A state is under an obligation to establish necessary and
reasonable regulations for the safety of all engaged in business or
domiciled within its limits, and passengers on trains of interstate
carriers are entitled while within a state to the same protection
of valid local laws as are citizens of the state.
The states have never surrendered the power to care for the
public safety, and the validity of police statutes enacted to that
end which are not purely arbitrary or in conflict with a power
granted to the general government cannot be questioned in federal
courts.
A state regulation that is uniform on all railroads of the class
to which it is applicable is not unconstitutional as denying equal
protection of the law because it does not apply to railroads less
than fifty miles in length. The classification is a reasonable
one.
A state statute prescribing a not unreasonable number for the
crews of freight trains is not an obstruction to, or burden on,
interstate commerce, but an aid thereto, and so
held that
the "full crew" act of Arkansas is not unconstitutional under the
commerce clause of the federal Constitution, Congress not having
acted in regard thereto.
While Congress may, in its discretion, take under its charge the
subject of equipment of interstate trains, until it does so, the
states may prescribe proper police regulations in regard thereto
without violating the commerce clause of the federal
Constitution.
86 Ark. 412 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of a law of
Arkansas relating to equipment of railway trains, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 219 U. S. 457
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Two actions were instituted by the State of Arkansas in one of
its courts against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway
Company, a corporation of Illinois engaged in railroad business in
several states. The company it was agreed, entered Arkansas for
purposes of railroad business, complying with all conditions of the
laws of that state authorizing foreign railroad corporations to do
such business within its limits.
The complaint alleged that the defendant company, on a named day
and in violation of the law of Arkansas, operated and ran in that
state a freight train of more than twenty-five cars without having
equipped such train with as many as three brakemen, and that the
railroad over which the train was operated was more than fifty
miles in length. The state asked a judgment in each case against
the railway company for $500. The company filed in each case both
an answer and a general demurrer.
The suits were based on an Arkansas statute (Ark.Laws 1907, No.
116, p. 295) prescribing the minimum number of employees to be used
in the operation of freight trains and providing a penalty for
violating its provisions.
The statute is in these words:
"§ 1. No railroad company or officer of court, owning or
operating any line or lines of railroad in this state, and engaged
in the transportation of freight over its line or lines, shall
equip any of its said freight trains with a crew consisting of less
than an engineer, a fireman, a conductor, and three brakemen,
regardless of any modern equipment of automatic couplers and air
brakes, except as hereinafter provided."
"§ 2. This
Page 219 U. S. 458
act shall not apply to any railroad company or officer of court
whose line or lines are less than fifty miles in length, nor to any
railroad in this state, regardless of the length of the said lines,
where said freight trains so operated shall consist of less than
twenty-five cars, it being the purpose of this act to require all
railroads in this state whose line or lines are over fifty miles in
length, engaged in hauling a freight train consisting of
twenty-five cars or more, to equip the same with a crew consisting
of not less than an engineer, a fireman, a conductor, and three
brakemen; but nothing in this act shall be construed so as to
prevent any railroad company or officer of court from adding to or
increasing its crew beyond the number set out in this act."
"§ 3. Any railroad company or officer of court violating
any of the provisions of this act shall be fined for each offense
not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred
dollars, and each freight train so illegally run shall constitute a
separate offense. Provided, the penalties of this act shall not
apply during strikes of men in train service of lines
involved."
Ark.Laws 1907, No. 116.
The railway company's answer in each case contained six
paragraphs. The court sustained the demurrer to paragraphs 1, 2, 3,
4, and 6 (the defendant excepting), and thereupon, by stipulation,
the two actions were consolidated for the purpose of a trial on
paragraph five, which was as follows:
"Defendant states that its said train was equipped with
automatic couplers and air brakes, so that the cars thereof could
be coupled and uncoupled without the necessity of brakemen going
between the cars, and could be stopped by the application of the
air brakes by the engineer of said train without the intervention
or assistance of the conductor or brakeman, as required by the Act
of Congress and the order of the Interstate Commerce Commission
made thereunder; that it had employed on said train a conductor and
two brakemen, and that the employment of another brakemen on said
train was unnecessary
Page 219 U. S. 459
because there were no duties connected with the running and
operating of said train to be performed by a third brakeman, and
said act, in attempting to require the defendant to employ three
brakemen on said train, attempted to require the defendant to
expend a large amount of money for a useless and unnecessary
purpose, and to deprive the defendant of its property without due
process of law, and is therefore in violation of and in conflict
with Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of
the United States."
