When a state recognizes an article to be a subject of interstate
commerce, it cannot prohibit that article from being the subject of
interstate commerce, and so
held that corporations engaged
in interstate commerce cannot be excluded from transporting from a
state oil and gas produced therein and actually reduced to
possession.
In matters of foreign and interstate commerce, there are no
state lines; in such commerce, instead of the states, a new power
and a new welfare appears that transcends the power and welfare of
any state.
The welfare of the United States is constituted of the welfare
of all the states, and that of the states is made greater by mutual
division of their resources; this is the purpose and result of the
commerce clause of the Constitution.
Natural gas and oil, when reduced to possession by the owner of
the land, are commodities belonging to him subject to his right of
sale thereof, and are subjects of both intrastate and interstate
commerce.
Page 221 U. S. 230
There is a distinction between the police power of the state to
regulate the taking of a natural product such as natural gas and
prohibiting that product from transportation in interstate
commerce. The former is within, and the latter is beyond, the power
of the state.
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co.,
220 U. S. 61,
distinguished.
A state does not have the same ownership in natural gas and oil
after the same have been reduced to possession as it does over the
flowing waters of its rivers. Riparian owners have no title to the
water itself as a commodity.
Hudson County Water Co. v.
McCarter, 209 U. S. 349,
distinguished.
The right to engage in interstate commerce is not the gift of a
state, nor can a state regulate or restrain such commerce or
exclude from its limits a corporation engaged therein.
Inaction by Congress in regard to a subject of interstate
commerce is a declaration of freedom from state interference.
Where a state grants the use of its highways to domestic
corporations engaged in intrastate commerce in a commodity, it
cannot deny the same use, under the same restrictions, to foreign
corporations engaged in interstate commerce in the same commodity,
and so
held that the statute of Oklahoma prohibiting
foreign corporations from building pipelines across highways and
transporting natural gas therein to points outside the state is
unconstitutional as a interference with, and restraint upon,
interstate commerce, and as a deprivation of property without due
process of law.
172 F. 545 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of a statute of
Oklahoma restricting interstate commerce in oil and natural gas,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 221 U. S. 239
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal brings up for review the decree entered in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Oklahoma in four suits consolidated by stipulation of the
parties.
The suits had the common purpose of attacking the constitutional
validity of a statute of Oklahoma, enacted in 1907, which is
referred to as chapter 67 of the Session Laws of 1907. It is
inserted in the margin in full.
* All
Page 221 U. S. 240
of the bills have the same foundation -- that is, the right to
buy, sell, and transport natural gas in interstate commerce
notwithstanding the provision of the statute.
The suits were numbered in the court below 856, 857,
Page 221 U. S. 241
858, and 859. In 856, the Kansas Natural Gas Company was
complainant. It is a corporation of the State of Delaware, and is
engaged in the business of purchasing and distributing natural gas
to consumers. It has a contract
Page 221 U. S. 242
for the purchase of all the gas that can be produced from a
certain well in Washington County, Oklahoma, and has acquired by
purchase the right of way over the land upon which the well is
located for the laying of a pipeline for the transportation of the
gas, and proposes to extend its trunk pipelines from the present
southern terminus thereof in the State of Kansas, southward across
the Oklahoma state line to the well. It also proposes to construct
lateral and branch lines from the trunk line so extended, for the
purpose of gathering and receiving such gas as it may be able to
purchase from the owners of other wells. Its line will not be used
in any way for local traffic, but only for the transportation of
the gas from the wells in Oklahoma into the States of Kansas and
Missouri.
Page 221 U. S. 243
In No. 857, the Marnet Mining Company, a corporation of West
Virginia, is complainant. For the purpose of transporting from the
producers of gas in the State of Oklahoma to purchasers and
consumers in Kansas and Missouri, it has purchased a right of way
over certain lands in the state, and proposes to construct a system
of pipelines to be used exclusively in such interstate
transportation, and not in any way for local traffic.
In No. 858, A. W. Lewis, a citizen and resident of the State of
Ohio, is complainant. He is the owner of an oil and gas lease by
which he has acquired the right to construct wells on a certain
tract of land in Oklahoma, and to take gas therefrom for the period
of fifteen years. He has constructed a well, in accordance with his
lease, which
Page 221 U. S. 244
is capable of producing many millions of cubic feet of gas per
day, which, being in excess of the local demand, he is unable to
sell in the state, and he alleges that, being prevented from
transporting it from the state, he has suffered great loss and
damage, and is deprived of his property without compensation.
In No. 859, O. A. Bleakley, a citizen and resident of
Pennsylvania, is complainant. He has received from the Secretary of
the Interior a right of way over the land of certain Indians over a
designated route, paying to the Indian agent, by law and the rules
and regulations of the Interior Department, the value of such right
of way and the damages which the owners of the land over which he
will pass for the laying and maintaining of a pipeline for the
exclusive purpose of transporting natural gas from Oklahoma to
Kansas.
