1. A California statute prohibits the sale or arrangement of any
transportation over the public highways of the State if the
transporting carrier has no permit from the Interstate Commerce
Commission. The Federal Motor Carrier Act has substantially the
same provision respecting carriers in interstate commerce.
Respondents operate a travel bureau in Los Angeles, and receive
commissions for arranging "share expense" passenger transportation
in private automobiles. State lines are crossed in many of the
trips. Respondents were convicted of violating the state
statute.
Held: The state statute, as so applied, is not invalid
under the Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution. Pp.
726-738.
2. The fact that a federal law and a state law affecting
interstate commerce are identical does not automatically invalidate
the state law; the question to be determined, by a judgment upon
the particular case, is whether the state law conflicts with
national policy and whether Congress intended to make its
jurisdiction exclusive. Pp.
336 U. S.
728-731.
3. Normally, congressional purpose to displace local laws must
be clearly manifested, and, if the claim is conflict in terms, it
must clearly appear that the federal provisions are inconsistent
with those of the state. P.
336 U. S.
733.
4. The tradition of "usual police powers" is of aid in
determining congressional intent as to excluding state action on
interstate commerce, at least when Congress has legislated, and
states clearly have an interest in regulating the use of their own
highways. Pp.
336 U. S.
734-735.
5. In this case, there is no conflict in terms between the
federal and California statutes, and no possibility of such
conflict, since the state statute makes federal law the law of the
state in this matter. P.
336 U. S.
735.
6. There is no indication in this case that Congress intended to
substitute a uniform federal law for diverse state laws, for there
was little state legislation on the subject when Congress acted.
Pp.
336 U. S.
735-736.
Page 336 U. S. 726
7. The state statute is not rendered invalid by the fact that it
imposes heavier penalties than the federal act, nor by the
possibility of double punishment. Pp.
336 U. S.
731-733,
336 U. S.
735-738.
8. Difficulties confronting state regulation of other phases of
interstate commerce cannot justify exclusion of the state
regulation here involved. P.
336 U. S.
736.
9. The validity of the California statute here involved, which
does not conflict with Interstate Commerce Commission policy, is
not affected by an earlier state statute which did conflict with
that policy. P.
336 U. S.
737.
10. So far as casual, occasional, or reciprocal transportation
of passengers for hire is concerned, the State may punish, as it
has in the present case, for the safety and welfare of its
inhabitants; the Federal Government may punish for the safety and
welfare of interstate commerce. P.
336 U. S.
738.
87 Call.App.2d 921, 197 P.2d 851, reversed.
Respondents were convicted of violating a California penal
statute. The conviction was reversed, and the complaint was ordered
dismissed, by the highest court of the State in which a decision
could be had.
87 Cal. App.
2d Supp. 921, 197 P.2d 851. This Court granted certiorari. 335
U.S. 883.
Reversed, p.
336 U. S.
738.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
A California statute prohibits the sale or arrangement of any
transportation over the public highways of the State if the
transporting carrier has no permit from the Interstate Commerce
Commission. [
Footnote 1] The
federal Motor
Page 336 U. S. 727
Carrier Act has substantially the same provision. [
Footnote 2] The question is whether the State
act as applied in this case is invalid in view of the federal
act.
Respondents operate a travel bureau in Los Angeles, and receive
commissions for arranging "share-expense" passenger transportation
in automobiles. Owners of private cars desiring passengers for a
trip register with respondents' agency, as do prospective
passengers. State lines are crossed in many of the trips. Until
1942, the federal act specifically exempted such "casual,
occasional, or reciprocal" transportation. [
Footnote 3] But, in that year, the Interstate Commerce
Commission removed the exemption, [
Footnote 4] as the Motor Carrier Act empowered it to do.
[
Footnote 5] Both the
California and federal statutes now require respondents to sell
transportation only in carriers having permits from the ICC.
Respondents were prosecuted under the State act. They admitted
their unlawful activity, but demurred to the criminal complaint on
the sole ground that the State statute entered an exclusive
congressional domain. The trial court disagreed, and entered a
judgment of conviction,
Page 336 U. S. 728
but the appellate court [
Footnote 6] upheld respondents' contention, and ordered
the complaint dismissed.
87 Cal. App.
2d Supp. 921, 197 P.2d 851. The case is here on certiorari, 335
U.S. 883.
Certain first principles are no longer in doubt. Whether as
inference from congressional silence or as a negative implication
from the grant of power itself, when Congress has not specifically
acted, we have accepted the
Cooley case's broad
delineation of the areas of state and national power over
interstate commerce.
Cooley v. Port
Wardens, 12 How. 299;
Southern Pacific Co. v.
Arizona, 325 U. S. 761,
325 U. S. 768.
See Ribble, State and National Power Over Commerce, ch.
10. Absent congressional action, the familiar test is that of
uniformity versus locality: if a case falls within an area in
commerce thought to demand a uniform national rule, State action is
struck down. If the activity is one of predominantly local
interest, State action is sustained. More accurately, the question
is whether the State interest is outweighed by a national interest
in the unhampered operation of interstate commerce.
There is no longer any question that Congress can redefine the
areas of local and national predominance,
Prudential Insurance
Co. v. Benjamin, 328 U. S. 408;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Arizona, supra, at
325 U. S. 769,
despite theoretical inconsistency with the rationale of the
Commerce Clause, art. 1, § 8, cl. 3, as a limitation in its
own right. The words of the Clause -- a grant of power -- admit of
no other result. When Congress enters the field by legislation, we
try to discover to what extent it intended to exercise its power of
redefinition; here, we are closer to an intent that can be
demonstrated with assurance, although we may employ
Page 336 U. S. 729
presumptions grounded in experience in doubtful cases.
But, whether Congress has or has not expressed itself, the
fundamental inquiry, broadly stated, is the same: does the State
action conflict with national policy? The
Cooley rule and
its later application,
Southern Pacific Co. v. Arizona,
supra, the question of congressional "occupation of the
field," and the search for conflict in the very terms of state and
federal statutes are but three separate particularizations of this
initial principle.
