1. A town situate upon navigable waters may, without infringing
the Constitution of the United States, erect wharves, collect
reasonable wharfage proportioned to the tonnage of vessels, and
forbid them, under a penalty, to land within the corporate limits
at any point other than the public wharf or landing.
2. The ordinances of the Town of Catlettsburg (
infra,
p.
105 U. S.
560), adopted pursuant to the power conferred by its
charter, are not unconstitutional, and this case shows no such
abuse of that power as entitles the complainant to relief.
3. Congress has not prescribed the rules touching the landing
and departure of vessels, wharfage, and other matters relating
thereto, which are enforced at points upon the navigable waters of
the country where the amount of commerce requires them, and if they
may be justly regarded as regulations of commerce, they are such as
the states may respectively adopt, until that body deems it
expedient to act.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit in chancery brought by the Cincinnati,
Portsmouth, Big Sandy, and Pomeroy Packet Company against the Board
of Trustees of the Town of Catlettsburg.
The bill is very inartifically drawn, and its allegations very
imperfectly present some of the questions which, by the brief of
counsel, it is supposed to have raised. It alleges the complainant
to be a corporation, owning a large number of steamboats engaged in
the navigation of the Ohio River and making frequent landings at
the public wharf of the Town of Catlettsburg, on the Kentucky side
of that river. That upon each of said landings they were subjected
to an illegal tax proportioned to the tonnage of each of said
boats, amounting, between Jan. 1, 1870, and April 30, 1877, to an
aggregate sum of $5,092. Parts of the ordinance of the town under
which this tax was collected, and of the statute of Kentucky
supposed to authorize the ordinance, are set out in the bill. This
ordinance is alleged to be void as a regulation of commerce, and as
laying a
Page 105 U. S. 560
duty of tonnage forbidden by section ten of the first article of
the Constitution. The bill then alleges that the tax is excessive
and beyond a reasonable charge for the use of the wharf by the
boats of the complainant, and that the amount already collected
exceeds the cost of erecting and preserving the wharf.
An amended bill was also filed, which does not materially affect
the matters in issue.
The thirty-first section of the Act of the Kentucky Legislature
of Jan. 28, 1868, incorporating the Town of Catlettsburg,
authorizes the board of trustees
"to erect, make, and repair wharves and docks, and to regulate
and fix the rate of wharfage thereat; to regulate the stationing or
anchoring of vessels or boats or rafts within the town limits, and
the depositing freight or lumber on the public wharves."
The ordinances of the town complained of are the following,
enacted Feb. 23, 1871:
"The following rates are established as charges upon steamboats
and other watercrafts landing at the public landing of
Catlettsburg, Ky.: on transient steamboats, $1 for every landing;
on the largest-sized regular packets, over 100 tons, custom house
measure, $1 for landing; and on all steamboats under 100 tons
burthen, fifty cents for each landing; for all store boats or
trading boats, $1 for each landing, and if they remain more than
one day, fifty cents per day for each day they remain, and for each
wharf boat used for the purpose of wharfage and commission, $10 per
month."
And another, adopted by said board of trustees May 5, 1873, in
the following words:
"That the public landing on the Ohio River between Division and
Main Streets is hereby appointed and established as a steamboat
landing, and all steamboats arriving at the Town of Catlettsburg
shall land at the wharf situate as aforesaid between Division
Street and Main Street and at no other point within the corporate
limits of the Town of Catlettsburg except by the written consent of
the wharfmaster of said town."
"That for any violation of the foregoing section, the owners,
controllers, or masters of any boat so violating shall be jointly
and severally liable to pay a fine of $10 for each offence, which
may be recovered by warrant in the name of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky,
Page 105 U. S. 561
for the use of the Board of Trustees of the Town of
Catlettsburg."
"It is hereby made the duty of the wharfmaster to enforce this
ordinance, and to report and prosecute all violations thereof."
The prayer of the bill is for an injunction restraining the
defendants from the collection of all taxes from the complainant's
boats while landing at the natural and unimproved shore of the Ohio
River, and at points other than the improved landing of the
defendants, between Division and Main Streets, and from the
collection of all excessive taxes while landing at any point within
the corporate limits, and from the enforcement of the ordinance
requiring them to land at the defendants' improved wharf, between
Division and Main Streets; and the original bill prayed a decree
for the sums improperly exacted of complainant.