It is alleged in the bills that a great number of wells have
been drilled in the state at great expense, which are capable of
producing more than 1,000,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day; that
such amount is more than necessary for the demands of the people of
the state, and the excess of supply is required to meet the wants
of those residing in Missouri and Kansas. This want, it is alleged,
may be supplied through the distributing plants now constructed and
those contemplated by complainants, but that, under the present
conditions, the owners are required to cease development work, and
to keep large and valuable wells capped and inoperative, to their
great injury and damage. It is alleged that, in constructing lines
for such transportation, it will not be necessary to go along the
highways of the state, but only across or over them, and that the
lines to be constructed will be private lines, will endanger the
lives and property of no one, and will be constructed in just
conformity with all reasonable rules and regulations of the
state.
It is averred that each of the defendants is charged by
Page 221 U. S. 245
virtue of his office to execute the laws and constitution of the
state, and that he has undertaken to enforce the act hereinbefore
referred to by proceedings in courts and by force of arms, and it
is his intent and avowed purpose to prevent the transportation of
gas beyond the limits of the state. The particular acts are set
forth.
The bills pray discovery, that the act above referred to be
declared void as being in conflict with § 8, Article I, and
the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States,
and that the defendants be enjoined from the things attributed to
them. General relief is also prayed.
Demurrers were filed to the bills, which were overruled (172 F.
545), and the defendants answered.
It was subsequently stipulated that the causes be consolidated
and that appellant file an amended answer in each of the cases, and
the answers of the other defendants be withdrawn. It will only be
necessary to consider the amended answer, not, however, its details
either of denial or averment, but only of certain facts especially
relied on. These are: the present daily capacity of the gas wells
of the state is approximately 1 1/4 billion cubic feet, the daily
consumption being more than can be safely taken from them "without
rapidly destroying their efficiency and depleting this great
natural resource of the state." The gas area of the state is found
in oil-producing sand, and the experience of all other natural gas
fields demonstrates that the gas found in and taken from such sand
is of much shorter duration than that found in purely gas sand, and
if the acts of complainants be permitted, "the field will be
exhausted in a very short time." While it is true that the gas in
Oklahoma is found in a gas and oil-producing sand which extends
underneath large contiguous areas of land, every well takes from
this unbroken area and diminishes the producing capacity of every
other well and of the entire field, the acts of the complainants,
if permitted,
Page 221 U. S. 246
will greatly damage and injury the entire field and take the
property of all other owners therein, and
"that the act of the legislature of the State of Oklahoma
alleged in the bill to be unconstitutional was an effort on the
part of the legislature of the state to preserve the natural gas
field of the state from destructive waste."
Certain cities of the states which, by reason of their proximity
to the gas field, should be supplied with gas are not now supplied
with it, and will never be if complainants are allowed to transport
it from Oklahoma without regulation by laws of the state, and the
population of the state is now 1,750,000, and is growing more
rapidly than that of any other state in the Union. On account of
the general prairie character of the state, it is without domestic
fuel except coal and natural gas. Its supply of coal is growing
rapidly more costly to produce, that the petroleum oil produced is
practically transported from the state, "and that substantially the
only natural, practical, usable fuel, both for domestic and
industrial use, is natural gas."
The complainants may and are actually in the process of erecting
enormous pumping stations outside of the state which
"might reasonably and would inevitably render entirely useless
all the present lines [gas] in Oklahoma, and take away from the
cities and towns of Oklahoma the entire practical use of their sole
and natural fuel, because, when gas is removed by the limited,
prudent, and natural rock pressure, the nature and formation of the
gas and oil sand is not radically changed, but if large pumps to
pump out the wells, out of proportion to the rock pressure, are
used, as are now actually threatened by the complainant, the gas
and oil sand is actually broken down as though shot with dynamite
and other violence, and the salt water thereunder, always to be
found, at once drowns out the wells where rock pressure has been
too greatly or rapidly decreased; that the use of the highways is a
portion of the
Page 221 U. S. 247
public property, and the same should be confined to those who
supply all alike who may seek to be served, and because of its
nature and extent, and because the enormous amount of capital
needed to make practical investments tends to create monopolies.
The business of gas transportation is a public business in
interstate trade, over which Congress has never legislated, and to
permit complainant to carry out its said attempt and intent to
monopolize the natural gas of the state and transport it away
without regulation by the state laws, over and across the state's
highways, without the state's consent, would be to devote public
property to private and exclusive use, against the principles of
the constitution of this state and the United States, and deprive
the intending purchasers of natural gas in this state from all
supply whatsoever."
There are other allegations of the effect of contemplated acts
of the complainants upon the gas supply of the state, and there are
admissions that pipelines are the only practical means of
transportation, but this, it is alleged, is due to its cheapness as
compared with other means of transportation, considering the price
of gas as a fuel as compared with other fuel products and the
transportation of gas from other fields. And it is set forth that
the highways of the state are open to the transportation of gas by
any means which do not "make a permanent appropriation of any part
of the highways by placing a plant in the same."
It is further alleged that, in order to supply the cities of the
state with gas, lines are continually being extended, and that
there are several other pipelines which are seeking to carry on
business in the state in the same manner as desired by complainant,
and if the right exist in complainant, it exists in all other
foreign corporations, and, if exercised, lines will be extended, as
one part of the field becomes exhausted, to other parts of the
field, and the lines supplying the cities of the state will also be
extended in
Page 221 U. S. 248
like manner and effect, and a speedy destruction of the supply
of the gas in the state will result.