We restate the familiar because respondents would have us
pronounce an additional rule: that, when Congress has made
specified activity unlawful, "coincidence is as ineffective as
opposition," and State laws "aiding" enforcement are invalid.
Respondents seem to argue that this is as fundamental as the rule
of conflict with national authority, and that it rests upon wholly
independent premises.
But respondents seize upon only one part of the familiar phrase
in
Charleston & W.C. R. Co. v. Varnville Furniture
Co., 237 U. S. 597,
237 U. S. 604.
We said that, when "Congress has taken the particular subject
matter in hand, coincidence is as ineffective as opposition. . . ."
See also Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Public Service Comm'n,
250 U. S. 566,
250 U. S. 569;
Missouri Pac. R. Co. v. Porter, 273 U.
S. 341,
273 U. S. 346.
Respondents' argument assumes the stated premise -- that Congress
has "taken the particular subject-matter in hand," to the exclusion
of state laws. The Court could not have intended to enunciate a
mechanical rule, to be applied whatever the other circumstances
indicating congressional intent. Neither the language nor the facts
of the cases cited support an approach in such marked contrast with
this Court's consistent decisional bases. The
Varnville
case struck down a South Carolina statute which had the effect of
holding a connecting carrier liable for goods damaged in
interstate
Page 336 U. S. 730
commerce, when Congress had determined that the initial carrier
should bear primary responsibility; the
Pennsylvania
Railway case held invalid a state measure requiring a
specified type of rear platform different from the detailed
specifications of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and, in the
Porter case, the Court thought Congress intended to leave
the terms of a uniform bill of lading to the ICC, and that state
laws on the subject were meant to be ineffective.
See
Cloverleaf Butter Co. v. Patterson, 315 U.
S. 148,
315 U. S.
157-159.
The "coincidence" rationale is only an application of the first
principle of conflict with national policy. The phrase itself
simply states that familiar rule. If State laws on commerce are
identical with those of Congress, the Court may find congressional
motive to exclude the States: Congress has provided certain limited
penalties, "and a state law is not to be declared a help because it
attempts to go farther than Congress has seen fit to go,"
Varnville, supra, at
237 U. S. 604
-- that is, if Congress has "occupied the field." But the fact of
identity does not mean the automatic invalidity of State measures.
Coincidence is only one factor in a complicated pattern of facts
guiding us to congressional intent. [
Footnote 7] As the Court
Page 336 U. S. 731
stated in the
Pennsylvania Railway case, at
250 U. S. 569,
the
"question whether Congress and its commissions acting under it
have so far exercised the exclusive jurisdiction that belongs to it
as to exclude the State must be answered by a judgment upon the
particular case."
Statements concerning the "exclusive jurisdiction" of Congress
beg the only controversial question: whether Congress intended to
make its jurisdiction exclusive.
This has long been settled.
Fox v. Ohio, 5
How. 410, announced uncertainly what
United
States v. Marigold, 9 How. 560: that
"the same act might, as to its character and tendencies, and the
consequences it involved, constitute an offence against both the
State and Federal governments, and might draw to its commission the
penalties denounced by either, as appropriate to its character in
reference to each."
9 How. at
50 U. S. 569.
[
Footnote 8]
See Ex parte
Siebold, 100 U. S. 371,
100 U. S. 390;
United States v. Lanza, 260 U. S. 377,
260 U. S. 384.
And see Union Brokerage Co. v. Jensen, 322 U.
S. 202,
322 U. S.
208.
Asbell v. Kansas, 209 U. S. 251, is
a further illustration. A Kansas statute provided criminal
penalties for the importation of cattle from any point south of the
State, except for immediate slaughter, without approval of the
proper State officials or the Bureau of Animal Industry of the
United States. The congressional Act, 32 Stat. 791, 792, allowed
cattle to be transported into a state if inspected and passed by an
inspector of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry. Violation
of the federal act brought criminal sanctions. Yet we affirmed a
conviction under the State law. We said that,
"if the state law conflicts with [federal law], the state law
must yield. But the law of Kansas now before us recognizes the
supremacy of the national law, and conforms to it. "
Page 336 U. S. 732
209 U.S. at
209 U. S. 258.
And see the similar problem and similar answer by
Brandeis, J., for the Court in
Dickson v. Uhlmann Grain
Co., 288 U. S. 188.
To limit our inquiry to respondents' single standard would
restrict us to unreality. For Congress is often explicit when it
wishes state laws to conclude federal prosecution, to avoid the
double punishment possible in a federal system.
See, for
example, 18 U.S.C. § 659, defining the crime of stealing
from an interstate carrier; 18 U.S.C. § 660, misapplication of
funds by an officer or employee of a carrier engaged in commerce.
And when state enforcement mechanisms so helpful to federal
officials are to be excluded, Congress may say so, as in the
Taft-Hartley Act, 29 U.S.C.(Supp.), § 160(a). That Congress
has specifically saved state laws in some instances,
see,
e.g., the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77r, indicates no
general policy save clarity.
Respondents' automatic "coincidence means invalidity" theory,
applied in an area as imbued with the state's interest as is this
one,
see infra, would lead us to the conclusion that a
state may not make a dealer in perishable agricultural commodities
respect its laws on the fraudulent nonpayment of an obligation if
that fraud occurred after an interstate shipment, 7 U.S.C. §
499b(4), for Congress has not expressly saved such prosecutions. We
would hold, too, that extortion or robbery from interstate commerce
under 18 U.S.C. § 1951 or 18 U.S.C. § 2117 is immune from
state action; that the wrecking of a bridge over an interstate
railroad is an "exclusively federal" offense, 18 U.S.C. §
1992; that the transmittal of a ransom note in interstate commerce
cannot be punished by local authorities, 18 U.S.C. § 875.
And see 18 U.S.C. §§ 331, 472, 479. In short, we
would be setting aside great numbers of state statutes to satisfy a
congressional purpose which would be only the product of this
Court's
Page 336 U. S. 733
imagination. We cannot agree that each of the problems under the
statutes cited may not be resolved by examination of the whole
case.
