, from enforcing the license
and fee provisions of Chapter 788, p. 2253, California Statutes of
1937.
Gray v. Ingels, 23 F. Supp. 946. [
Footnote 1]
The statute, known as the Caravan Act, was enacted as a
substitute for the Caravan Act of 1935, c. 402, p. 1453, Cal.Stat.
1935, held invalid in
Ingels v. Morf, 300 U.
S. 290, as an infringement of the commerce clause.
"Caravaning" is defined in § 1 of the present Act as the
"transportation of any vehicle . . . operated on its own wheels,
or in tow of a motor vehicle, for the purpose of selling or
offering the same for sale . . . within or without this State."
Sections 4, 5, and 6 exact in lieu of all other fees two license
fees, each of $7.50 for a six months permit for caravaning a
vehicle on the state highways. One of these is
"to reimburse the State for expense incurred in administering
police regulations pertaining to the operation of vehicles moved
pursuant to such permits and to public safety upon the highways as
affected by such operation;"
the other is declared to be "compensation for the privilege of
using the public highways." Section 8, excepts from the
Page 306 U. S. 587
operation of the statute vehicles moving wholly within either of
two zones which are approximately the northern and southern halves
of the state. Other sections of the Act make provision for the
issuance of licenses and the collection of fees. Section 12
provides for the collection of fees by seizure and sale of vehicles
transported in violation of the Act, and § 13 prescribes criminal
penalties for violation.
Appellees, numerous individuals, copartnerships, and
corporations, joined in bringing the present suit against
appellants, state officers charged with the duty of enforcing the
Act, alleging that each appellee had driven and would in the course
of business drive automobiles into California for the purpose of
sale. They prayed an injunction restraining appellants from
collecting the fees and enforcing the provisions of the statute in
aid of their collection. The district court's findings state that
the amount involved in the action is in excess of the sum of
$3,000; that each of appellees, in the course of business of
selling motor cars, purchases cars previously registered in other
states and "caravans" them into the state of California; that cars
for sale are often moved between points in a state zone; that the
operation of cars in caravans does not create an additional hazard
or a traffic problem necessitating special policing of the
caravans, and that the caravaning of cars does not create undue
wear and tear on the highways of the state; that the fees charged
are excessive, and bear no relation to the added expense to the
motor vehicle department of policing the highways of the state of
California, and that they are disproportionate to other taxes or
license fees charged by the state for the use of the highways. The
court concluded that the statute discriminated against interstate
commerce, deprived appellees of their property without due process,
and denied to them equal protection of the laws, in that it applies
only to those using the highways
Page 306 U. S. 588
for the transportation of motor vehicles for the purposes of
sale, and does not apply to other persons using the highways under
comparable circumstances.
Appellants assail here the findings of fact of the court below
on which it predicated its conclusion of unconstitutionality, and
insist that, upon the evidence, there is no basis for the
conclusion that the fees exacted are excessive, or that there is
discrimination against interstate commerce or a denial of equal
protection or due process.
JURISDICTION OF THE DISTRICT COURT
A motion of appellants in the court below to dismiss the bill of
complaint for want of the jurisdictional amount was withdrawn, and
the jurisdiction of the district court is not challenged here. But,
on the argument, it appearing doubtful whether the "matter in
controversy" exceeded "the sum or value of" $3,000, § 24(1) of the
Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 41(1), we raised the question whether
the jurisdictional amount was involved, as was our duty.
Mansfield, C. & L. Ry. Co. v. Swan, 111 U.
S. 379,
111 U. S. 382;
Stratton v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co., 282 U. S.
10,
282 U. S. 13;
St. Paul Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co., 303 U.
S. 283,
303 U. S. 287,
note 10. The bill of complaint alleges generally that "the amount
involved in this litigation is in excess of Three Thousand Dollars
($3,000.00), exclusive of interest and costs." But it is plain that
this allegation is insufficient to satisfy jurisdictional
requirements where there are numerous plaintiffs having no joint or
common interest or title in the subject matter of the suit. As the
bill of complaint shows on its face, and as the findings establish,
each appellee maintains his own separate and independent business,
which is said to be affected by the challenged fees. No joint or
common interest of appellees in the subject matter of the suit is
shown.
