1. Under the powers inherent in every sovereignty, a government
may regulate the conduct of its citizens toward each other, and,
when necessary for the public good, the manner in which each shall
use his own property.
2. It has, in the exercise of these powers, been customary in
England from time immemorial, and in this country from its first
colonization, to regulate ferries, common carriers, hackmen,
bakers, millers, wharfingers, innkeepers, &c., and, in so
doing, to fix a maximum of charge to be made for services rendered,
accommodations furnished, and articles sold.
3. Down to the time of the adoption of the fourteenth amendment
of the Constitution of the United States, it was not supposed that
statutes regulating the use, or even the price of the use, of
private property necessarily deprived an owner of his property
without due process of law. Under some circumstances, they may, but
not under all. The amendment does not change the law in this
particular; it simply prevents the States from doing that which
will operate as such deprivation.
4. When the owner of property devotes it to a use in which the
public has an interest, he in effect grants to the public an
interest in such use, and must, to the extent of that interest,
submit to be controlled by the public, for the common good, as long
as he maintains the use. He may withdraw his grant by discontinuing
the use.
5. Rights of property, and to a reasonable compensation for its
use, created by the common law cannot be taken away without due
process; but the law itself, as a rule of conduct, may, unless
constitutional limitations forbid, be changed at the will of the
legislature. The great office of statutes is to remedy defects in
the common law as they are developed, and to adapt it to the
changes of time and circumstances.
6. The limitation by legislative enactment of the rate of charge
for services
Page 94 U. S. 114
rendered in a public employment, or for the use of property in
which the public has an interest, establishes no new principle in
the law, but only gives a new effect to an old one.
7. Where warehouses are situated and their business is carried
on exclusively within a State, she may, as a matter of domestic
concern, prescribe regulations for them notwithstanding they are
used as instruments by those engaged in interstate, as well as
in-State, commerce, and, until Congress acts in reference to their
interstate relations, such regulations can be enforced even though
they may indirectly operate upon commerce beyond her immediate
jurisdiction.
8. The court does not hold that a case may not arise in which it
may be found that a State has, under the form of regulating her own
affairs, encroached upon the exclusive domain of Congress in
respect to interstate commerce.
9. The ninth section of the first article of the Constitution of
the United States operates only as a limitation of the powers of
Congress, and in no respect affects the States in the regulation of
their domestic affairs.
10. The act of the general assembly of Illinois, entitled "An
Act to regulate public warehouses and the warehousing and
inspection of grain, and to give effect to art. 13 of the
Constitution of this State" approved April 25, 1871, is not
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States.
The Constitution of Illinois, adopted in 1870, contains the
following in reference to the inspection of grain, and the storage
thereof in public warehouses:
ARTICLE XIII. WAREHOUSES
"SECTION 1. All elevators or storehouses where grain or other
property is stored for a compensation, whether the property stored
be kept separate or not, are declared to be public warehouses."
"SECT. 2. The owner, lessee, or manager of each and every public
warehouse situated in any town or city of not less than one hundred
thousand inhabitants, shall make weekly statements under oath
before some officer designated by law, and keep the same posted in
some conspicuous place in the office of such warehouse; and shall
also file a copy for public examination in such place as shall be
designated by law, which statement shall correctly set forth the
amount and grade of each and every kind of grain in such warehouse,
together with such other property as may be stored therein, and
what warehouse receipts have been issued, and are, at the time of
making such statement, outstanding therefor; and shall, on the copy
posted in the warehouse, note daily such changes as may be made in
the quantity and grade of grain in such warehouse; and the
different grades of grain shipped in separate lots shall not be
Page 94 U. S. 115
mixed with inferior or superior grades without the consent of
the owner or consignor thereof."
"SECT. 3. The owners of property stored in any warehouse, or
holder of a receipt for the same, shall always be at liberty to
examine such property stored, and all the books and records of the
warehouse in regard to such property."
"SECT. 4. All railroad companies, and other common carriers on
railroads, shall weigh or measure grain at points where it is
shipped, and receipt for the full amount, and shall be responsible
for the delivery of such amount to the owner or consignee thereof,
at the place of destination."
"SECT. 5. All railroad companies receiving and transporting
grain, in bulk or otherwise, shall deliver the same to any
consignee thereof, or any elevator or public warehouse to which it
may be consigned, provided such consignee, or the elevator, or
public warehouse, can be reached by any track owned, leased, or
used, or which can be used, by such railroad company; and all
railroad companies shall permit connections to be made with their
tracks, so that any such consignee, and any public warehouse,
coal-bank, or coal-yard may be reached by the cars on said
railroad."
"SECT. 6. It shall be the duty of the general assembly to pass
all necessary laws to prevent the issue of false and fraudulent
warehouse receipts, and to give full effect to this article of the
Constitution, which shall be liberally construed, so as to protect
producers and shippers. And the enumeration of the remedies herein
named shall not be construed to deny to the general assembly the
power to prescribe by law such other and further remedies as may be
found expedient, or to deprive any person of existing common-law
remedies."
"SECT. 7. The general assembly shall pass laws for the
inspection of grain, for the protection of producers, shippers, and
receivers of grain and produce."
The provisions of the act of the general assembly of Illinois,
entitled "An Act to regulate public warehouses and the warehousing
and inspection of grain, and to give effect to art. 13 of the
Constitution of this State," approved April 25, 1871, so far as the
same have any direct bearing upon the questions involved in this
case, are as follows:
"SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the people of the State of
Illinois, represented in the general assembly, that public
warehouses, as
Page 94 U. S. 116
defined in art. 13 of the Constitution of this State, shall be
divided into three classes, to be designated as classes A, B, and
C, respectively."
"SECT. 2. Public warehouses of class A shall embrace all
warehouses, elevators, or granaries in which grain is stored in
bulk, and in which the grain of different owners is mixed together,
or in which grain is stored in such a manner that the identity of
different lots or parcels cannot be accurately preserved, such
warehouses, elevators, or granaries, being located in cities having
not less than one hundred thousand inhabitants. Public warehouses
of class B shall embrace all other warehouses, elevators, or
granaries in which grain is stored in bulk, and in which the grain
of different owners is mixed together. Public warehouses of class C
shall embrace all other warehouses or places where property of any
kind is stored for a consideration."
"SECT. 3. The proprietor, lessee, or manager of any public
warehouse of class A shall be required, before transacting any
business in such warehouse, to procure from the Circuit Court of
the county a license, permitting such proprietor, lessee, or
manager to transact business as a public warehouseman under the
laws of this State, which license shall be issued by the clerk of
said court upon a written application, which shall set forth the
location and name of such warehouse, and the individual name of
each person interested as owner or principal in the management of
the same, or, if the warehouse be owned or managed by a
corporation, the names of the president, secretary, and treasurer
of such corporation shall be stated; and the license shall give
authority to carry on and conduct the business of a public
warehouse of class A in accordance with the laws of this State, and
shall be revocable by the said court upon a summary proceeding
before the court, upon complaint of any person in writing setting
forth the particular violation of law, and upon satisfactory proof
to be taken in such manner as may be directed by the court."
"SECT. 4. The person receiving a license as herein provided
shall file, with the clerk of the court granting the same, a bond
to the people of the State of Illinois, with good and sufficient
surety, to be approved by said court, in the penal sum of $10,000,
conditioned for the faithful performance of his duty as a public
warehouseman of class A, and the full and unreserved compliance
with all laws of this State in relation thereto."
"SECT. 5. Any person who shall transact the business of a public
warehouse of class A without first procuring a license as
herein
Page 94 U. S. 117
provided, or who shall continue to transact any such business
after such license has been revoked (save only that he may be
permitted to deliver property previously stored in such warehouse),
shall, on conviction, be fined in a sum not less than $100 for each
and every day such business is so carried on; and the court may
refuse to renew any license, or grant a new one to any of the
persons whose license has been revoked, within one year from the
time the same was revoked."
"SECT. 15. Every warehouseman of public warehouses of class A
shall be required, during the first week of January of each year,
to publish in one or more of the newspapers (daily, if there be
such) published in the city in which such warehouse is situated, a
table or schedule of rates for the storage of grain in the
warehouse during the ensuing year, which rates shall not be
increased (except as provided for in sect. 16 of this act) during
the year; and such published rates, or any published reduction of
them, shall apply to all grain received into such warehouse from
any person or source; and no discrimination shall be made, directly
or indirectly, for or against any charges made by such warehouseman
for the storage of grain."
