The following fundamental principles are not open to
dispute:
The government created by the federal Constitution is one of
enumerated powers, and cannot by any of its agencies exercise an
authority not granted by that instrument either expressly or by
necessary implication.
A power may be implied when necessary to give effect to a power
expressly granted.
While the Constitution of the United States and the laws enacted
in pursuance thereof, together with treaties made under the
authority of the United States, constitute the supreme law of the
land, a state may exercise all such governmental authority as is
consistent with its own, and not in conflict with the federal,
Constitution.
The police power of the state, never having been surrendered by
it to the federal government, is not granted by or derived from,
but exists independently of, the federal Constitution.
One of the powers never surrendered by, and therefore remaining
with, the state is to so regulate the relative rights and duties of
all within its jurisdiction as to guard the public morals, safety
and health, as well as to promote the public convenience and the
common good.
Page 219 U. S. 271
It is within the power of the state to devise the means to be
employed to the above ends provided they do not go beyond the
necessities of the case, have some real and substantial relation to
the object to be accomplished, and do not conflict with the
Constitution of the United States.
A state may enact a regulation as to sale and delivery of a
commodity by actual weight and prohibit arbitrary deductions under
rules of associations, without depriving the member of such
associations of their liberty of contract or of their property
without due process of law.
The state may, without violating the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, regulate the conduct of boards of trade or
exchange which have close and constant relations with the general
public, by such means as are not arbitrary or unreasonable. Such
regulation are not interferences with liberty of contract beyond
the police power of the state to protect the public and promote the
general welfare.
The statute of Missouri of June 8, 1909, to prevent fraud in the
purchase and sale of grain and other commodities and which
prohibits arbitrary deductions from actual weight or measure
thereof under custom or rule of boards of trade, is a valid
exercise of the police power of the state and is not
unconstitutional as a deprivation of property, interference with
liberty of contract, or denial of equal protection of the law.
227 Mo. 617 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of an act of the
Missouri to prevent fraud in the purchase and sale of grain and
other commodities, are stated in the opinion.
Page 219 U. S. 277
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was proceeded against by information
filed in the criminal court of Jackson County, Missouri, under a
statute of Missouri, which was passed June 8, 1909, and is
entitled, "An Act to Prevent Fraud in the Purchase and Sale of
Grain and Other Commodities." The statute reads:
"§ 1. Every sale of grain, seed, hay, or coal shall be made
on the basis of the actual weight thereof, and any purchaser of
grain, seed, hay, or coal, who shall deduct any amount from
the
actual weight or measure thereof under claim of right to do so
by reason of any custom or rule of a board of trade, or any
pretense whatsoever, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor,
and shall be subject to a fine of not less than $10 nor more than
$100 for each and every offense."
"§ 2. No agent or broker selling any grain, seed, hay, or
coal shall have authority, under claim or right to do so
by
reason of any custom or rule of board of trade, to sell any
grain, seed, hay, or coal only on the basis of the actual weight
thereof, and any contract of sale of any grain, seed, hay, or coal
made in violation of this act shall be null and void."
Mo.Sess.Acts 1909, p. 519; Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 11,969,
11,970.
The information charged that the accused, on the first day of
September, 1909 at the County of Jackson, State of Missouri,
purchased from one James Anderson a carload of wheat, by weight,
and unlawfully took and deducted
Page 219 U. S. 278
from the actual weight one hundred pounds, pretending and
claiming the right to make such deduction, and to have and keep the
said one hundred pounds so deducted free of charge and cost to him,
under and by virtue of a rule and custom of the Board of Trade of
Kansas City, Missouri.
Having been arrested on a capias, and being held in custody by
the defendant as marshal, the accused presented to the criminal
court an application for a writ of habeas corpus, claiming that he
was deprived of his liberty in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. The application
was denied, but it was subsequently granted by the supreme court of
the state. The latter court, upon final hearing, also denied the
application, and ordered that the petitioner be remanded to the
custody of the marshal. The case is now here for review, upon
assignments of error which question the constitutional validity of
the statute under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The case was heard upon an agreed statement of facts, the
parties reserving all questions as to the relevancy of any
particular fact therein stated. As the case is of some importance,
it will be appropriate to set forth the above statement in full, as
follows:
"Without admission of either party as to the relevancy of any
particular fact herein set forth, the following facts are agreed
between the parties: there are competitive grain markets at
Galveston, Texas; Chicago, Illinois; Omaha, Nebraska; Atchison and
Wichita, Kansas, and St. Louis, St. Joseph, and Kansas City,
Missouri. That Kansas City is a primary grain market. That a very
slight difference in price or condition will influence the market
course of grain. That the Board of Trade of Kansas City, Missouri,
is a voluntary organization of buyers and sellers of grain and
provisions, supported by dues and assessments, and maintained for
the purpose of furnishing a marketing place
Page 219 U. S. 279
where such persons can meet, and, under rules of safety and
convenience, transact such business. Its objects are:"
"To maintain a board of trade to promote uniformity in the
customs and usages of merchants; to inculcate principles of justice
and equity in business; to facilitate the speedy adjustment of
business disputes; to inspire confidence in the business methods
and integrity of the parties hereto; to collect and disseminate
valuable commercial and economic information, and generally to
secure to its members the benefits of cooperation in the
furtherance of their legitimate pursuits, and to promote the
general welfare of Kansas City."
