1. A bill by a state for an injunction against federal officers
charged with the administration of a federal statute cannot be
entertained by this Court where the bill does not show that any
right of the state which, in itself, is an appropriate subject of
judicial cognizance, is being or is about to be affected
prejudicially by the application or enforcement of the Act, but
seeks merely to obtain a judicial declaration that, in certain
features, the Act exceeds the authority of Congress and encroaches
upon that of the state. P.
269 U. S. 330.
2. The bill in this case, which seeks to draw in question the
constitutionality of parts of the Federal Water Power Act in their
relation to waters within or bordering on the complaining state,
fails to present any case or controversy appropriate for exertion
of the judicial power. P.
269 U. S.
334.
3. The power of Congress to regulate interstate and foreign
commerce includes the power to control, for the purposes of such
commerce, all navigable waters accessible to it and within the
United States, and to that end to adopt all appropriate measures to
free such waters from obstructions to navigation and to preserve,
and even enlarge, their navigable capacity, and the authority and
rights of a state in respect of such waters within its limits are
subordinate to this power of Congress. P.
269 U. S.
337.
Bill dismissed.
Page 269 U. S. 329
On a motion to dismiss a bill filed by the State of New Jersey
against the Attorney General of the United States and the members
of the Federal Power Commission, all alleged to be citizens of
other states, to enjoin the defendants from taking any steps to
apply or enforce, in respect of waters within or bordering on New
Jersey, certain provisions of the Federal Water Power Act.
Page 269 U. S. 330
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity brought in this Court by the State of
New Jersey against the Attorney General of the United States and
the members of the Federal Power Commission, all alleged to be
citizens of other states, to obtain a judicial declaration that
certain parts of the Act of June 10, 1920, called the Federal Water
Power Act, c. 285, 41 Stat. 1063, are unconstitutional insofar as
they relate to waters within or bordering on that state and to
enjoin the defendants from taking any steps towards applying or
enforcing them in respect of those waters. The defendants respond
with a motion to dismiss on the ground, among others, that the bill
does not present a case or controversy appropriate for the exertion
of judicial power, but only an abstract question respecting the
relative authority of Congress and the state in dealing with such
waters. If this be a proper characterization of the bill, the
motion to dismiss must prevail, as a reference to prior decisions
will show.
In
Georgia v.
Stanton, 6 Wall. 50, this Court had before it a
bill by the State of Georgia challenging the power of Congress to
enact the so-called Reconstruction Acts, and
Page 269 U. S. 331
seeking an injunction against the Secretary of War and others to
prevent them from giving effect to that legislation. On examining
the bill, the Court found that it was directed against an alleged
encroachment by Congress on political rights of the state, and not
against any actual or threatened infringement of rights of persons
or property, and, on that ground, the bill was dismissed. The
nature and extent of the judicial power under the Constitution were
much considered; the statement of Mr. Justice Thompson in
Cherokee Nation v.
Georgia, 5 Pet. 75 --
"It is only where the rights of persons or property are
involved, and when such rights can be presented under some judicial
form of proceedings, that courts of justice can interpose relief.
This Court can have no right to pronounce an abstract opinion upon
the constitutionality of a state law. Such law must be brought into
actual or threatened operation upon rights properly falling under
judicial cognizance, or a remedy is not to be had here"
-- was quoted with approval, and the Court added:
"By the second section of the third article of the Constitution
'the judicial power extends to all cases, in law and equity,
arising under the Constitution, the laws of the United States,'
etc., and as applicable to the case in hand, 'to controversies
between a state and citizens of another state' -- which
controversies, under the Judiciary Act, may be brought, in the
first instance, before this Court in the exercise of its original
jurisdiction, and we agree that the bill filed presents a case,
which, if it be the subject of judicial cognizance, would, in form,
come under a familiar head of equity jurisdiction -- that is,
jurisdiction to grant an injunction to restrain a party from a
wrong or injury to the rights of another where the danger, actual
or threatened, is irreparable, or the remedy at law inadequate.
But, according to the course of proceeding under this head in
equity, in order to entitle the party to the remedy, a case must be
presented appropriate
Page 269 U. S. 332
for the exercise of judicial power; the rights in danger, as we
have seen, must be rights of persons or property, not merely
political rights, which do not belong to the jurisdiction of a
court, either in law or in equity."