"The maximum charge of storage and handling of grain, including
the cost of receiving and delivering, shall be for the first thirty
days or part thereof two cents per bushel, and for each fifteen
days or part thereof, after the first thirty days, one-half of one
cent per bushel; provided, however, that grain damp or liable to
early damage, as indicated by its inspection when received, may be
subject to two cents per bushel storage for the first ten days, and
for each additional five days or part thereof, not exceeding
one-half of one per cent per bushel."
On the twenty-ninth day of June, 1872, an information was filed
in the Criminal Court of Cook County, Ill., against Munn &
Scott, alleging that they were, on the twenty-eighth day of June,
1872, in the city of Chicago, in said county, the managers and
lessees of a public warehouse, known as the "Northwestern
Elevator," in which they then and there stored grain in bulk, and
mixed the grain of different owners together in said warehouse;
that the warehouse was located in the city of Chicago, which
contained more than one hundred thousand inhabitants; that they
unlawfully transacted the business of public warehousemen, as
aforesaid, without procuring a license from the Circuit Court of
said county, permitting them
Page 94 U. S. 118
to transact business as public warehousemen, under the laws of
the State.
To this information a plea of not guilty was interposed.
From an agreed statement of facts, made of the record, it
appears that Munn & Scott leased of the owner, in 1862, the
ground occupied by the "Northwestern Elevator," and erected thereon
the grain warehouse or elevator in that year, with their own
capital and means; that they ever since carried on, in said
elevator, the business of storing and handling grain for hire, for
which they charged and received, as a compensation, the rates of
storage which had been, from year to year, agreed upon and
established by the different elevators and warehouses in the city
of Chicago, and published in one or more newspapers printed in said
city, in the month of January in each year, as the established
rates for the year then next ensuing such publication. On the
twenty-eighth day of June, 1872, Munn & Scott were the managers
and proprietors of the grain warehouse known as "The Northwestern
Elevator," in Chicago, Ill., wherein grain of different owners was
stored in bulk and mixed together; and they then and there carried
on the business of receiving, storing, and delivering grain for
hire without having taken a license from the Circuit Court of Cook
County permitting them, as managers, to transact business as public
warehousemen, and without having filed with the clerk of the
Circuit Court a bond to the people of the State of Illinois, as
required by sects. 3 and 4 of the act of April 25, 1871. The city
of Chicago then, and for more than two years before, had more than
one hundred thousand inhabitants. Munn & Scott had stored and
mixed grain of different owners together, only by and with the
express consent and permission of such owners or of the consignee
of such grain, they having agreed that the compensation should be
the published rates of storage.
Munn & Scott had complied in all respects with said act,
except in two particulars:
first, that had not taken out a
license, nor given a bond, as required by sects. 3 and 4; and,
second, they had charged for storage and handling grain
the rates established and published in January, 1872, which were
higher than those fixed by sect. 15.
Page 94 U. S. 119
The defendants were found guilty, and fined $100.
The judgment of the Criminal Court of Cook County having been
affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State, Munn & Scott sued
out this writ, and assign for error:
Page 94 U. S. 123
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the court.
The question to be determined in this case is whether the
general assembly of Illinois can, under the limitations upon the
legislative power of the States imposed by the Constitution of the
United States, fix by law the maximum of charges for the storage of
grain in warehouses at Chicago and other places in the State having
not less than one hundred thousand inhabitants
"in which grain is stored in bulk, and in which the grain of
different owners is mixed together, or in which grain is stored in
such a manner that the identity of different lots or parcels cannot
be accurately preserved."
It is claimed that such a law is repugnant --
1. To that part of sect. 8, art. 1, of the Constitution of the
United States which confers upon Congress the power "to regulate
commerce with foreign nations and among the several States;"
2. To that part of sect. 9 of the same article which provides
that "no preference shall be given by any regulation of commerce or
revenue to the ports of one State over those of another;" and
3. To that part of amendment 14 which ordains that no State
shall
"deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the
equal protection of the laws."
We will consider the last of these objections first.
Every statute is presumed to be constitutional. The courts ought
not to declare one to be unconstitutional unless it is clearly so.
If there is doubt, the expressed will of the legislature should be
sustained.
The Constitution contains no definition of the word "deprive,"
as used in the Fourteenth Amendment. To determine its
signification, therefore, it is necessary to ascertain the effect
which usage has given it, when employed in the same or a like
connection.
While this provision of the amendment is new in the Constitution
of the United States, as a limitation upon the powers of the
States, it is old as a principle of civilized government. It is
found in Magna Charta, and, in substance if not in form, in
Page 94 U. S. 124
nearly or quite all the constitutions that have been from time
to time adopted by the several States of the Union. By the Fifth
Amendment, it was introduced into the Constitution of the United
States as a limitation upon the powers of the national government,
and by the Fourteenth, as a guaranty against any encroachment upon
an acknowledged right of citizenship by the legislatures of the
States.
When the people of the United Colonies separated from Great
Britain, they changed the form, but not the substance, of their
government. They retained for the purposes of government all the
powers of the British Parliament, and, through their State
constitutions or other forms of social compact, undertook to give
practical effect to such as they deemed necessary for the common
good and the security of life and property. All the powers which
they retained they committed to their respective States unless in
express terms or by implication reserved to themselves.
Subsequently, when it was found necessary to establish a national
government for national purposes, a part of the powers of the
States and of the people of the States was granted to the United
States and the people of the United States. This grant operated as
a further limitation upon the powers of the States, so that now the
governments of the States possess all the powers of the Parliament
of England except such as have been delegated to the United States
or reserved by the people. The reservations by the people are shown
in the prohibitions of the constitutions.
When one becomes a member of society, he necessarily parts with
some rights or privileges which, as an individual not affected by
his relations to others, he might retain. "A body politic," as
aptly defined in the preamble of the Constitution of
Massachusetts,
"is a social compact by which the whole people covenants with
each citizen, and each citizen with the whole people, that all
shall be governed by certain laws for the common good."
This does not confer power upon the whole people to control
rights which are purely and exclusively private,
Thorpe v. R.
& B. Railroad Co., 27 Vt. 143; but it does authorize the
establishment of laws requiring each citizen to so conduct himself,
and so use his own property, as not unnecessarily to injure
another. This is the very essence of government, and
Page 94 U. S. 125
has found expression in the maxim
sic utere tuo ut alienum
non laedas. From this source come the police powers, which, as
was said by Mr. Chief Justice Taney in the
License
Cases, 5 How. 583,
"are nothing more or less than the powers of government inherent
in every sovereignty, . . . that is to say, . . . the power to
govern men and things."
Under these powers, the government regulates the conduct of its
citizens one towards another, and the manner in which each shall
use his own property, when such regulation becomes necessary for
the public good. In their exercise, it has been customary in
England from time immemorial, and in this country from its first
colonization, to regulate ferries, common carriers, hackmen,
bakers, millers, wharfingers, innkeepers, &c., and, in so
doing, to fix a maximum of charge to be made for services rendered,
accommodations furnished, and articles sold. To this day, statutes
are to be found in many of the States upon some or all these
subjects; and we think it has never yet been successfully contended
that such legislation came within any of the constitutional
prohibitions against interference with private property. With the
Fifth Amendment in force, Congress, in 1820, conferred power upon
the city of Washington
"to regulate . . . the rates of wharfage at private wharves, . .
. the sweeping of chimneys, and to fix the rates of fees therefor,
. . . and the weight and quality of bread,"
3 Stat. 587, sect. 7, and, in 1848,
"to make all necessary regulations respecting hackney carriages
and the rates of fare of the same, and the rates of hauling by
cartmen, wagoners, carmen, and draymen, and the rates of commission
of auctioneers,"
9
id. 224, sect. 2.
From this it is apparent that, down to the time of the adoption
of the Fourteenth Amendment, it was not supposed that statutes
regulating the use, or even the price of the use, of private
property necessarily deprived an owner of his property without due
process of law. Under some circumstances they may, but not under
all. The amendment does not change the law in this particular; it
simply prevents the States from doing that which will operate as
such a deprivation.
This brings us to inquire as to the principles upon which this
power of regulation rests, in order that we may determine what is
within and what without its operative effect. Looking,
Page 94 U. S. 126
then, to the common law, from whence came the right which the
Constitution protects, we find that, when private property is
"affected with a public interest, it ceases to be
juris
privati only." This was said by Lord Chief Justice Hale more
than two hundred years ago, in his treatise
De Portibus
Maris, 1 Harg.Law Tracts 78, and has been accepted without
objection as an essential element in the law of property ever
since. Property does become clothed with a public interest when
used in a manner to make it of public consequence and affect the
community at large. When, therefore, one devotes his property to a
use in which the public has an interest, he, in effect, grants to
the public an interest in that use, and must submit to be
controlled by the public for the common good, to the extent of the
interest he has thus created. He may withdraw his grant by
discontinuing the use, but, so long as he maintains the use, he
must submit to the control.