"Its members are governed by rules and regulations enacted by
the members, and which form part of the written contract of
association between them. This organization provides for the
exclusive use of its members a trading floor, where grain is bought
and sold only under and according to said rules. Three of said
rules are:"
" § 16. The weight supervising committee shall have
supervision, through the weight department, of the unloading of all
cars unloaded at all elevators, mills, warehouses, transfer and
team tracks, within the jurisdiction of this board, and shall cause
the same to be thoroughly swept and cleaned when unloaded. Sweeping
or cleaning of cars subsequently by any operator or employee of any
elevator, mill, warehouse, transfer or team tracks, or by any
person or persons under agreement with the same, or the buying or
receiving of any such sweepings or cleanings by any member of this
association, is prohibited."
" § 17. Violations of any of the provisions of § 16 of
this article shall subject the members so violating to a fine of
$50.00 for the first offense, to a fine of $100.00 for the second
offense, to expulsion and forfeiture of membership for the third
offense."
" § 18. On all grain bought by members of the Kansas City
Board of Trade, and on which Kansas City unloading weights are
given, an allowance of one hundred lbs. per car shall be
Page 219 U. S. 280
made to the buyer, to cover loss on account of dirt and other
foreign matter."
"That said board of trade maintains a bureau of weights, which
strictly enforces Rule 16. That Rules 16 and 17 were enacted to
secure to the seller full weight of the entire contents of the car,
and Rule 18 to secure the buyer from loss through dirt and foreign
matter in or swept out with the grain, which was unloaded at Kansas
City. Before grain is sold, it is graded. One of the considerations
in grading is the dirt and foreign matter in the grain. Experience
had shown that there is a loss from dirt and foreign matter,
varying with different cars, which is not fully taken care of in
the grade. That there is no method in use of accurately determining
the percentage of such foreign matter and dirt, and the one
hundred-pound quantity was taken as a fair average. The members of
said board of trade buy and sell sometimes as commission men for
outsiders and sometimes for their own account, and it is impossible
to tell without inquiry whether a buyer or seller is acting for
himself or for someone else. The buying and selling of grain on the
floor of said board of trade is, as in all other markets, based
upon the constantly and rapidly fluctuating market prices in that
and the other principal grain markets. There is no time nor
opportunity to ascertain the capacity (principal or agent) in which
a member is acting when he buys or sells, and, if he be in reality
acting as agent, no opportunity to investigate the financial
standing of the real principal. Because of this condition, and also
to secure the prompt and faithful performance of all such contracts
of sale, there is a rule of said board of trade forbidding the
disclosure of outside principals, and holding the member in all
cases as the principal. There are also rules making a member
responsible for the faithful performance of such contracts. That
the state railroad and warehouse commission has in force a rule
requiring cars unloaded at Kansas City to be cleanly swept.
That
Page 219 U. S. 281
the method of making the reduction is to weigh the loaded car;
then, after emptying and cleanly sweeping the car, to weigh the
car; the difference in these two weights is entered on the account
sales as the weight of the carload of grain, the deduction of one
hundred pounds being also noted on that slip, and settlement made
for this balance. That is, the weight of the entire contents of the
car is shown, and also the one hundred pounds' deduction on the
face of the account sales given the seller. That, upon the first
day of September, 1909, your petitioner [House] bought upon the
trading floor of said board of trade, and from a member thereof, a
carload of wheat on Kansas City unloading weights. In accordance
with the above method, and under said Rule 18, he deducted one
hundred pounds and made settlement for the balance. The member
selling this grain did not own it, but was acting as a commission
man. He, however, dealt with your petitioner as in his own right,
and your petitioner had no notice or knowledge that such seller was
not the real owner of the grain. Nothing had been said between the
member selling and his principal as to the allowance of the one
hundred pounds. Both your petitioner and the seller understood at
the time of sale that it was made subject to this rule."