The question is whether Congress intended to override State laws
identical with its own when it, through the Interstate Commerce
Commission, regulated share-expense passenger automobile
transportation, or whether it intended to let State laws stand.
While the statute says nothing expressly on this point and we are
aided by no legislative history directly in point, [
Footnote 9] we know that normally
congressional purpose to displace local laws must be clearly
manifested.
H. P. Welch Co. v. New Hampshire, 306 U. S.
79, and cases cited;
Maurer v. Hamilton,
309 U. S. 598,
309 U. S. 614;
Kelly v. Washington ex rel. Foss Co., 302 U. S.
1,
302 U. S. 11,
302 U. S. 14;
Mintz v. Baldwin, 289 U. S. 346. Or
if the claim is conflict in terms, it "must be clear that the
federal provisions are inconsistent with those of the state to
justify the thwarting of state regulation."
Cloverleaf Butter
Co. v. Patterson, supra, 315 U. S. 156.
See also Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U. S.
52, at
312 U. S.
67.
General propositions derived from the whole sweep of the
Commerce Clause are often helpful, and we think those just stated
are persuasive indications of congressional intent in the case now
before us. But the
Page 336 U. S. 734
quite separate Commerce Clause degree questions can be resolved
only by careful scrutiny of the particular activity regulated. The
Interstate Commerce Commission found these dangers present in the
business of share-expense passenger transportation: abandonment of
passengers before reaching the promised destination; personal
injuries sustained by passengers because of irresponsible drivers,
with attendant delay and expense; delays caused by arrest and
detention of drivers for violations of traffic laws; crowded
conditions in automobiles by reason of an excessive number of
passengers and their baggage, and
"annoyance, anxiety, or fright caused by reckless and improper
driving by the automobile operators, by the bad mechanical
condition of the vehicles used, by the fatigue of drivers operating
the automobiles for long periods without adequate rest, or by the
improper conduct of the driver or other passengers."
Evidence of these evils led the ICC to remove the exemption
which had covered these respondents.
Ex parte No. MC-35,
33 M.C.C. 69, 73, 74.
See also Report of Federal
Coordinator of Transportation on the Regulation of Transportation
Agencies other than Railroads and on Proposed Changes in Railroad
Regulation (Washington, 1934), Sen.Doc. 152, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.,
p. 226, mentioning the financial irresponsibility of these
carriers.
And see California v. Thompson, 313 U.
S. 109.
Of course, we no longer limit the states to their "traditional"
police powers in considering a statute's validity under the
Fourteenth Amendment.
See Lincoln Federal Labor Union v.
Northwestern Iron & Metal Co., 335 U.
S. 525. But the tradition of "usual police powers" is
still of aid in determining congressional intent to exclude State
action on interstate commerce, at least when Congress has
legislated. Many of the evils discussed by the ICC, above, are of
the oldest within the ambit of the police power: protection against
fraud and physical harm to a
Page 336 U. S. 735
State's residents. And, consistent with the many cases giving
the State's interest in its own highways more weight than the
national interest against "burdening" commerce, [
Footnote 10] we have held that the highway
regulation involved in this case is allowable State action before
Congress acted.
California v. Thompson, supra. Removal of
the Motor Carrier Act's exemption since the
Thompson case
does not change our conclusion.
The case would be different if there were conflict in the
provisions of the federal and California statutes. But there is no
conflict in terms, and no possibility of such conflict, for the
state statute makes federal law its own in this particular. The
case might also be different were there variegated state laws on
this subject in 1941, when the ICC removed the federal exemption.
We might then infer congressional purpose to displace local laws
and establish a uniform rule beyond which states may not go.
See Southern R. Co. v. Railroad Commission, 236 U.
S. 439. Whatever the result in that class of cases, it
would be startling to discover congressional intention to
"displace" state laws when there were no state laws to displace
when Congress acted. And that is nearly the situation in the
present case. When the ICC removed the federal exemption, it
mentioned twelve cities, other than Los Angeles and San Francisco,
in which the problem was particularly acute. [
Footnote 11] Of these twelve
Page 336 U. S. 736
cities, only two were located in states which attempted
regulation of the kind of transportation we are now considering.
[
Footnote 12] Such striking
absence of state law in states where the problem was recognized as
serious by the ICC clearly demonstrates a purpose to provide,
rather than displace local rules -- to fill a void, rather than
nationalize a single rule. And we see nothing to show that a more
serious problem in the California might not properly beget a more
serious penalty if the California legislature deemed it wise. ICC
recognition that the problem is more acute in some states than in
others may well indicate acceptance of that proposition.
It is said that ICC recognition of the difficulties facing state
regulation of interstate commerce, 33 M.C.C. at 76, because of
cases such as
Buck v. Kuykendall, supra, is of importance
here. But this case concerns only the state's mechanisms for
enforcing a statute identical with that of the federal government,
though rooted in different policy considerations. We cannot
predicate exclusion upon the simple recognition of Constitutional
difficulties not present in the cause before us. Since the
Page 336 U. S. 737
ICC order was issued after
California v. Thompson,
supra, one would expect the federal agency to be specific if
it intended to supersede state laws. And we do not see how a
previous California statute conflicting with ICC policy,
cf. 1933 Cal.Stat., c. 390, § 1, p. 1012, and
Frank Broker Application, 8 M.C.C. 15, can have anything
to do with the only California statute we are considering -- a
measure which does not conflict with ICC policy. It is difficult to
believe that the ICC intended to deprive itself of effective aid
from local officers experienced in the kind of enforcement
necessary to combat this evil -- aid of particular importance in
view of the ICC's small staff.
See 61st Annual Report of
the ICC (1947), p. 122; 62d Annual Report of the ICC (1948), p.
109. [
Footnote 13]
This is not a hypothetical case on "normal Congressional
intent." It is California's attempt to deal with a real danger to
its residents. We know that coincidence, with its consequent
possibility of double punishment, is an important factor to be
considered. In many cases, it may be a persuasive indication of
congressional intent. But we must look at the whole case. In this
case, the factors indicating exclusion of state laws are of no
consequence in the light of the small number of local regulations
and the state's normal power to enforce safety and good faith
requirements for the use of its own highways.
