The first resort, with a view to ascertaining the meaning of a
statute, is to the language used; if that is plain, there is an end
to construction, and the statute is to be taken to mean what it
says.
The purpose of Congress in enacting the Webb-Kenyon Act of March
1, 1913, c. 90, 37 Stat. 69, was not to prohibit all interstate
shipment or transportation of liquor into so-called dry territory,
but to render the prohibitory provisions of the statute operative
whenever, and only when, the liquor is to be dealt with in
violation of the law of the state into which it is shipped.
Page 238 U. S. 191
Except as affected by the Wilson Act of 1890, which permits
state law to operate on interstate shipments of liquor after
termination of transportation to the consignee, and the Webb-Kenyon
Act of 1913, which prohibits interstate transportation of liquor
into a state to be dealt with therein in violation of the laws of
that state, the interstate transportation of liquor is left
untouched, and remains within the sole jurisdiction of Congress
under the federal Constitution. As it appears that an interstate
shipment of liquor into Kentucky was not to be used in violation of
the laws of that state as such laws have been construed by its
highest court, the Webb-Kenyon Act had no effect to change the
general rule that a state may not regulate commerce which is wholly
interstate.
The facts, which involve the construction and application of
§ 259a of the statutes of Kentucky in regard to local option
and of the Act of Congress known as the Webb-Kenyon Law, are stated
in the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 193
MR. JUSTICE Day delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Adams Express Company was indicted for violation of §
2569a of the statutes of the State of Kentucky, which, omitting the
portions not essential to the consideration of this case,
provides:
"It shall be unlawful for any . . . public or private carrier to
bring into, . . . deliver or distribute, in any county, district,
precinct, town or city, where the sale of intoxicating liquors has
been prohibited, . . . any spirituous, vinous, malt or other
intoxicating liquor, regardless of the name by which it may be
called, and this act shall apply to all packages of such
intoxicating liquors whether broken or unbroken. . . . Any . . .
public or private carrier violating the provisions of this act
shall be deemed guilty of violating the local option law and shall
be fined not less than fifty nor more than one hundred dollars for
each offense. . . . And the place of delivery of such liquors shall
be held to be the place of sale. . . ."
The charge of the indictment was that the Adams Express Company,
doing the business of a common carrier in Kentucky, did knowingly
bring into and deliver in Whitley County of that state certain
intoxicating liquors to one John Horshaw, contrary to law. This
case, with
Page 238 U. S. 194
eighteen others, was heard in the Circuit Court of Whitley
County upon an agreed statement of facts which stipulated that the
Adams Express Company was engaged in the business of a common
carrier and did such business in Whitley County, Kentucky, and
between that county and the Cities of Jellico and High Cliff, in
the State of Tennessee. That, on the dates named in the indictment,
the Adams Express Company knowingly brought into, transferred,
delivered, and distributed certain spirituous liquors, to-wit,
whisky, in local option territory and where the local option law
was in force, as charged in the indictment. That, before bringing
such liquors into such territory, the consignees of said liquors,
being the persons named in the indictment, sent orders by mail for
such liquors to dealers at Jellico and High Cliff, in the State of
Tennessee, and paid the purchase price of said liquors to said
dealers at the places named in Tennessee. That, upon receipt of the
orders, the dealers, at their respective places of business at
Jellico and High Cliff, Tennessee, for the purpose of filling such
orders, delivered to the Adams Express Company the several packages
of liquor, directing the Express Company to carry and deliver the
same to such persons; that the Adams Express Company did thereupon
carry said packages of liquor from Jellico and High Cliff, in
Tennessee, into Whitley County, Kentucky, and there delivered the
same to the consignees thereof, who were the persons who had made
the orders and to whom the indictment charged the defendant with
delivering and distributing the liquors mentioned. That the liquors
were intended by said consignees for their personal use, and were
so used by them, and were not intended by them to be sold contrary
to law, and were not so sold by them. That the transactions and all
of them described occurred since the enactment and going into
effect of the act of Congress known as the Webb-Kenyon Law.