The court below held on demurrer to the original bill that there
could be no recovery in this suit for the amount illegally exacted
and paid, because an action at law was the appropriate and adequate
remedy for that purpose, and in that the court was probably
right.
If, however, the bill presents no ground for the injunction
prayed, the prayer for recovery of a moneyed decree becomes
immaterial.
The framer of the bill seems to have labored under a
misapprehension of the nature of the transaction in calling the
demands made of the complainant taxes. We can see nothing in the
ordinances intended to impose a tax upon anybody. The bill, as we
have said, is not very clear in its statements of the manner in
which this money was paid or collected. It must, however, have been
paid for the use of defendants' wharf or improved landing place, in
which case it is complained of as an excessive charge, or it must
have been paid as a penalty for landing at other points than
between Division and Main Streets in violation of the ordinance. In
neither case is there anything in the nature of a tax.
The effort of the pleader undoubtedly is to bring the case
within the constitutional prohibition of a tax upon tonnage.
If, however, the trustees of the town had a right to
compensation for the use of the improved landing or wharf which
they
Page 105 U. S. 562
had made, it is no objection to the ordinance fixing the amount
of this compensation that it was measured by the size of the vessel
and that this size was ascertained by the tonnage of each vessel.
It is idle, after the decisions we have made, to call this a tax
upon tonnage.
Cannon v. New
Orleans, 20 Wall. 577;
Packet Company v.
Keokuk, 95 U. S. 80;
Packet Company v. St. Louis, 100 U.
S. 423;
Guy v. Baltimore, 100 U.
S. 434.
Still less ground exists for holding that the penalties imposed
for a refusal to obey the rules for places of landing, and the
orders of the wharfmaster on that subject, are taxes on
tonnage.
Nor is there any room to question the right of a city or town
situated on navigable waters to build and own a wharf suitable for
vessels to land at, and to exact a reasonable compensation for the
facilities thus afforded to vessels by the use of such wharves, and
that this is no infringement of the constitutional provisions
concerning tonnage taxes and the regulation of commerce.
See cases above cited.
There remains to be considered the validity of the ordinance
which forbids the landing of vessels, except by the permission of
the wharfmaster, at any other point within the town than between
Division and Main Streets, and the question of excessive charges
for the use of the wharf.
There can be no doubt that the rules which govern the landing
and departure of vessels at points situated on navigable waters may
seriously affect them in their business of navigation and
transportation, and in some sense such rules are regulations of
commerce.
On the other hand, the necessity is obvious of the existence in
each port, where vessels as large as steamboats land at the shore
and deposit their cargoes on the banks of navigable streams, of
some authority to prescribe the places where this may be done, the
time of doing it, and the points at which they may discharge cargo,
both as relates to the streets, shores, houses of the town, and
other vessels landing at the same time.
The protection of the shore of the sea or bank of a river on
which a town is situated is a necessity to the town, and the
washing and crumbling of the bank from the agitation of the waters
made by the landing of large steamers demand that such regulations
should exist.
Page 105 U. S. 563
Small vessels without steam, rafts, flat boats, keel boats,
loaded to their very utmost capacity, and liable to be sunk by the
waves which accompany the landing of large steamboats, have the
same right to land at the shore that steamers have, and they have a
right to protection against their powerful competitors for trade.
This can best be secured by appropriate regulations prescribing
places for the landing of each, and in some instances placing the
matter under the control of a wharfmaster or other officer whose
duty it shall be to look after it.
Such rules and regulations and such an officer exist in every
place where the number of the inhabitants or the amount of the
water-borne commerce justifies or requires it. The necessity for
the existence of this power cannot be doubted.
We are not aware that in any instance Congress has attempted to
exercise it. If it be a regulation of commerce under the power
conferred on Congress by the Constitution, that body has signally
failed to provide any such regulation. It belongs also, manifestly,
to that class of rules which, like pilotage and some others, can be
most wisely exercised by local authorities, and in regard to which
no general rules, applicable alike to all ports and landing places,
can be properly made. If a regulation of commerce at all, it comes
within that class in which the states may prescribe rules until
Congress assumes to do so.