The consolidated causes were, by agreement of the parties, tried
by the court. The result in each case was a judgment against the
railway company for $100. Upon appeal by the company to the Supreme
Court of Arkansas, the action of the trial court was affirmed. 86
Ark. 412.
In the state court, the railway company assailed the act in
question as being in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment, as
well as of the commerce clause, of the Constitution of the United
States. But the Supreme Court of Arkansas overruled these
objections, holding that the act was not to be taken as
inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States. The case
is here for review on the question whether the statute is in
violation of the Constitution.
In our judgment, these questions are concluded by former
decisions, and no extended discussion of them is now required. Yet
an examination of some of the decisions will be proper in order to
show the precise grounds on which this Court has determined whether
state enactments of a particular kind were regulations of
interstate commerce or in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
A leading case on the general subject is
Smith v.
Alabama, 124 U. S. 465,
124 U. S. 474,
124 U. S. 482,
which involved the validity under the Constitution of the United
States of a statute of Alabama making it a misdemeanor for an
engineer to
Page 219 U. S. 460
operate, in that state, a train of cars used for transportation
of persons or freight without first undergoing an examination
before and obtaining a license from a board appointed by the
governor. The statute provided that, before issuing a license, the
board should inquire into the character and habits of the
applicant; that no license should be granted if he was found to be
of reckless or intemperate habits; that any license granted should
be forfeited if, upon notice, the engineer was found to have been
intoxicated within six hours before or during the time he was
engaged in running a railroad engine, and that the license should
be revoked or cancelled if the engineer was ascertained from any
cause to be unfit or incompetent. That case related to an engineer
whose ordinary run was over the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company,
between Mobile, Alabama, and Corinth, Mississippi. He never handled
the engine of any train between points wholly within Alabama. As an
employee of the company, he also operated an engine drawing a
passenger train between St. Louis and Mobile. It was contended that
the statute was repugnant to the commerce clause of the
Constitution of the United States. This Court referred to the
decision in
Sherlock v. Alling, 93 U. S.
99,
93 U. S. 102,
which involved the question whether an Indiana statute authorizing
a suit by the personal representative of a deceased person whose
death was caused by the wrongful act or omission of another could
be applied where the death was the result of a collision between
steamboats navigating the Ohio River. And, speaking by Mr. Justice
Matthews, it said:
"Legislation in a great variety of ways may affect commerce and
persons engaged in it without constituting a regulation of it
within the meaning of the Constitution. . . . And it may be said
generally that the legislation of a state, not directed against
commerce or any of its regulations but relating to the rights,
duties, and liabilities of citizens and only indirectly and
remotely affecting the operations of
Page 219 U. S. 461
commerce, is of obligatory force upon citizens within its
territorial jurisdiction, whether on land or water, or engaged in
commerce, foreign or interstate, or in any other pursuit."
The court proceeded:
"In conclusion, we find, therefore, first, that the statute of
Alabama the validity of which is under consideration is not,
considered, in its own nature, a regulation of interstate commerce
even when applied as in the case under consideration; secondly,
that it is properly an act of legislation within the scope of the
admitted power reserved to the state to regulate the relative
rights and duties of persons being and acting within its
territorial jurisdiction, intended to operate so as to secure for
the public, safety of person and property; and thirdly that, so far
as it affects transactions of commerce among the states, it does so
only indirectly, incidentally, and remotely, and not so as to
burden or impede them, and, in the particulars in which it touches
those transactions at all, it is not in conflict with any express
enactment of Congress on the subject, nor contrary to any intention
of Congress to be presumed from its silence."
In
Nashville &c. Railway v. Alabama, 128 U. S.