It is admitted that there are maintained and operated in the
state natural gas pipelines; but it is alleged that they are in
daily use for the transportation of gas within the state. And it is
further admitted that they in many instances, and often at great
length, run over, along, and across the highways of the state, and
"are operated without hurt, hindrance, damage, or inconvenience to
the traveling public or to abutting property owners." But it is
averred that "they were laid and are operated according to the laws
in force at the time, and pursuant to the laws of the state."
Appellant admits that it is his duty to execute the laws of the
state, and that it is his intention to enforce chapter 67 of the
Session Laws of 1907 and 1908, and the acts amendatory and
supplementary thereto "insofar as the same must or should be done
by litigation in which the state is interested," but that his
duties rest solely upon himself, and are not controlled by others,
and that he intends to prevent solely by actions in competent
courts the laying, constructing, and operating of gas pipelines in,
on under, across, or along the highways of the state by complainant
or by any other person not authorized so to do by the laws of the
state. He denies the acts of force charged against him, or that he
proposes to use force. The other denials and admissions it is not
necessary to set out. A dissolution of the injunction is
prayed.
The cases were consolidated, as we have said, and submitted on
the bills and the answers, "to the end that an immediate
determination thereof and final decree therein" might be
obtained.
A final decree was entered declaring that the statute referred
to "is unreasonable, unconstitutional, invalid, and void, and of no
force or effect whatever," and a perpetual injunction was awarded
against its enforcement.
Page 221 U. S. 249
The basis of the decree of the court was that expressed in its
opinion ruling upon the demurrers, to-wit, that the statute of
Oklahoma was prohibitive of interstate commerce in natural gas, and
in consequence was a violation of the commerce clause of the
Constitution of the United States, and that being, as the court
said, its dominant purpose, it would, if enforced against
complainants, "invade their rights as guaranteed by the Fourteenth
Amendment of the national Constitution" and also the constitution
of the state. 172 F. 545.
These conclusions are contested, and it is asserted that the
statute's "ruling principle is conservation, not commerce; that the
due process clause is the single issue." And due process, it is
urged, is not violated, because the statute is not a taking of
property, but a regulation of it under the police power of the
state. The provisions of the act, it is further insisted, are but
exercise of the police power to conserve the natural resources of
the state, and as means to that end the right of eminent domain is
forbidden to foreign corporations engaged in transporting gas from
the state, and the use of the highways of the state confined to
pipelines operated by domestic corporations, in order that gas may
be transmitted only between points within the state. And such
exercise of power, it is contended, does not regulate interstate
commerce, but only affects it indirectly.
A paradox is seemingly presented. Interstate commerce in natural
gas is absolutely prevented -- prohibited, in effect -- for we
think it is undoubted that pipelines are the only practical means
of gas transportation, and to prohibit interstate commerce is more
than to indirectly affect it. Every provision of the statute is
directed to such result. Pipeline construction is confined to
corporations organized under the laws of the state, and the
condition of their incorporation is that they shall only transmit
gas between
Page 221 U. S. 250
points in the state, and shall not transport to or deliver to
corporations or persons engaged in transporting or furnishing gas
to points outside of the state. The right of eminent domain is
given alone to such corporations, and the use of the highway is
confined to them, and, that there be no element of control over
them omitted, a violation of the statute is punished by a
forfeiture of charters and of property. Nor can a new corporation
be formed if even one of its stockholders was a stockholder of an
offending corporation.
To such stringent subjection foreign corporations could not be
brought, so they are absolutely excluded from the state by the
following provision:
"Sec. 3. Foreign corporations formed for the purpose of, or
engaged in the business of, transporting or transmitting natural
gas by means of pipelines shall never be licensed or permitted to
conduct such business within this state."
The statute presents no embarrassing questions of
interpretation. It was manifestly enacted in the confident belief
that the state had the power to confine commerce in natural gas
between points within the state, and all of the rights conferred on
domestic corporations, all of the rights denied to foreign
corporations, were means to such end. And, the state having such
power, it is contended, if its exercise affects interstate
commerce, it affects such commerce only incidentally. In other
words, affects it only, as it is contended, by the exertion of
lawful rights, and only because it cannot acquire the means for its
exercise.
The appellant makes a broader contention. The right to conserve,
or rather, the right to reserve, the resources of the state for the
use of the inhabitants of the state, present and future, is broadly
asserted. "The ruling principle of the law," counsel say, "is
conservation, not commerce." It is true the means adopted to secure
conservation
Page 221 U. S. 251
is more insistently brought forward than the right of
conservation, and the power of the state over its corporations and
over its highways and its right to give or withhold eminent domain
is many times put forward in the argument and illustrated by the
citation of many cases. It cannot but be observed that these rights
need not the support of one another. If the right of conservation
be as complete as contended for, it could be secured by simple
prohibitions or penalties. If the power over highways and eminent
domain be as absolute as asserted, it will have to be given effect
no matter for what purpose exercised. We are therefore admonished
at the very start in the discussion of the importance of the
questions presented and the power which the states may exert
against one another, even accepting the concession of appellant
that Congress may break down the isolation by granting the right
not only to take private property, but to subject the highways of
the state, against the consent of the state, to the uses of
interstate commerce. With full appreciation of the importance of
the question involved, we pass to their consideration.
