Revenue bills, within the meaning of the constitutional
provision that they must originate in the House of Representatives
and not in the Senate, are those that levy taxes in the strict
sense of the word, and are not bills for other purposes which may
incidentally create revenue.
An act of Congress appropriating money to be paid to railway
companies to carry out a scheme of public improvements in the
District of Columbia, and which also requires those companies to
eliminate grade crossings and erect a union station, and recognizes
and provides for the surrender of existing rights, is an act
appropriating money for governmental purposes, and not for the
private use exclusively of those companies.
The Acts of Congress of February 12, 19Q1, 31 Stat. 767, 774,
and of February 28, 1903, 32 Stat. 909, for eliminating grade
crossings of railways and erection of a union station in the
District of Columbia and providing for part of the cost thereof by
appropriations to be levied and assessed on property in the
District other than that of the United States are not
unconstitutional either because as bills for raising revenue they
should have originated in the House of Representatives and not in
the Senate or because they appropriate moneys to be paid to the
railway companies for their exclusive use, and assuming but not
deciding that he can raise the question by suit, a taxpayer of the
District is not oppressed or deprived of his property without due
process of law by reason of the taxes imposed under said
statutes.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 202 U. S. 434
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity to enjoin Ellis H. Roberts, as
Treasurer of the United States, from paying to any person any
moneys of the District of Columbia, under certain acts of Congress.
*
Page 202 U. S. 435
(31 Stat. 767, 774, 32 Stat. 909), and to enjoin the other
defendants from carrying into effect said acts of Congress, and
that said acts "be declared null and void for want of
constitutional authority." Defendants interposed demurrers to the
bill, which were sustained by the supreme court, and a decree
entered dismissing the bill. The court of appeals affirmed the
decree.
The principal allegations of the bill are that the railroad
defendants are private corporations, and all interested in the
railway and terminal facilities of the District of Columbia; that
the District of Columbia owns no stock in any of the companies, nor
is otherwise interested in any of them save as useful private
enterprises, and yet it is required by said acts, "without any
lawful consideration therefor," to pay the Baltimore & Potomac
Railroad Company the sum of $750,000, and a like sum to the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, "to be levied and assessed
upon the taxable property and privileges in the said District other
than the property of the United States and the District of
Columbia," and for the exclusive use of said corporations
respectively, "which is a private use, and not a governmental use;"
that the public moneys of the District of Columbia are raised
chiefly by taxation on the lands therein, and that the complainant
is obliged to pay and does pay direct taxes on land owned by him
therein. And the bill also alleges that the acts of Congress
are
"acts which provide for raising revenue, and are repugnant to
Article I, § 7, clause 1, of the Constitution of the United
States, and are therefore null and void
ab initio, and to
their entire extent, because they and each and every one of them
originated in the Senate, and not in the House of
Representatives."
Certain volumes of the Congressional Record are referred to and
made part of the bill.
Page 202 U. S. 436
In other allegations of the bill are expressed the limitations
upon the power of the United States and the District of Columbia as
to taxation; that the acts of Congress complained of are repugnant
to the Constitution of the United States; that public funds are
appropriated for private use, and that exorbitant taxes will be
required to meet the legitimate expenses of the District of
Columbia, and appellant will thereby be oppressed and deprived of
his property without due process of law.
The first contention of appellant is that the acts of Congress
are revenue measures, and therefore should have originated in the
House of Representatives, and not in the Senate, and, to sustain
the contention, appellant submits an elaborate argument. In answer
to the contention, the case of
Twin City Nat. Bank v.
Nebeker, 167 U. S. 196,
need only be cited. It was observed there that it was a part of
wisdom not to attempt to cover by a general statement what bills
shall be said to be "bills for raising revenue" within the meaning
of those words in the Constitution, but it was said, quoting Mr.
Justice Story,
"that the practical construction of the Constitution and the
history of the origin of the constitutional provision in question
prove that revenue bills are those that levy taxes in the strict
sense of the word, and are not bills for other purposes, which may
incidentally create revenue."
1 Story on Constitution § 880. And the act of Congress
which was there passed on illustrates the meaning of the language
used. The act involved was one providing a national currency, and
imposed a tax upon the average amount of the notes of a national
banking association in circulation. The provision was assailed for
unconstitutionality because it originated in the Senate. The
provision was sustained, this Court saying:
"The tax was a means for effectually accomplishing the great
object of giving to the people a currency that would rest primarily
upon the honor of the United States, and be available in every part
of the country. There was no purpose, by the act or by any of its
provisions, to raise revenue to be applied
Page 202 U. S. 437
in meeting the expenses or obligations of the government."
This language is applicable to the acts of Congress in the case
at bar. Whatever taxes are imposed are but means to the purposes
provided by the act.
The legality of those purposes is attacked in the other
contentions of appellant. All of the contentions rest upon the
correctness of the allegation that the moneys provided to be paid
to the railroad companies are for the exclusive use of the
companies, "which is a private use, and not a governmental
use."
The titles of the acts are the best brief summary of their
purposes, and those purposes are obviously of public benefit. We do
not think that it is necessary to enter into a discussion of the
cases which establish this. The scheme of improvement provided by
the acts required a removal of the railroads from their situations,
large expenditures of money by the companies, and the surrender of
substantial rights. These rights are recognized, and their
surrender expressed to be part of the consideration of the sums of
money paid to the companies. Indeed, there is an element of
contract not only in the changes made, but in the manner and upon
the scale which they are required to be made. As remarked by Mr.
Justice Morris, speaking for the court of appeals:
"The case is practically that of a contract between the United
States and the District of Columbia, on the one side, and the
railroad companies, on the other, whereby the railroad companies
agree to surrender certain rights, rights of property as well as
other rights, and to construct a work of great magnitude, greater,
perhaps, than their own needs require, but which Congress deems to
be demanded for the best interest of the national capital and by
the public at large, and for this surrender of right and this work
of magnitude commensurate with the public demand, Congress agrees
to pay a certain sum, partly out of the funds of the United States
and partly out of the funds of the District of Columbia. It is a
simple case of bargain and sale, like any other purchase. "
Page 202 U. S. 438
We have assumed that appellant, as a taxpayer of the District of
Columbia, can raise the questions we have considered, but we do not
wish to be understood as so deciding.
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN concurs in the result only.
* An act entitled "An Act to Provide for Eliminating Certain
Grade Crossings of Railroads in the District of Columbia, to
Require and Authorize the Construction of New Terminals and Tracks
for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company in the City of
Washington, and for Other Purposes," approved February 12, 1901; an
act entitled "An Act to Provide for Eliminating Certain Grade
Crossings on the Line of the Baltimore & Potomac Railroad
Company in the City of Washington, District of Columbia, and
Requiring Said Company to Depress and Elevate its Tracks, and to
Enable it to Relocate Parts of Its Railroad Therein, and for Other
Purposes," approved February 12, 1901; an act entitled "An Act to
Provide for a Union Railroad Station in the District of Columbia
and for Other Purposes," approved February 28, 1903.