96,
128 U. S. 101,
the question was as to the validity, so far as interstate commerce
was concerned, of a statute of Alabama enacted for the protection
of the traveling public against accidents caused by color blindness
and defective vision on the part of railroad employees, and which
provided for an examination before a state board of any person
seeking a position that involved the running or management of a
railroad train. In that case, the railway company operated its
lines through several states and employed as a train conductor one
who had not obtained a certificate of his fitness so far as color
blindness and visual powers were concerned after referring to
Smith v. Alabama, above cited, as holding that the statute
of Alabama involved in that case was not displaced by any
express
Page 219 U. S. 462
enactment of Congress in the exercise of its power over
commerce, and that, until so displaced, it remained
"as the law governing carriers in the discharge of their
obligations, whether engaged in purely internal commerce of the
state, or in commerce among the states,"
this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Field, said:
"The same observations may be made with respect to the
provisions of the state law for the examination of parties to be
employed on railways, with respect to their powers of vision. Such
legislation is not directed against commerce, and only affects it
incidentally, and therefore cannot be called, within the meaning of
the Constitution, a regulation of commerce."
But the case more nearly analogous to the present one is that of
N.Y., N.H. & H. Railroad v. New York, 165 U.
S. 628,
165 U. S.
631-633, where the Court was required to determine the
validity, under the Constitution of the United States, of a statute
of New York regulating the heating of steam passenger cars and
directing guards and guard posts to be placed on railroad bridges
and trestles and the approaches thereto. The statute provided that
no steam railroad doing business in New York after a named day
should heat its passenger cars on other than mixed trains by any
stove or furnace kept inside of the car or suspended therefrom,
except that, in case of accident or other emergency, such stove or
furnace, with necessary fuel, could be temporarily used; that,
where any cars had been equipped with apparatus to heat by steam,
hot water, or hot air from the locomotive or from a special car,
the stove then in use could be retained and used when the car was
standing still, and that the statute should not apply to railroads
less than fifty miles in length, nor to the use of stoves of a
pattern and kind to be approved by the state railroad commissioners
for cooking purposes in dining cars. The New York, New Haven &
Hartford Railroad Company, a Connecticut corporation, during a
certain
Page 219 U. S. 463
period named, ran trains of passenger cars over its route from
the City of New York to Hartford, and from Hartford to New York,
and on through trains as well as on its road in New York other than
on mixed trains, the company heated its cars by stoves and furnaces
kept within the cars. An action was brought against the railway
company for violation of the above statute, and there was a verdict
in favor of the state for the penalties imposed. That judgment was
affirmed by the Court of Appeals of New York. 142 N.Y. 646.
It was contended in that case that the New York statute was
repugnant both to the commerce clause of the Constitution and to
the Fourteenth Amendment. In the opinion of this Court, the
principle announced in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 211,
that the mere grant to Congress of the power to regulate commerce
did not, of its own force, and without legislation by Congress,
impair the authority of the states to establish reasonable
regulations for the protection of the health, the lives, or the
safety of their people, was reaffirmed, and it was said:
"The statute in question had for its object to protect all
persons traveling in the State of New York on passenger cars moved
by the agency of steam against the perils attending a particular
mode of heating such cars. There may be reason to doubt the
efficacy of regulations of that kind. But that was a matter for the
state to determine. We know from the face of the statute that it
has a real, substantial relation to an object as to which the state
is competent to legislate -- namely, the personal security of those
who are passengers on cars used
within its limits. Why may
not regulations to that end be made applicable, within a state, to
the cars of railroad companies engaged in interstate commerce as
well as to cars used wholly within such state? Persons traveling on
interstate trains are as much entitled, while within the state, to
the protection of that state as those who travel on domestic
trains. The
Page 219 U. S. 464
statute in question is not directed against interstate commerce.
Nor is it, within the meaning of the Constitution, a regulation of
commerce although it controls, in some degree, the conduct of those
engaged in such commerce. So far as it may affect interstate
commerce, it is to be regarded as legislation in aid of commerce,
and enacted under the power remaining with the state to regulate
the relative rights and duties of all persons and corporations
within its limits. Until displaced by such national legislation as
Congress may rightfully establish under its power to regulate
commerce with foreign nations and among the several states, the
validity of the statute, so far as the commerce clause of the
Constitution of the United States is concerned, cannot be
questioned."
It was also contended that the statute, if enforced according to
its terms, would make rapid transportation difficult, if not
impossible, and that to compel an interstate train to conform to
its provisions would be a wholly unnecessary burden on interstate
passengers. After observing that possible inconveniences could not
affect the question of the power in each state to make such
regulations for the safety of passengers on interstate trains as,
in the the judgment of the state, all things considered, were
reasonable, appropriate, or necessary, this Court said (165 U.S.