As to conservation, appellant says that
"the case narrows itself to the single question of whether, in
any event, a state has the right to conserve its natural resources,
and second, has it the right to preserve a common supply for the
equal use of all those who may be law resort to it."
The second question is not presented in the case. The provisions
of the statute are not directed against waste. They are directed
against any use of the gas except in the state. The right of the
state "to preserve the common supply for the equal use of all"
owners is not denied by appellees. We put the question out of
consideration, therefore, except incidentally, and concede the
right of the state to preserve the supply of gas, as we shall
hereafter set forth.
The extent of power which the second question implies a state
possesses challenges serious inquiry. The natural resources of a
state may be other than natural gas -- for
Page 221 U. S. 252
example, may be timber and coal and iron and other metals; but
it is contended that the right of conservation extends to these,
and the broad statement of the first question is qualified in the
argument by the properties of natural gas and the limitation of its
supply. This, it is contended, gives a range to the police power of
the state which otherwise it would not possess. And such power, as
we understand the further contention to be, may determine not only
the conservation of the resources of the state, but as to what
class of persons may use them, as dependent upon their
transportation in state, rather than in interstate, commerce. The
contention is discussed at length and variously illustrated.
Indeed, analogies are adduced of limitations upon the use of
property by virtue of the police power under conditions which
invoke its exercise for the advancement of the general welfare. We
select for review from the cases brought forward those nearest to
our inquiry, which are
Ohio Oil Co. v. Indiana,
177 U. S. 190;
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U. S.
61;
Hudson County Water Co. v. McCarter,
209 U. S. 349.
Ohio Oil Co. v. Indiana was a writ of error to the
Supreme Court of Indiana to review a judgment of that court which
sustained a statute which prohibited anyone having the control or
possession of any natural gas or oil well to permit the gas or oil
therefrom to escape into the open air, and restrained the oil
company from violating the statute. Against the statute was urged
the rights of property assured by the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States. The case is a valuable one, and
clearly announces the right of an owner to the soil beneath it, and
the relation of his rights to all other owners of the surface of
the soil. The right of taking the gas, it was said, was common to
all owners of the surface, and because of such a common right in
all landowners, an unlimited use (against a wasteful use the
statute was directed) by any it was competent for the state to
prohibit. This
Page 221 U. S. 253
limitation upon the surface owners of property was justified by
the peculiar character of gas and oil, they having the power of
self-transmission, and that therefore, to preserve an equal right
in all surface owners, there could not be an unlimited right in
any. Gas and oil were likened to, not made identical with, animals
ferae naturae, and, like such animals, were subject to
appropriation by the owners of the soil, but also like them, did
not become property until reduced to actual possession.
But an important distinction was pointed out. In things
ferae naturae, it was observed, all were endowed with the
power of reducing them to possession and exclusive property. In the
case of natural gas, only the surface proprietors had such power,
and the distinction, it was said, marked the difference in the
extent of the state's control.
"In the one, as the public are the owners, everyone may be
absolutely prevented from seeking to reduce to possession. No
divesting of private property, under such a condition, can be
conceived, because the public are the owners, and the enactment by
the state of a law as to the public ownership is but the discharge
of the governmental trust resting in the state as to property of
that character.
Geer v. Connecticut, 161 U. S.
519. On the other hand, as to gas and oil, the surface
proprietors within the gas field all have the right to reduce to
possession the gas and oil beneath. They could not be absolutely
deprived of this right which belongs to them without a taking of
private property."
And this right, it was further said, was coequal in all of the
owners of the surface, and that the power of the state could be
exerted
"for the purpose of protecting all the collective owners by
securing a just distribution, to arise from the enjoyment by them
of their privilege to reduce to possession, and to reach the like
end by preventing waste."
And, further characterizing the statute, it was said, viewed as
one to prevent the waste of the common property of
Page 221 U. S. 254
the surface owners, it protected their property, not divested
them of it. And special emphasis was given to this conclusion by
the comment that to assert that the right of the surface owner to
take was, under the Fourteenth Amendment, a right to waste, was
"to say that one common owner may divest all the others of their
rights without wrongdoing; but the lawmaking power cannot protest
all the owners in their enjoyment without violating the
Constitution of the United States."
The case, therefore, is an authority against, not in support of,
the contention of the appellant in the case at bar.
The statute of Indiana was directed against waste of the gas,
and was sustained because it protected the use of all the surface
owners against the waste of any. The statute was one of true
conservation, securing the rights of property, not impairing them.