An extended discussion of the general question of constitutional
law raised by the assignments of error is rendered unnecessary by
former decisions of this Court. There are certain fundamental
principles which those cases recognize and which are not open to
dispute. In our opinion, they sustain the power of the state to
enact the statute in question. Briefly stated, those principles are
that the government created by the federal Constitution is one of
enumerated powers, and cannot, by any of its agencies, exercise an
authority not granted by that instrument, either in express words
or by necessary implication; that a power may be implied when
necessary
Page 219 U. S. 282
to give effect to a power expressly granted; that, while the
Constitution of the United States and the laws enacted in pursuance
thereof, together with any treaties made under the authority of the
United States constitute the supreme law of the land, a state of
the Union may exercise all such governmental authority as is
consistent with its own constitution, and not in conflict with the
federal Constitution; that such a power in the state, generally
referred to as its police power, is not granted by or derived from
the federal Constitution, but exists independently of it, by reason
of its never having been surrendered by the state to the general
government; that, among the powers of the state, not surrendered,
which power therefore remains with the state, is the power to so
regulate the relative rights and duties of all within its
jurisdiction as to guard the public morals, the public safety, and
the public health, as well as to promote the public convenience and
the common good, and that it is with the state to devise the means
to be employed to such ends, taking care always that the means
devised do not go beyond the necessities of the case, have some
real or substantial relation to the objects to be accomplished, and
are not inconsistent with its own Constitution or the Constitution
of the United States. The cases which sanction these principles are
numerous, are well known to the profession, and need not be here
cited.
Applying these principles to the present case, we cannot say
that the statute in question is in conflict with the Constitution
of the United States. The Supreme Court of Missouri well observed
that the object of the statute was to prevent the enforcement of a
rule of a board of trade under the ordinary operation of which
unfair and fraudulent practices occur or would most probably occur
in the sale of grain and the other commodities named. That court
said:
"The provision of the act which petitioner is charged
Page 219 U. S. 283
with having violated is that part thereof which prohibits any
purchaser of grain from deducting any amount from the actual weight
under any claim of right to do so by reason of any custom or rule
of the board of trade, and it is the rule of the Kansas City Board
of Trade at which this act is really aimed. The petitioner claims
that this act is unconstitutional because it prohibits him from
deducting an arbitrary amount, to-wit, one hundred pounds, from
each and every car of grain, irrespective of the fact whether or
not it actually contains any dirt or other foreign substance. While
conceding in the agreed statement of facts that there is no method
of accurately determining the percentage of such foreign matter and
dirt, he assumes that there will be an average of one hundred
pounds to each car. He admits that in grading wheat, dirt and
foreign matter are taken into account in determining the value of
the grain, but the Kansas City Board of Trade has arbitrarily added
to this, and deducted one hundred pounds from every car; so that,
if A shipped a car of grain to Kansas City to a member of the Board
of Trade, which was entirely free from dirt or foreign matter,
under this rule one hundred pounds would be deducted, and he loses
the value of this one hundred pounds, and receives no compensation
therefor, but is told that he must submit to this because some
other shipper may ship a carload of grain containing two hundred
pounds of dirt or foreign matter; thus the grain of A, which
contains no dirt, is taken without compensation, and the man who
shipped a carload of grain with two hundred pounds of dirt suffers
a deduction of only one hundred pounds. . . . 1 Bishop, New
Crim.Law, § 234. . . . It prohibits merely the taking of one
man's property by another without compensation. It imposes no
unjust burden upon the purchaser, but simply inhibits his deducting
from the wheat he purchases, a part thereof which he would take
without paying the seller therefor, by virtue, not of any
Page 219 U. S. 284
agreement with the seller, but by virtue of a rule made by an
association of which he is a member."
Again, the supreme court of the state:
"Petitioner insists that, by prohibiting him from making the
deduction on one hundred pounds, his property is taken without due
process of law. We agree with the Attorney General that he has
reversed the conditions. To strike down this act will be to permit
him to continue to take the shipper's property without due process
of law, and without any compensation therefor. Without further
elaboration, we are of the opinion that this act is a valid one,
and it is wisely aimed to prevent unjust and unfair practice, and
to repeal and nullify a rule of the Board of Trade which is unjust
and unfair, and contrary to good morals and fair dealings, and the
act offends against no provision of the Constitution."
Reference has been made to the fact that the Board of Trade of
Kansas City is a voluntary association of individuals who perform
great service to the public, and that its purpose is to enforce, as
between its members, a high standard of business dealings. Let all
this be granted, and yet it must be held that the board, in the
management of its affairs, has such close and constant relations to
the general public, that the conduct of its business may be
regulated by such means, not arbitrary or unreasonable in their
nature, as may be found by the state necessary or needful to
protect the people against unfair practices that may likely occur
from time to time. Such regulations do not in any true sense
interfere with that "liberty of contract" which the individual
members of the board of trade are undoubtedly entitled under the
Constitution to enjoy without unnecessary interference from
government, for the liberty of contract which that instrument
protects against invasion by the state is subject to such
regulations of the character just stated as the state may establish
for the protection of the public
Page 219 U. S. 285
and the promotion of the general welfare. If such state
regulations are not unreasonable -- that is, not simply arbitrary
nor beyond the necessities of the case -- they are not forbidden by
the Constitution of the United States. We so adjudge on both
principle and authority.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Missouri is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, concurring:
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and myself concur in the judgment solely on
the ground that it is competent for the State of Missouri to
provide that, in the absence of an express contract to which the
owner of the articles sold on the board is a party, the rule of the
Kansas City Board of Trade shall not prevail.