1. The business of tobacco warehouses in Georgia is affected
with a public interest, and their charges to growers for handling
and selling leaf tobacco are subject to reasonable regulation by
the State. P.
301 U. S.
449.
2. Statutory rates or charges are presumed to be reasonable; he
who attacks them as confiscatory has the burden of proving them so.
P.
301 U. S.
450.
3. A legislature, acting within its sphere, is presumed to know
the needs of the people of its State. P.
301 U. S.
451.
The existence of the tobacco industry in Georgia, the
transactions of the tobacco markets, and the necessity of
protecting the growers from exorbitant warehouse charges must be
presumed
Page 301 U. S. 442
to have been fully known to the members of the legislature, and
this presumption cannot be overthrown by testimony of individual
legislators.
4. Practically all the tobacco grown in Georgia is shipped out
of the State in foreign or interstate commerce; the purchasers at
the "markets" in Georgia for the most part are manufacturers of
cigarettes who immediately have the tobacco transported to their
plants outside the State; other purchases made by speculators and
warehousemen are for the purpose of resale as soon as possible to
the cigarette manufacturers, and thus the tobacco so bought, as
well as the rest, is destined for interstate or foreign shipment.
Held that, if it be assumed that Congress has authority to
regulate charges of the warehousemen, such authority has not been
exercised by the Tobacco Inspection Act of August 23, 1935. P.
301 U. S.
452.
5. Congress may circumscribe its regulation of interstate
commerce and occupy a limited field, and the intent to supersede
the exercise by the its police power as to matters not covered by
the Federal legislation is not to be implied unless the latter,
fairly interpreted, is in actual conflict with the state law. P.
301 U. S.
454.
6. The Georgia statute here in question, fixing reasonable
maximum charges for the services of warehousemen, in aid of the
tobacco growers but not attempting to fix the prices for which the
tobacco is sold at auction in Georgia or to regulate the activities
of purchasers, lays no actual burden upon interstate or foreign
commerce in the tobacco. P.
301
U.S. 455.
7. Federal power over a field of interstate commerce may be
exclusive, though unexercised, when the subject is such as to
demand uniformity of regulation; but, in matters admitting of
diversity of local treatment according to local requirements, the
States, in the absence of congressional regulation, are at liberty
to act. P.
301 U.S.
455.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court of three judges
dismissing a bill in a suit to restrain the enforcement of a
statute fixing maximum charges for handling and selling leaf
tobacco.
Page 301 U. S. 443
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by tobacco warehousemen to restrain the
enforcement of a statute of Georgia, approved March 28, 1935,
fixing maximum charges for handling and selling leaf tobacco.
Ga.Laws 1935, pp. 476-478.
The statute was assailed as an arbitrary and capricious exercise
of state power, repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Federal Constitution, and as placing a direct burden upon
interstate commerce in violation of the commerce clause. The
hearing in the District Court was by three judges (28 U.S.C. §
380) and, upon findings, of fact and conclusions of law, a final
decree was entered dismissing the bill of complaint, one judge
dissenting. The case comes here on appeal.
The facts found by the District Court with respect to the
tobacco industry in Georgia and the nature of the transactions at
the warehouses are not in dispute. It appears that this industry is
relatively new, beginning in 1917, but, by the year 1925, it was
becoming well established. The type of tobacco grown in Georgia is
the "bright leaf," which is almost exclusively used in the
manufacture of cigarettes. This variety is grown extensively in
North Carolina, to a much less extent in South Carolina and
Georgia, and to some extent in Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
The acreage planted by the individual farmer in Georgia is
comparatively small, but the aggregate acreage is now not only very
considerable, but is widely distributed over a large area in the
southern portion of the state.
The necessity for markets and the early maturity of the tobacco
in Georgia presented an opportunity which
Page 301 U. S. 444
was early recognized by experienced and skilled warehousemen who
were operating in the tobacco belts of North Carolina and other
states, where selling seasons began some time after the termination
of the selling season in Georgia. With few exceptions, competent
warehousemen, and experienced and skilled auctioneers and helpers
in handling and selling tobacco are not found in Georgia, and must
be obtained from other states. There were forty-five warehouses
operated in 1935, thirty-nine of which were connected in some
capacity with warehouses in North Carolina, Kentucky, Virginia, or
Tennessee.