Its purpose was to secure to the common owners of the gas a
proportionate acquisition of it -- a reduction to possession and
property -- not to take away any right of use or disposition after
it had thus become property. It was sustained because such was its
purpose, and we said that the surface owners of the soil, owners of
the gas as well, could not be deprived of the right to reduce it to
possession without the taking of private property. It surely cannot
need argument to show that, if they could not be deprived of the
right to reduce the gas to possession, they could not be deprived
of any right which attached to it when in possession.
The Oklahoma statute far transcends the Indiana statute. It does
what this Court took pains to show that the Indiana statute did not
do. It does not protect the rights of all surface owners against
the abuses of any. It does not alone regulate the right of the
reduction to possession of the gas, but, when the right is
exercised, when the gas becomes property, takes from it the
attributes of property -- the right to dispose of it -- indeed,
selects its market, to reserve it for future purchasers and use
within the state
Page 221 U. S. 255
on the ground that the welfare of the state will thereby be
subserved. The results of the contention repel its acceptance. Gas,
when reduced to possession, is a commodity; it belongs to the owner
of the land, and, when reduced to possession, is his individual
property, subject to sale by him, and may be a subject of
intrastate commerce and interstate commerce. The statute of
Oklahoma recognizes it to be a subject of intrastate commerce, but
seeks to prohibit it from being the subject of interstate commerce,
and this is the purpose of its conservation. In other words, the
purpose of its conservation is in a sense commercial -- the
business welfare of the state, as coal might be, or timber. Both of
those products may be limited in amount, and the same consideration
of the public welfare which would confine gas to the use of the
inhabitants of a state would confine them to the inhabitants of the
state. If the states have such power, a singular situation might
result. Pennsylvania might keep its coal, the Northwest its timber,
the mining states their minerals. And why may not the products of
the field be brought within the principle? Thus enlarged, or
without that enlargement, its influence on interstate commerce need
not be pointed out. To what consequences does such power tend? If
one state has it, all states have it; embargo may be retaliated by
embargo, and commerce will be halted at state lines. And yet we
have said that, "in matters of foreign and interstate commerce,
there are no state lines." In such commerce, instead of the states,
a new power appears and a new welfare -- a welfare which transcends
that of any state. But rather let us say it is constituted of the
welfare of all of the states, and that of each state is made the
greater by a division of its resources, natural and created, with
every other state, and those of every other state with it. This was
the purpose, as it is the result, of the interstate commerce clause
of the Constitution of the United States. If there is to be a
turning backward, it
Page 221 U. S. 256
must be done by the authority of another instrumentality than a
court.
The case of
State ex Rel. Corwin v. Indiana & Ohio Oil,
Gas & Mining Co., 120 Ind. 575, is pertinent here. A
statute of Indiana was considered which made it unlawful to pipe or
conduct gas from any point within the state to any point or place
without the state. It was assailed on one side as a regulation of
interstate commerce, and therefore void under the Constitution of
the United States. It was defended, on the other hand, as a
provision for the exercise of the right of eminent domain,
confining it to those engaged in state business, denying it to
those engaged in interstate business, and, further, as imposing
restrictions on foreign corporations. It will be observed,
therefore, the statute had, it may be assumed, the same inducement
as the Oklahoma statute, and the same special justifications were
urged in its defense. The court rejected the defenses, and decided
that the statute was not a legitimate exercise of the police power,
or the regulation of the right of eminent domain or of foreign
corporations, but had the purpose "plainly and unmistakably
manifested" to prohibit transportation of natural gas beyond the
limits of the state, and that, this being its purpose, it was void
as a regulation of interstate commerce. These propositions were
announced: (1) natural gas is as much a commodity as iron ore,
coal, or petroleum, or other products of the earth, and can be
transported, bought, and sold as other products; (2) it is not a
commercial product when it is in the earth, but becomes so when
brought to the surface and placed in pipes for transportation; (3)
if it can be kept within the state after it has become a commercial
product, so may corn, wheat, lead, and iron. If laws can be enacted
to prevent its transportation, "a complete annihilation of
interstate commerce might result." And the court concluded: "We can
find no tenable ground upon which the act can be sustained, and we
are compelled to
Page 221 U. S. 257
adjudge it invalid." The case was explicitly affirmed in
Manufacturers' Gas & Oil Co. v. Indiana Natural Gas &
Oil Co., 155 Ind. 545.
The case is valuable because the court, through the same justice
who wrote the opinion, distinguished between an exercise of the
police power to regulate the taking of natural gas and its
prohibition in interstate commerce.
Jamieson v. Indiana Natural Gas Co., 128 Ind. 555,
sustained a statute which prohibited the taking of gas under a
greater pressure than 300 pounds to the square inch. The court said
that natural gas "is, no doubt, so far a commercial commodity that
this state cannot prohibit its transportation to another state by
direct legislation," citing
State ex Rel. Corwin v. The Indiana
&c. Co. supra. The court said further:
"If it can be taken from the well and transported to another
state under a safe pressure, the state cannot prohibit its
transportation, nor can the state establish one standard of
pressure for its own citizens and another standard for the citizens
of other states."
The court therefore discerning in the statute no discrimination
and no prohibition, but only a regulation universal in its
application, and justified by the nature of the gas, and which
allowed its transportation to other states, decided that there was
no restriction or burden upon interstate commerce.
