1. Plaintiffs in the federal court secured a decree enjoining
state officers from enforcing state statute as unconstitutional. A
proceeding of mandamus, to which they were not parties, was pending
before the state supreme court in which the same officers had been
commanded to execute the statute, as valid. Further action in the
mandamus case was suspended by the state court to await final
decision of the constitutional question by this Court on appeal in
the injunction suit.
Held that Jud.Code § 265, 28
U.S.C. § 379, which provides that a writ of injunction shall
not be granted by any court of the United States to stay
proceedings in any court of a State, is inapplicable . P.
306 U. S.
378.
2. State legislation providing standards for all cement sold or
used in the State, and requiring inspection and imposing an
"inspection fee" of fifteen cents per hundredweight -- sixty times
the cost of inspection -- in respect of cement imported from
abroad, 30% of the cement sold or used in the State, whilst
requiring no inspection and exacting no fee in respect of domestic
cement --
held invalid under the commerce clause of the
Constitution. Pp.
306 U. S. 378,
306 U. S.
380.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court of three judges which
enjoined the appellants, members of the State Road Department of
Florida, from enforcing a Florida statute. The court below filed no
opinion.
Page 306 U. S. 376
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case is here on appeal, under § 266 of the Judicial
Code, 28 U.S.C. § 380, to review the final decree of a
three-judge District Court enjoining appellants, constituting the
State Road Department of Florida, from enforcing against appellees
relevant provisions of a Florida statute. Acts 1937, c. 18995,
Fla.Comp.Gen.Laws Supp. c. CVIII, §§ 4151(512)-(519). The
statute provides for the inspection of all imported cement and the
payment for such inspection of a fee of fifteen cents per hundred
pounds. A motion to dismiss the bill having been overruled, and
appellants having elected to stand on the bill, a final decree was
duly entered.
At the threshold, a challenge to the jurisdiction of the
District Court must be met. It derives from § 265 of the
Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 379, for it is claimed that the
injunction in effect stayed proceedings in the Supreme Court of
Florida. Disposition of this claim entails a quick narrative of the
course of litigation disclosed by the record.
On July 29, 1937, a petition for mandamus was filed in the
Supreme Court of Florida by the State of Florida
ex
Page 306 U. S. 377
rel. Florida Portland Cement Company to compel
appellants, members of the State Road Department, to enforce the
statute in question, and, on the same day, an alternative writ of
mandamus was issued. Appellants' demurrer, raising the
constitutionality of the statute, was overruled on October 12,
1937.
State v. Hale, 129 Fla. 588, 176 So. 577. A
peremptory writ of mandamus on November 17, 1937, directed
appellants to enforce the statute. Meanwhile, on November 4, 1937,
appellee Bimco Trading, Inc. filed its bill of complaint in this
suit to enjoin the enforcement of the statute as forbidden,
inter alia, by Article 1, § 8, cl. 3, and Article 1,
§ 10, cl. 2, of the Constitution. On November 27, 1937, the
District Court granted an interlocutory injunction restraining
appellants from enforcing the statute. Thereafter, appellants moved
the Supreme Court of Florida to stay the mandamus proceedings
pending an appeal to this Court from the order of the District
Court, and on December 9, 1937, the Florida court ordered
"that all further proceedings and actions taken pursuant to the
peremptory Writ of Mandamus heretofore issued in this cause be, and
the same is hereby, stayed until the final decision of the Supreme
Court of the United States upon the constitutionality of the Act
involved in this cause and until the further order of this
Court."
This cause was then prosecuted with dispatch. On March 8, 1938,
appellants' motion to dismiss, which had been filed on November 24,
1937, was overruled, and, appellants refusing to plead over, the
District Court, on June 14, 1938, entered a final decree
permanently enjoining the enforcement of the statute.
To invoke § 265 in these circumstances is to assert that a
successful mandamus proceeding in a state court against state
officials to enforce a challenged statute bars injunctive relief in
a United States district court against enforcement of the statute
by state officials at the suit of
Page 306 U. S. 378
strangers to the state court proceedings. This assumes that the
mandamus proceeding bound the independent suitor in the federal
court as though he were a party to the litigation in the state
court. This, of course, is not so.
Chase National Bank v.
Norwalk, 291 U. S. 431,
291 U. S.
441.
Appellants are, in effect, contending that no proceedings are
here available to bring the constitutionality of the Florida
statute before this Court once the state court directed its
enforcement. The Supreme Court of Florida itself manifested no such
strangling conception of § 265. It did not deem the
proceedings initiated below as a denial of the right of way of a
state court through an obstructive exercise of authority by a
United States court. On the contrary, in staying "all further
proceedings and actions" until this Court had finally passed upon
its constitutionality, the Supreme Court of Florida recognized the
propriety of the present proceedings as an orderly mode for
invoking the ultimate judicial voice on constitutional issues.
