1. The provision of § 39 of the Organic Act for Puerto
Rico, 48 U.S.C. § 752, that "every corporation hereafter
authorized to engage in agriculture shall by its charter be
restricted to the ownership and control of not to exceed five
hundred acres of land" is enforceable by proceedings of
quo
warranto authorized by the local legislature under § 37
of the Organic Act, 48 U.S.C. § 821, which provides that "the
legislative authority shall extend to all matters of a legislative
character not locally inapplicable. . . ." P.
309 U. S.
548.
2. Section 39 of the Organic Act of Puerto Rico is not one of
"the laws of the United States' within the meaning of the provision
of Jud.Code § 256 which vests in "the courts of the United
States . . . exclusive of the courts of the several States'
jurisdiction of all suits "for penalties and forfeitures incurred
under the laws of the United States." P.
309 U. S.
550.
106 F.2d 754 reversed.
Certiorari,
post, p. 642, to review the reversal of a
judgment of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico sustaining a
proceeding in
quo warranto.
Page 309 U. S. 544
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question here in controversy is a matter of great importance
to Puerto Rico, and involves the power of its legislature to
enforce Congressional policies affecting the Island. We therefore
brought the case here on a writ of certiorari, 309 U.S. 642, to
review a decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit. 106 F.2d 754. That court had reversed the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 53 P.R. 779 (Spanish edition)
sustaining a proceeding in
quo warranto brought against
respondent.
The proceeding was initiated in the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico
under jurisdiction conferred upon it by the local legislature. The
substance of two measures, enacted in 1935, and set out below,
authorized the Government of Puerto Rico to bring a
quo
warranto proceeding in its Supreme Court against any
corporation violating federal law. [
Footnote 1] Accordingly, the Attorney General of the
Island
Page 309 U. S. 545
brought the present suit against respondent, a corporation
organized in 1927 under Puerto Rico's corporation law. The gravamen
of the suit was alleged defiance by respondent of the Congressional
restriction imposed upon "every corporation authorized to engage in
agriculture . . . to the ownership and control of not to exceed
five hundred acres of land." This restriction, according to the
complaint, embodied "the public policy of the
Page 309 U. S. 546
People of Puerto Rico" first declared by Congress in its Joint
Resolution of May 1, 1900, 31 Stat. 715, supplementing the Foraker
Act of April 12, 1900, 31 Stat. 77. [
Footnote 2] This limitation upon the corporate ownership
of land was continued when Congress, in 1917, revised the
constitutional framework of Puerto Rico's government in what is the
existing Organic Act, § 39 of the Act of March 2, 1917, 39
Stat. 951, 964, 48 U.S.C. § 752.
The present controversy derives from the fact that Congress
affixed no direct consequences to disobedience of its land policy
for Puerto Rico. The main issue presented here is whether Puerto
Rico's Legislative Assembly has power to graft such consequences
upon the Congressional
Page 309 U. S. 547
prohibition. This was the issue as the Supreme Court of Puerto
Rico conceived it, and we are not disposed to deal with it
differently. It was suggested by the dissenting judge in the Court
of Appeals that the Supreme Court's judgment may be supported by
construing the 1935 legislation as a means of enforcing the local
land policy -- identic, to be sure, with that declared by Congress
-- embodied in the 1911 corporation law of Puerto Rico. To do so,
however, would take us into niceties of pleading and of local law
which were not canvassed by the insular court. Such a course would
be peculiarly gratuitous when the issue which the local court in
fact decided is easily resolved.
In the setting of the traditional relation between the broad
outlines designed by Congress for the government of territories and
the powers of local legislatures to move freely within those
outlines, the difficulties conjured up against the view taken by
the Puerto Rican court rapidly evaporate. The objections urged
against it illustrate vividly the power of subtle argument to give
an appearance of difficulty to what is relatively simple. The
breadth of local autonomy reposed by Congress in the Legislative
Assembly was elucidated too recently and too thoroughly in
Puerto Rico v. Shell Co., 302 U.
S. 253, to call for repetition here. Suffice it to say
that the opinion in that case underlined the fullness of scope
which Congress gave to Puerto Rico when it provided, by § 37
of the Organic Act of 1917, that "the legislative authority shall
extend to all matters of a legislative character not locally
inapplicable. . . ." 39 Stat. 964, 48 U.S.C. § 821. Drawing on
the practice of Congress in its treatment of territories throughout
our history, and assimilating that practice into the Puerto Rican
situation, the Court concluded that
"The grant of legislative power in respect of local matters,
contained in section 32 of the Foraker Act and continued in force
by section 37 of the
Page 309 U. S. 548
Organic Act of 1917, is as broad and comprehensive as language
could make it."