165 U. S.
633):
"Inconvenience of this character cannot be avoided so long as
each state has plenary authority within its territorial limits to
provide for the safety of the public, according to its own views of
necessity and public policy, and so long as Congress deems it wise
not to establish regulations on the subject that would displace any
inconsistent regulations of the states, covering the same
ground."
In reference to the contention that the statute denied the equal
protection of the laws as prescribed by the Fourteenth Amendment,
the Court said (p.
165 U. S.
633):
"This contention is based upon that clause of the statute
declaring that it shall not apply to railroads less than fifty
Page 219 U. S. 465
miles in length. No doubt the main object of the statute was to
provide for the safety of passengers traveling on what are commonly
called trunk or through lines, connecting distant or populous parts
of the country, and on which the perils incident to traveling are
greater than on short, local lines. But, as suggested in argument,
a road only fifty miles in length would seldom have a sleeping car
attached to its trains, and passengers traveling on roads of that
kind do not have the apprehension ordinarily felt by passengers on
trains regularly carrying sleeping cars or having many passenger
coaches on account of the burning of cars in case of their
derailment or in case of collision. In any event, there is no such
discrimination against companies having more than fifty miles of
road as to justify the contention that there has been a denial to
the companies named in the act of the equal protection of the laws.
The statute is uniform in its operation upon all railroad companies
doing business in the state of the class to which it is made
applicable."
The principles announced in the above cases require an
affirmance of the judgment of the Supreme Court of Arkansas. It is
not too much to say that the state was under an obligation to
establish such regulations as were necessary or reasonable for the
safety of all engaged in business or domiciled within its
limits. Beyond doubt, passengers on interstate carriers, while
within Arkansas, are as fully entitled to the benefits of valid
local laws enacted for the public safety as are citizens of the
state. Local statutes directed to such an end have their source in
the power of the state, never surrendered, of caring for the public
safety of all within its jurisdiction, and the validity under the
Constitution of the United States of such statutes is not to be
questioned in a federal court unless they are clearly inconsistent
with some power granted to the general government, or with some
right secured by that instrument, or unless they are purely
arbitrary in their
Page 219 U. S. 466
nature. The statute here involved is not in any proper sense a
regulation of interstate commerce, nor does it deny the equal
protection of the laws. Upon its face, it must be taken as not
directed against interstate commerce, but as having been enacted in
aid, not in obstruction, of such commerce, and for the protection
of those engaged in such commerce. Under the evidence, there is
admittedly some room for controversy as to whether the statute is
or was necessary, but it cannot be said that it is so unreasonable
as to justify the court in adjudging that it is merely an arbitrary
exercise of power, and not germane to the objects which evidently
the state legislature had in view. It is a means employed by the
state to accomplish an object which it is entitled to accomplish,
and such means, even if deemed unwise, are not to be condemned or
disregarded by the courts if they have a real relation to that
object. And, the statute being applicable alike to all belonging to
the same class, there is no basis for the contention that there has
been a denial of the equal protection of the laws. Undoubtedly
Congress, in its discretion, may take entire charge of the whole
subject of the equipment of interstate cars, and establish such
regulations as are necessary and proper for the protection of those
engaged in interstate commerce. But it has not done so in respect
to the number of employees to whom may be committed the actual
management of interstate trains of any kind. It has not established
any regulations on that subject, and, until it does, the statutes
of the state, not in their nature arbitrary, and which really
relate to the rights and duties of all within the jurisdiction,
must control. This principle has been firmly established, and is a
most wholesome one under our systems of government, federal and
state. In addition to the cases above cited,
Mobile County v.
Kimball, 102 U. S. 691;
G., C. & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Hefley, 158 U. S.
98;
Western U. Tel. Co. v. James, 162
U. S. 656;
Chicago &c. R. Co. v. Solan,
169 U. S. 133;
Western U. Tel. Co.
v.
Page 219 U. S. 467
Kansas, 216 U. S. 27;
Reid v. Colorado, 187 U. S. 137, and
M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Haber, 169 U.
S. 613, may be consulted.
Judgment affirmed.