Thus, as to ferries, Lord Hale says, in his treatise
De Jure
Maris, 1 Harg.Law Tracts, 6, the king has
"a right of franchise or privilege, that no man may set up a
common ferry for all passengers without a prescription time out of
mind, or a charter from the king. He may make a ferry for his own
use or the use of his family, but not for the common use of all the
king's subjects passing that way, because it doth in consequence
tend to a common charge, and is become a thing if public interest
and use, and every man for his passage pays a toll, which is a
common charge, and every ferry ought to be under a public
regulation,
viz., that it give attendance at due times,
keep a boat in due order, and take but reasonable toll; for if he
fail in these, he is finable."
So if one owns the soil and landing-places on both banks of a
stream, he cannot use them for the purposes of a public ferry
except upon such terms and conditions as the body politic may from
time to time impose, and this because the common good requires that
all public ways shall be under the control of the public
authorities. This privilege or prerogative of the king, who in this
connection only represents and gives another name to the body
politic, is not primarily for his profit, but for the protection of
the people and the promotion of the general welfare.
Page 94 U. S. 127
And, again, as to wharves and wharfingers, Lord Hale, in his
treatise
De Portibus Maris, already cited, says:
"A man, for his own private advantage, may, in a port or town,
set up a wharf or crane, and may take what rates he and his
customers can agree for cranage, wharfage, housellage, pesage; for
he doth no more than is lawful for any man to do,
viz.,
makes the most of his own. . . . If the king or subject have a
public wharf, unto which all persons that come to that port must
come and unlade or lade their goods as for the purpose, because
they are the wharfs only licensed by the queen, . . . or because
there is no other wharf in that port, as it may fall out where a
port is newly erected, in that case, there cannot be taken
arbitrary and excessive duties for cranage, wharfage, pesage,
&c., neither can they be enhanced to an immoderate rate, but
the duties must be reasonable and moderate, though settled by the
king's license or charter. For now the wharf and crane and other
conveniences are affected with a public interest, and they cease to
be
juris privati only, as if a man set out a street in new
building on his own land, it is now no longer bare private
interest, but is affected by a public interest."
This statement of the law by Lord Hale was cited with
approbation and acted upon by Lord Kenyon at the beginning of the
present century, in
Bolt v. Stennett, 8 T.R. 606.
And the same has been held as to warehouses and warehousemen. In
Aldnutt v. Inglis, 12 East 527, decided in 1810, it
appeared that the London Dock Company had built warehouses in which
wines were taken in store at such rates of charge as the company
and the owners might agree upon. Afterwards the company obtained
authority, under the general warehousing act, to receive wines from
importers before the duties upon the importation were paid, and the
question was whether they could charge arbitrary rates for such
storage, or must be content with a reasonable compensation. Upon
this point, Lord Ellenborough said (p. 537):
"There is no doubt that the general principle is favored, both
in law and justice, that every man may fix what price he pleases
upon his own property, or the use of it, but if for a particular
purpose the public have a right to resort to his premises and make
use of them, and he have a monopoly in them for that purpose,
if
Page 94 U. S. 128
he will take the benefit of that monopoly, he must, as an
equivalent, perform the duty attached to it on reasonable terms.
The question then is whether, circumstanced as this company is, by
the combination of the warehousing act with the act by which they
were originally constituted, and with the actually existing state
of things in the port of London whereby they alone have the
warehousing of these wines, they be not, according to the doctrine
of Lord Hale, obliged to limit themselves to a reasonable
compensation for such warehousing. And, according to him, whenever
the accident of time casts upon a party the benefit of having a
legal monopoly of landing goods in a public port, as where he is
the owner of the only wharf authorized to receive goods which
happens to be built in a port newly erected, he is confined to take
reasonable compensation only for the use of the wharf."
And further on (p. 539):
"It is enough that there exists in the place and for the
commodity in question a virtual monopoly of the warehousing for
this purpose, on which the principle of law attaches, as laid down
by Lord Hale in the passage referred to [that from
De Portibus
Maris already quoted], which includes the good sense as well
as the law of the subject."
And in the same case Le Blanc, J., said (p. 541):
"Then, admitting these warehouses to be private property, and
that the company might discontinue this application of them, or
that they might have made what terms they pleased in the first
instance, yet having, as they now have, this monopoly, the question
is, whether the warehouses be not private property clothed with a
public right, and, if so, the principle of law attaches upon them.
The privilege, then, of bonding these wines being at present
confined by the act of Parliament to the company's warehouses, is
it not the privilege of the public, and shall not that which is for
the good of the public attach on the monopoly, that they shall not
be bound to pay an arbitrary but a reasonable rent? But, upon this
record, the company resist having their demand for warehouse rent
confined within any limit, and, though it does not follow that the
rent in fact fixed by them is unreasonable, they do not choose to
insist on its being reasonable for the purpose of raising the
question. For this purpose, therefore, the question may be taken to
be whether they may claim an unreasonable rent. But though this be
private property, yet the principle laid down by Lord Hale
attaches
Page 94 U. S. 129
upon it that, when private property is affected with a public
interest, it ceases to be
juris privati only and, in case
of its dedication to such a purpose as this, the owners cannot take
arbitrary and excessive duties, but the duties must be
reasonable."
We have quoted thus largely the words of these eminent
expounders of the common law because, as we think, we find in them
the principle which supports the legislation we are now examining.
Of Lord Hale it was once said by a learned American judge,
"In England, even on rights of prerogative, they scan his words
with as much care as if they had been found in Magna Charta, and,
the meaning once ascertained, they do not trouble themselves to
search any further."
6 Cow. (N.Y.) 536, note.
In later times, the same principle came under consideration in
the Supreme Court of Alabama. That court was called upon in 1841 to
decide whether the power granted to the city of Mobile to regulate
the weight and price of bread was unconstitutional, and it was
contended that "it would interfere with the right of the citizen to
pursue his lawful trade or calling in the mode his judgment might
dictate;" but the court said,
"there is no motive . . . for this interference on the part of
the legislature with the lawful actions of individuals, or the mode
in which private property shall be enjoyed, unless such calling
affects the public interest or private property is employed in a
manner which directly affects the body of the people. Upon this
principle, in this State, tavernkeepers are licensed, . . . and the
County Court is required, at least once a year, to settle the rates
of innkeepers. Upon the same principle is founded the control which
the legislature has always exercised in the establishment and
regulation of mills, ferries, bridges, turnpike roads, and other
kindred subjects."
Mobile v. Yuille, 3 Ala.N.S. 140.
From the same source comes the power to regulate the charges of
common carriers, which was done in England as long ago as the third
year of the reign of William and Mary, and continued until within a
comparatively recent period. And in the first statute we find the
following suggestive preamble, to-wit:
Page 94 U. S. 130
"And whereas divers wagoners and other carriers, by combination
amongst themselves, have raised the prices of carriage of goods in
many places to excessive rates, to the great injury of the trade,
be it therefore enacted,"
&c. 3 W. & M. c. 12, § 24; 3 Stat. at Large (Great
Britain) 481.
Common carriers exercise a sort of public office, and have
duties to perform in which the public is interested.
New Jersey Nav. Co. v.
Merchants' Bank, 6 How. 382. Their business is,
therefore, "affected with a public interest," within the meaning of
the doctrine which Lord Hale has so forcibly stated.
But we need not go further. Enough has already been said to show
that, when private property is devoted to a public use, it is
subject to public regulation. It remains only to ascertain whether
the warehouses of these plaintiffs in error, and the business which
is carried on there, come within the operation of this
principle.
For this purpose, we accept as true the statements of fact
contained in the elaborate brief of one of the counsel of the
plaintiffs in error. From these it appears that
"the great producing region of the West and Northwest sends its
grain by water and rail to Chicago, where the greater part of it is
shipped by vessel for transportation to the seaboard by the Great
Lakes, and some of it is forwarded by railway to the Eastern ports.