The principal purchasers of the bright leaf tobacco grown in
Georgia and elsewhere are limited to a few large manufacturers of
cigarettes. These are called "the Companies." They purchase tobacco
only at warehouse auction sales to which they send or furnish
"buyers." Each buyer is the representative of one of the competing
purchasers, and a "set of buyers," usually from eight to twelve in
number, is made up of representatives from each of the purchasing
cigarette manufacturers. The presence of a "set of buyers" is
essential at an auction sale. A town having one or more warehouses
is known as a "market." By sending a set of buyers to a new
warehouse, the manufacturers may recognize a new market, and, by
refusing to send one to a old market, may cause its abandonment,
and, by sending either one or two sets of buyers to a given market,
the manufacturers may determine the rapidity with which the
accumulated tobacco may be disposed of. There is another class of
purchasers known as "speculators." These on rare occasions buy
tobacco from a grower and have it transported to a warehouse for
sale. At auction sales, speculators to a limited extent, as
compared with buyers, purchase tobacco for a later sale. There is
strenuous and expensive competition between warehousemen in
securing tobacco from growers to be
Page 301 U. S. 445
handled and sold, but, in the sale of tobacco, there is no
competition except such as exists between the respective buyers and
speculators at the auction sales, and the bids of the warehousemen
themselves.
The tobacco belt in Georgia comprises about twenty counties in
the southern part of the state, and in 1935 there were fifteen
towns known as "markets." Seven of the markets were supplied with
one set of buyers, and eight were furnished two sets. The "two set
markets" had a total of thirty, and the "one set markets" a total
of fifteen, warehouses in operation. The quantity of tobacco sold
in the warehouses and the average prices ranged from 106,483,019
pounds at 9.86 cents per pound in 1930, to 71,826,352 pounds at
18.91 cents per pound in 1935.
After the tobacco has been cured and is ready for the market,
the grower grades it as best he can and the resulting "piles" of
loose leaves are placed in sheets which are then tied and the
tobacco is so transported to the selected warehouse for sale.
Auction sales are held daily during five days of the week, and in
any particular warehouse as often as sufficient tobacco
accumulates. It is essential that there be present the
warehouseman, an auctioneer, and other skilled help, and one set of
buyers. The warehouseman makes the opening bid. If this is not
taken or raised by another, the warehouseman generally becomes the
purchaser of the tobacco for his own account. If not sold in that
fashion, the bidding continues until the sale is announced. The
grower or other owner may turn down the sale, and, in such case, he
may hold the tobacco for a later sale or remove it. After the sale
has been completed, the tobacco is delivered to the purchaser, who
removes it from the floor. The purchaser has it reweighed and pays
the warehouseman. The warehouseman then pays the seller the
purchase price, less warehouse charges. Tobacco purchased by the
warehouseman is afterwards sold by him at auction.
Page 301 U. S. 446
The tobacco is ready for the market in the latter part of July
or early in August. The exact date for opening the selling season
is fixed by the manufacturers, who are the principal buyers, and
the warehousemen. The selling season is from three to five weeks in
length. The short tobacco season causes growers to rush tobacco to
the market, and does not give them a fair opportunity "to properly
grade, store, bundle, and orderly market their tobacco." The short
season is in large part occasioned by the efforts of the
manufacturers to transfer their buyers to the North Carolina belts,
in some of which the selling seasons begin early in September, and
the efforts of the warehousemen to dispose of the tobacco in
Georgia so that they and their auctioneers and other skilled
employees may proceed to the later and larger seasons of North
Carolina and other states.
When the act in question was passed, the warehouse charges,
based upon three elements, the sale value, the number of piles
handled, and the weight of the quantity sold, were as follows:
Commissions: 2 1/2 percent on gross sales.
Auction fees: 25 cents per pile up to 200 pounds; 50 cents per
pile above 200 pounds.
Weighing and handling fees: 25 cents per pile up to 100 pounds,
and 25 cents for each additional 100 pounds.
The act of 1935 prescribed the following maximum charges:
Commissions: 2 1/2 percent on gross sales.
Auction fees: 15 cents on all piles of 100 pounds or less; 25
cents on all piles over 100 pounds.