Page 336 U. S. 738
"The state and federal regulations here applicable have their
separate spheres of operation."
Union Brokerage Co. v. Jensen,
supra, at
322 U. S. 208.
[
Footnote 14] So far as
casual, occasional, or reciprocal transportation of passengers for
hire is concerned, the State may punish as it has in the present
case for the safety and welfare of its inhabitants; the nation may
punish for the safety and welfare of interstate commerce. There is
no conflict.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Calif.Stats.1947, c. 1215, §§ 2, 4, pp. 2724, 2725,
Deering's Calif.Penal Code (1947 Supp.), §§ 654.1, 654.3.
The statute makes it criminal to sell transportation in a carrier
which has failed to secure a permit from either the California
Public Utilities Commission or the Interstate Commerce Commission
of the United States. Our only concern is with the correspondence
of State and federal legislation.
[
Footnote 2]
49 U.S.C. §§ 301, 303(b) (
see note 5 infra), 49 Stat. 543
et
seq. The act is limited to carriers operating in interstate
commerce. 49 U.S.C. § 302(b).
[
Footnote 3]
49 U.S.C. § 303(b)(9).
[
Footnote 4]
When the transportation is arranged "by a third-party
intermediary who engages in making such transactions for
compensation or as a regular occupation or business."
Ex parte
No. MC-35, 33 M.C.C. 69, 81.
[
Footnote 5]
The ICC order was upheld by the District Court for the Northern
District of Illinois in
Drake v. United States, November
18, 1942 (3 Federal Carriers Cases 2297). We affirmed.
Levin v.
United States, 319 U.S. 728.
[
Footnote 6]
The Appellate Department of the Superior Court of Los Angeles
County, California. There is no further review in the State courts.
Art. VI, §§ 4, 4b, Calif.Const.;
People v.
Reed, 13 Cal. App. 2d
39, 56 P.2d 240.
[
Footnote 7]
Compare Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. Harris,
234 U. S. 412,
with Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Washington, 222 U.
S. 370;
New York v. Compagnie Generale
Transatlantique, 107 U. S. 59,
107 U. S. 63;
Oregon-Washington R. & Nav. Co. v. Washington,
270 U. S. 87, and
Cloverleaf Butter Co. v. Patterson, 315 U.
S. 148. In these cases, we made our decision concerning
congressional intent by considering all the factors we considered
relevant. We did not resort to a mechanical rule.
The text also seems to supply the underlying rationale for the
two cases cited in
Varnville, supra, 237 U.S. at
237 U. S. 604,
to support the familiar quotation on "coincidence."
Southern R.
Co. v. Railroad Comm'n, 236 U. S. 439, and
Chicago, R.I. & P. R. Co. v. Hardwick Farmers' Elevator
Co., 226 U. S. 426.
And see Jerome v. United States, 318 U.
S. 101,
318 U. S.
105.
[
Footnote 8]
The
Fox and
Marigold cases were concerned with
congressional power over forgeries, but, for the purposes of this
case, the principle is the same.
[
Footnote 9]
As might be expected, there was an exemption of casual
operations when the statute was passed.
See note 5 supra, and text. Discussion
in debate and hearings is largely descriptive.
See, e.g.,
Hearings before Subcommittee of House Committee on Interstate and
Foreign Commerce on H.R. 5262 and H.R. 6016, 74th Cong., 1st Sess.,
pp. 47, 97, 183, 188-191, 208, 262; Hearings before Senate
Committee on Interstate Commerce on S. 1629, S. 1632, and S. 1635,
74th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 69, 70, 87, 97, 119, 186-188, 215, 390.
The Committee reports are not helpful.
There is, however, an expression of deference to State action on
intrastate commerce, 49 U.S.C. § 302(b), as strengthened on
the floor of the Senate, 79 Cong.Rec. 5735-5737.
See 79
Cong.Rec. 12197; 49 U.S.C. § 305(a).
[
Footnote 10]
E.g., South Carolina State Highway Department v. Barnwell
Bros., 303 U. S. 177,
625;
Clark v. Poor, 274 U. S. 554,
274 U. S. 557;
Maurer v. Hamilton, 309 U. S. 598,
309 U. S. 614;
Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U. S. 610;
H. P. Welch Co. v. New Hampshire, 306 U. S.
79;
Kelly v. Washington ex rel. Foss Co.,
302 U. S. 1,
302 U. S. 10.
See the distinction of
Buck v. Kuykendall,
267 U. S. 307, and
Bush & Sons Co. v. Maloy, 267 U.
S. 317, in
Bradley v. Public Utilities
Commission, 289 U. S. 92, at
289 U. S. 95.
See Kauper, State Regulation of Interstate Motor Carriers,
31 Mich.L.Rev. 920, 1097.
[
Footnote 11]
"The travel bureau business is quite extensive in many cities,
particularly those in the western and southwestern States, notably
at Kansas City, Mo., Wichita, Kans., Oklahoma City and Tulsa,
Okla., Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio, Houston and El Paso, Tex.
Los Angeles and San Francisco, Calif., Portland, Oreg., Seattle,
Wash., and Denver, Colo. The record establishes that such
operations exist at other cities, including Chicago, Ill., and New
York, N.Y. At one time, there were approximately 50 bureaus in
operation in Los Angeles alone. . . ."
33 M.C.C. at 71-72.
[
Footnote 12]
Letters from motor carrier commissions in western and
southwestern States show that, in 1941, there was no regulation, or
attempt at regulation, covering Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Tulsa,
Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio, Houston, El Paso, Portland, or
Seattle. Only in Wichita and Denver was regulation attempted, and
its extent in Wichita is not at all clear.
In 1941, there was likewise no regulation or attempt at
regulation of any kind in Arizona, Montana, New Mexico, or Utah,
although Wyoming attempted some measure of control Idaho's only
requirement was a registration fee.