Cf. Gibbs v. Buck, 307 U. S.
66.
Page 306 U. S. 589
It is a familiar rule that, when several plaintiffs assert
separate and distinct demands in a single suit, the amount involved
in each separate controversy must be of the requisite amount to be
within the jurisdiction of the district court, and that those
amounts cannot be added together to satisfy jurisdictional
requirements.
Wheless v. St. Louis, 180 U.
S. 379;
Rogers v. Hennepin County, 239 U.
S. 621;
Pinel v. Pinel, 240 U.
S. 594;
Scott v. Frazier, 253 U.
S. 243. The general allegation in the bill of complaint
that "the amount involved in this litigation is in excess of"
$3,000 and the finding of the court that "the amount involved in
the within action" exceeds the jurisdictional amount give no
indication that the amount in controversy with respect to the claim
of any single plaintiff exceeds the jurisdictional amount, and are
insufficient to show that the district court had jurisdiction of
the cause.
Pinel v. Pinel, supra.
Examination of the record shows that only in the case of a
single appellee, Paul Gray, Inc., is there any allegation or proof
tending to show the amount in controversy. As to it, the bill of
complaint alleges that "it causes to be caravaned into the said
state . . . approximately one hundred fifty (150) automobiles each
year." This allegation is supported by evidence that this appellee
is regularly engaged in the business and tending to show that its
volume exceeded that amount when the act went into effect July 2,
1937. Since the amount in controversy in a suit to restrain illegal
imposition of fees or taxes is the amount of the fees or taxes
which would normally be collected during the period of the
litigation,
Healy v. Ratta, 292 U.
S. 263, we cannot say, upon this state of the record,
that jurisdiction was not established as to appellee Paul Gray,
Inc.
We ignore affidavits filed here for the purpose of supplementing
the record by showing the amount in controversy as to another
appellee. While it has been the practice
Page 306 U. S. 590
of this Court to receive affidavits for the purpose of
establishing its own appellate jurisdiction under statutes
prescribing that a specified amount in controversy is prerequisite
to the appeal,
Williamson v.
Kincaid, 4 Dall. 20;
Rush v.
Parker, 5 Cranch 287;
Roura v. Philippine
Islands, 218 U. S. 386;
see Red River Cattle Co. v. Needham, 137 U.
S. 632, that procedure is inapplicable here. Our review
of the action of the district court in assuming jurisdiction is
confined to the record before the district court.
Henneford v.
Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 303 U. S. 17.
Proper practice requires that, where each of several plaintiffs
is bound to establish the jurisdictional amount with respect to his
own claim, the suit should be dismissed as to those who fail to
show that the requisite amount is involved. [
Footnote 2] Otherwise, an appellate court could be
called on to sustain a decree in favor of a plaintiff who had not
shown that the claim involved the jurisdictional amount, even
though the suit were dismissed on the merits as to the other
plaintiffs who had established the jurisdictional amount for
themselves. Although it appears that such a result could not follow
here, we think it better practice to dismiss the suit for want of
the jurisdictional amount as to all appellees except Paul Gray,
Inc.
See Rich v.
Lambert, 12 How. 347;
Ex parte Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad Co., 106 U. S. 5;
Hassall v. Wilcox, 115 U. S. 598.
Cf. Grosjean v. American Press Co., Inc., 297 U.
S. 233.
Page 306 U. S. 591
DISCRIMINATION
Apart from appellees' insistence that the fees are an
unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce because excessive,
the substance of their contention is that the statute discriminates
between automobiles transported into the state singly and those
similarly transported intrazone, for which no fee is charged, and
also that the statute discriminates between those cars driven by
appellees in caravans and those similarly driven wholly within
either of the state zones, for which no fee is charged.
In
Morf v. Bingaman, 298 U. S. 407, we
had occasion to consider the validity of a fee or tax exacted by
New Mexico for the transportation into the state of any motor
vehicle for the purpose of sale within or without the state. It
there appeared that the plaintiff, with others, was engaged in
transporting motor cars on their own wheels in caravans across the
State of New Mexico for the purpose of sale, and that their
transportation for that purpose had resulted in the creation of a
distinct class of motor vehicle traffic of considerable magnitude.