Weighing and handling fees: 10 cents per pile of 100 pounds or
less, and 10 cents for each additional 100 pounds.
It will be observed that the statutory reduction is confined to
the auction fees and the charges for weighing and handling. The
percentage reduction is difficult of
Page 301 U. S. 447
exact determination. Complainants say that the gross income of
the warehousemen will be reduced about 20 percent The difference in
dollars between the amount which complainants would have received
in 1935 under the former schedule and the amount of which they
would be entitled under the act is found to be $115,920.90, and
this amount was paid into the registry of the court. Statutes in
North Carolina and South Carolina fix the same scale of charges as
those prescribed by the Georgia act. No attack has been made upon
the constitutionality of these statutes. The scale heretofore in
effect in Georgia "is not so high as the nonstatutory Tennessee or
Kentucky charges."
The District Court made additional findings, which appellants
challenge, with respect to the control exercised by the
warehousemen over the charges made for their services and their
common agreement as to the amount of these charges. The court found
that, by reason of their control of the warehouses, "warehousemen
have, unless regulated by law, an unduly coercive control over the
prices charged the growers for services;" that, beginning with the
tobacco selling season of 1927, all warehousemen in Georgia have
uniformly maintained "a hard and fast schedule of charges;" that,
while there have been some exceptions, they are "so insignificant
as to be immaterial;" that, prior to 1927, the warehousemen in
Georgia for many years, if not from the beginning of the
industry,
"had maintained and exacted from sellers of tobacco a uniform
schedule of charges substantially, if not identically, the same as
the schedule fixed by the Act of 1935."
The court also found that the propriety of charging more for
handling tobacco in Georgia than in the Carolinas had not been
established; that it had not been shown that the Georgia act "was
passed without any knowledge on the part of the legislature as to
actual conditions
Page 301 U. S. 448
under which the business was, and is, being carried on in
Georgia;" that it had not been proved "what each or any
warehouseman, individual or corporate, lost in revenue by reason of
the scale of charges prescribed by the act;" that it was not denied
"that some warehousemen earned a satisfactory profit," and it had
not been proved that, where a loss occurred it was not due
"to excessive competition, ill-advised loans, unnecessary
expenses in buying influence or hauling customers' tobacco, or
other causes than the reduction in charges."
The court observed that the testimony as to the effects of the
act was with respect to the
"group of warehousemen who are complainants, rather than to the
effect on each one, and even then it was not proven that all the
losses are traceable to the reduction in charges, rather than to
other causes."
The court made findings with regard to the organization known as
the "Tobacco Warehousemen's Association" of which all the
complainants were members. The court said that the prosecution of
the suit was "an organized fight through the Warehousemen's
Association;" that the growers are not eligible for membership in
that organization; that "the Association and the buyers determine
the date the market in Georgia opens and substantially determine
the date on which it closes;" that the Association undertakes to
deal with such practices as affect the interest of the members, and
adopt rules which they are to observe. The court quoted from the
minutes of meetings certain action tending to support the view that
there was a common agreement as to warehouse charges and a concert
of action in relation to the present suit. The court concluded
that, "through the Warehousemen's Association and their common
agreement" as to charges, the complainants "maintain and enjoy a
virtual monopoly in the field covered by their operations;" that
the business of tobacco warehousemen in Georgia in 1935,
Page 301 U. S. 449
and for some years prior thereto, was such as to cause it to be
"affected with a public interest;" that the scale of charges
prescribed by the act was "not unreasonable, arbitrary, and
capricious," but was "reasonably adapted to accomplish the desired
result;" and that the fixing of charges for the services rendered
by the warehousemen did "not burden or interfere with interstate
commerce."
First. Unless there is conflict with the authority of
the Congress over interstate commerce, the enactment of the statute
was clearly within the competency of the Georgia Legislature. While
appellants' assignment of errors challenge the conclusion of the
District Court that the business of the tobacco warehouses was one
"affected with a public interest," their counsel conceded in the
argument at bar that the challenge could not be sustained. That
concession was appropriate in view of the evidence and the
findings. The uncontroverted facts with respect to the nature and
extent of the tobacco industry, the establishment of markets for
public sales, and the dependence of the industry upon the services
of the warehousemen in connection with these sales show beyond
cavil the public interest in these markets and in the maintenance
of reasonable charges for the services there rendered.