302 U.S. at
302 U. S.
261.
Surely nothing more immediately touches the local concern of
Puerto Rico than legislation giving effect to the Congressional
restriction on corporate land holdings. This policy was born of the
special needs of a congested population largely dependent upon the
land for its livelihood. [
Footnote
3] It was enunciated as soon as Congress became responsible for
the welfare of the Island's people, was retained against vigorous
attempts to modify it, [
Footnote
4] and was reaffirmed when Congress enlarged Puerto Rico's
powers of self-government. Surely Congress meant its action to have
significance beyond mere empty words. To treat the absence of a
specific remedy for violation of the restriction as an implied bar
against local enforcement measures is to impute to Congress a "dog
in the manger" attitude bordering on disingenuousness. We refuse to
believe that Congress was bent on the elaborate futility of a
brutum fulmen. What was said in another context,
Texas
& N.O. R. Co. v. Railway Clerks, 281 U.
S. 548,
281 U. S. 569,
is apposite here:
"The definite prohibition which Congress inserted in the act
cannot therefore be overridden in the view that Congress intended
it to be ignored. As the prohibition was appropriate to the aim of
Congress, and is capable of enforcement, the conclusion must be
that enforcement was contemplated."
The suggestion that enforcement might come only through
Page 309 U. S. 549
quo warranto proceedings by the Attorney General of the
United States is equally feckless.
A much more rational explanation, consistent with the organic
relation between Congress and the local government, is at hand. As
the ultimate legislative guardian of the Island's welfare, Congress
confined the legislature's discretion within the limits of the five
hundred acre restriction. How this policy was to be realized was
for Puerto Rico to say.
"Local authorities may ascertain facts and decide questions upon
which depends appropriate exertion of the power much more
conveniently than may the Congress."
Public Service Commission v. Havemeyer, 296 U.
S. 506,
296 U. S.
515-516.
It is admitted, as indeed, in view of the
Shell case,
it could not be denied, that the remedy here pursued would have
been available to the Legislative Assembly if that body had adopted
the Congressional policy in a substantive statute of its own. But
respondent contends that the same result cannot be achieved by
investing the insular courts with jurisdiction directly to enforce
the Congressional policy. Such useless indirection is compelled
neither by the Organic Act nor by any general consideration
underlying the distribution of power between Congress and the
insular legislature. So long as the Legislative Assembly acts
within the framework which Congress has set up, it merely avails
itself of the power conferred in § 37 of the Organic Act. It
has done so here.
There remains for consideration an objection based on § 256
of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 371. That section vests in
"the courts of the United States . . . exclusive of the courts of
the several States" jurisdiction of all suits "for penalties and
forfeitures incurred under the laws of the United States." Whether
a law passed by Congress is a "law of the United States" depends on
the meaning given to that phrase by its context. A law
Page 309 U. S. 550
for the District of Columbia, though enacted by Congress, was
held to be not a "law of the United States" within the meaning of
§ 250 of the Judicial Code, 36 Stat. 1087, 1159.
American
Security Co. v. District of Columbia, 224 U.
S. 491. Likewise, we hold that § 39 of the Organic
Act is not one of "the laws of the United States" within the
meaning of § 256. Section 39 is peculiarly concerned with
local policy calling for local enforcement from which local courts
should not be excluded by a statutory provision plainly designed
for the protection of policies having general application
throughout the United States.
Other objections urged at the bar and in respondent's brief do
not call for particular mention. On the only questions now before
us, we think the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico acted within the
scope of power validly conferred upon it by the Legislative
Assembly. [
Footnote 5] The
judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals must therefore be
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS did not participate in the decision of
this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Act No. 33 of July 22, 1935, Laws of Puerto Rico, Special
Session, 1935, p. 418, providing:
"Section 1. -- The is hereby conferred upon the Supreme Court of
Puerto Rico exclusive original jurisdiction to take cognizance of
all Quo Warranto proceedings that the Government of Puerto Rico may
hereafter institute for violations of the provisions of Section
752, Title 48, United States Code, and, for that purpose, it is
provided that the violation of said provisions shall constitute
sufficient cause to institute a proceeding of the nature of
Quo
Warranto."
"Section 2.- -- ll laws or parts of laws in conflict herewith
are hereby repealed."
"Section 3. -- This Act, being of an urgent character, shall
take effect immediately after its approval."