Cooley v. Board of
Wardens, 12 How. 299;
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713;
Crandall v.
State of Nevada, 6 Wall. 35;
Pound v.
Turck, 95 U. S. 459.
There is probably not a city or large town in the United states
situated on a navigable water where ordinances, rules, and
regulations like those of the Town of Catlettsburg are not made and
imposed by authority derived from state legislation, and the long
acquiescence in this exercise of the power and its absolute
necessity are arguments almost conclusive in favor of its rightful
existence.
We are of opinion that there is nothing in the ordinances of the
Town of Catlettsburg complained of, authorized as they clearly are
by the statute of Kentucky, which is repugnant to the Constitution
of the United states.
But while the authority to make such regulations may exist
Page 105 U. S. 564
in the trustees of that town, it must be conceded that an
oppressive abuse in the exercise of that power may present a case
in which the proper court could give relief. If, for instance,
while forbidding all boats to land elsewhere than at a designated
and limited part of the shore, that space was too small to permit
the landing at the same time of vessels whose business required it,
or if, having assumed the obligation of providing appropriate and
sufficient wharf accommodations and forbidden boats to land at any
other place, there was in fact no proper landing place provided, a
court would find some remedy for such oppressive and arbitrary
conduct.
But nothing in this bill implies that the landing place pointed
out by the ordinance is insufficient in dimensions or wanting in
proper means of accommodating the business of the vessels using
it.
So also, while the statute authorizes the trustees to establish
the rates of wharfage, if the sum demanded for that service is so
far beyond a reasonable compensation for the use of the city's
wharf as to be oppressive, and an abuse of the power thus
conferred, the courts could in some way give appropriate relief,
and it is this part of appellant's case which presents the only
difficult question for our consideration.
We do not feel justified, however, on the allegations of this
bill, in reversing the order of the circuit court sustaining a
demurrer to it, for several reasons.
In the first place, the bill is manifestly founded on the idea
of the unconstitutionality of these ordinances, and an injunction
is asked to restrain defendants from interfering with the landing
anywhere within the city limits of appellant's boats, and in
general from enforcing the obnoxious ordinances. There is, it is
true, a prayer to restrain them from the collection of all
excessive taxes while their boats are landing within the corporate
limits, but what is excessive or what is reasonable is not shown,
and, as we have already said, the money collected is not taxes in
any sense whatever.
In the next place, the bill does not show how or why the sums
paid for the use of the wharf, or for landing at other places, is
excessive. The one reason for so charging which is given is
evidently fallacious -- namely that the town has already
Page 105 U. S. 565
raised enough money from the use of the wharf to pay for its
construction and preservation.
The compensation which either the city or private owner of a
wharf is entitled to receive is not to be based exclusively on a
reimbursement of the cost of the wharf, and no such criterion can
govern in the matter.
The ordinance establishing these rates and penalties is given in
the bill, and has been copied in this opinion. It is by no means
apparent that they are excessive. When it is considered that the
wharf needs constant repair and care; that the compensation of a
wharfmaster, who must be always ready to locate the vessels and
collect the charges, is to be paid; and that the character and
extent of the improvements are not shown, it would seem that
something more than characterizing those rates as excessive is
needed to invoke the restraining power of a court of equity. It is
not alleged that they are oppressive or an abuse of the power
confided to the trustees. No statement is made of what would be
reasonable in the premises, and, consistently with the bill, the
charge may be so little in excess of a just compensation as not to
call for equitable relief.
There is no hindrance to trying this question in an action at
law, where the verdict of a jury or the judgment of the court in
one or two cases would establish what is reasonable under the
circumstances, and this being once established by the appropriate
tribunal, the court of equity could restrain the excess.
We concur with the circuit judge that no such case of oppressive
use or clear abuse of the power properly conferred on the trustees
in regard to wharfage charges is alleged by this bill as to justify
the interposition of a court of equity.
Decree affirmed.