On writ of error, the errors considered must be only those of
law, and this Court cannot consider sufficiency of evidence to
convict if it is conceded that there was any evidence at all.
Sections 1 and 2 of Law No. 1411 of the Philippine Commission,
prohibiting exportation of Philippine silver coin from the
Philippine
Page 218 U. S. 303
Islands, is not void as depriving the owner of such coin of his
property therein without due process of law within the meaning of
the due process provision of the Organic Act of 1902. Congress, by
the Act of March 2, 1903, c. 980, 32 Stat. 952, authorized the
government of the Philippine Islands to adopt such measures as it
deemed proper and not inconsistent with the organic act to maintain
parity of gold and silver coinage.
In determining whether a law of the Philippine Commission is
invalid as inconsistent with the organic act, this Court puts aside
all questions of the wisdom of the law, even if enacted in the face
of axioms of commerce, and considers only whether power exists to
enact under, and whether the enactment is inconsistent with, the
organic act.
The power to coin money and regulate its value is a prerogative
of sovereignty exclusively vested in the Congress of the United
States, from which is derived the power of the government of the
Philippine Islands in respect to local coinage.
The quality of legal tender of coin is an attribute of law aside
from its bullion value, and renders such coin as the government has
made legal tender subject to such reasonable regulations by the
police power as public policy may require, including prohibition
against exportation, and the exercise of such power does not
deprive the owner of his property without due process of law even
if the bullion value in a foreign country exceeds the legal tender
value in the country of coinage.
Where power is given by Congress to the Philippine Commission to
prohibit an act, the power includes making violation of the
prohibition a misdemeanor.
The facts, which involve the validity of the Philippine law
prohibiting the exportation from the Philippine Islands of silver
coin, are stated in the opinion.
Page 218 U. S. 307
MR. JUSTICE LURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error has been convicted of the offense of
"exporting from the Philippine Islands Philippine silver coin," in
violation of Philippine law No. 1411, being §§ 1998 and
1999, Compiled Acts of the Philippine Commission, Title 3, Chapter
194. Sections 1 and 2 of law No. 1411 read as follows:
"SEC. 1. The exportation from the Philippine Islands of
Philippine silver coins, coined by authority of the Act of Congress
approved March 2nd 1903, or the bullion made by melting or
otherwise mutilating such coins, is hereby prohibited, and any of
the aforementioned silver coins or bullion which is exported, or of
which the exportation is attempted subsequent to the passage of
this act, and contrary to its provisions, shall be liable to
forfeiture, under due process of law, and one third of the sum or
value of the bullion so forfeited shall be payable to the person
upon whose information, given to the proper authorities,
Page 218 U. S. 308
the seizure of the money or bullion so forfeited is made, and
the other two-thirds shall be payable to the Philippine government,
and accrue to the gold standard fund. Provided, that the
prohibition herein contained shall not apply to sums of P. 25.00 or
less, carried by passengers leaving the Philippine Islands."
"SEC 2. The exportation or attempt to export Philippine silver
coin or bullion made from such coins from the Philippine Islands,
contrary to law, is hereby declared to be a criminal offense,
punishable, in addition to the forfeiture of the said coins or
bullion, as above provided, by a fine not to exceed P. 10,000.00,
or by imprisonment for a period not to exceed one year, or both, in
the discretion of the court."
We may pass over the assignments of error which challenge the
sufficiency of the evidence to warrant a conviction, inasmuch as it
is not contended that there was no evidence. This is a writ of
error, and upon such a writ the error to be considered must be
confined to error of law.
The substantial question is as to whether a law which prohibits
the exportation of Philippine silver coin from the Philippine
Islands is a law which deprives the owner of his property in such
coins without due process of law, in violation of that prohibition
of the organic act of July 1, 1902, which provides that "no law
shall be enacted in said islands which shall deprive any person of
life, liberty, or property without due process of law." Act of July
1, 1902, 32 Stat. 692, c. 1369. The authority for the law is found
in the same act of Congress, §§ 76
et seq., 32
Stat. 710, which authorized the Philippine government to establish
a mint in the City of Manila for coinage purposes and to enact laws
for its operation, and for the striking of certain coins. By the
later Act of Congress of March 2, 1903 (c. 980, 32 Stat. 952), it
was provided that the gold peso, consisting
Page 218 U. S. 309
of 12.9 grains of gold, nine-tenths fine, should be the unit of
value in the islands. The second section of that act provided as
follows:
"That, in addition to the coinage authorized for use in the
Philippine Islands by the Act of July first, nineteen hundred and
two, entitled, 'An Act Temporarily to Provide for the
Administration of the Affairs of Civil government in the Philippine
Islands, and for Other Purposes,' the government of the Philippine
Islands is authorized to coin to an amount not exceeding
seventy-five million pesos, for use in said islands, a silver coin
of the denomination of one peso, and of the weight of four hundred
and sixteen grains, and the standard of said silver coins shall be
such that of one thousand parts, by weight, nine hundred shall be
of pure metal and one hundred of alloy, and the alloy shall be of
copper."