[
Footnote 13]
Respondents ignore practical differences when they rely upon the
Southern R. Co. case,
supra, which invalidated
state regulation of grab-irons on railroad cars moving in
interstate commerce. The individual state's interest in the manner
its residents use its own highways can hardly be compared with the
time-honored ICC control over the nation's traditional avenues of
interstate transportation, the railroads. A case closer to the one
before us is
Asbell v. Kansas, supra. To recognize that
the question is one of degree does not resolve the sharp
differences in extreme revealed by the
Southern R. Co.
case and the one now before us.
[
Footnote 14]
"The Federal Government has dealt with the manner in which
customhouse brokerage is carried on. Minnesota, however, is
legitimately concerned with safeguarding the interests of its own
people. . . ."
Id.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, dissenting.
My brother BURTON has set forth in convincing detail how the
regulation of "travel bureaus" for arranging transportation of
passengers by motor carriers engaged in interstate commerce was
taken over by federal authority, after experience had disclosed the
inadequacy of state regulation. What I have to say only serves to
emphasize my agreement with his conclusion.
In
California v. Thompson, 313 U.
S. 109, this Court recognized that positive intervention
of Congress was required to displace the reserve power of the State
to promote safety and honesty in the business of arranging for
motor carrier transportation even beyond state lines. As to such
business, the power of Congress to regulate commerce "among the
several States" was an excluding, not an exclusive, power -- State
action was not barred by the Commerce Clause, but only by
appropriate congressional action. State action is displaced only to
the extent that Congress chooses to displace it. One would suppose
that, when Congress has proscribed defined conduct and attached
specific consequences to violations of such outlawry,
Page 336 U. S. 739
the States were no longer free to impose additional or different
consequences by making the same misconduct also a state offense.
And that is this case.
For the first time in the hundred and twenty-five years since
the problem of determining when State regulation has been displaced
by federal enactment came before this Court,
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, the Court today decides that the
States can impose an additional punishment for a federal offense
unless Congress in so many words forbids the States to do it. When
Congress deals with a specific evil in a specific way, subject to
specified sanctions, it is not reasonable to require Congress to
add, "and hereafter the States may not also punish for this very
offense," to preclude the States from outlawing the same specific
evil under different sanctions.
* To do so would
impute to Congress the purpose of imposing upon a nationwide rule
the crazy-quilt of diversity -- actual or potential -- in State
legislation, when the federal policy was adopted by Congress
precisely because it concluded that the manner in which the States,
under their permissive power, dealt with the evil was
unsatisfactory.
Page 336 U. S. 740
Such an inference is a strained and strange way of interpreting
the mind of Congress. It also disregards an important aspect of
civil liberties, namely, avoidance of double punishment for the
same act even though such double punishment may be constitutionally
permissible.
See Jerome v. United States, 318 U.
S. 101,
318 U. S.
105.
Of course, the same physical act may offend a State policy and
another policy of the United States. Assaulting a United States
marshal would offend a State's policy against street brawls, but it
may also be an obstruction to the administration of federal law.
Scores of such instances, inevitable in a federal government, will
readily suggest themselves. That was the kind of a situation
presented by
United States v.
Marigold, 9 How. 560. Passing counterfeit currency
may, in one aspect, be "a private cheat practiced by one citizen of
Ohio upon another," and therefore invoke a State's concern in
"protecting her citizens against frauds," 9 How. at
50 U. S.
568-569, but the same passing becomes of vital concern
to the Federal Government because it tends to debase the currency.
Such a situation is quite different from this case. It merits
repetition to say that we are now reversing a State court for
holding that the very same conduct for the disobedience of which
federal regulation imposes a maximum fine of one hundred dollars
for the first offense cannot be prosecuted in a State court under a
State law imposing a larger fine and, perchance, a prison
sentence.
The talk about "conflict" as a basis for displacing State by
Federal enactment is relevant only in situations where Congress has
chosen to "circumscribe its regulation and occupy only a limited
field," while State regulation is "outside that limited field," and
yet an inference of negation of State action is sought to be drawn.
See Kelly v. Washington, 302 U. S. 1,
302 U. S. 10.
Even in each circumstances, this Court has drawn inferences of
implied exclusion of
Page 336 U. S. 741
State action, although in no sense of the word would there have
been physical clash between State and Federal regulation so as to
preclude concurrence of vitality for both regulations.
See,
e.g., Cloverleaf Butter Co. v. Patterson, 315 U.
S. 148;
Hill v. Florida, 325 U.
S. 538. In this case, we have the very conduct
theretofore left to State regulation taken over by Federal
regulation, and yet the Court superimposes upon the displacing
Federal regulation the State regulation which was consciously
displaced. That a Court which, only on April 4, 1949, decided
H. P. Hood & Sons v. Du Mond, 336 U.
S. 525, as it did, should now decide this case as it
does presents indeed a problem for reconciliation.
* The variety of sanctions now enforceable is reflected in the
following statutes:
United States: fine of not more than $100 for the first
offense and not more than $500 for any subsequent offense. 49 Stat.
564, 49 U.S.C. § 322(a).
California: fine of not over $250 or imprisonment for
not over 90 days or both, and on the second conviction,
imprisonment for not less than 30 days or more than 180 days. For
subsequent convictions, imprisonment for no less than 90 days and
not more than one year. Cal.Pen.Code § 654.3 (1947 Supp.).
Washington: fine of not over $250 or not over 90 days
in jail; apparently additional offenses do not increase the
punishment. Wash.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 2266 (1940), §§
6397-19, 6397-20, (1941 Supp.).
Wyoming: fine of not less than $25, nor more than $100,
or imprisonment for not more than six months or both. Wyoming
Comp.Stat. §§ 60-1309, 60-1362 (1945). The applicability
of these sections to a situation of the present type is not free
from doubt.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR.
JUSTICE JACKSON join, dissenting.
