The Act of August 8, 1890, 26 Stat. 313, c. 728, enacting
"That all fermented, distilled or other intoxicating liquors or
liquids transported into any state or territory, or remaining
therein for use, consumption, sale or storage therein, shall upon
arrival in such state or territory be subject to the operation and
effect of the laws of such state or territory enacted in the
exercise of its police powers to the same extent and in the same
manner as though such liquids or liquors had been produced in such
state or territory, and shall not be exempt therefrom by reason of
being introduced therein in original packages or otherwise"
is a valid and constitutional exercise of the legislative power
conferred upon Congress, and after that act took effect, such
liquors or liquids, introduced into a state or territory from
another state, whether, in original packages or otherwise, became
subject to the operation of such of its then existing
Page 140 U. S. 546
laws as had been properly enacted in the exercise of its police
powers, among which was the statute in question as applied to the
petitioner's offense.
This was an application for a writ of habeas corpus made to the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Kansas by
Charles A. Rahrer, who alleged in his petition that he was
illegally and wrongfully restrained of his liberty by John M.
Wilkerson, Sheriff of Shawnee County, Kansas, in violation of the
Constitution of the United States.
The writ was issued, and, return having been made thereto, the
cause was heard on the following agreed statement of facts:
"It is understood and agreed by and between the attorneys for
the petitioner herein and the respondent that the above-entitled
application to be discharged upon writ of habeas corpus shall be
heard and decided upon the following facts, namely:"
"That H. C. Maynard and Lisle Hopkins are citizens and residents
of the State of Missouri, and are partners doing business at Kansas
City, in the State of Missouri, under the firm name of Maynard,
Hopkins & Co.; that said Maynard, Hopkins & Co. are, and
were at all the times herein mentioned, doing a general wholesale
business in Kansas City, in the State of Missouri, in the sale of
intoxicating liquors; that said Maynard, Hopkins & Co. do a
general business of packing and shipping intoxicating liquors from
their place of business in Kansas City, in the State of Missouri,
to various points in the State of Kansas and other states; that in
June, 1890, the said Maynard, Hopkins & Co. constituted and
appointed the petitioner herein, Charles Rahrer, a citizen of the
United States, their lawful agent in the City of Topeka in the
State of Kansas, to sell and dispose of for them in original
packages liquors shipped by the said Maynard, Hopkins & Co.
from the State of Missouri to Topeka, in the State of Kansas; that
in July, 1890, the said Maynard, Hopkins & Co. shipped to the
City of Topeka, in the State of Kansas, from Kansas City, in the
State of Missouri, a carload of intoxicating liquors packed by them
and shipped from Kansas City, in the State of Missouri, in
Page 140 U. S. 547
original packages, which carload of intoxicating liquors so
shipped was taken charge of by the petitioner herein, Charles
Rahrer at Topeka, in the State of Kansas, as the agent of Maynard,
Hopkins & Co.; that on the 9th day of August, 1890, the said
Charles Rahrer, as agent of the said Maynard, Hopkins & Co.,
offered for sale and sold in the original package a portion of said
liquor, so shipped by the said Maynard, Hopkins & Co., to-wit,
one pony keg of beer, being a four-gallon keg, which keg was in the
same condition in which it was shipped from Kansas City, in the
State of Missouri, to Topeka, in the State of Kansas; that said keg
of beer was separate and distinct from all other kegs of beer so
shipped, and was shipped as a separate and distinct package by
Maynard, Hopkins & Co. from Kansas City, in the State of
Missouri."
"That the petitioner, Charles A. Rahrer, on the 9th day of
August, 1890, offered for sale, and sold, one pint of whisky, which
was a portion of the liquor shipped by Maynard, Hopkins & Co.,
as above stated; that said pint of whisky was sold in the same
condition in which it was shipped from the State of Missouri and
received in the State of Kansas; that it was separate and distinct
from every other package of liquor so shipped, and was sold in the
same package in which it was received, being securely in closed in
a wooden box of sufficient size to hold said pint bottle of
whisky."