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U. S.
61, is to the same effect as
Ohio Oil Company v.
Indiana. Its similarity to the latter case was pointed out.
Indeed, they can be said to be identical in principle. In the one
case, oil and gas, in the other, mineral water and gas, were
commingled beneath the surface of the earth, and capable of
movement and common ownership. In the one case, the right was
asserted to waste the gas to secure the oil, which was the more
valuable of the two; in the other case, the right was asserted to
waste the water to secure the gas, as the more valuable of the two.
In both cases, there was
Page 221 U. S. 258
a statute forbidding the waste. Speaking of the purpose of the
statute in
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., it was
said:
"It is to prevent or avoid the injury and waste suggested that
the statute was adopted. It is not the first of its type. One in
principle quite like it was considered by this Court in
Ohio
Oil Co. v. Indiana, 177 U. S. 190."
The statute was sustained upon the reasoning of that case.
Hudson County Water Co. v. McCarter is urged, we have
seen, on our attention. A statute of the State of New Jersey was
involved which made it unlawful for any person or corporation to
transport or carry through pipes the waters of any fresh-water
lake, river, etc., into any other state for use therein. Two
propositions may be said to be the foundation of the decision of
the court below sustaining the statute.
"[(1)] The fresh-water lakes, ponds, brooks, and rivers, and the
waters flowing therein, constitute an important part of the natural
advantages of [the state,] upon the faith of which its population
has multiplied in numbers and increased in material and moral
welfare. The regulation of the use and disposal of such waters
therefore, if it be within the powers of the state, is among the
most important objects of government. [(2)] The common law
recognizes no right in the riparian owner, as such, to divert water
from the stream in order to make merchandise of it, nor any right
to transport any portion of the water from the stream to a distance
for the use of others."
It was further declared that the common law authorized the
acquisition of water "only by riparian owners, and for purposes
narrowly limited. Not that the ownership is common and public." And
the contention was rejected that the title of the individual
riparian owner was to the water itself -- the fluid considered as a
commodity -- and exclusive against the public and against all
persons excepting other riparian owners.
It is clear that neither of these propositions will support the
contentions of the appellant in the case at bar. Nor
Page 221 U. S. 259
does any principle announced upon the review of the case here,
though the power of the state to enact the statute was put "upon a
broader ground than that which was emphasized below." The police
power of the state was discussed, and the difficulty expressed of
fixing "boundary stones between" it and the right of private
property which was asserted in the case. There were few decisions,
it was said, that were very much in point. But certain principles
were expressed, of which
Geer v. Connecticut, 161 U.
S. 519, was considered as furnishing an illustration,
and
Kansas v. Colorado, 185 U. S. 125, and
Georgia v. Tennessee Copper Co., 206 U.
S. 230, some suggestions.
That principle was that the
"interest of the public of a state to maintain the rivers that
are wholly within it substantially undiminished, except by such
drafts upon them as the guardian of the public welfare may permit
for the purpose of turning them to a more perfect use."
And this principle was emphasized as the one determining the
case, and the opinion expressed that it was
"quite beyond any rational view of riparian rights that an
agreement of no matter what private owners could sanction the
diversion of an important stream outside the boundaries of the
state in which it flows. The private right to appropriate is
subject not only to the rights of lower owners, but to the initial
limitation that it may not substantially diminish one of the great
foundations of public welfare and health."
It is hardly necessary to say that there was no purpose in the
case to take from property its uses and commercial rights, or to
assimilate a flowing river and the welfare which was interested in
its preservation to the regulation of gas wells, or to take from
the gas when reduced to possession the attributes of property
decided to belong to it in
Ohio Oil Co. v. Indiana, and
recognized in
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co. Indeed,
pains were taken to put out of consideration a material measure of
the benefits of a great river to
Page 221 U. S. 260
a state. And surely we need not pause to point out the
difference between such a river, flowing upon the surface of the
earth, and such a substance as gas, seeping invisible through sands
beneath the surface.
We have reviewed the cases at some length, as they demonstrate
the unsoundness of the contention of appellant based upon the right
to conserve (we use this word in the sense appellant uses it) the
resources of the state, and that the statute finds no justification
in such purpose for its interference with private property or its
restraint upon interstate commerce. At this late day, it is not
necessary to cite cases to show that the right to engage in
interstate commerce is not the gift of a state, and that it cannot
be regulated or restrained by a state, or that a state cannot
exclude from its limits a corporation engaged in such commerce. To
attain these unauthorized ends is the purpose of the Oklahoma
statute. The state, through the statute, seeks in every way to
accomplish these ends, and all the powers that a state is conceived
to possess are exerted and all the limitations upon such powers are
attempted to be circumvented. Corporate persons are more subject to
control than natural persons. The business is therefore confined to
the former, and foreign corporations are excluded from the state.
Lest they might enter by the superior power of the Constitution of
the United States, the use of the highways is forbidden to them and
the right of eminent domain is withheld from them, and the
prohibitive strength which these provisions are supposed to carry
is exhibited in the fact that the boundary of the state is a
highway. If it cannot be passed without the consent of the state,
commerce to and from the state is impossible. The situation is not
underestimated by appellant, and he says:
"If the appellees had the right of way, they might engage in
interstate commerce, but their desire to engage in interstate
commerce is a different thing from the means open to them to
procure a right of way."