. . . Vessels, to some extent, are loaded in the Chicago harbor,
and sailed through the St. Lawrence directly to Europe. . . . The
quantity [of grain] received in Chicago has made it the greatest
grain market in the world. This business has created a demand for
means by which the immense quantity of grain can be handled or
stored, and these have been found in grain warehouses, which are
commonly called elevators, because the grain is elevated from the
boat or car, by machinery operated by steam, into the bins prepared
for its reception, and elevated from the bins, by a like process,
into the vessel or car which is to carry it on. . . . In this way,
the largest traffic between the citizens of the country north and
west of Chicago and the citizens of the country lying on the
Atlantic coast north of Washington is in grain which passes through
the elevators of Chicago. In this way, the trade in grain is
carried on by the inhabitants of seven or eight of the
Page 94 U. S. 131
great States of the West with four or five of the States lying
on the seashore, and forms the largest part of interstate commerce
in these States. The grain warehouses or elevators in Chicago are
immense structures, holding from 300,000 to 1,000,000 bushels at
one time, according to size. They are divided into bins of large
capacity and great strength. . . . They are located with the river
harbor on one side and the railway tracks on the other, and the
grain is run through them from car to vessel, or boat to car, as
may be demanded in the course of business. It has been found
impossible to preserve each owner's grain separate, and this has
given rise to a system of inspection and grading by which the grain
of different owners is mixed, and receipts issued for the number of
bushels which are negotiable, and redeemable in like kind, upon
demand. This mode of conducting the business was inaugurated more
than twenty years ago, and has grown to immense proportions. The
railways have found it impracticable to own such elevators, and
public policy forbids the transaction of such business by the
carrier; the ownership has, therefore, been by private individuals,
who have embarked their capital and devoted their industry to such
business as a private pursuit."
In this connection, it must also be borne in mind that, although
in 1874 there were in Chicago fourteen warehouses adapted to this
particular business, and owned by about thirty persons, nine
business firms controlled them, and that the prices charged and
received for storage were such
"as have been from year to year agreed upon and established by
the different elevators or warehouses in the city of Chicago, and
which rates have been annually published in one or more newspapers
printed in said city, in the month of January in each year, as the
established rates for the year then next ensuing such
publication."
Thus, it is apparent that all the elevating facilities through
which these vast productions "of seven or eight great States of the
West" must pass on the way "to four or five of the States on the
seashore" may be a "virtual" monopoly.
Under such circumstances, it is difficult to see why, if the
common carrier, or the miller, or the ferryman, or the innkeeper,
or the wharfinger, or the baker, or the cartman, or the
Page 94 U. S. 132
hackney-coachman, pursues a public employment and exercises "a
sort of public office," these plaintiffs in error do not. They
stand, to use again the language of their counsel, in the very
"gateway of commerce," and take toll from all who pass. Their
business most certainly "tends to a common charge, and is become a
thing of public interest and use." Every bushel of grain for its
passage "pays a toll, which is a common charge," and, therefore,
according to Lord Hale, every such warehouseman "ought to be under
public regulation,
viz., that he . . . take but reasonable
toll." Certainly, if any business can be clothed "with a public
interest, and cease to be
juris privati only," this has
been. It may not be made so by the operation of the Constitution of
Illinois or this statute, but it is by the facts.
We also are not permitted to overlook the fact that, for some
reason, the people of Illinois, when they revised their
Constitution in 1870, saw fit to make it the duty of the general
assembly to pass laws "for the protection of producers, shippers,
and receivers of grain and produce," art. 13, sect. 7; and by sect.
5 of the same article, to require all railroad companies receiving
and transporting grain in bulk or otherwise to deliver the same at
any elevator to which it might be consigned, that could be reached
by any track that was or could be used by such company, and that
all railroad companies should permit connections to be made with
their tracks, so that any public warehouse, &c., might be
reached by the cars on their railroads. This indicates very clearly
that, during the twenty years in which this peculiar business had
been assuming its present "immense proportions," something had
occurred which led the whole body of the people to suppose that
remedies such as are usually employed to prevent abuses by virtual
monopolies might not be inappropriate here. For our purposes, we
must assume that, if a state of facts could exist that would
justify such legislation, it actually did exist when the statute
now under consideration was passed. For us, the question is one of
power, not of expediency. If no state of circumstances could exist
to justify such a statute, then we may declare this one void
because is excess of the legislative power of the State. But if it
could, we must presume it did. Of the propriety of legislative
Page 94 U. S. 133
interference within the scope of legislative power the
legislature is the exclusive judge.
Neither is it a matter of any moment that no precedent can be
found for a statute precisely like this. It is conceded that the
business is one of recent origin, that its growth has been rapid,
and that it is already of great importance. And it must also be
conceded that it is a business in which the whole public has a
direct and positive interest. It presents, therefore, a case for
the application of a long-known and well established principle in
social science, and this statute simply extends the law so as to
meet this new development of commercial progress. There is no
attempt to compel these owners to grant the public an interest in
their property, but to declare their obligations, if they use it in
this particular manner.
It matters not in this case that these plaintiffs in error had
built their warehouses and established their business before the
regulations complained of were adopted. What they did was from the
beginning subject to the power of the body politic to require them
to conform to such regulations as might be established by the
proper authorities for the common good. They entered upon their
business and provided themselves with the means to carry it on
subject to this condition. If they did not wish to submit
themselves to such interference, they should not have clothed the
public with an interest in their concerns. The same principle
applies to them that does to the proprietor of a hackney-carriage,
and as to him it has never been supposed that he was exempt from
regulating statutes or ordinances because he had purchased his
horses and carriage and established his business before the statute
or the ordinance was adopted.
It is insisted, however, that the owner of property is entitled
to a reasonable compensation for its use, even though it be clothed
with a public interest, and that what is reasonable is a judicial,
and not a legislative, question.
As has already been shown, the practice has been otherwise. In
countries where the common law prevails, it has been customary from
time immemorial for the legislature to declare what shall be a
reasonable compensation under such circumstances, or, perhaps more
properly speaking, to fix a maximum beyond which any charge made
would be unreasonable.
Page 94 U. S. 134
Undoubtedly, in mere private contracts relating to matters in
which the public has no interest, what is reasonable must be
ascertained judicially. But this is because the legislature has no
control over such a contract. So, too, in matters which do affect
the public interest, and as to which legislative control may be
exercised, if there are no statutory regulations upon the subject,
the courts must determine what is reasonable. The controlling fact
is the power to regulate at all. If that exists, the right to
establish the maximum of charge, as one of the means of regulation,
is implied. In fact, the common law rule, which requires the charge
to be reasonable, is itself a regulation as to price. Without it,
the owner could make his rates at will, and compel the public to
yield to his terms or forego the use.
But a mere common law regulation of trade or business may be
changed by statute. A person has no property, no vested interest,
in any rule of the common law. That is only one of the forms of
municipal law, and is no more sacred than any other. Rights of
property which have been created by the common law cannot be taken
away without due process; but the law itself, as a rule of conduct,
may be changed at the will, or even at the whim, of the
legislature, unless prevented by constitutional limitations.
Indeed, the great office of statutes is to remedy defects in the
common law as they are developed, and to adapt it to the changes of
time and circumstances. To limit the rate of charge for services
rendered in a public employment, or for the use of property in
which the public has an interest, is only changing a regulation
which existed before. It establishes no new principle in the law,
but only gives a new effect to an old one.
We know that this is a power which may be abused, but that is no
argument against its existence. For protection against abuses by
legislatures, the people must resort to the polls, not to the
courts.
After what has already been said, it is unnecessary to refer at
length to the effect of the other provision of the Fourteenth
Amendment which is relied upon,
viz., that no State shall
"deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of
the laws." Certainly it cannot be claimed that this prevents the
State from regulating the fares of hackmen or the
Page 94 U. S. 135
charges of draymen in Chicago, unless it does the same thing in
every other place within its jurisdiction. But, as has been seen,
the power to regulate the business of warehouses depends upon the
same principle as the power to regulate hackmen and draymen, and
what cannot be done in the one case in this particular cannot be
done in the other.
We come now to consider the effect upon this statute of the
power of Congress to regulate commerce.
It was very properly said in the case of the
State
Tax on Railway Gross Receipts, 15 Wall. 293, that
"it is not everything that affects commerce that amounts to a
regulation of it, within the meaning of the Constitution." The
warehouses of these plaintiffs in error are situated, and their
business carried on, exclusively within the limits of the State of
Illinois. They are used as instruments by those engaged in State as
well as those engaged in interstate commerce, but they are no more
necessarily a part of commerce itself than the dray or the cart by
which, but for them, grain would be transferred from one railroad
station to another. Incidentally they may become connected with
interstate commerce, but not necessarily so. Their regulation is a
thing of domestic concern, and, certainly, until Congress acts in
reference to their interstate relations, the State may exercise all
the powers of government over them even though in so doing it may
indirectly operate upon commerce outside its immediate
jurisdiction. We do not say that a case may not arise in which it
will be found that a State, under the form of regulating its own
affairs, has encroached upon the exclusive domain of Congress in
respect to interstate commerce, but we do say that, upon the facts
as they are represented to us in this record, that has not been
done.