The question presented is whether § 654.1 of the Penal Code
of California [
Footnote 2/1] is
invalid as applied in this case to interstate commerce by the
Municipal Court of Los Angeles. The respondents, Zook and Craig,
were convicted of making a sale, in 1948, in California, of
interstate motor transportation to Texas, on an individual fare
basis, over the public highways of California, under conditions
whereby the transportation was to be supplied by a carrier having
no certificate of convenience and necessity or other permit from
the Public Utilities Commission of California, or from the
Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States. Such a sale
was adjudged contrary to the terms of § 654.1, but the
Appellate Department of the Superior Court of California held that
that Section was invalid as thus applied to interstate commerce in
the face of the Interstate Commerce Act of the United States and of
orders issued under the authority
Page 336 U. S. 742
of that Act making precisely such a sale a federal offense. We
agree with the court below that California could not, without the
consent of Congress, lawfully thus share the exclusive jurisdiction
being exercised by Congress to regulate commerce among the states,
and we find here no such consent. On the other hand, we do find
here, under all the circumstances, that Congress has exercised its
power of regulation of this precise form of interstate commerce to
the exclusion of the states and in conflict with the regulation
attempted here by the California.
From 1933 until 1947, the California legislation on this subject
expressly distinguished between intrastate and interstate
transportation. It provided that the state legislation was to be
applicable to interstate motor carriers only "until such time as
Congress of the United States shall act, . . . " [
Footnote 2/2] or in "the absence of action on the
part of Congress or the Interstate Commerce Commission. . . ."
[
Footnote 2/3] California thus
recognized not only the possibility, but the propriety of federal
regulation of this form of commerce to the extent of its interstate
operations. In 1935 [
Footnote 2/4]
and in 1940, [
Footnote 2/5]
Congress, on its part, expressly recognized a federal
responsibility for such regulation. It assumed jurisdiction over
the qualifications and maximum hours of service of employees and
over safety of operations and standards of equipment. As to other
regulations, Congress temporarily and conditionally exempted this
kind of transportation from the Interstate
Page 336 U. S. 743
Commerce Act. In doing so, however, it authorized the Interstate
Commerce Commission to determine from time to time to what extent,
if any, the exemption should be removed. In 1942, after a thorough
study, that Commission largely removed the exemption. [
Footnote 2/6] Thus, by express authority of
Congress, the regulation of the interstate operations of this type
of transportation was vested in the Interstate Commerce Commission
after a determination by that Commission that such an application
of federal law was necessary to carry out the policy of
Congress.
Section 654.1, which was added to the Penal Code of California
in 1947, contained no provision distinguishing between intrastate
and interstate commerce in this field. It mentioned only
"transportation . . . over the public highways of the California. .
. ." The state court below nevertheless interpreted the Section as
seeking to include interstate, as well as intrastate,
transportation, and then held that it was invalid insofar as it
applied to interstate transportation. [
Footnote 2/7] We accept the state court's
Page 336 U. S. 744
interpretation, and the question before us is only the validity
of the statute as applied to interstate transportation. [
Footnote 2/8] If it were not for the
interpretation given to the California statute by the court below,
the issue might be disposed of by limiting that statute, like its
predecessor, to intrastate transportation.
Page 336 U. S. 745
The complaint is printed in the margin. [
Footnote 2/9] Its sufficiency is the precise issue
presented to us on the demurrer which the court below has ordered
sustained. In that court, the respondents successfully asserted the
invalidity of the state statute in the face of the Interstate
Commerce Act applicable to the same offense. The petitioner
concedes that the two laws sought to forbid and punish the same
acts, but contends that this was a permissible duplication.
Page 336 U. S. 746
Agreeing that the two statutes forbid the same acts, our first
duty is to see how far this identity of legislative effect extends.
Our remaining duty then is to determine whether the state law is
valid in the face of the federal law on the same subject.
The substantial identity between the statutes ends with their
definitions of the offense. Only the Federal Act requires a
broker's license, and the general exemptions from the respective
Acts are in great conflict. [
Footnote
2/10] The penalties are substantially different. [
Footnote 2/11] For example,
Page 336 U. S. 747
in the instant case, each respondent was fined $150 more under
the state law than would have been possible under the federal law
for what apparently was a first offense under each Act. Under the
state law, the court also had an option to impose a jail sentence,
whereas no such option would have been available to it under the
federal law. The federal law also provided for a fine up to $500
for each offense after the first. Under the state law, convictions
after the first were punishable solely by imprisonment.
Accordingly, while the offense here charged was one which violated
both the state and federal statutes, there was a substantial
conflict between the sanctions available for the enforcement of
those statutes. This conflict is by no means conclusive of this
case, but it is entitled to consideration as indicating the
absence, rather than the presence, of an implied consent by the
United States to the intrusion of the state law into the exclusive
jurisdiction made available to the United States by the Federal
Constitution. Prosecution and punishment under both the state and
federal statutes would, in this instance, often result in greater
punishment than the maximum permitted by the federal law. We cannot
readily assume congressional consent to state legislation
Page 336 U. S. 748
that makes an expressly stated congressional "maximum" penalty
no longer a maximum penalty.
The issue requires answers to two questions: I. Did the
California Code invade the exclusive jurisdiction which Congress
was exercising through its Interstate Commerce Act? II. If so, was
the conviction under the California Code invalid on the ground that
Congress had taken exclusive jurisdiction over that offense and had
not consented to share its jurisdiction with California as here
proposed? For the reasons to be stated, we believe the answer to
each of those questions should be yes.
I
The California Code invaded the exclusive jurisdiction which
Congress was exercising through its Interstate Commerce Act.