The Express Company requested a peremptory instruction
Page 238 U. S. 195
for a verdict of not guilty because the shipments of liquor were
interstate shipments and constituted interstate commerce within the
meaning of the commerce clause of the federal Constitution. That,
the liquors being for the personal use of the consignees
respectively, § 2659a is repugnant to the Constitution of
Kentucky, and if the indictment was authorized by the act of
Congress known as the Webb-Kenyon Law, that law is in contravention
of the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution of the United
States and of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
Constitution. This request for a peremptory instruction for the
defendant was refused. The court instructed the jury that, if it
believed from the evidence that the Adams Express Company, as a
common carrier, brought any spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors
into Whitley County, being local option territory in the State of
Kentucky, and there delivered the same to the persons named in the
indictment, then the defendant was guilty and its punishment should
be fixed at not less than $50 nor more than $100, and that, upon
the whole case, if they had any reasonable doubt of the guilt of
the company, they should find a verdict of not guilty. The
defendant duly excepted to the giving of these instructions and to
the refusal to grant its prayer for a peremptory instruction. The
company was convicted, and fined in the sum of $50. That amount not
being sufficient to give the court of appeals of the state
jurisdiction, a writ of error was taken from this Court to the
Circuit Court of Whitley County.
The Kentucky statute now under consideration was before this
Court in the case of
Louis. & Nash. R. Co. v. Cook Brewing
Co., 223 U. S. 70. In
that case, it was held that, as applied to interstate shipments,
the statute was void as an attempt by the state to regulate
commerce among the states. Such must still be the fate of the
statute unless it is the effect of the Act of Congress of March
1,
Page 238 U. S. 196
1913, 37 Stat. 699, c. 90, known as the Webb-Kenyon Act, to
require a different result. That Act provides:
"An Act Divesting Intoxicating Liquors of Their Interstate
Character in Certain cases."
"Be it enacted, etc., that the shipment or transportation, in
any manner or by any means whatsoever, of any spirituous, vinous,
malted, fermented, or other intoxicating liquor of any kind, from
one state, territory, or district of the United States, or place
noncontiguous to but subject to the jurisdiction thereof, into any
other state, territory, or district of the United States, or place
noncontiguous to but subject to the jurisdiction thereof, or from
any foreign country into any state, territory, or district of the
United States, or place noncontiguous to but subject to the
jurisdiction thereof, which said spirituous, vinous, malted,
fermented, or other intoxicating liquor is intended by any person
interested therein, to be received, possessed, sold, or in any
manner used, either in the original package or otherwise, in
violation of any law of such state, territory, or district of the
United States, or place noncontiguous to but subject to the
jurisdiction thereof, is hereby prohibited."
Before entering upon a consideration of the meaning of this act,
it is well to have in mind certain principles of constitutional
law, and, as well, certain legislation of Congress upon this
subject in force at the time when the Webb-Kenyon Act was passed.
The Constitution of the United States grants to Congress authority
to regulate commerce among the states to the exclusion of state
control over the subject. This power is comprehensive and subject
to no limitations except such as are found in the Constitution
itself. This general principle runs through all the cases decided
in this Court considering the matter, and has never been questioned
since Chief Justice Marshall, for the Court, delivered the judgment
in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1. Applying this general
principle,
Page 238 U. S. 197
it was held by this Court in
Leisy v. Hardin,
135 U. S. 100,
that the State of Iowa, in the absence of congressional permission,
had no authority to prohibit the sale of liquor in original
packages in the hands of importers from other states in that state,
and the court there declared that, whatever the individual views of
its members might be concerning the deleterious qualities of
certain articles of commerce, when such articles were recognized by
Congress as legitimate subjects of interstate commerce, such
interstate traffic could not be controlled by the laws of the state
amounting to regulations thereof. In the course of the
consideration of this case, this Court said:
"The responsibility is upon Congress, so far as the regulation
of interstate commerce is concerned, to remove the restriction upon
the state in dealing with imported articles of trade within its
limits, which have not been mingled with the common mass of
property therein, if in its judgment the end to be secured
justifies and requires such action."