In
Marye v. Parsons, 114 U. S. 325, a
owner of coupons cut from bonds of the State of Virginia issued
with a guaranty that the coupons should be receivable in payment of
taxes brought a bill in equity in a federal court in that state
against the tax collectors to compel them to recognize the guaranty
and to disregard later statutes forbidding acceptance of such
coupons in payment of taxes. The coupons were overdue, the state
had made default in their payment, and the tax collectors had
announced a general purpose to follow the subsequent statutes. The
coupons were transferrable, and could be sold at nearly their face
value to other persons who had taxes to pay, provided the plaintiff
obtained a decree adjudging the subsequent statutes invalid and
directing the collectors to accept the coupons when tendered in
payment of taxes by any lawful holder. Indeed, an arrangement to
sell the coupons on these terms had been effected before the bill
was filed. But no one was then in a position to tender the coupons
to the tax collectors, because the plaintiff who owned the coupons
had no tax to pay, and because the prospective transferees, while
having taxes to pay, did not as yet own the coupons. The bill set
forth the situation just described and prayed a decree along the
lines suggested. In the court of first instance, the plaintiff
obtained a decree, but this Court reversed it and directed a
dismissal of the bill for want of jurisdiction, saying:
"The bill as framed therefore calls for a declaration of an
abstract character, that the contract set out requiring coupons to
be received in payment of taxes and debts due to the state is
valid; that the statutes of the General Assembly of Virginia
impairing its obligations are contrary
Page 269 U. S. 333
to the Constitution of the United States, and therefore void,
and that it is the legal duty of the collecting officers of the
state to receive them when offered in payment of such taxes and
debts."
"But no court sits to determine questions of law
in
thesi. There must be a litigation upon actual transactions
between real parties, growing out of a controversy affecting legal
or equitable rights as to person or property. All questions of law
arising in such cases are judicially determinable. The present is
not a case of that description."
In
Muskrat v. United States, 219 U.
S. 346, the question was whether, consistently with the
limitations of the judicial power, this Court could entertain, on
an appeal from the Court of Claims, a suit brought under a
permissive act of Congress by members of the Cherokee Tribe of
Indians to determine the constitutional validity of congressional
enactments enlarging prior restrictions on the alienation of their
allotments and permitting newly born children and other members of
the tribe omitted from a prior enrollment to share in the
distribution of tribal lands and funds. In an extended opinion, the
Court pointed out that the suit did not present an actual
controversy between the parties respecting any specific right of
person or property, but only a question of the power of Congress to
enact the legislation described, and held that such a suit was not
within the scope of the judicial power, and could not be
entertained by this Court, originally or on appeal, even under a
permissive act of Congress.
In
Texas v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
258 U. S. 158,
where a bill praying that an act enlarging the powers of the
Interstate Commerce Commission and creating the Railroad Labor
Board be declared unconstitutional, and action thereunder prevented
by injunction, was dismissed for want of jurisdiction, this Court
said:
Page 269 U. S. 334
"The bill is of unusual length, 65 printed pages. Much of it is
devoted to the presentation of an abstract question of legislative
power -- whether the matters dealt with in several of the
provisions of titles III and IV fall within the field wherein
Congress may speak with constitutional authority, or within the
field reserved to the several states. The claim of the state,
elaborately set forth, is that they fall within the latter field,
and therefore that the congressional enactment is void. Obviously
this part of the bill does not present a case or controversy within
the range of the judicial power as defined by the Constitution. It
is only where rights, in themselves appropriate subjects of
judicial cognizance, are being or are about to be affected
prejudicially by the application or enforcement of a statute that
its validity may be called in question by a suitor and determined
by an exertion of the judicial power."
And in
Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U.
S. 447, the Court recognized and gave effect to the
reasoning and principle of those cases by dismissing a bill brought
by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to restrain executive officers
from giving effect to an act of Congress alleged to be an
unconstitutional usurpation of power, but not shown to affect
prejudicially any proprietary or other right of the state subject
to judicial cognizance.
On reading the present bill, we are brought to the conclusion,
first, that its real purpose is to obtain a judicial declaration
that, in making certain parts of the Federal Water Power Act
applicable to waters within and bordering on the State of New
Jersey, Congress exceeded its own authority and encroached on that
of the state; and, secondly, that the bill does not show that any
right of the state which in itself is an appropriate subject of
judicial cognizance is being or about to be affected prejudicially
by the application or enforcement of the act. We think the reasons
for this conclusion will be
Page 269 U. S. 335
indicated sufficiently by describing the act and then pointing
out the distinctive features of the bill.