A similar conception of public interest, reenforced by abundant
experience, is reflected in the legislation of other tobacco
growing states. In Virginia, the sale of tobacco in public
warehouses has long been regulated by statute, and maximum charges
have been fixed. Code of Virginia 1887, §§ 1820-1825;
1924, §§ 1376-1381. In North Carolina, such regulation
goes back to an early day.
See Consolidated Statutes of
North Carolina, § 5124
et seq. In
Gray v. Central
Warehouse Co., 181 N.C. 166, 106 S.E. 657, 660, the Supreme
Court of that state, after summarizing the local legislation upon
that subject since 1895, goes on to say:
Page 301 U. S. 450
"Indeed, as far back as the history of the state extends, the
business of tobacco warehouses has been, if not a public duty,
always 'affected with a public use.' The laws of North Carolina
from 1669 to 1790 have been compiled as State Records, vols. 23,
24, and 25, by the writer of this opinion [Chief Justice Clark],
and in the index thereto, in the last-named volume, it appears that
no less than 75 statutes were enacted prior to 1790 in regard to
tobacco warehouses requiring inspection, regulation, and fixing
charges in such business. To the fullest extent, therefore, their
regulation and control by the public has been recognized and
enforced in this state. In fact, there is no subject in which the
protection of the producers against extortion and combinations to
reduce prices is more important."
In South Carolina, maximum charges for selling leaf tobacco upon
the floor of tobacco warehouses are fixed.Code, South Carolina
1932, § 7197, and earlier statutes there cited. The statute of
Georgia here under attack copies almost exactly the South Carolina
statute.
See also, as to the authority of the state,
Nash v. Page, 80 Ky. 539;
Pannell v. Louisville
Tobacco Warehouse Co., 113 Ky. 630.
So far as the present controversy turns upon the power of the
state to give this sort of protection to this industry, provided
its regulation is not arbitrary or confiscatory and in the absence
of conflict with the federal power over commerce, our rulings are
decisive in support of the state action.
Munn v. Illinois,
94 U. S. 113;
Budd v. New York, 143 U. S. 517;
Brass v. Stoeser, 153 U. S. 391;
German Alliance Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 233 U.
S. 389;
O'Gorman & Young v. Hartford Insurance
Co., 282 U. S. 251;
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S. 502.
Confiscation is not shown. The presumption of reasonableness has
not been overthrown.
O'Gorman & Young v. Hartford Insurance
Co., supra. It is apparent
Page 301 U. S. 451
that the return to the warehousemen will largely be governed by
the volume and value of the tobacco crop. The evidence relates
chiefly to the years of the great depression, and affords no
appropriate criterion for a more normal period. Moreover, we find
no sufficient ground for disturbing the finding of the District
Court that the evidence did not satisfactorily establish what any
warehouseman, individual or corporate, lost by reason of the
prescribed scale of charge, in contradistinction to its effect upon
the warehousemen as a group.
See Aetna Insurance Co. v.
Hyde, 275 U. S. 440,
275 U. S.
447-448. The burden resting upon appellants to make a
convincing showing that the statutory rates would operate so
severely as to deprive them, respectively, of their property
without due process of law, was not sustained.
Aetna Insurance
Co. v. Hyde, supra; Los Angeles Gas & Electric Corp. v.
Railroad Commission, 289 U. S. 287,
289 U. S.
304-305;
Lindheimer v. Illinois Bell Telephone
Co., 292 U. S. 151,
292 U. S. 164;
Dayton Power & Light Co. v. Public Utilities Comm'n,
292 U. S. 290,
292 U. S.
298.
Appellants contend that the legislative action was taken without
investigation, and hence must be considered to be arbitrary and
beyond the legislative power. There is no principle of
constitutional law which nullifies action taken by a legislature,
otherwise competent, in the absence of a special investigation. The
result of particular legislative inquiries, through commissions or
otherwise, may be most helpful in portraying the exigencies to
which the legislative action has been addressed and in fortifying
conclusions as to reasonableness.
Nebbia v. New York,
supra, pp.