The remaining objection, to-wit, that the statute in its present
form, is repugnant to sect. 9, art. 1, of the Constitution of the
United States because it gives preference to the ports of one State
over those of another, may be disposed of by the single remark that
this provision operates only as a limitation of the powers of
Congress, and in no respect affects the States in the regulation of
their domestic affairs.
We conclude, therefore, that the statute in question is not
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, and that
Page 94 U. S. 136
there is no error in the judgment. In passing upon this case, we
have not been unmindful of the vast importance of the questions
involved. This and cases of a kindred character were argued before
us more than a year ago by most eminent counsel, and in a manner
worthy of their well-earned reputations. We have kept the cases
long under advisement in order that their decision might be the
result of our mature deliberations.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD and MR. JUSTICE STRONG dissented.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD.
I am compelled to dissent from the decision of the court in this
case, and from the reasons upon which that decision is founded. The
principle upon which the opinion of the majority proceeds is, in my
judgment, subversive of the rights of private property, heretofore
believed to be protected by constitutional guaranties against
legislative interference, and is in conflict with the authorities
cited in its support.
The defendants had constructed their warehouse and elevator in
1862 with their own means, upon ground leased by them for that
purpose, and, from that time until the filing of the information
against them, had transacted the business of receiving and storing
grain for hire. The rates of storage charged by them were annually
established by arrangement with the owners of different elevators
in Chicago, and were published in the month of January. In 1870,
the State of Illinois adopted a new constitution, and, by it,
"all elevators or storehouses where grain or other property is
stored for a compensation, whether the property stored be kept
separate or not, are declared to be public warehouses."
In April, 1871, the legislature of the State passed an act to
regulate these warehouses, thus declared to be public, and the
warehousing and inspection of grain, and to give effect to this
article of the Constitution. By that act, public warehouses, as
defined in the Constitution, were divided into three classes, the
first of which embraced all warehouses, elevators, or granaries
located in cities having not less than one hundred thousand
inhabitants in which grain was stored in bulk and the grain of
different owners was mixed together or stored in such manner
Page 94 U. S. 137
that the identity of different lots or parcels could not be
accurately preserved. To this class, the elevator of the defendants
belonged. The act prescribed the maximum of charges which the
proprietor, lessee, or manager of the warehouse was allowed to make
for storage and handling of grain, including the cost of receiving
and delivering it, for the first thirty days or any part thereof,
and for each succeeding fifteen days or any part thereof, and it
required him to procure from the Circuit Court of the county a
license to transact business as a public warehouseman, and to give
a bond to the people of the State in the penal sum of $10,000 for
the faithful performance of his duty as such warehouseman of the
first class, and for his full and unreserved compliance with all
laws of the State in relation thereto. The license was made
revocable by the Circuit Court upon a summary proceeding for any
violation of such laws. And a penalty was imposed upon every person
transacting business as a public warehouseman of the first class
without first procuring a license, or continuing in such business
after his license had been revoked, of not less than $100 or more
than $500 for each day on which the business was thus carried on.
The court was also authorized to refuse for one year to renew the
license, or to grant a new one to any person whose license had been
revoked. The maximum of charges prescribed by the act for the
receipt and storage of grain was different from that which the
defendants had previously charged and which had been agreed to by
the owners of the grain. More extended periods of storage were
required of them than they formerly gave for the same charges. What
they formerly charged for the first twenty days of storage the act
allowed them to charge only for the first thirty days of storage,
and what they formerly charged for each succeeding ten days after
the first twenty the act allowed them to charge only for each
succeeding fifteen days after the first thirty. The defendants,
deeming that they had a right to use their own property in such
manner as they desired, not inconsistent with the equal right of
others to a like use, and denying the power of the legislature to
fix prices for the use of their property and their services in
connection with it, refused to comply with the act by taking out
the license and giving the bond required,
Page 94 U. S. 138
but continued to carry on the business and to charge for
receiving and storing grain such prices as they had been accustomed
to charge and as had been agreed upon between them and the owners
of the grain. For thus transacting their business without procuring
a license as required by the act, they were prosecuted and fined,
and the judgment against them was affirmed by the Supreme Court of
the State.
The question presented, therefore, is one of the greatest
importance -- whether it is within the competency of a State to fix
the compensation which an individual may receive for the use of his
own property in his private business and for his services in
connection with it.
The declaration of the Constitution of 1870 that private
buildings used for private purposes shall be deemed public
institutions does not make them so. The receipt and storage of
grain in a building erected by private means for that purpose does
not constitute the building a public warehouse. There is no magic
in the language, though used by a constitutional convention, which
can change a private business into a public one or alter the
character of the building in which the business is transacted. A
tailor's or a shoemaker's shop would still retain its private
character even though the assembled wisdom of the State should
declare, by organic act or legislative ordinance, that such a place
was a public workshop and that the workmen were public tailors or
public shoemakers. One might as well attempt to change the nature
of colors by giving them a new designation. The defendants were no
more public warehousemen, as justly observed by counsel, than the
merchant who sells his merchandise to the public is a public
merchant, or the blacksmith who shoes horses for the public is a
public blacksmith, and it was a strange notion that, by calling
them so, they would be brought under legislative control.
The Supreme Court of the State -- divided, it is true, by three
to two of its members -- has held that this legislation was a
legitimate exercise of State authority over private business, and
the Supreme Court of the United States, two only of its members
dissenting, has decided that there is nothing in the Constitution
of the United States or its recent amendments which impugns its
validity. It is therefore with diffidence I presume to question the
soundness of the decision.
Page 94 U. S. 139
The validity of the legislation was, among other grounds,
assailed in the State court as being in conflict with that
provision of the State Constitution which declares that no person
shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process
of law, and with that provision of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Federal Constitution which imposes a similar restriction upon the
action of the State. The State court held, in substance, that the
constitutional provision was not violated so long as the owner was
not deprived of the title and possession of his property, and that
it did not deny to the legislature the power to make all needful
rules and regulations respecting the use and enjoyment of the
property, referring in support of the position to instances of its
action in prescribing the interest on money, in establishing and
regulating public ferries and public mills, and fixing the
compensation in the shape of tolls, and in delegating power to
municipal bodies to regulate the charges of hackmen and draymen and
the weight and price of bread. In this court, the legislation was
also assailed on the same ground, our jurisdiction arising upon the
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, ordaining that no State shall
deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law. But it would seem from its opinion that the court
holds that property loses something of its private character when
employed in such a way as to be generally useful. The doctrine
declared is that property "becomes clothed with a public interest
when used in a manner to make it of public consequence and affect
the community at large," and, from such clothing, the right of the
legislature is deduced to control the use of the property and to
determine the compensation which the owner may receive for it. When
Sir Matthew Hale and the sages of the law in his day spoke of
property as affected by a public interest, and ceasing from that
cause to be
juris privati solely, that is, ceasing to be
held merely in private right, they referred to property dedicated
by the owner to public uses, or to property the use of which was
granted by the government, or in connection with which special
privileges were conferred. Unless the property was thus dedicated,
or some right bestowed by the government was held with the
property, either by specific grant or by prescription or so long a
time as
Page 94 U. S. 140
to imply a grant originally, the property was not affected by
any public interest so as to be taken out of the category of
property held in private right. But it is not in any such sense
that the terms "clothing property with a public interest" are used
in this case. From the nature of the business under consideration
-- the storage of grain -- which, in any sense in which the words
can be used, is a private business in which the public are
interested only as they are interested in the storage of other
products of the soil or in articles of manufacture, it is clear
that the court intended to declare that, whenever one devotes his
property to a business which is useful to the public -- "affects
the community at large" -- the legislature can regulate the
compensation which the owner may receive for its use, and for his
own services in connection with it. "When, therefore," says the
court,
"one devotes his property to a use in which the public has an
interest, he, in effect, grants to the public an interest in that
use, and must submit to be controlled by the public for the common
good, to the extent of the interest he has thus created. He may
withdraw his grant by discontinuing the use, but, so long as he
maintains the use, he must submit to the control."
The building used by the defendants was for the storage of
grain; in such storage, says the court, the public has an interest;
therefore, the defendants, by devoting the building to that
storage, have granted the public an interest in that use, and must
submit to have their compensation regulated by the legislature.