"It is further agreed that Charles A. Rahrer, the petitioner
herein, was not the owner of said liquor, but was simply acting as
the agent of Maynard, Hopkins & Co., who were the owners of
said liquor."
"That on the 21st day of August, 1890, there was filed in the
office of the Clerk of the District Court of Shawnee County,
Kansas, an information by R. B. Welch, county attorney of said
county, together with affidavit of Otis M. Capron and John C.
Butcher appended and attached thereto, and in support thereof,
taken under sec. 2543, General Statutes of 1889, charging the said
Charles A. Rahrer with violating the prohibitory liquor law of the
State of Kansas by making the two sales hereinbefore mentioned. A
copy of
Page 140 U. S. 548
said information and affidavits so filed is attached to the
return of the respondent herein and is hereby referred to and made
a part hereof. That the petitioner herein, Charles A. Rahrer, was
arrested upon a warrant issued upon the information and affidavit
heretofore referred to, and is held in custody by the respondent,
John M. Wilkerson, Sheriff of Shawnee County, by reason of said
information so filed and said warrant so issued, and not
otherwise."
"Said Charles A. Rahrer was not a druggist, and did not have,
nor did his principals, Maynard, Hopkins & Co., have, any
druggist's permit at the time of making the said sales of
intoxicating liquor hereinbefore mentioned, nor had he or they ever
made any application for a druggist's permit to the probate judge
of Shawnee County, Kansas, before making such sales of intoxicating
liquor as aforesaid. The said sales of intoxicating liquors were
not made by said Charles A. Rahrer upon a printed or written
affidavit of the applicant for such intoxicating liquors, as
required under the prohibitory laws of the State of Kansas."
"A copy of the warrant under and by virtue of which the
respondent, John M. Wilkerson, Sheriff of Shawnee County, holds the
said Charles A. Rahrer is attached to the return of the respondent,
and is hereby referred to and made a part hereof."
"The recent act of Congress relating to intoxicating liquors,
and known as the 'Wilson Bill,' as signed by the President on
August 8, A.D. 1890."
The circuit court discharged the petitioner, and the cause was
brought to this Court by appeal. The opinion will be found in 43 F.
556.
The Constitution of Kansas provides: "The manufacture and sale
of intoxicating liquors shall be forever prohibited in this state,
except for medical, scientific, and mechanical purposes." 1
Gen.Stat. Kansas, 1889, p. 107. The sections of the Kansas statutes
claimed to have been violated by the petitioner are as follows:
"Any person or persons who shall manufacture, sell, or barter
any spirituous, malt, vinous, fermented, or other intoxicating
Page 140 U. S. 549
liquors shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and punished as
hereinafter provided,
provided however that such liquors
may be sold for medical, scientific, and mechanical purposes, as
provided in this act."
"It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to sell or
barter for medical, scientific, or mechanical purposes any malt,
vinous, spirituous, fermented, or other intoxicating liquors
without first having procured a druggist's permit therefor from the
probate judge of the county wherein such druggist may be doing
business at the time,"
etc.
"Any person without taking out and having a permit to sell
intoxicating liquors as provided in this act, or any person not
lawfully and in good faith engaged in the business of a druggist,
who shall directly or indirectly sell or barter any spirituous,
malt, vinous, fermented or other intoxicating liquors, shall be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall
be fined in any sum not less than one hundred dollars nor more than
five hundred dollars, and be imprisoned in the county jail not less
than thirty days nor more than ninety days."
1 Gen.Stat. Kansas, c. 31, §§ 380, 381, 386.
On August 8, 1890, an act of Congress was approved, entitled
"An act to limit the effect of the regulations of commerce between
the several states and with foreign countries in certain cases,"
which reads as follows:
"That all fermented, distilled, or other intoxicating liquors or
liquids transported into any state or territory, or remaining
therein, for use, consumption, sale, or storage therein, shall upon
arrival in such state or territory be subject to the operation and
effect of the laws of such state or territory enacted in the
exercise of its police powers to the same extent and in the same
manner as though such liquids or liquors had been produced in such
state or territory, and shall not exempt therefrom by reason of
being introduced therein in original packages or otherwise."