Act No. 47 of August 7, 1935, Laws of Puerto Rico, Special
Session, 1935, pp. 530-532, providing:
"Section 1. -- Section 2 of An Act entitled 'An Act establishing
Quo Warranto proceedings,' approved March 1, 1902, is hereby
amended as follows:"
"Section 2. -- In case any person should usurp, or unlawfully
hold or execute any public office or should unlawfully make use of
any franchise, or likewise shall hold any office in any corporation
created by and existing under the laws of Puerto Rico, or any
public officer shall have done or suffered any act which, by the
provisions of the law, involves a forfeiture of his office, or any
association or number of persons shall act within Puerto Rico as a
corporation, without being legally incorporated, or any corporation
does or omits any act which amounts to a surrender or forfeiture of
its rights and privileges as a corporation, or exercises rights not
conferred by law, the Attorney General, or any prosecuting attorney
of the respective district court, either on his own initiative or
at the instance of another person, may file before any district
court of Puerto Rico a petition for an information in the nature of
Quo Warranto in the name of The Puerto Rico; or whenever
any corporation, by itself or through any other subsidiary or
affiliated entity or agent, exercises rights, performs acts, or
makes contracts in violation of the express provisions of the
Organic Act of Puerto Rico or of any of its statutes, the Attorney
General or any district attorney, either on his own initiative or
at the instance of another person, may file before the Supreme
Court of Puerto Rico a petition for an information in the nature of
Quo Warranto in the name of The Puerto Rico, and if from
the allegations such court shall be satisfied that there is
probable ground for the proceeding, the court may grant the
petition and order the information accordingly. Where it appears to
the court that the several rights of divers parties to the same
office or franchise may properly be determined on the same
proceeding, the court may give leave to join all such persons in
the same petition, in order to try their respective rights to such
office or franchise."
"When any corporation, by itself or through any other subsidiary
or affiliated entity or agent, is unlawfully holding, under any
title, real estate in Puerto Rico, the Puerto Rico may at its
option, through the same proceedings, institue [
sic] in
its behalf the confiscation of such property, or the alienation
thereof at public auction, within a term of not more than six
months counting from the date on which final sentence is
rendered."
"In every case, alienation or confiscation shall be through the
corresponding indemnity as established in the law of eminent
domain."
[
Footnote 2]
§ 3 of the Joint Resolution provides:
"No corporation shall be authorized to conduct the business of
buying and selling real estate or be permitted to hold or own real
estate except such as may be reasonably necessary to enable it to
carry out the purposes for which it was created, and every
corporation hereafter authorized to engage in agriculture shall be
its charter be restricted to the ownership and control of not to
exceed five hundred acres of land, and this provision shall be held
to prevent any member of a corporation engaged in agriculture from
being in any wise interested in any other corporation engaged in
agriculture. Corporations, however, may loan funds upon real estate
security, and purchase real estate when necessary for the
collection of loans, but they shall dispose of real estate so
obtained within five years after receiving the title. Corporations
not organized in Porto Rico, and doing business therein, shall be
bound by the provisions of this section so far as they are
applicable."
Whether the restriction operates directly as a limitation upon
the powers of the corporation or merely as a limitation upon the
Legislative Assembly's power to confer corporate privileges, its
effect is to render corporate land ownership in excess of the
prescribed acreage unlawful.
See the opinion of Attorney
General Wickersham, 28 Op.Atty.Gen. 258, 260, 261.
[
Footnote 3]
See Gayer, Homan and James, The Sugar Economy of Puerto
Rico, pp. 97-132; Diffie, Porto Rico: A Broken Pledge, pp. 45-88;
Fleagle, Social Problems in Porto Rico, pp. 19-27; Hanson, Planning
Problems and Activities in Puerto Rico (Report to National
Resources Committee, 1936).
Compare Clark, etc., Porto
Rico and Its Problems, pp. 495-500, 628
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
See H.R. 23,000, 61st Cong.; H.Rep. No. 750, 61st
Cong., 2d Sess.; S.Rep. No. 920, 61st Cong., 3d Sess.; 45 Cong.Rec.
6861
et seq., 7220
et seq., 7584
et
seq., 7604
et seq., 8177
et seq.; 46
Cong.Rec. 2644.
[
Footnote 5]
The imposition of a fine by the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, as
a part of the power to grant relief ancillary to the main
proceeding for forfeiture of the corporate privileges, was within
the scope of authority validly conferred upon it by the 1935
legislation.
Compare Illinois v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 33
F. 721.
See High, Extraordinary Legal Remedies,
§§ 745-762.