Crenshaw v. Arkansas, 227 U. S. 389,
followed to effect that the negotiation of sales of goods which are
in another state, for the purpose of introducing them into the
state in which the negotiation is made is interstate commerce.
Where one has been convicted for violating a state statute which
is unconstitutional as applied to the act committed, the conviction
cannot be sustained because there was proof of another violation
with which he was not charged, as conviction for the latter would
be condemnation without hearing which would be denial of due
process of law.
167 Mich. 417 reversed.
The facts, which involve the validity under the commerce clause
of the federal Constitution of a conviction under the peddling and
hawking license act of Michigan, are stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 667
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error was tried and convicted in a justice court
upon a criminal information which charged that
"one David J. Stewart did travel from place to place within the
county of Berrien, State of Michigan, for the purpose of taking
orders for the purchase of goods, wares, and merchandise by sample,
lists, and catalogues, without having then and there obtained a
license as a hawker and peddler, as required and provided by
Chapter 136 of the Compiled Laws of Michigan of 1897, as
amended."
From that judgment, an appeal was taken to the county court,
where the cause was tried
de novo by a jury, resulting
again in a conviction, and that judgment was affirmed by the
supreme court of the state (167 Mich. 417). This writ of error was
then prosecuted.
There are several assignments of error of a federal nature, but
the consideration of one -- the asserted repugnancy of the statute
upon which the warrant was based to the commerce clause of the
Constitution of the United States -- will enable us to dispose of
the case. The statute provides:
"No person shall be authorized to travel from place to place
within this state, for the purpose of carrying to sell or exposing
to sale any goods, wares, or merchandise or to take orders for the
purchase of goods, wares, or merchandise, by sample, lists, or
catalogues, unless he shall have obtained a license as a hawker and
peddler in the manner hereinafter directed."
Violation of the statute was made a misdemeanor punishable by
fine or imprisonment.
Briefly stated, the material facts, which are
uncontroverted,
Page 232 U. S. 668
are as follows: the defendant resided in the City of Chicago,
where he was engaged in the general merchandise business, but much
of his time was spent in the State of Michigan, soliciting orders
for groceries and other merchandise to be shipped from his Chicago
store. Duplicates of the orders secured were mailed by him to his
manager in Chicago, and goods corresponding to the orders were
shipped in carload lots from the Chicago store, consigned to the
defendant at St. Joseph and other points in Berrien County,
Michigan. Upon the arrival of the cars at St. Joseph, the goods
were delivered to the customers by draymen employed by the
defendant, who filled the orders at the car by checking from the
original orders, there being no identifying marks on the packages,
except as to their contents. Customers living at a distance
received notice by mail of the arrival of the cars, and called or
sent for their goods. If for any reason any orders were
undelivered, the goods corresponding to such orders were returned
to the Chicago store, or placed in a storeroom which the defendant
hired in Benton Harbor, Michigan, and there is some evidence
tending to show that occasional sales were made by the defendant
from the storeroom and from the car without previous
solicitation.
Upon the above facts, the trial court charged the jury as
follows:
"In this case, it is claimed by the defendant that he was
engaged in interstate commerce, and that he was protected by the
interstate commerce law."
"Now, it is true that a wholesale merchant or grocer, in the
City of Chicago, for instance, can solicit orders through an agent
in this state, and he can send an agent here to deliver the
goods."
"The facts, however, in this case, are different. The goods were
shipped here in a car consigned to the defendant himself. The goods
were never consigned to the man who made the order, and when they
got here, they were
Page 232 U. S. 669
not the goods of the man who made the order, because if any of
those men who had made an order had gone down to the car, they
could not have claimed the goods that were there because they could
not be identified. The packages were mixed promiscuously in boxes,
and there were no names on the packages. Moreover, those goods were
not shipped according to the usual course of business, promptly,
but there was a delay of some two or three months in the shipment
of those goods."
"I hold, gentlemen, that there was no sale ever consummated
until the goods were actually delivered by the drayman at the
house. Ordinarily the sale is consummated at Chicago (where goods
are ordered from Chicago), and the sale is consummated the moment
they are shipped at the City of Chicago, directed to the consignee.
In this case, no sale was consummated whatever until the goods were
actually delivered at the house."
"So I hold, practically, that the car was a mere warehouse or
place of doing business by the defendant, and it was there that he
distributed the goods as he pleased. For that reason, gentlemen, I
hold that the defendant comes within the law, and that he is what
is called a hawker and peddler."
"
* * * *"
"In this case, as it is only a matter of law, and there are no
facts in dispute, it will be your duty of course, as a matter of
form, to follow the direction of the court. I find, gentlemen of
the jury, in this case, that the defendant, under the evidence and
the law, is guilty of the charge. . . ."
And the correctness of the charge thus given was in terms
sustained by the supreme court of the state in its opinion.
The charge as thus given and affirmed is clearly in conflict
with the rule announced in
Crenshaw v. Arkansas,
227 U. S. 389, and
the cases there reviewed. Indeed,
Page 232 U. S. 670
reference to authority is unnecessary, since it was admitted in
the argument at bar that the judgment below, insofar as it affirmed
the action of the trial court in holding that there could be a
conviction because of the deliveries of merchandise from the cars
to fill orders previously solicited and obtained, was erroneous
because in conflict with the commerce clause of the Constitution.
But it is said although there was manifestly reversible error from
this point of view, nevertheless, as from another point of view
there was a ground adequate to sustain the judgment, there should
be an affirmance. The court below, it is said, not only placed its
affirmance upon the erroneous ruling as to the sales made under
orders, but also upon the ground that there was evidence showing
some sales made from the car or storeroom not under previous
orders, and as the latter sales were not within the shelter of the
commerce clause, therefore the affirmance on that ground was an
independent nonfederal conclusion sustaining the action of the
court and calling for the duty of affirmance. But this proposition
disregards the fact that the only charge made against the accused
was for peddling, and that the instructions of the court and the
whole course of the trial conclusively established that the sales
made from the car, as the result of the orders solicited, formed
the sole basis for the prosecution, and the conviction therefore
related to that, and to that alone. If, then, it be admitted that
the judgment below was placed upon two grounds, such admission
would not establish that the judgment rested upon an independent
state ground adequate to sustain it, since the first ground, it is
admitted, was federal and erroneous, and the second ground, if
upheld, would amount to a condemnation without hearing, and
therefore constitute a denial of due process of law. Thus, the
proposition, if sustained, would require us to hold that an
admitted violation of one constitutional right must be left
uncorrected because at the same time another and equally
Page 232 U. S. 671
fundamental constitutional right was disregarded; a conclusion
which would give effect to both wrongs obviously demonstrates our
plain duty to reverse and remand for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.