And it is further
Page 221 U. S. 261
said, that "the confusion of the right to engage in interstate
commerce with the power to forcibly secure a right of way is the
basis of appellees' case."
There is here and there a suggestion that the, state not having
granted such right, the alternative is a grant of it by Congress.
But this overlooks the affirmative force of the interstate commerce
clause of the Constitution. The inaction of Congress is a
declaration of freedom from state interference with the
transportation of articles of legitimate interstate commerce, and
this has been the answer of the courts to contentions like those
made in the case at bar.
State ex Rel. Corwin v. Indiana &
O. Oil, Gas. & Mining Co., supra; Benedict v. Columbus
Construction Co., 49 N.J.Eq. 23, and also in
Haskell,
Governor, et al. v. Cowham, United States Circuit Court of
Appeals, Eighth Circuit. In the latter case the Oklahoma statute
was under review, and in response to the same contentions which are
here presented, these propositions were announced, with citation of
cases:
"No state, by the exercise of or by the refusal to exercise any
or all of its powers, may prevent or unreasonably burden interstate
commerce within its borders in any sound article thereof."
"No state, by the exercise of or by the refusal to exercise any
or all of its powers, may substantially discriminate against or
directly regulate interstate commerce or the right to carry it
on."
The power of the State of Oklahoma over highways is much
discussed by appellant and appellees, the appellant contending for
a power practically absolute, as exercised under the statute,
making the highways impassable barriers to the pipelines of
appellees. The appellees contend for a more modified and limited
right in the state, one not extending beyond an easement of public
passage, subject therefore to certain rights in the abutting
owners, which rights can be transferred, and further contend that,
even
Page 221 U. S. 262
if the power of the state be not so limited, it cannot be
exercised to discriminate against interstate commerce.
The rights of abutting owners we will not discuss, nor the
rights derived from them by appellees, except to say that whatever
rights they had they conveyed to appellees, and against them there
is no necessity of resorting to the exercise of eminent domain. We
place our decision on the character and purpose of the Oklahoma
statute. The state, as we have seen, grants the use of the highways
to domestic corporations engaged in intrastate transportation of
natural gas, giving such corporations even the right to the
longitudinal use of the highways. It denies to appellees the lesser
right to pass under them or over them, notwithstanding it is
conceded in the pleadings that the greater use given to domestic
corporations is no obstruction to them. This discrimination is
beyond the power of the state to make. As said by the Circuit Court
of Appeals in the Eighth Circuit, no state can by action or
inaction prevent, unreasonably burden, discriminate against, or
directly regulate interstate commerce or the right to carry it on.
And in all of these inhibited particulars the statute of Oklahoma
offends.
And, we repeat again, there is no question in the case of the
regulating power of the state over the natural gas within its
borders. The appellees concede the power, and, replying to the
argument of appellant, based on the intention of appellees to erect
large pumps to increase the natural rock pressure of the gas,
appellees say:
"Kansas, by legislative enactment, forbids the use of artificial
apparatus to increase the natural flow from gas wells. Chapter 312,
Laws of Kansas, 1909, page 520. To this act the Kansas Natural Gas
Company has no objection."
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, MR. JUSTICE LURTON, and MR. JUSTICE HUGHES
dissent.
*
"
Chapter 67. Pipe Lines -- Regulating Gas and Oil Pipe Lines
-- Article. 1."
"An Act Regulating the Laying, Constructing, and Maintaining and
Operation of Gas Pipe Lines for the Transportation of Natural Gas
within the State of Oklahoma, Defining the Modes of Procedure for
the Exercise of the Right of Eminent Domain for Such Purposes,
Providing for the Inspection and Supervision of the Laying of Such
Pipe Lines, and Limiting the Gas Pressure Therein, and Providing
Penalties for the Violation Thereof."
"Be it enacted by the people of the State of Oklahoma:"
"SECTION 1. Any firm, copartnership, association, or combination
of individuals may become a body corporate under the laws of this
state for the purpose of producing, transmitting, or transporting
natural gas to points within this state by complying with the
general corporation laws of the State of Oklahoma, and with this
act."
"SEC. 2. No corporation organized for the purpose of, or engaged
in, the transportation or transmission of natural gas within this
state shall be granted a charter or right of eminent domain, or
right to use the highways of this state unless it shall be
expressly stipulated in such charter that it shall only transport
or transmit natural gas through its pipelines to points within this
state; that it shall not connect with, transport to, or deliver
natural gas to individuals, associations, copartnerships,
companies, or corporations engaged in transporting or furnishing
natural gas to points, places, or persons outside of this
state."
"SEC. 3. Foreign corporations formed for the purpose of, or
engaged in the business of, transporting or transmitting natural
gas by means of pipelines shall never be licensed or permitted to
conduct such business within this state."