The petitioner's concession that the respondents' acts
simultaneously violated the terms of both statutes sharply
distinguishes the issue here from those often presented in this
general field of controversy. (1) We do not have here the much
litigated issue as to the validity of state statutes prohibiting or
otherwise regulating acts committed in the course of interstate
commerce, but in a field of that commerce where Congress has taken
no action. In the instant case, Congress has taken jurisdiction by
statute not only in this general field, but over the precise type
of interstate motor carrier transportation of passengers that is
the subject of the state legislation and of the complaint in this
case. (2) Similarly, we do not have here a case where a state has
applied its prohibitory or otherwise regulatory measures to some
intrastate transaction taking place before or after, and separable
from, the transactions in interstate commerce over which the
Federal Government has taken jurisdiction. (3) We
Page 336 U. S. 749
do not have here an attempt by a state to supplement federal
control over some activity related to, but not specifically covered
by, the federal legislation. (4) Also, we do not have here a case
where Congress has expressly consented to share with the states the
plenary and supreme authority of Congress to take jurisdiction over
the regulation of the interstate commerce in question. (5) On the
other hand, we do have here the significant situation of a state
attempting, by a new state law, to reach and punish, additionally,
a transaction in interstate commerce in the face of the active
exercise of substantially conflicting federal jurisdiction over the
same transaction and in the absence of express congressional
consent to such attempted duplication of jurisdiction. This is in
contrast to an attempt by a state to help enforce, as such, an
already existing federal statute covering the offense.
We start not merely with the inherent right of a state to
exercise its police power over acts within its jurisdiction. We
start also with the constitutional provisions by which the supreme
legislative power of the respective states has been delegated to
Congress to regulate interstate commerce. [
Footnote 2/12]
Once Congress has lawfully exercised its legislative supremacy
in one of its allotted fields and has not accompanied that exercise
with an indication of its consent to share it with the states, the
burden of overcoming the supremacy of the federal law in that field
is upon any state seeking to do so.
Page 336 U. S. 750
An early statement of the general principle involved was made by
Mr. Justice Story in
Prigg v.
Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. 539,
41 U. S.
617-618. [
Footnote
2/13] That statement was approved and enlarged upon by Mr.
Justice J. R. Lamar in
Southern R. Co. v. Railroad Commission
of Indiana, 236 U. S. 439, in
a case arising under the Interstate Commerce Act in which, on
reasoning applicable in the instant case, an Indiana statute was
held invalid because it required handholds on the sides or ends of
railroad cars operating in interstate commerce in Indiana in
substantial duplication of the Federal Safety Appliance Act,
requiring handholds on both the sides and ends of such cars. There,
Mr. Justice Lamar said:
"But the principle that the offender may, for one act, be
prosecuted in two jurisdictions, has no application where one of
the governments has exclusive
Page 336 U. S. 751
jurisdiction of the subject matter, and therefore the exclusive
power to punish. Such is the case here, where Congress, in the
exercise of its power to regulate interstate commerce, has
legislated as to the appliances with which certain
instrumentalities of that commerce must be furnished in order to
secure the safety of employees. Until Congress entered that field,
the states could legislate as to equipment in such manner as to
incidentally affect, without burdening, interstate commerce. But
Congress could pass the safety appliance act only because of the
fact that the equipment of cars moving on interstate roads was a
regulation of interstate commerce. Under the Constitution the
nature of that power is such that, when exercised, it is exclusive,
and
ipso facto supersedes existing state legislation on
the same subject. Congress, of course, could have 'circumscribed
its regulations' so as to occupy a limited field.
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. But, so far
as it did legislate, the exclusive effect of the safety appliance
act did not relate merely to details of the statute and the
penalties it imposed, but extended to the whole subject of
equipping cars with appliances intended for the protection of
employees.
The states thereafter could not legislate so as to
require greater or less or different equipment; nor could they
punish by imposing greater or less or different penalties. . .
."
"
* * * *"
"
The test, however, is not whether the state legislation is
in conflict with the details of the Federal law or supplements it,
but whether the state had any jurisdiction of a subject over which
Congress had exerted its exclusive control."
(Emphasis added.)
Id. at
236 U. S. 446,
236 U. S. 448.
Page 336 U. S. 752
Mr. Justice Holmes said, in
Charleston & W. Car. R. Co.
v. Varnville Furniture Co., 237 U. S. 597,
237 U. S.
604:
"When Congress has taken the particular subject matter in hand,
coincidence is as ineffective as opposition, and a state law is not
to be declared a help because it attempts to go farther than
Congress has seen fit to go."
Mr. Justice Butler reemphasized this in sweeping terms in
Missouri Pac. R. Co. v. Porter, 273 U.
S. 341,
273 U. S. 346, by
concluding the opinion of the Court as follows:
"Its [Congress'] power to regulate such [interstate] commerce
and all its instrumentalities is supreme, and, as that power has
been exerted, state laws have no application.
They cannot be
applied in coincidence with, as complementary to or as in
opposition to, federal enactments which disclose the intention of
Congress to enter a field of regulation that is within its
jurisdiction."
(Emphasis added.)
See also Erie R. Co. v. New York,
233 U. S. 671,
233 U. S. 683;
Second Employers' Liability Cases, 223 U. S.
1,
223 U. S. 55.
Related to this exclusive jurisdiction of Congress, established
by Article VI of the Constitution, is the general policy against
subjecting anyone to punishment more than once for the commission
of a single act. Unless care is taken to prevent this, such double
punishment may result from the overlapping of the federal and state
jurisdictions. However, its unfairness to the individual, as well
as its cumbersomeness for enforcement purposes, suggests that it
should not be read into legislation in the absence of clear
language demonstrating a purpose to permit it. In a case which
related to the interpretation of a federal statute that might
duplicate or build upon a state law, this Court said:
". . . it should be noted that the double jeopardy provision of
the Fifth Amendment does not stand as a bar to federal prosecution
though a state conviction
Page 336 U. S. 753
based on the same acts has already been obtained. . . . That
consideration gives additional weight to the view that, where
Congress is creating offenses which duplicate or build upon state
law, courts should be reluctant to expand the defined offenses
beyond the clear requirements of the terms of the statute."
Jerome v. United States, 318 U.
S. 101,
318 U. S.
105.
So here we should be reluctant to read into a federal statute
congressional consent to state legislation which authorized
prosecution and punishment by the State in addition to federal
prosecution and punishment.