In the course of this business, second-hand cars purchased at
points in the east are assembled in caravans, which are driven as
such to the point of sale in California. Large numbers of the cars
are coupled in twos, each two in charge of a single driver who
operates the forward car and controls the movement of both by the
use of the mechanism and brakes of one. The drivers of caravans,
except two or three regularly engaged, are casually employed and
serve without pay or for small compensation in order to secure
transportation to the point of destination. We said, pages
298 U. S.
411-412:
"The Legislature may readily have concluded, as did the trial
court, that the drivers have little interest in the business or the
vehicles they drive, and less regard than
Page 306 U. S. 592
drivers of state licensed cars for the safety and convenience of
others using the highways. The evidence supports the inference that
cars thus coupled and controlled frequently skid, especially on
curves, causing more than the usual wear and tear on the road; that
this and other increased difficulties in the operation of the
coupled cars, and the length of the caravans, increase the
inconvenience and hazard to passing traffic. . . . There is ample
support for a legislative determination that the peculiar character
of this traffic involves a special type of use of the highways,
with enhanced wear and tear on the roads and augmented hazards to
other traffic, which imposes on the state a heavier financial
burden for highway maintenance and policing than do other types of
motor car traffic. We cannot say that these circumstances do not
afford an adequate basis for special licensing and taxing
provisions, whose only effect, even when applied to interstate
traffic, is to enable the state to police it, and to impose upon it
a reasonable charge, to defray the burden of this state expense,
and for the privilege of using the state highways."
The California has found it expedient to adopt licensing
provisions for this class of traffic and to exact the fees
specified in the statute for the use of its highways and the
expense of policing. That this peculiar type of traffic occurs in
large volume between eastern points and points in California, and
that there is basis for the legislative judgment that the traffic
imposes special burdens on the use of the state highways for which
a special charge may be made, are abundantly supported by the
record. The parties have stipulated that fifteen thousand
automobiles are brought into the state for sale annually. Of these,
from 80 to 90 percent. come in caravans or convoys, and, of the
cars so moving, one-half are coupled together in twos. It further
appears by stipulation that the caravans or convoys are made up of
from nineteen to twenty-five cars.
Page 306 U. S. 593
There is much evidence in the record indicating that, if is the
long haul traffic in cars for sale in California which tends to
produce the movement in large caravans or convoys in order to save
expense of transportation, and which in turn tends to impose
special burdens on the state in connection with the use of its
highways, calling for the imposition of regulations and fees
different from those applied to other types of motor car movement.
Without repeating what was said more at length of like traffic in
Morf v. Bingaman, supra, the evidence in the present case
shows that coupled cars, under control of a single driver, subject
the highways to increased wear and tear because of their tendency
to skid and sway on curves and in passing other traffic, and that
the length of the caravans and the inefficiency and
irresponsibility of the drivers, casually employed, increase
traffic congestion and the inconveniences and hazards of automobile
traffic. These circumstances have caused the state to make
increased provision for the policing of the traffic. It is true
that the district court found that the practice of caravaning
creates no additional traffic hazard, nor any undue wear and tear
on the highways. But in this we think that its determination was
not only contrary to the evidence, but went beyond the judicial
province.
It is no longer open to question that the states have
constitutional authority to exact reasonable fees for the use of
their highways by vehicles moving interstate,
Hendrick v.
Maryland, 235 U. S. 610;
Kane v. New Jersey, 242 U. S. 160;
Clark v. Poor, 274 U. S. 554;
Sprout v. South Bend, 277 U. S. 163;
Morf v. Bingaman, supra; Dixie Ohio Express Co. v. State
Revenue Comm'n, p.
306 U. S. 72, and
that, for that purpose, they may classify the vehicles according to
the character of the traffic and the burden it imposes on the state
by that use, and charge for the use a fee not shown to be
unreasonable or excessive.
Page 306 U. S. 594
Continental Baking Co. v. Woodring, 286 U.
S. 352,
286 U. S.
370-371;
Hicklin v. Coney, 290 U.
S. 169;
Morf v. Bingaman, supra, 298 U. S. 413;
Dixie Ohio Express Co. v. State Revenue Comm'n, supra.