"SEC. 4. No association, combination, copartnership, or
corporation shall have or exercise the right of eminent domain
within this state for the purpose of constructing or maintaining a
gas pipeline or lines within this state, or shall be permitted to
take private or public property for their use within this state,
unless expressly granted such power in accordance with this
act."
"SEC. 5. The laying, constructing, building, and maintaining a
gas pipeline or lines for the transportation or transmission of
natural gas along, over, under, across, or through the highways,
roads, bridges, streets, or alleys in this state, or of any county,
city, municipal corporation, or any other private or public
premises within this state, is hereby declared an additional burden
upon said highway, bridge, road, street, or alley, and any other
private or public premises, may only be done when the right is
granted by express charter from the state, and shall not be
constructed, maintained, or operated until all damages to adjacent
owners are ascertained and paid as provided by law."
"SEC. 6. All pipelines for the transportation or transmission of
natural gas in this state shall be laid under the direction and
inspection of proper persons skilled in such business, to be
designated by the chief mining inspector for such duty, and the
expenses of such inspection and supervision shall be borne and paid
for by the parties laying and constructing such pipelines for the
transportation or transmission of natural gas."
"SEC. 7. No pipeline for the transportation or transmission of
natural gas shall be subjected to a greater pressure than three
hundred pounds to the square inch, except for the purpose of
testing such lines, and gas pumps shall not be used on any gas
pipeline for the transportation or transmission of natural gas, or
used on or in any gas well within this state."
"SEC. 8. Any corporation granted the right under the provisions
of this act to exercise the right of eminent domain, or use the
highways of this state to construct or maintain a gas pipeline or
lines for the transportation or transmission of natural gas to
points within this state, which shall transport or transmit any
natural gas to a point outside of or beyond this state, or shall
connect with or attempt to connect with or threaten to connect with
any gas pipeline furnishing, transporting, or transmitting gas to a
point outside of or beyond this state, shall by each or all of said
acts forfeit all right granted it or them by the charter from this
state, and said forfeiture shall extend back to the time of the
commission of said act or said acts in violation of this act, and
such act or acts shall of themselves work a forfeiture of any and
all rights of any and every kind and character which may be or may
have been granted by the state for the transportation or
transmission of natural gas within this state, and all the property
of said corporation and all the property at any time belonging to
said corporation at any time used in the construction, maintaining,
or operation of said gas pipeline or lines, shall, in due course of
law, be forfeited to and be taken into the possession of the state
through its proper officer, and in said action there shall be a
right to the state of the appointment of a receiver, either before
or after the judgment, to be exercised at the option of the state,
and the officer taking possession of said property shall
immediately disconnect said pipeline or lines at a proper point in
this state from any pipeline or lines going out of or beyond the
state. And said property shall be sold as directed by the court
having jurisdiction of said proceedings, and the proceeds of said
sale shall be applied, first to the payment of the cost of such
proceeding, and the remainder, if any, paid into the school fund of
the state, and said charter under which said act or acts were
committed shall be revoked, and no charter for the transportation
or transmission of natural gas shall ever be granted to any
corporation having among its stockholders any person who was one of
the stockholders of said corporation whose charter has or may have
been forfeited as aforesaid, and if any such charter shall have
been granted, and thereafter a person shall become a stockholder
thereof who was one of the stockholders of the corporation whose
charter has been or may have been forfeited, as herein provided,
the charter of said corporation, one of whose stockholders is as
last named, shall therefore be forfeited and revoked. Provided,
that any person who may be denied the right to become a stockholder
as above prescribed may be granted the right to become such
stockholder by the corporation commission, when such person shows
to such commission that he was not a party to the former violation
of this act."
"SEC. 9. No pipelines for the transportation or transmission of
natural gas shall be laid upon private or public property when the
purpose of such line is to transport or transmit gas for sale to
the public until the same is properly inspected as provided in this
act, and before any gas pipeline company shall furnish or sell gas
to the public, it shall secure from the inspector a certificate
showing that said line is laid and constructed in accordance with
this act, and under the inspection of the proper officer; provided
that nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent persons
drilling for oil and gas from laying surface lines to transport or
transmit gas to wells which are being drilled within this state,
and further provided, that factories in this state may transport or
transmit gas through pipelines for their own use for factories
located wholly within this state, upon securing the right of way
from the state over or along the highways and from property owners
to their lands."
"SEC. 10. That no person, firm, or association or corporation
shall ever be permitted to transmit or transport natural gas by
pipelines in this state, or in this state construct or operate a
pipeline for the transmission of natural gas, except such persons,
firms, associations, or corporations be incorporated as in this act
provided, except as in section 9 of this act, and provided further
that all persons, firms, corporations, associations, and
institutions now doing the business of transportation or
transmission [of] natural gas in the state and otherwise complying
with this act are hereby permitted to incorporate under the
provisions of this act within ten days after the passage and
approval of the same."
"SEC. 11. All acts and parts of acts in conflict with this act
are hereby repealed."
"SEC. 12. An existing emergency is hereby declared by the
legislature for the preservation of the public peace, health, and
safety of the state."
"SEC. 13. This act shall take effect from and after its passage
and approval, as provided by law."
Approved December 21, 1907.