26 St. 313, c. 728.
Page 140 U. S. 554
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts as above,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The power of the state to impose restraints and burdens upon
persons and property in conservation and promotion of the public
health, good order, and prosperity is a power originally and always
belonging to the states, not surrendered to them by the general
government, nor directly restrained by the Constitution of the
United States, and essentially exclusive.
And this Court has uniformly recognized state legislation,
legitimately for police purposes, as not, in the sense of the
Constitution, necessarily infringing upon any right which has been
confided expressly or by implication to the national
government.
The Fourteenth Amendment, in forbidding a state to make or
enforce any law abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens
of the United States, or to deprive any person of life,
Page 140 U. S. 555
liberty, or property without due process of law, or to deny to
any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws, did not invest, and did not attempt to invest, Congress with
power to legislate upon subjects which are within the domain of
state legislation.
As observed by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, delivering the opinion of
the Court in the
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S.
3, the legislation under that amendment cannot
"properly cover the whole domain of rights appertaining to life,
liberty, and property, defining them, and providing for their
vindication. That would be to establish a code of municipal law
regulative of all private rights between man and man in society. It
would be to make Congress take the place of the state legislatures,
and to supersede them. It is absurd to affirm that because the
rights of life, liberty, and property (which include all civil
rights that men have) are by the amendment sought to be protected
against invasion on the part of the state without due process of
law, Congress may therefore provide due process of law for their
vindication in every case, and that because the denial by a state
to any persons of the equal protection of the laws is prohibited by
the amendment, therefore Congress may establish laws for their
equal protection."
In short, it is not to be doubted that the power to make the
ordinary regulations of police remains with the individual states,
and cannot be assumed by the national government, and that in this
respect it is not interfered with by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Barbier v. Connolly, 113 U. S. 27,
113 U. S.
31.
The power of Congress to regulate commerce among the several
states when the subjects of that power are national in their nature
is also exclusive. The Constitution does not provide that
interstate commerce shall be free, but, by the grant of this
exclusive power to regulate it, it was left free except as Congress
might impose restraint. Therefore it has been determined that the
failure of Congress to exercise this exclusive power in any case is
an expression of its will that the subject shall be free from
restrictions or impositions upon it by the several states.
Robbins v. Shelby Taxing District, 120 U.
S. 489. And if a law passed by a state, in the exercise
of
Page 140 U. S. 556
its acknowledged powers, comes into conflict with that will, the
Congress and the state cannot occupy the position of equal opposing
sovereignties, because the Constitution declares its supremacy, and
that of the laws passed in pursuance thereof.
Gibbons
v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 210. That which is not supreme
must yield to that which is supreme.
Brown
v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 448.
"Commerce undoubtedly is traffic," said Chief Justice
Marshall,
"but it is something more; it is intercourse. It describes the
commercial intercourse between nations and parts of nations in all
its branches, and is regulated by prescribing rules for carrying on
that intercourse."
Unquestionably fermented, distilled, or other intoxicating
liquors or liquids are subjects of commercial intercourse,
exchange, barter, and traffic between nation and nation, and
between state and state, like any other commodity in which a right
of traffic exists, and are so recognized by the usages of the
commercial world, the laws of Congress, and the decisions of
courts. Nevertheless it has been often held that state legislation
which prohibits the manufacture of spirituous, malt, vinous,
fermented, or other intoxicating liquors within the limits of a
state, to be there sold or bartered for general use as a beverage,
does not necessarily infringe any right, privilege, or immunity
secured by the Constitution of the United States or by the
amendments thereto.
Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.