After the decision of
Leisy v. Hardin, Congress passed
the Wilson Act of 1890, 26 Stat. 313, c. 728. That Act made
intoxicating liquors transported in interstate commerce subject to
the exercise of the police power of the states upon arrival in the
state in the same manner as though such liquors had been produced
in the state or territory into which the same were shipped. The
constitutionality of that Act was attacked, and came under
consideration in this Court in
In re Rahrer, 140 U.
S. 545, where the law was upheld. In affirming the right
of Congress to pass the statute, this Court said:
"In so doing, Congress has not attempted to delegate the power
to regulate commerce, or to exercise any power reserved to the
states, or to grant a power not possessed by the states, or to
adopt state laws. It has taken its own course and made its own
regulation, applying to
Page 238 U. S. 198
these subjects of interstate commerce one common rule whose
uniformity is not affected by variations in state laws in dealing
with such property. . . ."
"Congress did not use terms of permission to the state to act,
but simply removed an impediment to the enforcement of the state
laws in respect to imported packages in their original condition
created by the absence of a specific utterance on its part. It
imparted no power to the state not then possessed, but allowed
imported property to fall at once upon arrival within the local
jurisdiction."
In
Rhodes v. Iowa, 170 U. S. 412, it
was held that the Wilson Act did not have the effect to permit
interstate shipments of liquor to come under the operation of the
liquor laws of the state until after their delivery to the
consignee, and that one receiving liquor shipped in interstate
commerce obtained the right to use the same although he no longer
had the right to sell it free from the restrictions imposed by the
laws of the state.
And see Vance v. Vandercook,
170 U. S. 438.
From what we have said, it follows that, before the passage of
the Webb-Kenyon Act, while the state, in the exercise of its police
power, might regulate the liquor traffic after the delivery of the
liquor transported in interstate commerce, there was nothing in the
Wilson Act to prevent shipment of liquor in interstate commerce for
the use of the consignee, provided he did not undertake to sell it
in violation of the laws of the state. The history of the
Webb-Kenyon Act shows that Congress deemed this situation one
requiring further legislation upon its part, and thereupon
undertook, in the passage of that Act, to deal further with the
subject and to extend the prohibitions against the introduction of
liquors into the states by means of interstate commerce. That the
act did not assume to deal with all interstate commerce shipments
of intoxicating liquors into prohibitory territory in the
states
Page 238 U. S. 199
is shown in its title, which expresses the purpose to divest
intoxicating liquors of their interstate character in certain
cases. What such cases should be was left to the text of the act to
develop.
It is elementary that the first resort, with a view to
ascertaining the meaning of a statute, is to the language used. If
that is plain, there is an end to construction, and the statute is
to be taken to mean what it says.
Extraneous words omitted, this statute reads:
"The shipment or transportation . . . of . . . intoxicating
liquor . . . from one state . . . into any other state . . . which
. . . intoxicating liquor is intended by any person interested
therein to be received, possessed, sold, or in any manner used,
either in the original package or otherwise, in violation of any
law of such state . . . is hereby prohibited."
It would be difficult to frame language more plainly indicating
the purpose of Congress not to prohibit all interstate shipment or
transportation of liquor into so-called dry territory, and to
render the prohibition of the statute operative only where the
liquor is to be dealt with in violation of the local law of the
state into which it is thus shipped or transported. Such shipments
are prohibited only when such person interested intends that they
shall be possessed, sold, or used in violation of any law of the
state wherein they are received. Thus far and no farther has
Congress seen fit to extend the prohibitions of the act in relation
to interstate shipments. Except as affected by the Wilson Act,
which permits the state laws to operate upon liquors after
termination of the transportation to the consignee, and the
Webb-Kenyon Act, which prohibits the transportation of liquors into
the state, to be dealt with therein in violation of local law, the
subject matter of such interstate shipment is left untouched and
remains within the sole jurisdiction of Congress under the federal
Constitution.