291 U. S. 516
et seq. But the Legislature, acting within its sphere, is
presumed to know the needs of the people of the state. Whether or
not special inquiries should be made is a matter for the
legislative discretion. Here, the existence of the industry, highly
important to the state, the transactions in the tobacco markets,
the
Page 301 U. S. 452
necessity of protecting the growers from exorbitant warehouse
charges, must be presumed to have been fully known to the members
of the Legislature, and this presumption cannot be overthrown, as
it has been sought to be overthrown, by testimony of individual
legislators.
Second. The main contention of appellants is that the
state had no power to enact the regulation as it attempted to
govern transactions in the course of interstate and foreign
commerce. Appellants urge that practically all the tobacco grown in
Georgia is shipped out of the state, about 40 percent in foreign,
and the remaining 60 percent in interstate, commerce; that the
purchasers at the "markets" in Georgia for the most part are
manufacturers of cigarettes who immediately have the tobacco
transported to their plants outside the state; that the purchases
made by speculators and warehousemen are for the purpose of resale
as soon as possible to the cigarette manufacturers, and thus that
the tobacco so brought, as well as the rest, "is destined for
interstate or foreign shipment."
We find it unnecessary to pass upon the authority of the
Congress to regulate the charges of the warehousemen, for we are of
the opinion that, if it be assumed that Congress has that
authority, it has not been exercised, and, in the absence of such
exercise, the state may impose the regulation in question for the
protection of its people.
The federal statute to which appellants refer is the "Tobacco
Inspection Act" of August 23, 1935. 49 Stat. 731. That statute,
while declaring the transactions in tobacco at auction markets to
be "affected with a public interest" (§ 2) had a limited
objective. It did not undertake to regulate the charges of
warehousemen or in any way to derogate from the existing state
legislation upon that subject. It sought to aid tobacco growers by
establishing and promoting the use of standards of classification,
and by maintaining an official inspection service.
Page 301 U. S. 453
It was found that the farmer had "no definite system of grades
of his own," that the private grading systems used by the buyers
were kept "strictly confidential," so that, "without Government
standards, the farmer has no definite guide for sorting his
tobacco," and that hence "farmers generally are unable to class
their tobacco correctly to meet the trade's demands." [
Footnote 1] To meet this need, the act
authorized the Secretary of Agriculture to make investigations and
to establish standards for tobacco "by which its type, grade, size,
condition, or other characteristics" might be determined (§
3). It authorized the Secretary to designate auction markets, on
determining "by referendum the desire of tobacco growers," but it
was also provided that the act should not be construed as
preventing transactions in tobacco at markets not so designated
(§ 5). It authorized the Secretary, independently or in
cooperation with other branches of the government, state agencies,
or others, to employ the license competent persons as samplers or
weighers, but it was added that this provision was "intended merely
to provide for the furnishing or services upon request of the owner
or other person financially interested in tobacco to be sampled,
inspected, or weighed," and should "not be construed otherwise"
(§ 6). And the Secretary was further authorized, in order to
carry out the purposes of the act, to "cooperate with any other
Department or agency of the Government; any State, territory,
district, or possession," as well as with purchasing and consuming
organizations, boards of trade, etc. (§ 14).
The Congress, as the reports of the committees in both Houses
show, [
Footnote 2] was fully
conversant with the manner in which the transactions in tobacco
were carried on. It
Page 301 U. S. 454
cannot be doubted that the Congress was well aware of the long
established legislation in Virginia, North Carolina, South
Carolina, and the more recent legislation in Georgia, prescribing
maximum charges for the services of warehousemen. We deem it to be
highly significant that, in the light of existing practices and
statutory regulations, the Congress carefully restricted its own
requirements, and did not attempt to interfere with the operation
of state laws as to the amounts which warehousemen might charge.
The purpose and terms of the federal statute negative any such
intention. It is inconceivable that the Congress, in endeavoring to
aid the tobacco growers in sorting or "grading," and thus to
facilitate the marketing of their tobacco, intended to deprive them
of the protection they already had against extortionate charges of
the warehousemen upon whom they depended in making their sales.
Instead of frustrating the operation of such state laws, the
provisions of the act expressly afforded and emphasized the
opportunity for cooperation with the states in protecting the
farmers' interests. In this view, we find no ground for the
contention that Congress has taken possession of the field of
regulation to the exclusion of state laws which do not conflict
with its own requirements.