S. 623, and cases cited. "These cases," in the language
of the opinion in
Mugler v. Kansas (page
123 U. S.
659,)
"rest upon the acknowledged right of the states of the union to
control their purely internal affairs, and, in so doing, to protect
the health, morals, and safety of their people by regulations that
do not interfere with the execution of the powers of the general
government or violate rights secured by the Constitution of the
United States. The power to establish such regulations, as was said
in
Gibbons
v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S.
203, reaches everything within the territory of a state
not surrendered to the national government."
But it was not thought in that case that the record presented
any question of the invalidity of state laws because repugnant to
the power to regulate commerce among
Page 140 U. S. 557
the states. It is upon the theory of such repugnancy that the
case before us arises, and involves the distinction which exists
between the commercial power and the police power, which,
"though quite distinguishable when they do not approach each
other, may yet, like the intervening colors between white and
black, approach so nearly as to perplex the understanding, as
colors perplex the vision in marking the distinction between
them."
12 Wheat.
25 U. S.
441.
And here the sagacious observations of Mr. Justice Catron in the
License
Cases, 5 How. 599, may profitably be quoted, as
they have often been before:
"The law and the decision apply equally to foreign and to
domestic spirits, as they must do on the principles assumed in
support of the law. The assumption is that the police power was not
touched by the Constitution, but left to the states as the
Constitution found it. This is admitted, and whenever a thing, from
character or condition, is of a description to be regulated by that
power in the state, then the regulation may be made by the state,
and Congress cannot interfere. But this must always depend on fact,
subject to legal ascertainment, so that the injury may have
redress. And the fact must find its support in this, whether the
prohibited article belongs to, and is subject to be regulated as
part of, foreign commerce, or of commerce among the states. If from
its nature it does not belong to commerce or if its condition, from
putrescence or other cause, is such when it is about to enter the
state that it no longer belongs to commerce, or, in other words, is
not a commercial article, then the state power may exclude its
introduction, and, as an incident to this power, a state may use
means to ascertain the fact. And here is the limit between the
sovereign power of the state and the federal power -- that is to
say that which does not belong to commerce is within the
jurisdiction of the police power of the state, and that which does
belong to commerce is within the jurisdiction of the United States.
And to this limit must all the general views come, as I suppose,
that were suggested in the reasoning of this Court in the cases of
Gibbons v. Ogden, Brown v. Maryland, and
New York v.
Miln. What then is
Page 140 U. S. 558
the assumption of the state court? Undoubtedly, in effect, that
the state had the power to declare what should be an article of
lawful commerce in the particular state, and, having declared that
ardent spirits and wines were deleterious to morals and health,
they ceased to be commercial commodities there, and that then the
police power attached, and consequently the powers of Congress
could not interfere. The exclusive state power is made to rest not
on the fact of the state or condition of the article nor that it is
property usually passing by sale from hand to hand, but on the
declaration found in the state laws, and asserted as the state
policy, that it shall be excluded from commerce. And by this means,
the sovereign jurisdiction in the state is attempted to be created
in a case where it did not previously exist. If this be the true
construction of the constitutional provision, then the paramount
power of Congress to regulate commerce is subject to a very
material limitation, for it takes from Congress, and leaves with
the states, the power to determine the commodities or articles of
property which are the subjects of lawful commerce. Congress may
regulate, but the states determine what shall or shall not be
regulated. Upon this theory, the power to regulate commerce,
instead of being paramount over the subject, would become
subordinate to the state police power, for it is obvious that the
power to determine the articles which may be the subjects of
commerce, and thus to circumscribe its scope and operation, is in
effect the controlling one. The police power would not only be a
formidable rival, but, in a struggle, must necessarily triumph over
the commercial power, as the power to regulate is dependent upon
the power to fix and determine upon the subjects to be regulated.