It becomes necessary, therefore, to inquire whether a
Page 238 U. S. 200
shipment of the character here in question comes within the
terms of the Webb-Kenyon Act because of the purpose to use the
liquor in violation of the law of the State of Kentucky. The
stipulation upon which the case was tried shows that the liquor was
bought and paid for in Tennessee, and was shipped from that state
into the State of Kentucky for the personal use of the consignee,
without any intention on his part to dispose of it contrary to the
law of the state.
The case under review was one of nineteen tried under the same
stipulation. In one of them, the fine imposed was large enough to
give jurisdiction to the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, and the case
before that court is found in 154 Ky. 462. Considering whether such
shipment was in violation of the law of the state, that court,
after commenting upon the fact that the stipulation showed that the
liquors were intended by the consignees for their personal use, and
were not intended by them to be sold and were not sold, contrary to
law, further said:
"This being the purpose for which the liquor was intended to be
received, possessed, and used, it is clear that the consignees who
received from the carrier the liquor did not, in so doing, violate
or intend to violate any law of this state, because there is not
and never has been any law of this state that prohibited the
citizen from purchasing, where it was lawful to sell it,
intoxicating liquor for his personal use, or from having in his
possession for such use liquor so purchased.
Calhoun v.
Commonwealth, 154 Ky. 70;
Martin v. Commonwealth, 153
Ky. 784. As said in
Commonwealth v. Campbell, 133 Ky.
50:"
"'The history of our state from its beginning shows that there
was never even the claim of a right on the part of the legislature
to interfere with the citizen using liquor for his own comfort,
provided that in so doing he committed no offense against public
decency by being intoxicated,
Page 238 U. S. 201
and we are of opinion that it never has been within the
competency of the legislature to so restrict the liberty of the
citizen, and certainly not since the adoption of the present
Constitution. The Bill of Rights, which declares that among the
inalienable rights possessed by the citizens is that of seeking and
pursuing their safety and happiness, and that the absolute and
arbitrary power over the lives, liberty, and property of freemen
exists nowhere in a republic, not even in the largest majority,
would be but an empty sound if the legislature could prohibit the
citizen the right of owning or drinking liquor when, in so doing,
he did not offend the laws of decency by being intoxicated in
public. . . . Therefore the question of what a man will drink, or
eat, or own, provided the rights of others are not invaded, is one
which addresses itself alone to the will of the citizen. It is not
within the competency of government to invade the privacy of a
citizen's life and to regulate his conduct in matters in which he
alone is concerned, or to prohibit him any liberty the exercise of
which will not directly injure society.'"
And further:
"It therefore appears that the issue in this case really comes
down to this: was the liquor involved in this transaction intended
by any person interested therein to be received, possessed, sold,
or in any manner used in violation of any law of this state? It is
shown by the agreed state of facts, when considered in the light of
the Constitution and laws of the state, and the opinions of this
Court, that it was not."
In the subsequent case of
Adams Exp. Co. v.
Commonwealth, 160 Ky. 66, it appeared that the liquor was
intended by the consignee to be sold in violation of the law of the
state, and was so sold, and the court held that, in such case, the
carrier was bound, before the delivery of the whisky, to be
circumspect and to use
Page 238 U. S. 202
ordinary care to learn the purpose for which it was to be used,
and if, acting in good faith upon reasonable grounds, the carrier
was misled, it was not liable; otherwise it was, and that the
question was one of fact for the jury. The court, however,
expressly adhered to its ruling in
Adams Express Co. v.
Commonwealth, 154 Ky.,
supra, under facts such as
were there presented, and such as appear in the case now under
consideration.
It therefore follows that, inasmuch as the facts of this case
show that the liquor was not to be used in violation of the laws of
the State of Kentucky as such laws are construed by the highest
court of that state, the Webb-Kenyon Law has no application and no
effect to change the general rule that the states may not regulate
commerce wholly interstate. As it appears that the conviction in
this case was for an interstate transportation, not prohibited by
the Webb-Kenyon Act, the rights under the interstate commerce
clause of the Constitution expressly set up by the Express Company
were denied by the judgment of conviction in the Circuit Court of
Whitley County, and that judgment must accordingly be reversed.
Reversed.