The case calls for the application of the well established
principle that Congress may circumscribe its regulation and occupy
a limited field, and that the intent to supersede the exercise by
the state of its police power as to matters not covered by the
federal legislation is not to be implied unless the latter fairly
interpreted is in actual conflict with the state law.
Savage v.
Jones, 225 U. S. 501,
225 U. S. 533;
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Georgia, 234 U.
S. 280,
234 U. S.
293-294;
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Public Utilities
Comm'n, 245 U. S. 493,
245 U. S. 510;
Carey v. South Dakota, 250 U. S. 118,
250 U. S. 122;
Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Public Utility Comm'n,
278 U. S. 24,
278 U. S. 35;
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry.
Co. v.
Page 301 U. S. 455
Railroad Comm'rs, 283 U. S. 380,
283 U. S.
392-393;
Hartford Indemnity Co. v. Illinois,
298 U. S. 155,
298 U. S.
158.
Laying on one side the federal statute as in no way
inconsistent, we find no ground for concluding that the state
requirements lay any actual burden upon interstate or foreign
commerce. The Georgia act does not attempt to fix the prices at the
auction sales or to regulate the activities of the purchasers. The
fixing of reasonable maximum charges for the services of the
warehousemen in aid of the tobacco growers does not militate
against any interest of those who buy. They pay the bid price, as
accepted, and the warehouseman pays the seller, deducting from the
purchase price the warehouse charges.
We are thus brought to the final contention of appellants that
the state law, although not in conflict with any exertion of
federal authority, must fall as being repugnant to the existence of
an exclusive federal power although unexercised. The contention
ignores the principle that this ground of invalidity is to be found
only with respect to such matters as demand a general system or
uniformity of regulation; that, in other matters, admitting of
diversity of treatment according to the special requirements of
local conditions, the states may act within their respective
jurisdictions until Congress sees fit to act.
Cooley v.
Board of Wardens, 12 How. 299,
53 U. S. 319;
Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U. S. 352,
230 U. S.
399-400;
Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U.
S. 610,
235 U. S. 622;
Morris v. Duby, 274 U. S. 135,
274 U. S. 143;
Sproles v. Binford, 286 U. S. 374,
286 U. S.
390.
In the instant case, the Georgia statute deals with a local
need, exercising the state's protective power with respect to its
own industry. A similar contention to that now advanced was held
untenable in
Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S.
113, where state regulation of charges by the
proprietors of grain elevators was sustained despite the fact that
the elevators were used as instrumentalities by those
Page 301 U. S. 456
who engaged in interstate commerce.
Id., p.
94 U. S. 135.
The point was again raised and overruled in
Budd v. New
York, 143 U. S. 517, in
upholding the New York statute regulating charges for "elevating,
trimming, receiving, weighing, and discharging grain by means of
floating and stationery elevators and warehouses." It was
recognized that, in the actual state of the business, the passage
of the grain to the city of New York and other places on the
seaboard without the use of elevators would be practically
impossible. The elevator at Buffalo was a link in the chain of
transportation of the grain from the places where it was grown to
the seaboard, but the Court said:
"So far as the statute in question is a regulation of commerce,
it is a regulation of commerce only on the waters of the State of
New York. It operates only within the limits of that state, and is
no more obnoxious as a regulation of interstate commerce than was
the statute of Illinois in respect to warehouses in
Munn v.
Illinois. It is of the same character with navigation laws in
respect to navigation within the state, and laws regulating
wharfage rates within the state, and other kindred laws."
Id., pp.
143 U. S.
544-545. Again, in
Brass v. North Dakota,
153 U. S. 391, the
statute of that state "regulating grain warehouses and weighing and
handling of grain" was held not to amount to a regulation of
commerce between the states in the absence of a conflict with
federal legislation, upon the authority of the
Munn and
Budd cases.
In
Cargill Co. v. Minnesota, 180 U.
S. 452,
180 U. S. 470,
the requirement of a state license for grain warehouses on railroad
rights of way was found to be not inconsistent with the power of
the Congress, although the warehouse company purchased the grain,
handled in or shipped from its warehouse, for the purpose of
transporting it as its property to its terminal elevators in
Wisconsin and Illinois, and thence to other points in the eastern
states.
Id., p.