If this be sound law, if there be no protection, either in the
principles upon which our republican government is founded or in
the prohibitions of the Constitution against such invasion of
private rights, all property and all business in the State are held
at the mercy of a majority of its legislature. The public has no
greater interest in the use of buildings for the storage of grain
than it has in the use of buildings for the residences of families,
nor, indeed, anything like so great an interest, and, according to
the doctrine announced, the legislature may fix the rent of all
tenements used for residences, without reference to the cost of
their erection. If the owner does not like the rates prescribed, he
may cease renting his houses. He has granted to the public, says
the court, an interest in the use of the
Page 94 U. S. 141
buildings, and "he may withdraw his grant by discontinuing the
use, but, so long as he maintains the use, he must submit to the
control." The public is interested in the manufacture of cotton,
woollen, and silken fabrics, in the construction of machinery, in
the printing and publication of books and periodicals, and in the
making of utensils of every variety, useful and ornamental; indeed,
there is hardly an enterprise or business engaging the attention
and labor of any considerable portion of the community in which the
public has not an interest in the sense in which that term is used
by the court in its opinion, and the doctrine which allows the
legislature to interfere with and regulate the charges which the
owners of property thus employed shall make for its use, that is,
the rates at which all these different kinds of business shall be
carried on, has never before been asserted, so far as I am aware,
by any judicial tribunal in the United States.
The doctrine of the State court that no one is deprived of his
property, within the meaning of the constitutional inhibition, so
long as he retains its title and possession, and the doctrine of
this court that, whenever one's property is used in such a manner
as to affect the community at large, it becomes by that fact
clothed with a public interest, and ceases to be
juris
privati only, appear to me to destroy, for all useful
purposes, the efficacy of the constitutional guaranty. All that is
beneficial in property arises from its use and the fruits of that
use, and whatever deprives a person of them deprives him of all
that is desirable or valuable in the title and possession. If the
constitutional guaranty extends no further than to prevent a
deprivation of title and possession, and allows a deprivation of
use, and the fruits of that use, it does not merit the encomiums it
has received. Unless I have misread the history of the provision
now incorporated into all our State constitutions, and by the Fifth
and Fourteenth Amendments into our Federal Constitution, and have
misunderstood the interpretation it has received, it is not thus
limited in its scope, and thus impotent for good. It has a much
more extended operation than either court, State, or Federal has
given to it. The provision, it is to be observed, places property
under the same protection as life and liberty. Except by due
process of law, no State can
Page 94 U. S. 142
deprive any person of either. The provision has been supposed to
secure to every individual the essential conditions for the pursuit
of happiness, and, for that reason, has not been heretofore, and
should never be, construed in any narrow or restricted sense.
No State "shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law," says the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution. By the term "life," as here used, something more is
meant than mere animal existence. The inhibition against its
deprivation extends to all those limbs and faculties by which life
is enjoyed. The provision equally prohibits the mutilation of the
body by the amputation of an arm or leg, or the putting out of an
eye, or the destruction of any other organ of the body through
which the soul communicates with the outer world. The deprivation
not only of life, but of whatever God has given to everyone with
life for its growth and enjoyment, is prohibited by the provision
in question if its efficacy be not frittered away by judicial
decision.
By the term "liberty," as used in the provision, something more
is meant than mere freedom from physical restraint or the bounds of
a prison. It means freedom to go where one may choose, and to act
in such manner, not inconsistent with the equal rights of others,
as his judgment may dictate for the promotion of his happiness --
that is, to pursue such callings and avocations as may be most
suitable to develop his capacities and give to them their highest
enjoyment.
The same liberal construction which is required for the
protection of life and liberty, in all particulars in which life
and liberty are of any value, should be applied to the protection
of private property. If the legislature of a State, under pretence
of providing for the public good, or for any other reason, can
determine, against the consent of the owner, the uses to which
private property shall be devoted, or the prices which the owner
shall receive for its uses, it can deprive him of the property as
completely as by a special act for its confiscation or destruction.
If, for instance, the owner is prohibited from using his building
for the purposes for which it was designed, it is of little
consequence that he is permitted to retain the
Page 94 U. S. 143
title and possession; or, if he is compelled to take as
compensation for its use less than the expenses to which he is
subjected by its ownership, he is, for all practical purposes,
deprived of the property as effectually as if the legislature had
ordered his forcible dispossession. If it be admitted that the
legislature has any control over the compensation, the extent of
that compensation becomes a mere matter of legislative discretion.
The amount fixed will operate as a partial destruction of the value
of the property, if it fall below the amount which the owner would
obtain by contract, and, practically, as a complete destruction if
it be less than the cost of retaining its possession. There is,
indeed, no protection of any value under the constitutional
provision which does not extend to the use and income of the
property, as well as to its title and possession.
This court has heretofore held in many instances that a
constitutional provision intended for the protection of rights of
private property should be liberally construed. It has so held in
the numerous cases where it has been called upon to give effect to
the provision prohibiting the States from legislation impairing the
obligation of contracts, the provision being construed to secure
from direct attack not only the contract itself, but all the
essential incidents which give it value and enable its owner to
enforce it. Thus, in
Bronson v. Kinzie, reported in the
1st of Howard, it was held that an act of the legislature of
Illinois, giving to a mortgagor twelve months within which to
redeem his mortgaged property from a judicial sale and prohibiting
its sale for less than two-thirds of its appraised value, was void
as applied to mortgages executed prior to its passage. It was
contended in support of the act that it affected only the remedy of
the mortgagee, and did not impair the contract, but the court
replied that there was no substantial difference between a
retrospective law declaring a particular contract to be abrogated
and void and one which took away all remedy to enforce it or
incumbered the remedy with conditions that rendered it useless or
impracticable to pursue it. And, referring to the constitutional
provision, the court said, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice
Taney, that
"it would be unjust to the memory of the distinguished men who
framed it to suppose that it was designed to protect a mere barren
and
Page 94 U. S. 144
abstract right, without any practical operation upon the
business of life. It was undoubtedly adopted as a part of the
Constitution for a great and useful purpose. It was to maintain the
integrity of contracts, and to secure their faithful execution
throughout this Union by placing them under the protection of the
Constitution of the United States. And it would but ill become this
court, under any circumstances, to depart from the plain meaning of
the words used, and to sanction a distinction between the right and
the remedy, which would render this provision illusive and
nugatory, mere words of form, affording no protection and producing
no practical result."
And in
Pumpelly v. Green Bay
Company, 13 Wall. 177, the language of the court is
equally emphatic. That case arose in Wisconsin, the constitution of
which declares, like the constitutions of nearly all the States,
that private property shall not be taken for public use without
just compensation; and this court held that the flooding of one's
land by a dam constructed across a river under a law of the State
was a taking within the prohibition, and required compensation to
be made to the owner of the land thus flooded. The court, speaking
through Mr. Justice Miller, said:
"It would be a very curious and unsatisfactory result if, in
construing a provision of constitutional law always understood to
have been adopted for protection and security to the rights of the
individual as against the government, and which has received the
commendation of jurists, statesmen, and commentators as placing the
just principles of the common law on that subject beyond the power
of ordinary legislation to change or control them, it shall be held
that, if the government refrains from the absolute conversion of
real property to the uses of the public, it can destroy its value
entirely, can inflict irreparable and permanent injury to any
extent, can, in effect, subject it to total destruction without
making any compensation because, in the narrowest sense of the
word, it is not taken for the public use. Such a construction would
pervert the constitutional provision into a restriction on the
rights of the citizen, as those rights stood at the common law,
instead of the government, and make it an authority for invasion of
private right, under the pretext of the public good, which had no
warrant in the laws or practices of our ancestors. "
Page 94 U. S. 145
The views expressed in these citations, applied to this case,
would render the constitutional provision invoked by the defendants
effectual to protect them in the uses, income, and revenues of
their property, as well as in its title and possession. The
construction actually given by the State court and by this court
makes the provision, in the language of Taney, a protection to "a
mere barren and abstract right, without any practical operation
upon the business of life," and renders it "illusive and nugatory,
mere words of form, affording no protection and producing no
practical result."
The power of the State over the property of the citizen under
the constitutional guaranty is well defined. The State may take his
property for public uses, upon just compensation being made
therefor. It may take a portion of his property by way of taxation
for the support of the government. It may control the use and
possession of his property, so far as may be necessary for the
protection of the rights of others, and to secure to them the equal
use and enjoyment of their property. The doctrine that each one
must so use his own as not to injure his neighbor --
sic utere
tuo ut alienum non laedas -- is the rule by which every member
or society must possess and enjoy his property, and all legislation
essential to secure this common and equal enjoyment is a legitimate
exercise of State authority. Except in cases where property may be
destroyed to arrest a conflagration or the ravages of pestilence,
or be taken under the pressure of an immediate and overwhelming
necessity to prevent a public calamity, the power of the State over
the property of the citizen does not extend beyond such limits.