The same process of legislation and reasoning adopted by the state
and its courts could bring within the police power any article of
consumption that a state might wish to exclude, whether it belonged
to that which was drank or to food and clothing, and with nearly
equal claims to propriety, as malt liquors and the produce of
fruits other than grapes stand on no higher grounds than the light
wines of this and other countries, excluded, in effect, by the law
as it now stands.
Page 140 U. S. 559
And it would be only another step to regulate real or supposed
extravagance in food and clothing. And in this connection it may be
proper to say that the three states whose laws are now before us
had in view an entire prohibition from use of spirits and wines of
every description, and that their main scope and object is to
enforce exclusive temperance as a policy of state, under the belief
that such a policy will best subserve the interests of society, and
that to this end, more than to any other, has the sovereign power
of these states been exerted; for it was admitted on the argument
that no licenses are issued, and that exclusion exists, so far as
the laws can produce the result -- at least in some of the states,
and that this was the policy of the law. For these reasons, I think
the case cannot depend on the reserved power in the state to
regulate its own police."
And the learned judge reached the conclusion that the law of New
Hampshire, which particularly raised the question, might be
sustained as a regulation of commerce, lawful because not repugnant
to any actual exercise of the commercial power by Congress. In
respect of this, the opposite view has since prevailed, but the
argument retains its force in its bearing upon the purview of the
police power as not concurrent with, and necessarily not superior
to, the commercial power.
The laws of Iowa under consideration in
Bowman v. Railway
Company, 125 U. S. 465, and
Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100,
were enacted in the exercise of the police power of the state, and
not at all as regulations of commerce with foreign nations and
among the states; but as they inhibited the receipt of an imported
commodity or its disposition before it had ceased to become an
article of trade between one state and another or another country
and this, they amounted in effect to a regulation of such commerce.
Hence it was held that inasmuch as interstate commerce, consisting
in the transportation, purchase, sale, and exchange of commodities,
is national in its character, and must be governed by a uniform
system, so long as Congress did not pass any law to regulate it
specifically or in such way as to allow that laws of the state to
operate upon it, Congress thereby indicated its will that such
Page 140 U. S. 560
commerce should be free and untrammeled, and therefore that the
laws of Iowa referred to were inoperative insofar as they amounted
to regulations of foreign or interstate commerce in inhibiting the
reception of such articles within the state, or their sale upon
arrival, in the form in which they were imported there from a
foreign country or another state. It followed as a corollary that
when Congress acted at all, the result of its action must be to
operate as a restraint upon that perfect freedom which its silence
insured.
Congress has now spoken, and declared that imported liquors or
liquids shall, upon arrival in a state, fall within the category of
domestic articles of a similar nature. Is the law open to
constitutional objection?
By the first clause of Section 10 of Article I of the
Constitution, certain powers are enumerated which the states are
forbidden to exercise in any event, and by clauses 2 and 3, certain
others which may be exercised with the consent of Congress. As to
those in the first class, Congress cannot relieve from the positive
restriction imposed. As to those in the second, their exercise may
be authorized, and they include the collection of the revenue from
imposts and duties on imports and exports by state enactments,
subject to the revision and control of Congress, and a tonnage
duty, to the exaction of which only the consent of Congress is
required. Beyond this Congress is not empowered to enable the state
to go in this direction. Nor can Congress transfer legislative
powers to a state, nor sanction a state law in violation of the
Constitution, and if it can adopt a state law as its own, it must
be one that it would be competent for it to enact itself, and not a
law passed in the exercise of the police power.
Cooley v.
Port Wardens of Philadelphia, 12 How. 299;
Gunn v. Barry,
15 Wall. 610,
82 U. S. 623;
United States v.
Dewitt, 9 Wall. 41.
It does not admit of argument that Congress can neither delegate
its own powers nor enlarge those of a state. This being so, it is
urged that the act of Congress cannot be sustained as a regulation
of commerce, because the Constitution, in the matter of interstate
commerce, operates
ex proprio vigore as a restraint upon
the power of Congress to so regulate
Page 140 U. S. 561
it as to bring any of its subjects within the grasp of the
police power of the state. In other words, it is earnestly
contended that the Constitution guarantees freedom of commerce
among the states in all things, and that not only may intoxicating
liquors be imported from one state into another without being
subject to regulation under the laws of the latter, but that
Congress is powerless to obviate that result.