The classification of the traffic for the purposes of regulation
and fixing fees is a legislative, not a judicial, function. Its
merits are not to be weighed in the judicial balance and the
classification rejected merely because the weight of the evidence
in court appears to favor a different standard.
Cf. Worcester
County Trust Co. v. Riley, 302 U. S. 292,
302 U. S. 299.
The determination of the legislature is presumed to be supported by
facts known to it, unless facts judicially known or proved preclude
that possibility.
Standard Oil Co. v. Marysville,
279 U. S. 582,
279 U. S. 584;
Borden's Farm Products Co. v. Ten Eyck, 297 U.
S. 251,
297 U. S. 263;
s.c.
11 F. Supp.
599, 600;
South Carolina Highway Dept. v. Barnwell
Bros., 303 U. S. 177,
303 U. S.
191-192;
United States v. Carolene Products
Co., 304 U. S. 144,
304 U. S.
153-154. Hence, in passing on the validity of the
present classification, it is not the province of a court to hear
and examine evidence for the purpose of deciding again a question
which the legislature has already decided. Its function is only to
determine whether it is possible to say that the legislative
decision is without rational basis. This is equally the case where
the classification, which is one which the legislature was
competent to make, is applied to vehicles using the state highways
in interstate commerce.
South Carolina Highway Department v.
Barnwell Bros., supra, 303 U. S. 187
et seq. The legislature must be assumed to have acted on
information available to courts, and where, as here, the evidence,
like that discussed in
Morf v. Bingaman, supra, shows that
it is at least a debatable question whether the traffic in caravans
involves special wear and tear of the highways and increased
traffic hazards requiring special police control, decision is for
the legislature, and not the courts.
Standard Oil Co. v.
Marysville,
Page 306 U. S. 595
supra; South Carolina Highway Department v. Barnwell Bros.,
supra.
Appellee Paul Gray, Inc., so far as appears, caravans its cars
for sale in California from Detroit, Michigan, and St. Joseph,
Missouri. Its cars, like those of the other appellees, move in
caravans of from nineteen to twenty-five cars. It does not appear,
nor is it contended, that this appellee transports any cars singly.
From what has been said, it is evident, as was decided in
Morf
v. Bingaman, supra, that cars moving in caravans of the type
described constitute a special class of traffic which may be taxed
or charged for differently from other classes without infringing
the equal protection clause.
The argument that the statute denies equal protection to
appellees because it exacts fees for cars transported into the
state for sale singly, but none for cars which move similarly
intrazone or for those which enter the state not for purposes of
sale, ignores the actual circumstances in which the statute is
applied to appellees, as shown by the record, and seeks to take
advantage of an alleged discrimination which, if it exists, does
appellees no harm. The Fourteenth Amendment does not require
classification for fees, more than for taxation, to follow any
particular form of words. If that adopted results in the
application of the exaction to a class which may be separately
charged without a denial of equal protection, those within the
class cannot complain that it might have been more aptly defined,
or that the statute may tax others who are not within the class.
See Patsone v. Pennsylvania, 232 U.
S. 138,
232 U. S. 144;
Silver v. Silver, 280 U. S. 117,
280 U. S. 123;
Morf v. Bingaman, supra, 298 U. S.
413.
It is the practice of transporting automobiles for long
distances over the highway for purpose of sale which has given rise
to the practice of moving them in caravans. The use of automobiles
for other purposes, or for pleasure, does not have that result. The
classification of the statute,
Page 306 U. S. 596
in its practical application, embraces and is constitutionally
applicable to cars moving in caravans, the class of traffic in
which appellee Paul Gray, Inc., engages, and on which it is alone
taxed. One form of discrimination of which it complains is that
fees are exacted for cars driven into the state singly for sale,
but not for those driven singly to market intrazone or singly from
without the state for other purposes. Appellee does not show that
it belongs to either class, and, so far as the traffic in which it
participates is properly taxed, it cannot complain of the
imposition of the charge on a business which it does not do.