The act is a long one, extends to all the states and organized
territories and the District of Columbia, and varies its operation
according to local situations and conditions. Some of its
provisions are general, some relate to areas containing public and
Indian lands, and some have special application to the use of
government dams in developing power. As respects the State of New
Jersey, the act may be adequately described for present purposes by
stating that it relates particularly to navigable waters, subjects
their improvement and utilization for purposes of navigation and
developing power to stated restrictions and supervision by a public
commission, which it creates, requires that such operations be
carried on under preliminary permits and long-term licenses
obtained from the commission and conditioned on compliance with the
restrictions, provides that no license "affecting the navigable
capacity of any navigable waters" shall be issued until the plans
of the dam or other structures affecting navigation have been
approved by the Chief of Engineers and the Secretary of War,
directs that preference be given to applications by the state or
any municipality; requires that each applicant for a license to use
the waters for power purposes submit satisfactory evidence of his
compliance with the laws of the state and of his right to engage in
such business; prescribes that licensees shall pay to the United
States reasonable annual charges, to be fixed by the commission,
for the purpose of reimbursing the United States for the cost of
administering the act,
"and for the expropriation to the government of excessive
profits until' the state 'shall make provision for preventing
excessive profits or the expropriation therefor [thereof] to"
itself, but relieves the state and any municipality from the
payment
Page 269 U. S. 336
of any charge in respect of licenses for power purposes where
the power is sold without profit or used for public purposes, and
also in respect of licenses for projects primarily designed to
improve navigation, and provides that any person or corporation,
including the state or any municipality, intending to construct a
dam or other works in a stream not declared navigable "may, in
their discretion," file a declaration of their intention with the
commission, whereupon it shall by investigation ascertain whether
"the interests of interstate or foreign commerce" will be affected
thereby, that, if it finds they will be affected, the construction
shall not proceed unless a license is sought and obtained, and
that, if it finds the other way, the construction may proceed
without a license. Some provisions relate particularly to the
development of power, some only to improvement of navigation, and
others to both, but all, taken together, suggest, if they do not
show, that conservation for the purposes of navigation is a leading
object. Thus, it is said in § 10(a) that every licensed
project must be
"adapted to a comprehensive scheme of improvement and
utilization for the purposes of navigation, of water power
development, and of other beneficial uses,"
and, in § 10(c), that the licensee "shall so maintain and
operate said works as not to impair navigation." One provision
declares that nothing in the act shall be construed as affecting or
interfering with the laws of the state relating to the "control,
appropriation, use, or distribution of water used in irrigation or
for municipal or other uses, or any vested right acquired therein."
There are also provisions making it a misdemeanor, punishable by a
fine of not exceeding $1,000, for any licensee, or any person
willfully to fail or refuse to comply with any provision of the
act, condition of a license, or regulation or order of the
commission, and other provisions authorizing the Attorney General,
on the recommendation of the commission or the Secretary of
Page 269 U. S. 337
War, to bring suits to prevent, remedy, or correct violations of
the act or lawful regulations or orders thereunder, and also suits
to revoke permits or licenses for violations of their terms.
Rightly to appraise the bill, one should have in mind the
doctrine, heretofore firmly settled, that the power to regulate
interstate and foreign commerce, which the Constitution vests in
Congress, includes the power to control, for the purposes of such
commerce, all navigable waters which are accessible to it and
within the United States, whether within or without the limits of a
state, and, to that end, to adopt all appropriate measures to free
such waters from obstructions to navigation and to preserve and
even enlarge their navigable capacity, and that the authority and
rights of a state in respect of such waters within its limits, and
in respect of the lands under them, are subordinate to this power
of Congress.
Philadelphia v. Stimson, 223 U.
S. 605,
223 U. S. 634,
223 U. S. 638;
United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Co., 229 U. S.
53,
229 U. S. 62,
229 U. S. 65;
Lewis Blue Point Oyster Co. v. Briggs, 229 U. S.
82,
229 U. S. 88;
Greenleaf Lumber Co. v. Garrison, 237 U.
S. 251,
237 U. S. 258
et seq.; Willink v. United States, 240 U.
S. 572,
240 U. S. 580;
United States v. Rio Grande Irrigation Co., 174 U.
S. 690,
174 U. S.
703.
The bill is directed against many provisions of the act,
especially those requiring permits and licenses and subjecting
licensees to various restrictions and conditions and those relating
to projects for utilizing the waters in the development of power,
and it directly alleges that they all go beyond the power of
Congress and impinge on that of the state. Plainly these
allegations do not suffice as a basis for invoking an exercise of
judicial power.
The bill further alleges, in an indefinite way, that "it is the
intention" of the state to utilize the Morris Canal, which it
recently has acquired, for "water power development" and in the
"conservation of potable waters;" that there are "opportunities"
for developing water
Page 269 U. S. 338
power at several places along streams which feed the canal and
in designated localities along the Delaware River "where dams could
be erected and power developed;" that the state "contemplates"
utilizing these opportunities "through a state agency or by private
enterprise," with a resulting profit to its treasury; that the
state has an established policy respecting "the conservation of
potable waters," which has been put into partial effect "through
its agencies and by private enterprise" by means of reservoirs and
waterworks constructed at large cost, and that, in its sovereign
capacity, the state owns lands under the Bay of New York, the
Hudson River, adjacent waters, and the Delaware River, from the
leasing of which for dock, pier, and related purposes it derives a
large revenue. These allegations are followed by others, similarly
indefinite, to the effect that the challenged provisions of the
act, if applied and enforced, will interfere with the state's
contemplated development of "the aforesaid power projects," will
jeopardize its policy respecting the conservation of potable waters
and work serious injury to reservoirs and waterworks constructed
and used in that connection, will deprive the state of revenue from
the leasing of its submerged lands and from the development and
conservation of water resources, and will subject the state and its
citizens to onerous restrictions and conditions not required for
the protection or promotion of navigation or of interstate or
foreign commerce.