Thus the grant to the general government of a power designed to
prevent embarrassing restrictions upon interstate commerce by any
state would be made to forbid any restraint whatever. We do not
concur in this view. In surrendering their own power over external
commerce, the states did not secure absolute freedom in such
commerce, but only the protection from encroachment afforded by
confiding its regulation exclusively to Congress.
By the adoption of the Constitution, the ability of the several
states to act upon the matter solely in accordance with their own
will was extinguished, and the legislative will of the general
government substituted. No affirmative guaranty was thereby given
to any State of the right to demand, as between it and the others,
what it could not have obtained before, while the object was
undoubtedly sought to be attained of preventing commercial
regulations partial in their character or contrary to the common
interests. And the magnificent growth and prosperity of the country
attest the success which has attended the accomplishment of that
object. But this furnishes no support to the position that Congress
could not, in the exercise of the discretion reposed in it,
concluding that the common interests did not require entire freedom
in the traffic in ardent spirits, enact the law in question. In so
doing, Congress has not attempted to delegate the power to regulate
commerce, or to exercise any power reserved to the states, or to
grant a power not possessed by the states, or to adopt state laws.
It has taken its own course, and made its own regulation, applying
to these subjects of interstate commerce one common rule, whose
uniformity is not affected by variations in state laws in dealing
with such property.
The principle upon which local option laws, so called, have
Page 140 U. S. 562
been sustained is that, while the legislature cannot delegate
its power to make a law, it can make a law which leaves it to
municipalities or the people to determine some fact or state of
things, upon which the action of the law may depend. But we do not
rest the validity of the act of Congress on this analogy. The power
over interstate commerce is too vital to the integrity of the
nation to be qualified by any refinement of reasoning. The power to
regulate is solely in the general government, and it is an
essential part of that regulation to prescribe the regular means
for accomplishing the introduction and incorporation of articles
into and with the mass of property in the country or state. 12
Wheat.
25 U. S.
448.
No reason is perceived why, if Congress chooses to provide that
certain designated subjects of interstate commerce shall be
governed by a rule which divests them of that character at an
earlier period of time than would otherwise be the case, it is not
within its competency to do so.
The differences of opinion which have existed in this tribunal
in many leading cases upon this subject have arisen not from a
denial of the power of Congress when exercised, but upon the
question whether the inaction of Congress was in itself equivalent
to the affirmative interposition of a bar to the operation of an
undisputed power possessed by the states.
We recall no decision giving color to the idea that when
Congress acted, its action would be less potent than when it kept
silent.
The framers of the Constitution never intended that the
legislative power of the nation should find itself incapable of
disposing of a subject matter specifically committed to its charge.
The manner of that disposition brought into determination upon this
record involves no ground for adjudging the act of Congress
inoperative and void.
We inquire, then, whether fermented, distilled, or other
intoxicating liquors or liquids transported into the State of
Kansas, and there offered for sale and sold, after the passage of
the act, became subject to the operation and effect of the existing
laws of that state in reference to such articles. It is said that
this cannot be so, because, by the decision in
Leisy
v.
Page 140 U. S. 563
Hardin, similar state laws were held unconstitutional
insofar as they prohibited the sale of liquors by the importer in
the condition in which they had been imported. In that case,
certain beer imported into Iowa had been seized in the original
packages or kegs, unbroken and unopened, in the hands of the
importer, and the Supreme Court of Iowa held this seizure to have
been lawful under the statutes of the state. We reversed the
judgment upon the ground that the legislation, to the extent
indicated -- that is to say, as construed to apply to importations
into the state from without, and to permit the seizure of the
articles before they had by sale or other transmutation become a
part of the common mass of property of the state -- was repugnant
to the third clause of Section 8 of Article I of the Constitution
of the United States in that it could not be given that operation
without bringing it into collision with the implied exercise of a
power exclusively confided to the general government. This was far
from holding that the statutes in question were absolutely void in
whole or in part, and as if they had never been enacted. On the
contrary, the decision did not annul the law, but limited its
operation to property strictly within the jurisdiction of the
state.