So far as appellees complain that no fee is exacted for cars
which move for sale intrazone in caravans, different considerations
apply. As we have said, it is the long haul of cars for sale which
has produced motor vehicle caravans and has made them a special
class for the purposes of regulation and imposition of fees. It was
for the legislature to consider and decide whether the actual
conditions which prevail in the state, affecting movement of cars
for sale, eliminate or so reduce the burden of the caravan traffic
on the highways as to call for a different classification of the
short haul traffic for the purposes of regulation and fees. The
legislature having made its classification by the establishment of
zones, in the light of special conditions in the state, courts are
not free to set aside its determination unless they can say that it
is without any substantial basis.
Carley & Hamilton v.
Snook, 281 U. S. 66,
281 U. S. 73;
Continental Baking Co. v. Woodring, supra; Sproles v.
Binford, 286 U. S. 374;
Hicklin v. Coney, supra; Aero Mayflower Transit Co. v. Public
Service Comm'n, 295 U. S. 285.
The trial court found that cars are often moved in convoys in
Zone 1, which includes the metropolitan area of Los Angeles, and it
thought this sufficient to establish an unlawful discrimination
without consideration of the
Page 306 U. S. 597
other conditions affecting the intrazone traffic. The evidence
establishes beyond any reasonable doubt that the movement intrazone
of cars for sale in convoys similar to that of appellees is
negligible, and that the principal sources of cars for sale moving
intrazone are the assembly plants of automobile manufacturers
located in or near the metropolitan areas of Los Angeles and San
Francisco. Being new cars, the bulk of them, shipped interstate or
to distant Points intrastate, move by rail, water or truck. Most of
those which move on their own wheels are driven relatively short
distances, seventy-five miles or less, in the metropolitan area
over highways of more than two lanes, as distinguished from
caravans coming from without the state, which move for long
distances over two-lane highways in mountain districts. The
proportion driven singly does not appear. Such convoys or caravans
as there are usually consist of two or three cars. The evidence
discloses no case of more than four. Coupling is negligible. Each
car is in charge of a regularly employed and licensed driver. The
intrazone movement is subject to other licensing and taxing
provisions of the state law, and no showing is made that the
differences in fees or taxes exacted from the two classes of
traffic do not bear a fair relationship to the differences in the
burden of the traffic for which the state must provide.
The legislature could reasonably have concluded that the wear
and tear and injury to the highways from driving coupled cars
intrazone was negligible, and that the relatively short distances
which cars are driven in twos or threes, the character of the
highways used, and the difference in the class of drivers, taken
together, eliminate from the intrazone traffic or so substantially
reduce the burden imposed by traffic like that of appellees moving
interstate or interzone as to require, in fairness, a different
classification for the purpose of fees charged for the use of the
highways. We cannot say that that conclusion
Page 306 U. S. 598
is without support or infringes the principles which we have
repeatedly recognized as defining the power of the states, in the
absence of Congressional action, to classify vehicles or traffic
for the purposes of regulating use of the highways by vehicles
moving interstate. If the classification with respect to a matter
remaining within state control, despite the commerce clause, is
otherwise valid, it is not any the less so because it affects
interstate commerce.
See South Carolina Highway Department v.
Barnwell Bros., supra, 303 U. S.
191-192, and cases cited. As the state has authority to
charge a reasonable fee for the use of its highways, and as the
classification of the traffic which the state has made for the
purpose of fixing the fees is valid, the only remaining question is
whether the fees which it has fixed must be deemed excessive.
REASONABLENESS OF THE FEES
In
Ingels v. Morf, supra, the $15 fee charged under the
California Act of 1935 for driving a car into the state for purpose
of sale was contested as excessive. There, the statute declared
that the fee was
"intended to reimburse the State treasury for the added expense
which the State may incur in the administration and enforcement of
this act and the added expense of policing the highways over which
such caravaning may be conducted . . . ,"
and the automobile owner assumed and by proof sustained the
burden of showing that the charge made for the precise purposes
defined by the statute was excessive. We accepted the evidence as
establishing that the cost of issuing caravan permits was about $5
per car and as supporting the finding of the trial court that the
cost of policing did not exceed $5 a car. And we concluded that the
total cost of administration and policing was substantially less
than the $15 fee charged.
Here, a fee of $7.50 is collected for administration and
enforcement of the Act and a fee of like amount is charged
Page 306 U. S. 599
for the use of the highways. Appellees have offered no proof
that either of the fees is too large, although the burden rested
upon them to show that the fees were excessive for the declared
purposes.