It is true that the legislation which secures to all protection
in their rights, and the equal use and enjoyment of their property,
embraces an almost infinite variety of subjects. Whatever affects
the peace, good order, morals, and health of the community comes
within its scope, and everyone must use and enjoy his property
subject to the restrictions which such legislation imposes. What is
termed the police power of the State, which, from the language
often used respecting it, one would suppose to be an undefined and
irresponsible element in government, can only interfere with the
conduct of individuals in their intercourse with each other, and in
the use of their property, so far
Page 94 U. S. 146
as may be required to secure these objects. The compensation
which the owners of property, not having any special rights or
privileges from the government in connection with it, may demand
for its use, or for their own services in union with it, forms no
element of consideration in prescribing regulations for that
purpose. If one construct a building in a city, the State, or the
municipality exercising a delegated power from the State, may
require its walls to be of sufficient thickness for the uses
intended; it may forbid the employment of inflammable materials in
its construction, so as not to endanger the safety of his
neighbors; if designed as a theatre, church, or public hall, it may
prescribe ample means of egress, so as to afford facility for
escape in case of accident; it may forbid the storage in it of
powder, nitroglycerine, or other explosive material; it may require
its occupants daily to remove decayed vegetable and animal matter
which would otherwise accumulate and engender disease; it may
exclude from it all occupations and business calculated to disturb
the neighborhood or infect the air. Indeed, there is no end of
regulations with respect to the use of property which may not be
legitimately prescribed, having for their object the peace, good
order, safety, and health of the community, thus securing to all
the equal enjoyment of their property; but, in establishing these
regulations, it is evident that compensation to the owner for the
use of his property, or for his services in union with it, is not a
matter of any importance; whether it be one sum or another does not
affect the regulation either in respect to its utility or mode of
enforcement. One may go, in like manner, through the whole round of
regulations authorized by legislation, State or municipal, under
what is termed the police power, and in no instance will he find
that the compensation of the owner for the use of his property has
any influence in establishing them. It is only where some right or
privilege is conferred by the government or municipality upon the
owner, which he can use in connection with his property or by means
of which the use of his property is rendered more valuable to him,
or he thereby enjoys an advantage over others, that the
compensation to be received by him becomes a legitimate matter of
regulation. Submission to the regulation of compensation in such
cases is an implied condition
Page 94 U. S. 147
of the grant, and the State, in exercising its power of
prescribing the compensation, only determines the conditions upon
which its concession shall be enjoyed. When the privilege ends, the
power of regulation ceases.
Jurists and writers on public law find authority for the
exercise of this police power of the State and the numerous
regulations which it prescribes in the doctrine already stated,
that everyone must use and enjoy his property consistently with the
rights of others and the equal use and enjoyment by them of their
property. "The police power of the State," says the Supreme Court
of Vermont,
"extends to the protection of the lives, limbs, health, comfort,
and quiet of all persons, and the protection of all property in the
State. According to the maxim
sic utere tuo ut alienum non
laedas, which, being of universal application, it must, of
course, be within the range of legislative action
to define the
mode and manner in which everyone may so use his own as not to
injure others."
Thorpe v. Rutland & Burlington Railroad Co., 27 Vt.
149. "We think it a settled principle growing out of the nature of
well ordered civil society," says the Supreme Court of
Massachusetts,
"that every holder of property, however absolute and unqualified
may be his title, holds it under the implied liability that his use
of it shall not be injurious to the equal enjoyment of others
having an equal right to the enjoyment of their property, nor
injurious to the rights of the community."
Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cush. 84. In his Commentaries,
after speaking of the protection afforded by the Constitution to
private property, Chancellor Kent says:
"But though property be thus protected, it is still to be
understood that the lawgiver has the right to prescribe the mode
and manner of using it,
so far as may be necessary to prevent
the abuse of the right, to the injury or annoyance of others, or of
the public. The government may, by general regulations,
interdict such uses of property as would create nuisances and
become dangerous to the lives, or health, or peace, or comfort of
the citizens. Unwholesome trades, slaughterhouses, operations
offensive to the senses, the deposit of powder, the application of
steam power to propel cars, the building with combustible
materials, and the burial of the dead, may all be interdicted by
law in the midst of dense masses of population,
Page 94 U. S. 148
on the general and rational principle that every person
ought so to use his property as not to injure his neighbors, and
that private interests must be made subservient to the general
interests of the community. 2 Kent, 340."
The Italics in these citations are mine. The citations show what
I have already stated to be the case, that the regulations which
the State, in the exercise of its police power, authorizes with
respect to the use of property are entirely independent of any
question of compensation for such use, or for the services of the
owner in connection with it.
There is nothing in the character of the business of the
defendants as warehousemen which called for the interference
complained of in this case. Their buildings are not nuisances;
their occupation of receiving and storing grain infringes upon no
rights of others, disturbs no neighborhood, infects not the air,
and in no respect prevents others from using and enjoying their
property as to them may seem best. The legislation in question is
nothing less than a bold assertion of absolute power by the State
to control at its discretion the property and business of the
citizen, and fix the compensation he shall receive. The will of the
legislature is made the condition upon which the owner shall
receive the fruits of his property and the just reward of his
labor, industry, and enterprise. "That government," says Story,
"can scarcely be deemed to be free where the rights of property
are left solely dependent upon the will of a legislative body
without any restraint. The fundamental maxims of a free government
seem to require that the rights of personal liberty and private
property should be held sacred."
Wilkeson v.
Leland, 2 Pet. 657. The decision of the court in
this case gives unrestrained license to legislative will.
The several instances mentioned by counsel in the argument, and
by the court in its opinion in which legislation has fixed the
compensation which parties may receive for the use of their
property and services do not militate against the views I have
expressed of the power of the State over the property of the
citizen. They were mostly cases of public ferries, bridges, and
turnpikes, of wharfingers, hackmen, and draymen, and of interest on
money. In all these cases except that of interest on money, which I
shall presently notice, there was some special
Page 94 U. S. 149
privilege granted by the State or municipality; and no one, I
suppose, has ever contended that the State had not a right to
prescribe the conditions upon which such privilege should be
enjoyed. The State in such cases exercises no greater right than an
individual may exercise over the use of his own property when
leased or loaned to others. The conditions upon which the privilege
shall be enjoyed being stated or implied in the legislation
authorizing its grant, no right is, of course, impaired by their
enforcement. The recipient of the privilege, in effect, stipulates
to comply with the conditions. It matters not how limited the
privilege conferred, its acceptance implies an assent to the
regulation of its use and the compensation for it. The privilege
which the hackman and drayman have to the use of stands on the
public streets, not allowed to the ordinary coachman or laborer
with teams, constitutes a sufficient warrant for the regulation of
their fares. In the case of the warehousemen of Chicago, no right
or privilege is conferred by the government upon them, and hence no
assent of theirs can be alleged to justify any interference with
their charges for the use of their property.
The quotations from the writings of Sir Matthew Hale, so far
from supporting the positions of the court, do not recognize the
interference of the government, even to the extent which I have
admitted to be legitimate. They state merely that the franchise of
a public ferry belongs to the king, and cannot be used by the
subject except by license from him, or prescription time out of
mind, and that, when the subject has a public wharf by license from
the king, or from having dedicated his private wharf to the public,
as in the case of a street opened by him through his own land, he
must allow the use of the wharf for reasonable and moderate
charges. Thus, in the first quotation which is taken from his
treatise
De Jure Maris, Hale says that the king has
"a right of franchise or privilege that no man may set up a
common ferry for all passengers without a prescription time out of
mind or a charter from the king. He may make a ferry for his own
use or the use of his family, but not for the common use of all the
king's subjects passing that way, because it doth in consequent
tend to a common charge, and is become a thing of public interest
and use, and every man for his passage
Page 94 U. S. 150
pays a toll, which is a common charge, and every ferry ought to
be under a public regulation,
viz., that it give
attendance at due times, keep a boat in due order, and take but
reasonable toll; for if he fail in these, he is finable."
Of course, one who obtains a license from the king to establish
a public ferry, at which "every man for his passage pays a toll,"
must take it on condition that he charge only reasonable toll, and,
indeed, subject to such regulations as the king may prescribe.