In
Chicago, Milwaukee &c. Railway v. Minnesota,
134 U. S. 418, it
was held that the act of the Legislature of the State of Minnesota
of March 7, 1887, establishing a railroad and warehouse commission,
as construed by the Supreme Court of that state, by which
construction we were bound in considering the case, was in conflict
with the Constitution of the United States in the particulars
complained of by the railroad company, but nevertheless the case
was remanded, with an instruction for further proceedings. And MR.
JUSTICE BLATCHFORD, speaking for this Court, said:
"In view of the opinion delivered by that court, it may be
impossible for any further proceedings to be taken other than to
dismiss the proceeding for a mandamus, if the court should adhere
to its opinion that, under the statute, it cannot investigate
judicially the reasonableness of the rates fixed by the
commission."
In
Tiernan v. Rinker, 102 U. S. 123, an
act of the Legislature of the State of Texas levying a tax upon the
occupation
Page 140 U. S. 564
of selling liquors, malt and otherwise, but not of selling
domestic wines or beer, was held inoperative so far as it
discriminated against imported wines or beer; but, as Tiernan was a
seller of other liquors as well as domestic, the tax against him
was upheld.
In the case at bar, petitioner was arrested by the state
authorities for selling imported liquor on the 9th of August, 1890,
contrary to the laws of the state. The act of Congress had gone
into effect on the 8th of August, 1890, providing that imported
liquors should be subject to the operation and effect of the state
laws to the same extent and in the same manner as though the
liquors had been produced in the state, and the law of Kansas
forbade the sale. Petitioner was thereby prevented from claiming
the right to proceed in defiance of the laws of the state, upon the
implication arising from the want of action on the part of Congress
up to that time. The laws of the state had been passed in the
exercise of its police powers, and applied to the sale of all
intoxicating liquors, whether imported or not, there being no
exception as to those imported and no inference arising, in view of
the provisions of the state constitution and the terms of the law
-- within whose mischief all intoxicating liquors came -- that the
state did not intend imported liquors to be included. We do not
mean that the intention is to be imputed of violating any
constitutional rule, but that the state law should not be regarded
as less comprehensive than its language is, upon the ground that
action under it might in particular instances be adjudged in valid
from an external cause.
Congress did not use terms of permission to the state to act,
but simply removed an impediment to the enforcement of the state
laws in respect to imported packages in their original condition,
created by the absence of a specific utterance on its part. It
imparted no power to the state not then possessed, but allowed
imported property to fall at once upon arrival within the local
jurisdiction.
It appears from the agreed statement of facts that this liquor
arrived in Kansas prior to the passage of the act of Congress, but
no question is presented here as to the right of
Page 140 U. S. 565
the importer in reference to the withdrawal of the property from
the state, nor can we perceive that the congressional enactment is
given a retrospective operation by holding it applicable to a
transaction of sale occurring after it took effect. This is not the
case of a law enacted in the unauthorized exercise of a power
exclusively confided to Congress, but of a law which it was
competent for the state to pass, but which could not operate upon
articles occupying a certain situation until the passage of the act
of Congress. That act in terms removed the obstacle, and we
perceive no adequate ground for adjudging that a reenactment of the
state law was required before it could have the effect upon
imported which it had always had upon domestic property.
Jurisdiction attached not in virtue of the law of Congress, but
because the effect of the latter was to place the property where
jurisdiction could attach.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE GRAY, and MR. JUSTICE BREWER,
concurred in the judgment of reversal, but not in all the reasoning
of the opinion of the Court.