Hendrick v. Maryland, supra, 235 U. S. 624;
Interstate Busses Corp. v. Blodgett, 276 U.
S. 245,
276 U. S. 251;
Morf v. Bingaman, supra, 298 U. S. 410;
Ingels v. Morf, supra, 300 U. S. 296;
Great Northern Railway Co. v. Washington, 300 U.
S. 154, is not to the contrary.
Appellants, without abandoning their position that the burden of
proof rests on appellees, offered evidence to show that the costs
of administration and policing proved in
Ingels v. Morf,
supra, were incomplete. Due to the nature of the case, much of
the proof is inexact and speculative. But there is evidence that
thirty-nine officers devoted part or all of their time to enforcing
the 1937 Act. The expense of operating their automobiles and
motorcycles is considerable; an increased burden is imposed upon
the personnel of the border police stations, and some increase in
clerical force and in expenditures for stationery and miscellaneous
items has been required. Investigations of attempted evasions
increase the unit cost above that of other types of traffic. The
total of these added expenses, as computed by appellants at about
$133,000 annually certainly approximates the amount of the revenue
derived from the fees. The aggregate of the fees collected during
eleven months for 14,000 cars at $7.50 each is $105,000. Appellees
do nothing to challenge this evidence, and they point to no
specific errors in the estimates or computation upon which
appellants calculate the costs.
The state is not required to compute with mathematical precision
the cost to it of the services necessitated by the caravan traffic.
If the fees charged do not appear to be manifestly disproportionate
to the services rendered, we cannot say from our own knowledge or
experience that they are excessive.
Kane v. New Jersey,
supra, 242 U. S.
168;
Page 306 U. S. 600
Interstate Busses Corp. v. Blodgett, supra,
276 U. S.
251-252;
Morf v. Bingaman, supra; Dixie Ohio Express
Co. v. State Revenue Comm'n, supra; see Patapsco Guano Co. v. North
Carolina, 171 U. S. 345,
171 U. S. 354;
McLean & Co. v. Denver & Rio Grande R. Co.,
203 U. S. 38,
203 U. S. 55;
Interstate Transit, Inc. v. Lindsey, 283 U.
S. 183,
283 U. S. 186.
Appellees have failed to sustain the burden of proof that either of
the fees is excessive for the purpose for which it is
collected.
The trial court seems to have thought, as appellees argue, that
unreasonableness of the fees was established by proof that the same
fees are not imposed on other classes of traffic. But since, as we
have seen, there is basis for the classification of the traffic,
there is basis for a difference in fees charged the different
classes.
Hendrick v. Maryland, supra; Interstate Busses Corp.
v. Blodgett, supra. Appellees have laid no foundation for any
contention that there are not compensating differences in the
traffic comparable to the difference in fees, or for impeaching the
legislative judgment that those specified are fairly related to the
traffic to which they are applied.
The cause will be reversed with instructions to the district
court to dismiss the case as to appellee Paul Gray, Inc., on the
merits, and to dismiss as to the other appellees for want of
jurisdiction.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK is of the opinion that the case should be
dismissed for want of jurisdiction as to all the appellees.
[
Footnote 1]
The suit was begun July 14, 1937, before the enactment of the
amendment to § 24 of the Judicial Code, 50 Stat. 738, providing
that
"no district court shall have jurisdiction of any suit to
enjoin, suspend, or restrain the assessment, levy, or collection of
any tax imposed by or pursuant to the laws of any State where a
plain, speedy, and efficient remedy may be had at law or in equity
in the courts of such State."
Section 2 of the Act excludes from its operation suits begun in
the district courts before its enactment.
[
Footnote 2]
A different question is involved in the case of a creditor's
bill to liquidate an insolvent corporation for the benefit of all
creditors. There, his claim must exceed the jurisdictional amount.
Lion Bonding & Surety Co. v. Karatz, 262 U. S.
77. But creditors whose claims are less may be made
parties because of their interest in a fund brought within the
jurisdiction of the court.
Gibson v. Shufeldt,
122 U. S. 27;
Handley v. Stutz, 137 U. S. 366;
National Bank of Commerce v. Allen, 90 F. 545,
555-556.