Therefore, § 265 has no relevance here. That provision is an
historical mechanism (Act of March 2, 1793, 1 Stat. 334, 335) for
achieving harmony in one phase of our complicated federalism by
avoiding needless friction between two systems of courts having
potential jurisdiction over the same subject matter.
Wells
Fargo & Co. v. Taylor, 254 U. S. 175,
254 U. S. 183.
The present record presents no occasion for bringing this safeguard
into play.
We turn therefore to the merits.
After reciting that,
"during the past twelve months. approximately thirty percentum
(30%) of all cement sold and used in Florida was manufactured in
foreign countries and imported;"
that cement is "an integral part of the construction" of "large
numbers" of buildings; that "much of the foreign manufactured
cement . . . brought into the Florida has been of inferior
Page 306 U. S. 379
quality;" that
"the importation . . . and use of foreign cement not only
jeopardizes public safety but amounts to unfair competition being
forced on this great industry in Florida,"
the legislature of that State, in 1937, enacted the statute in
controversy. Section 1 authorizes the State Road Department of
Florida "to fix a minimum standard for all cement offered for sale
or sold or used" within the State. Section 2 enforces obedience to
standards of quality thus to be set by the Department by provisions
for inspection and for exaction of an inspection fee of fifteen
cents per hundred weight. It is this section which gives the
statute teeth. But this section -- the scheme for inspection and
for the inspection fee -- applies only to "cement imported or
brought into the Florida from any foreign Country. . . ." The
statute thus renders the 70% domestic cement immune from its
requirements of inspection and its attendant fee. According to the
uncontested allegation of the bill of complaint, this inspection
fee is "sixty times the actual cost of inspection." Apart from this
allegation, the Government, appearing as
amicus and more
particularly on behalf of the national interest represented by the
Trade Agreements Act, 48 Stat. 943, 19 U.S.C. § 1351, gives
perspective to the size of the fifteen cent fee by comparing it
with the duty of six cents per one hundred pounds fixed by the
Hawley-Smoot Act of 1930 (46 Stat. 590, 602, 19 U.S.C. § 1001,
par. 205(b)), and with the duty of four and one-half cents fixed by
the Belgian Trade Agreement of 1935 (49 Stat. 3680, 3691; 19 U.S.C.
§ 1351).
As grounds for this discrimination in the incidence of an
obviously onerous exaction as between foreign and domestic cement,
the preamble of the statute states that
"it is of paramount importance to the public safety that only
cement measuring up to a minimum standard should be offered for
sale, sold, or used in the state of Florida, "
Page 306 U. S. 380
and that the importation "amounts to unfair competition being
forced on this great industry in Florida." So far as public safety
demands certain standards in the quality of cement, such safety is
dependent on assurance of that quality by appropriate inspection no
less of the 70% domestic cement than of the 30% obtained from
abroad. That no Florida cement needs any inspection, while all
foreign cement requires inspection at a cost of fifteen cents per
hundredweight, is too violent an assumption to justify the
discrimination here disclosed. The other justification -- the
competitive effect of foreign cement in the Florida market -- is
rather a candid admission that the very purpose of the statute is
to keep out foreign goods. The Supreme Court of Florida gives no
reason resting in local conditions for what appears to be a
transparent discrimination in the imposition of heavy inspection
fees as between imported and domestic cement, and none has been
offered by appellants. The context of a particular statute may
justify distinctive treatment of phases of interstate or foreign
commerce. The circumstances may negative apparent discrimination in
the difference of treatment. Such was the situation in
McLean
& Co. v. Denver & Rio Grande R. Co., 203 U. S.
38, referred to by the Florida Supreme Court. But this
is not that kind of a case. According the statute every presumption
of validity, no reasonable conjecture can here overcome the
calculated discrimination against foreign commerce.
Such assumption of national powers by a state has, ever since
March 12, 1827 (
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419), been found to be in
collision with the Constitution. It can never be pleasant to
invalidate the enactment of a state, particularly when it bears the
imprimatur of constitutionality by the highest court of the state.
But it would not be easy to imagine a statute more clearly designed
than the present to circumvent what the Commerce
Page 306 U. S. 381
Clause forbids.
Cook v. Pennsylvania, 97 U. S.
566,
97 U. S. 567;
Voight v. Wright, 141 U. S. 62. This
makes it unnecessary to consider the objections urged under Article
1, § 10, cl. 2.
The decree of the District Court is
Affirmed.