A statute must be so construed, if fairly possible, as to avoid
not only the conclusion that it is unconstitutional but also grave
doubts upon that score.
United States v. Delaware & Hudson
Co., 213 U. S. 366.
This Court cannot assume to know judicially that no opium is
produced in this country, nor is it warranted in so assuming when
construing a statute itself purporting to deal with producers of
that article.
When Congress contemplates the production of an article within
the United States, this Court must construe tho act on the
hypothesis that such production takes place.
An attempt of Congress to make possession of an article -- in
this case, opium -- produced in any of the states a crime would
raise the gravest question of power.
United
States v. De Witt, 9 Wall. 41.
In construing a statute which calls itself a registration or
taxing act and does not purport to be in execution of a treaty and
which contains a provision not required by any treaty, a grave
doubt arises whether such a statute is entitled to the supremacy
claimed for treaties on the ground that it does in effect carry out
existing treaty obligations on the general subject of both treaty
and statute.
While the Opium Registration Act of December 17, 1914, may have
a moral end, as well as revenue, in view, this Court, in view of
the grave doubts as to its constitutionality except as a revenue
measure construes it as such.
Every question of construction is unique, and an argument that
might prevail in one case may be inadequate in another.
Only definite words will warrant the conclusion that Congress
intended to strain its powers, almost, if not quite, to the
breaking point, to make a great proportion of citizens
prima
facie criminals by mere possession of an article.
The words "any person not registered" in § 8 of the Opium
Registration Act of 1914 do not mean any person in the United
States, but refer to the class dealt with by the statute -- those
required to register -- and one not in that class is not subject to
the penalties prescribed by the statute.
225 F. 1003 affirmed.
Page 241 U. S. 395
The facts, which involve the construction and application of the
Act of December 17, 1914, relating to registration of, and the tax
on, persons producing and dealing in opium and other specified
drugs, are stated in the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 399
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an indictment under § 8 of the Act of December 17,
1914, c. 1, 38 Stat. 785, 789. It was quashed by the district court
on the ground that the statute did not apply to the case. 225 F.
1003. The indictment charges a conspiracy with Willie Martin to
have in Martin's possession opium and salts thereof, to-wit, one
dram of morphine sulphate. It alleges that Martin was not
registered with the collector of internal revenue of the district,
and had not paid the special tax required; that the defendant, for
the purpose of executing the conspiracy, issued to Martin a written
prescription for the morphine sulphate, and that he did not issue
it in good faith, but knew that the drug was not given for
medicinal purposes, but for the purpose of supplying one addicted
to the use of opium. The question is whether the possession
conspired for is within the prohibitions of the act.
The act is entitled
"An Act to Provide for the Registration of, with Collectors of
Internal Revenue, and to Impose a Special Tax Upon, All Persons Who
Produce, Import, Manufacture, Compound, Deal in, Dispense, Sell,
Distribute, or Give Away Opium or Coca Leaves, Their Salts,
Derivatives, or Preparations, and for Other Purposes."
By § 1, the persons mentioned in the title are required to
register and to pay
Page 241 U. S. 400
a special tax at the rate of $1 per annum, with certain
exceptions, and it is made unlawful for the persons required to
register to produce, etc., the drugs without having registered and
paid the special tax. All provisions of law relating to special
taxes are extended to this tax. By § 2 it is declared unlawful
for any person to sell or give away the drugs mentioned without a
written order, provided for, excepting deliveries by physicians,
etc., or on their order, and certain other cases. Then, after
provision for returns, it is made unlawful by § 4 for any
person who shall not have registered and paid the special tax to
send, carry, or deliver the drugs in such commerce as Congress
controls, again with exceptions. By § 6, preparations
containing certain small proportions of the drugs are excluded from
the operation of the act, under conditions. By § 7, internal
revenue tax laws are made applicable, and then comes § 8,
under which the indictment is framed.
By § 8, it is declared unlawful for "any person" who is not
registered and has not paid the special tax to have in his
possession or control any of the said drugs, and "such possession
or control" is made presumptive evidence of a violation of this
section and of § 1. There is a proviso that the section shall
not apply to any employee of a registered person and certain
others, with qualifications, or to the possession of any of the
drugs which have been prescribed in good faith by a physician
registered under the act, and to the possession of some others. And
finally it is provided that the exemptions need not be negatived in
any indictment, etc., and that the burden of proving them shall be
upon the defendant. The district judge considered that the act was
a revenue act, and that the general words "any person" must be
confined to the class of persons with whom the act previously had
been purporting to deal. The government, on the other hand,
contends that this act was passed with two others in order
Page 241 U. S. 401
to carry out the international opium convention, 38 Stat., Part
2, 1929; that Congress gave it the appearance of a taxing measure
in order to give it a coating of constitutionality, but that it
really was a police measure that strained all the powers of the
legislature, and that § 8 means all that it says, taking its
words in their plain literal sense.
A statute must be construed, if fairly possible, so as to avoid
not only the conclusion that it is unconstitutional, but also grave
doubts upon that score.
United States v. Delaware & Hudson
Co., 213 U. S. 366,
213 U. S. 408.
If we could know judicially that no opium is produced in the United
States, the difficulties in this case would be less; but we hardly
are warranted in that assumption when the act itself purports to
deal with those who produce it. Section 1. Congress, at all events,
contemplated production in the United States, and therefore the act
must be construed on the hypothesis that it takes place. If opium
is produced in any of the states, obviously the gravest question of
power would be raised by an attempt of Congress to make possession
of such opium a crime.
United States v. De
Witt, 9 Wall. 41. The government invokes Article VI
of the Constitution, that treaties made under the authority of the
United States shall be the supreme law of the land. But the
question arises under a statute, not under a treaty. The statute
does not purport to be in execution of a treaty, but calls itself a
registration and taxing act. The provision before us was not
required by the opium convention, and whether this section is
entitled to the supremacy claimed by the government for treaties
is, to say the least, another grave question, and, if it is
reasonably possible, the act should be read so as to avoid
both.
The foregoing consideration gains some additional force from the
penalty imposed by § 9 upon any person who violates any of the
requirements of the act. It is a fine of not more than $2,000, or
imprisonment for not more than
Page 241 U. S. 402
five years, or both, in the discretion of the court. Only words
from which there is no escape could warrant the conclusion that
Congress meant to strain its powers almost if not quite to the
breaking point in order to make the probably very large proportion
of citizens who have some preparation of opium in their possession
criminal or at least
prima facie criminal, and subject to
the serious punishment made possible by § 9. It may be assumed
that the statute has a moral end as well as revenue in view, but we
are of opinion that the district court, in treating those ends as
to be reached only through a revenue measure, and within the limits
of a revenue measure, was right.
Approaching the issue from this point of view, we conclude that
"any person not registered" in § 8 cannot be taken to mean any
person in the United States, but must be taken to refer to the
class with which the statute undertakes to deal -- the persons who
are required to register by § 1. It is true that the exemption
of possession of drugs prescribed in good faith by a physician is a
powerful argument, taken by itself, for a broader meaning. But
every question of construction is unique, and an argument that
would prevail in one case may be inadequate in another. This
exemption stands alongside of one that saves employees of
registered persons, as do §§ 1 and 4, and nurses under
the supervision of a physician, etc., as does § 4, and is so
far vague that it may have had in mind other persons carrying out a
doctor's orders, rather than the patients. The general purpose
seems to be to apply to possession exemptions similar to those
applied to registration. Even if for a moment the scope and intent
of the act were lost sight of, the proviso is not enough to
overcome the dominant considerations that prevail in our mind.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES and MR. JUSTICE PITNEY dissent.