There is no showing that the state is now engaged or about to
engage in any work or operations which the act purports to prohibit
or restrict, or that the defendants are interfering or about to
interfere with any work or operations in which the state is
engaged. If the use of particular waters in connection with the
Morris Canal or with any reservoirs and water works before the act
was passed gave rise, as the bill suggests, to a right to continue
such use, the act does not purport to disturb, but rather to
recognize,
Page 269 U. S. 339
that right, and there is no showing that the defendants are
taking or about to take any steps to prevent the state from
exercising it. Passing that right, the state is merely shown to be
contemplating power development and water conservation in the
future. There is no showing that it has determined on or is about
to proceed with any definite project. Neither is it shown that the
defendants are now taking or about to take any definite action
respecting waters bordering on or within the state, save as the
commission is about to consider and act on "various applications
from persons in New Jersey" for preliminary permits and licenses to
utilize "navigable waters on the boundary and inland" for the
development of water power. As the applications are not further
described, it must be assumed that the permits are sought, as the
act provides, "for the sole purpose of maintaining priority of
application for a license," and that the licenses are sought
conformably to the provision requiring applicants to submit
satisfactory evidence of compliance with the laws of the state with
respect to "the appropriation, diversion and use of water for power
purposes" and to "the right to engage in" that business. While the
state is thus apparently put in the position of objecting to the
licensing of projects sanctioned by its own laws, the bill explains
that the objection is chiefly to the restrictions and conditions to
which, according to the terms of the act, an applicant is deemed to
assent by seeking and accepting a license. These restrictions and
conditions are assailed in the bill as passing beyond the field of
congressional power and invading that reserved to the state. But
whether they are thus invalid cannot be made the subject of
judicial inquiry until they are given or are about to be given some
practical application and effect. Naturally this will be after they
become part of an accepted license, and after some right,
privilege, immunity, or duty asserted under them becomes the
subject of actual controversy.
Page 269 U. S. 340
Such a situation is not presented here. As respects the state's
submerged lands, the bill signally fails to disclose any existing
controversy within the range of the judicial power. Stating merely
that the state will be deprived of revenue from the leasing of such
lands is not enough. Facts must be stated showing that the act is
being or about to be applied in a way which does or will encroach
on or prejudicially affect the state's qualified right in the
lands. There is no such showing.
The state places some reliance on
Pennsylvania v. West
Virginia, 262 U. S. 553. But
in this it overlooks important factors in that decision. Two bills
substantially alike -- one by Pennsylvania and the other by Ohio --
were considered. Both were brought to prevent the enforcement of a
West Virginia statute restricting the carrying of natural gas from
that state into others. The gas had been for several years carried
in large and continuous volume through pipelines into Pennsylvania
and Ohio, and those states had come to be largely dependent on it
as a fuel for public institutions and otherwise. The statute, in
its first section, imposed on the pipeline carriers an
unconditional and mandatory duty (opinion, p.
262 U. S. 593)
which, if respected, would largely prevent this supply of fuel from
moving into Pennsylvania and Ohio and would subject those states to
great loss. The bills disclosed that the situation when they were
brought was such that the statute directly and immediately would
effect a serious diminution of the volume of gas carried into the
complaining states, and on which they were dependent (p.
262 U. S.
594). Of the cases thus presented, the Court said:
"Each suit presents a direct issue between two states as to
whether one may withdraw a natural product, a common subject of
commercial dealings, from an established current of commerce moving
into the territory of the other. The complainant state asserts, and
the defendant
Page 269 U. S. 341
state denies, that such a withdrawal is an interference with
interstate commerce forbidden by the Constitution. This is
essentially a judicial question. It concededly is so in suits
between private parties, and, of course, its character is not
different in a suit between states."
"What is sought is not an abstract ruling on that question, but
an injunction against such a withdrawal presently threatened and
likely to be productive of great injury. The purpose to withdraw is
shown in the enactment of the defendant state before set forth and
is about to be carried into effect by her officers acting in her
name and at her command."
This bill falls far short of showing a situation like that
presented there, and what it does show falls on the other side of
the jurisdictional line.
Our conclusion is that the bill cannot be entertained.
Bill dismissed.