In the second quotation, which is taken from his treatise
De
Portibus Maris, Hale says:
"A man, for his own private advantage, may, in a port or town,
set up a wharf or crane, and may take what rates he and his
customers can agree for cranage, wharfage, housellage, pesage; for
he doth no more than is lawful for any man to do,
viz.,
makes the most of his own. If the king or subject have a public
wharf, unto which all persons that come to that port must come and
unlade or lade their goods as for the purpose, because they are the
wharves only licensed by the king, or because there is no other
wharf in that port, as it may fall out where a port is newly
erected, in that case, there cannot be taken arbitrary and
excessive duties for cranage, wharfage, pesage, &c.; neither
can they be enhanced to an immoderate rate, but the duties must be
reasonable and moderate, though settled by the king's license or
charter. For now the wharf and crane and other conveniences are
affected with a public interest, and they cease to be
juris
privati only; as if a man set out a street in new building on
his own land, it is now no longer bare private interest, but is
affected by the public interest."
The purport of which is that if one have a public wharf, by
license from the government or his own dedication, he must exact
only reasonable compensation for its use. By its dedication to
public use, a wharf is as much brought under the common law rule of
subjection to reasonable charges as it would be if originally
established or licensed by the crown. All property dedicated to
public use by an individual owner, as in the case of land for a
park or street, falls at once, by force of the dedication, under
the law governing property appropriated by the government for
similar purposes.
I do not doubt the justice of the encomiums passed upon Sir
Page 94 U. S. 151
Matthew Hale as a learned jurist of his day; but I am unable to
perceive the pertinency of his observations upon public ferries and
public wharves, found in his treatises on "The Rights of the Sea"
and on "The Ports of the Sea," to the questions presented by the
warehousing law of Illinois, undertaking to regulate the
compensation received by the owners of private property, when that
property is used for private purposes.
The principal authority cited in support of the ruling of the
court is that of
Alnutt v. Inglis, decided by the King's
Bench, and reported in 12 East. But that case, so far from
sustaining the ruling, establishes, in my judgment, the doctrine
that everyone has a right to charge for his property, or for its
use, whatever he pleases unless he enjoys in connection with it
some right or privilege from the government not accorded to others;
and, even then, it only decides what is above stated in the
quotations from Sir Matthew Hale, that he must submit, so long as
he retains the right or privilege, to reasonable rates. In that
case, the London Dock Company, under certain acts of Parliament,
possessed the exclusive right of receiving imported goods into
their warehouses before the duties were paid, and the question was
whether the company was bound to receive them for a reasonable
reward, or whether it court arbitrarily fix its compensation. In
deciding the case, the Chief Justice, Lord Ellenborough, said:
"There is no doubt that the general principle is favored, both
in law and justice, that every man may fix what price he pleases
upon his own property, or the use of it; but if, for a particular
purpose, the public have right to resort to his premises and make
use of them, and he have a monopoly in them for that purpose, if he
will take the benefit of that monopoly, he must, as an equivalent,
perform the duty attached to it on reasonable terms."
And, coming to the conclusion that the company's warehouses were
invested with "the monopoly of a public privilege," he held that,
by law, the company must confine itself to take reasonable rates,
and added that, if the crown should thereafter think it advisable
to extend the privilege more generally to other persons and places,
so that the public would not be restrained from exercising a choice
of warehouses for the purpose, the company might be enfranchised
from the restriction which
Page 94 U. S. 152
attached to a monopoly; but, so long as its warehouses were the
only places which could be resorted to for that purpose, the
company was bound to let the trade have the use of them for a
reasonable hire and reward. The other judges of the court placed
their concurrence in the decision upon the ground that the company
possessed a legal monopoly of the business, having the only
warehouses where goods imported could be lawfully received without
previous payment of the duties. From this case, it appears that it
is only where some privilege in the bestowal of the government is
enjoyed in connection with the property that it is affected with a
public interest in any proper sense of the terms. It is the public
privilege conferred with the use of the property which creates the
public interest in it.
In the case decided by the Supreme Court of Alabama, where a
power granted to the city of Mobile to license bakers and to
regulate the weight and price of bread was sustained so far as
regulating the weight of the bread was concerned, no question was
made as to the right to regulate the price. 3 Ala. 137. There is no
doubt of the competency of the State to prescribe the weight of a
loaf of bread, as it may declare what weight shall constitute a
pound or a ton. But I deny the power of any legislature under our
government to fix the price which one shall receive for his
property of any kind. If the power can be exercised as to one
article, it may as to all articles, and the prices of everything,
from a calico gown to a city mansion, may be the subject of
legislative direction.
Other instances of a similar character may, no doubt, be cited
of attempted legislative interference with the rights of property.
The act of Congress of 1820, mentioned by the court, is one of
them. There, Congress undertook to confer upon the city of
Washington power to regulate the rates of wharfage at private
wharves and the fees for sweeping chimneys. Until some
authoritative adjudication is had upon these and similar
provisions, I must adhere, notwithstanding the legislation, to my
opinion that those who own property have the right to fix the
compensation at which they will allow its use, and that those who
control services have a right to fix the compensation at which they
will be rendered. The chimney-sweeps may, I think, safely claim all
the compensation which
Page 94 U. S. 153
they can obtain by bargain for their work. In the absence of any
contract for property or services, the law allows only a reasonable
price or compensation; but what is a reasonable price in any case
will depend upon a variety of considerations, and is not a matter
for legislative determination.
The practice of regulating by legislation the interest
receivable for the use of money, when considered with reference to
its origin, is only the assertion of a right of the government to
control the extent to which a privilege granted by it may be
exercised and enjoyed. By the ancient common law, it was unlawful
to take any money for the use of money; all who did so were called
usurers, a term of great reproach, and were exposed to the censure
of the church; and if, after the death of a person, it was
discovered that he had been a usurer whilst living, his chattels
were forfeited to the king and his lands escheated to the lord of
the fee. No action could be maintained on any promise to pay for
the use of money, because of the unlawfulness of the contract.
Whilst the common law thus condemned all usury, Parliament
interfered, and made it lawful to take a limited amount of
interest. It was not upon the theory that the legislature could
arbitrarily fix the compensation which one could receive for the
use of property, which, by the general law, was the subject of hire
for compensation, that Parliament acted, but in order to confer a
privilege which the common law denied. The reasons which led to
this legislation originally have long since ceased to exist, and if
the legislation is still persisted in, it is because a long
acquiescence in the exercise of a power, especially when it was
rightfully assumed in the first instance, is generally received as
sufficient evidence of its continued lawfulness. 10 Bac.Abr. 264.
*
There were also recognized in England, by the ancient common
law, certain privileges as belonging to the lord of the manor,
which grew out of the state of the country, the condition of the
people, and the relation existing between him and
Page 94 U. S. 154
his tenants under the feudal system. Among these was the right
of the lord to compel all the tenants within his manor to grind
their corn at his mill. No one, therefore, could set up a mill
except by his license, or by the license of the crown, unless he
claimed the right by prescription, which presupposed a grant from
the lord or crown, and, of course, with such license went the right
to regulate the tolls to be received. Woolrych on the Law of
Waters, c. 6, of Mills. Hence originated the doctrine which at one
time obtained generally in this country, that there could be no
mill to grind corn for the public without a grant or license from
the public authorities. It is still, I believe, asserted in some
States. This doctrine being recognized, all the rest followed. The
right to control the toll accompanied the right to control the
establishment of the mill.
It requires no comment to point out the radical differences
between the cases of public mills and interest on money and that of
the warehouses in Chicago. No prerogative or privilege of the crown
to establish warehouses was ever asserted at the common law. The
business of a warehouseman was, at common law, a private business,
and is so in its nature. It has no special privileges connected
with it, nor did the law ever extend to it any greater protection
than it extended to all other private business. No reason can be
assigned to justify legislation interfering with the legitimate
profits of that business that would not equally justify an
intermeddling with the business of every man in the community, so
soon, at least, as his business became generally useful.
I am of opinion that the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Illinois should be reversed.
* The statute of 13 Eliz. c. 8, which allows ten percent
interest, recites "that all usury, being forbidden by the law of
God, is sin, and detestable," and the statute of 21 James the
First, reducing the rate to eight percent, provided that nothing in
the law should be "construed to allow the practice of usury in
point of religion or conscience," a clause introduced, it is said,
to satisfy the bishops, who would not vote for the bill without
it.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG.
When the judgment in this case was announced by direction of a
majority of the court, it was well known by all my brethren that I
did not concur in it. It had been my purpose to prepare a
dissenting opinion, but I found no time for the preparation, and I
was reluctant to dissent in such a case without stating my reasons.
Mr. Justice Field has now stated them as fully as I can, and I
concur in what he has said.