Page 301 U. S. 457
180 U. S. 462.
The Court thus stated the reasons for this conclusion:
"The statute puts no obstacle in the way of the purchase by the
defendant company of grain in the state or the shipment out of the
state of such grain as it purchased. The license has reference only
to the business of the defendant at its elevator and warehouse. The
statute only requires a license in respect of business conducted at
an established warehouse in the state between the defendant and the
sellers of grain. . . . In no real or substantial sense is such
commerce obstructed by the requirement of a license."
See also Merchants' Exchange v. Missouri, 248 U.
S. 365,
248 U. S.
368.
Even where the federal government has intervened, as in the
United States Warehousing Act of August 11, 1916, 7 U.S.C. c. 10,
in providing for licenses for warehouses where agricultural
products are "stored for interstate or foreign commerce" we held
that the license did not convert the warehouseman into an
instrumentality of the federal government, and, while by means of
the licensing provisions a measure of control over those engaged in
the business was secured to the national government, still the
license did not confer upon the warehouseman immunity from state
taxation.
Federal Compress Co. v. McLean, 291 U. S.
17,
291 U. S. 22-23.
That case was followed by our decision in
Chassaniol v.
Greenwood, 291 U. S. 584, to
the effect that the business of buying and selling cotton locally
produced, processed, and warehoused was local in character, and
that a local occupation tax upon the buyer did not contravene the
commerce clause, although the course of the business was such that
all the cotton so bought was ultimately shipped by the buyer in
interstate or foreign commerce. On similar grounds, we held in
Minnesota v. Blasius, 290 U. S. 1,
290 U. S. 8, that,
because there was "a flow of interstate commerce" which was subject
to the regulating power of the Congress, it did not necessarily
follow that, in the absence of a conflict
Page 301 U. S. 458
with the exercise of that power, a state might not lay a
nondiscriminatory tax upon property which, "although connected with
that flow as a general course of business," had come to rest and
acquired a situs within the state.
All these decisions but illustrate the principle that the mere
existence of the congressional power, no conflict with its exercise
being shown, does not deprive the states of their authority to
safeguard their local interests by legislation which does not
directly burden transactions in interstate or foreign commerce.
The cases upon which appellants rely are distinguishable. In
Dahnke-Walker Co. v. Bondurant, 257 U.
S. 282, the statute held to be invalid imposed
burdensome conditions upon the enforcement of rights arising from
transactions in interstate commerce. In
Lemke v. Farmers' Grain
Co., 258 U. S. 50, the
North Dakota statute of 1919 disclosed a comprehensive scheme to
regulate the buying of grain in the course of interstate commerce.
Such purchases could be made only by those who held licenses from
the state, paid state charges for the same, and acted under a
system of grading, inspecting, and weighing fully defined in the
act. The grain could only be purchased subject to the power of the
state grain inspector to determine the margin of profit which the
buyer could realize upon his purchase. That margin of profit was
defined to be the difference between the price paid at the North
Dakota elevator and the market price, with an allowance for freight
at the Minnesota points to which the grain was shipped and sold.
The state officer was thus authorized to "fix and determine the
price" to be paid for grain which was "bought, shipped, and sold in
interstate commerce." That the provision was a regulation of
interstate commerce was said to be "obvious from its mere
statement."
Id., pp.
258 U. S. 56-58.
The later North Dakota statute of 1923 fell under a like
condemnation in
Page 301 U. S. 459
Shafer v. Farmers' Grain Co., 268 U.
S. 189, as the statute subjected the buying for
interstate shipment to conditions and a measure of control which
caused a direct interference with interstate commerce.
Here, the Georgia act lays no constraint upon purchases in
interstate commerce, does not attempt to fix the prices or
conditions of purchases or the profit of the purchasers. It simply
seeks to protect the tobacco growers from unreasonable charges of
the warehousemen for their services to the growers in handling and
selling the tobacco for their account. Whatever relation these
transactions had to interstate and foreign commerce, the effect is
merely incidental and imposes no direct burden upon that commerce.
The state is entitled to afford its industry this measure of
protection until its requirement is superseded by valid federal
regulation. The judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
See Report of the House Committee on Agriculture,
H.R.Rep. No. 1102, 74th Cong., 1st sess.; Report of Senate
Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, Sen.Rep. No. 1211, 74th
Cong., 1st sess.
[
Footnote 2]
See Note 1