A state may not punish one who sells and delivers liquor in
original packages within the state pursuant to orders solicited
within the state but delivered from without the state under the
circumstances of this case, which arose prior to the Webb-Kenyon
Law.
The transportation of intoxicating liquor, as of other
merchandise, from state to state is interstate commerce, and cannot
be interfered with by the states except as permitted by
Congress.
The Wilson Act of 1890, while placing liquor on arrival at
destination under the law of the state, does not subject liquor
transported in interstate commerce to state regulation until after
arrival at destination and delivery to the consignee or
purchaser.
Under the Wilson Act, the power of the state does not extend to
a shipment of liquor prior to delivery to the purchaser because it
was transmitted in pursuance of an order previously obtained within
the state, where, as in Pennsylvania, there is no statute
prohibiting the solicitation and taking of such orders for liquor
without a license.
Delamater v. South Dakota, 205 U. S.
93, distinguished.
53 Pa.Sup. 210 reversed.
Page 238 U. S. 63
The facts, which involve the validity under the commerce clause
of the federal Constitution of a conviction for selling liquor
without a state license, and the construction of the Wilson Act of
1890, are stated in the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 64
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error was convicted in the Court of Quarter
Sessions of Lawrence County, in the State of Pennsylvania, of the
crime of selling intoxicating liquors in that county without a
license, contrary to § 15 of an Act of May 13,
Page 238 U. S. 65
1887 (P.L., p. 113), which declares:
"Any person who shall hereafter be convicted of selling or
offering for sale any vinous, spirituous, malt or brewed liquors,
or any admixture thereof, without a license shall be
sentenced,"
etc. The superior court affirmed the conviction (53 Pa.Super.
210), the supreme court of the state refused an appeal, and this
writ of error was allowed.
The facts are these: plaintiff in error is a liquor dealer
having his place of business in the County of Mahoning, in the
State of Ohio, which immediately adjoins Lawrence County,
Pennsylvania. He had no license to sell in Lawrence County, nor any
place of business there, but went into that county and there took
an order for liquor, with the understanding that the liquor should
be thereafter delivered from his stock in Ohio to the residence of
the purchaser in Pennsylvania. He returned to Ohio, there loaded
the goods upon his own wagon, and either by himself or his employee
drove across the state line and delivered the liquor to the
residents of the purchaser pursuant to the contract. Thus, the sale
was negotiated in Pennsylvania, but contemplated and required for
its fulfillment a transaction in interstate commerce, which
afterwards took place, with resulting delivery in Pennsylvania.
The charge, as will be observed, was selling, not offering for
sale. And it is admitted that, by the Pennsylvania decisions, the
act of taking orders for future delivery is not punishable under
the statute cited, or any other, and that it is not the making of
an executory contract, but the executed sale, that is punishable.
Commonwealth v. Smith, 16 Pa.Co. 644, 646-647;
Star
Brewing Company's License, 43 Pa.Super. 577, 580;
Commonwealth v. Guinzburg, 46 Pa.Super. 488, 497,
and
see Garbracht v. Commonwealth, 96 Pa. 449, 453. And so, in the
present case, the superior court (53 Pa.Super. 220) recognized that
it was not the making of the executory contract, but
Page 238 U. S. 66
the execution of it, that involved a violation of the law of the
state.
The federal question presented is whether, under the act of
Congress approved August 8, 1890 (c. 728, 26 Stat. 313), known as
the Wilson Act, the State of Pennsylvania may punish plaintiff in
error for delivering in that state liquors transported in
interstate commerce under the circumstances stated. The case arose
before the passage of the Act of March 1, 1913 (c. 90, 37 Stat.
699), known as the Webb-Kenyon Act, and the effect of this
legislation is therefore not now involved.
As has been recently pointed out in
Kirmeyer v. Kansas,
236 U. S. 568,
236 U. S. 572,
the transportation of intoxicating liquor, as of other merchandise,
from state to state is interstate commerce, and state legislation
which penalizes it or directly interferes with it otherwise than as
permitted by an act of Congress is in conflict with the commerce
clause of the federal Constitution, and while Congress, in the
Wilson Act, declared in substance that liquors transported into any
state, or remaining therein for use, consumption, etc., shall, upon
arrival in such state, be subject to the operation and effect of
its laws enacted in the exercise of the police power to the same
extent and in the same manner as though the liquors had been
produced in such state, and shall not be exempt therefrom by reason
of being introduced in original packages, this does not subject
liquors transported in interstate commerce to state regulation
until after their arrival at destination and delivery to consignee
or purchaser.
Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U.
S. 100,
135 U. S. 110;
Rhodes v. Iowa, 170 U. S. 412,
170 U. S. 423;
American Express Co. v. Iowa, 196 U.
S. 133,
196 U. S.
142-143;
Louis. & Nash. R. Co. v. Cook Brewing
Co., 223 U. S. 70,
223 U. S.
82.
The Pennsylvania superior court deemed that the present case was
controlled by
Delamater v. South Dakota, 205 U. S.
93, where a statute imposing an annual license charge
upon the business of selling or offering for sale
Page 238 U. S. 67
intoxicating liquors within the state by traveling salesmen
soliciting orders was held to be enforceable in view of the Wilson
Act, even as applied to the business of soliciting, within the
borders of the state, proposals for the purchase of liquors, which
were to be consummated by the delivery within the state of liquors
to be brought from without. That case, however, has no present
pertinency, since the prohibition of the Pennsylvania statute is
not addressed to the business of soliciting contracts for the
purchase of liquor, but to the sale of the liquor itself, and by
the terms of the Wilson Act, as previously construed, the control
of this subject by the several states is postponed until after the
delivery of the liquor within the state.
Judgment reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.