Section six of the same Act of March 2, 1903, provided:
"That the coinage authorized by this act shall be subject to the
conditions and limitations of the provisions of the Act of July
first, nineteen hundred and two, entitled, 'An Act Temporarily to
Provide for the Administration of the Affairs of Civil government
in the Philippine Islands, and for Other Purposes,' except as
herein otherwise provided, and the government of the Philippine
Islands may adopt such measures as it may deem proper, not
inconsistent with said Act of July first, nineteen hundred and two,
to maintain the value of the silver Philippine peso at the rate of
one gold peso."
In a subsequent part of the same section, the issuance of
certificates of indebtedness, bearing interest, was authorized as a
specific measure for maintaining the parity between the silver and
gold peso.
The law of the Philippine Commission, above set out, under which
the conviction of the plaintiff in error was secured, must rest
upon the provision of § 6, above set out, as a means of
maintaining "the value of the silver
Page 218 U. S. 310
peso at the rate of one gold peso." Passing by any consideration
of the wisdom of such a law prohibiting the exportation of the
Philippine Islands silver pesos as not relevant to the question of
power, a substantial reason for such a law is indicated by the fact
that the bullion value of such coin in Hong Kong was some nine
percent greater than its face value. The law was therefore adapted
to keep the silver pesos in circulation as a medium of exchange in
the islands and at a parity with the gold peso of Philippine
mintage.
The power to "coin money and regulate the value thereof, and of
foreign coin," is a prerogative of sovereignty and a power
exclusively vested in the Congress of the United States. The power
which the government of the Philippine Islands has in respect to a
local coinage is derived from the express act of Congress. Along
with the power to strike gold and silver pesos for local
circulation in the islands was granted the power to provide such
measures as that government should "deem proper," not inconsistent
with the Organic Law of July 1, 1902, necessary to maintain the
parity between the gold and silver pesos. Although the Philippine
act cannot therefore be said to overstep the wide legislative
discretion in respect of measures to preserve a parity between the
gold and silver pesos, yet it is said that, if the particular
measure resorted to be one which operates to deprive the owner of
silver pesos of the difference between their bullion and coin
value, he has had his property taken from him without compensation,
and, in its wider sense, without that due process of law guaranteed
by the fundamental act of July, 1902.
Conceding the title of the owner of such coins, yet there is
attached to such ownership those limitations which public policy
may require by reason of their quality as a legal tender and as a
medium of exchange. These limitations are due to the fact that
public law gives to such coinage a value which does not attach as a
mere consequence
Page 218 U. S. 311
of intrinsic value. Their quality as a legal tender is an
attribute of law aside from their bullion value. They bear,
therefore, the impress of sovereign power which fixes value and
authorizes their use in exchange. As an incident, government may
punish defacement and mutilation, and constitute any such act, when
fraudulently done, a misdemeanor. Rev.Stat. §§ 5189,
5459.
However unwise a law may be aimed at the exportation of such
coins, in the face of the axioms against obstructing the free flow
of commerce, there can be no serious doubt but that the power to
coin money includes the power to prevent its outflow from the
country of its origin. To justify the exercise of such a power, it
is only necessary that it shall appear that the means are
reasonably adapted to conserve the general public interest, and are
not an arbitrary interference with private rights of contract or
property. The law here in question is plainly within the limits of
the police power, and not an arbitrary or unreasonable interference
with private rights. If a local coinage was demanded by the general
interest of the Philippine Islands, legislation reasonably adequate
to maintain such coinage at home as a medium of exchange is not a
violation of private right forbidden by the organic law. Obviously,
if the Philippine government had power to prohibit the exportation
or melting of Philippine silver pesos, it had the power to make the
violation of the prohibition a misdemeanor. The proceedings for the
enforcement of the law included the ordinary process in criminal
cases lawful in the islands, and not forbidden by the Act of July,
1902.
Judgment affirmed.