Where there is legislative intent to share the exclusiveness of
the congressional jurisdiction, appropriate language can make that
intent clear. An outstanding example of such authorization is in
the Eighteenth Amendment, now repealed. It was there provided that
"The Congress and the several States shall have concurrent power to
enforce this article by appropriate legislation." (U.S.Const.) More
recently, clear language was used by Congress to insure the
validity of state cooperation in the "Migratory Bird Conservation
Act," approved February 18, 1929:
"SEC. 17. That when any State shall, by suitable legislation,
make provision adequately to enforce the provisions of this Act and
all regulations promulgated thereunder, the Secretary of
Agriculture may so certify, and then and thereafter said State may
cooperate with the Secretary of Agriculture in the enforcement of
this Act and the regulations thereunder."
45 Stat. 1225, 16 U.S.C. § 715p.
Still closer to the present situation is the language used by
the Congress that passed the Motor Carrier Act, 1935. In "The
Whaling Treaty Act," it said:
"SEC. 12. That nothing in this Act shall be construed to prevent
the several States and Territories
Page 336 U. S. 754
from making or enforcing laws or regulations not inconsistent
with the provisions of said Convention [for the regulation of
whaling] or of this Act, or from making or enforcing laws or
regulations which shall give further protection to whales. . .
."
49 Stat. 1248, 16 U.S.C. § 912. [
Footnote 2/14]
The Motor Carrier Act, 1935, did not overlook the subject of
exclusive state and federal jurisdiction over the respective fields
of intrastate and interstate commerce touched by the Act. It did
not, however, approve joint and conflicting control by both at the
same time.
It expressly vested in the Interstate Commerce
Commission
Page 336 U. S. 755
the regulation of the transportation of passengers by motor
carriers engaged in interstate commerce. With equal clarity,
it expressly provided that Part II of the Interstate Commerce Act
should not affect the powers of taxation of the several states. It
thus dealt with and preserved to the states their full powers to
tax without added restriction because of the Motor Carrier Act's
relation to interstate commerce. The state powers of taxation were
thus distinguished from those of regulation because the power of
regulation of interstate commerce was vested expressly in the
Interstate Commerce Commission. Also, in relation to the regulation
of intrastate commerce, Congress provided that nothing in Part II
of the Interstate Commerce Act
"shall be construed . . . to authorize a motor carrier to do an
intrastate business on the highways of any State, or to interfere
with the
exclusive exercise by each the power of regulation of
intrastate commerce by motor carriers on the highways
thereof."
(Emphasis added.) § 202(c), 49 Stat. 543, later designated
§ 202(b), 54 Stat. 920, 49 U.S.C. § 302(b). For full text
of original § 202(b) and (c), later designated § 202(a)
and (b),
see 336 U. S.
infra.
Congress thus dealt directly with the problem of state and
federal regulation of motor carrier transportation either
interstate or intrastate in character. Congress indicated no
consent to share with others its exclusive jurisdiction over the
regulation of interstate commerce. If
Page 336 U. S. 756
it had intended to do so, that would have been the place to
express such an intent. The language used reflected not merely an
absence of congressional consent to the sharing of its jurisdiction
over any form of interstate commerce. On the contrary, especially
when read with § 203(b)(9), it evidenced a conscious
congressional dissent from any such sharing of its jurisdiction
over this form of interstate commerce described in this
legislation. Section 203(b)(9) stated a positive insistence upon
federal jurisdiction in the precise field which concerns us here.
It provided that the federal jurisdiction become effective whenever
and to the extent that the Interstate Commerce Commission found the
necessity for it. In this narrow field, Congress thus expressly
left temporarily on trial the substantially exclusive state
regulation of interstate commerce which was already in effect. This
express temporary conditional exemption created a special situation
in which the consent of Congress to state regulation was to be
continued or cut off by the Interstate Commerce Commission. It did
not suggest any sharing or duplication of control by the Commission
and the state. This temporary survival of state control was
expressly and unequivocally terminated by the order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission in 1942. That order called for a
positive discontinuance of state control, coupled with a positive
vesting of jurisdiction in the Interstate Commerce Commission over
this particular type of interstate commerce. The procedure thus
taken to substitute federal for state regulation of interstate
commerce was the very opposite of a procedure permissive of joint
or duplicating federal and state control. It is difficult to
conceive of a more deliberate and obvious substitution of one for
the other. The area available for such substitution of federal for
state control was clearly defined and set aside in § 203(b)(9)
and then put into effect by
Page 336 U. S. 757
order of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Ex parte No.
35, 33 M.C.C. 69, 49 C.F.R. Cum.Supp. § 210.1. For an
example of a substitution of exclusive federal regulation for
exclusive state regulation of certain interstate commerce
activities in the warehousing field,
see Rice v. Santa Fe
Elevator Corp., 331 U. S. 218.
This brings us to the final question of statutory
interpretation. Did Congress impliedly consent to this attempted
sharing of its established jurisdiction within the narrow limits of
§ 203(b)(9)?
II
The conviction under the California Code was invalid because
Congress had taken exclusive jurisdiction over that offense, and
had not consented to share its jurisdiction with
California.
It is a contradiction in terms to say that a state, without the
consent of Congress, may duplicate or share in the exclusive
jurisdiction of Congress. If the jurisdiction of Congress has
become exclusive, the state's jurisdiction must, by hypothesis, be
derived thereafter from Congress or cease to exist. In this case,
there was no express consent by Congress to share with the states
the federally protected exclusive jurisdiction over this type of
transaction in interstate commerce. The question remains, however,
whether, under all the circumstances, Congress shall be held to
have impliedly consented to share its exclusive jurisdiction with
California. The text of the legislation and the course of events
which led the Federal Government to take jurisdiction not only
disclose an absence of any basis for a claim that Congress
impliedly consented to the California legislation, but present
overwhelming evidence of a deliberate, careful and unconditional
assumption by Congress of federal jurisdiction,
Page 336 U. S. 758
consciously exclusive of the inadequate state
regulation theretofore found to exist.
See the reference,
supra, to original § 202(b) and (c) of the Act,
dealing with the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission
and of the states. For full text,
see § 202(a) and
(b) in
336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(2),
infra. In addition, we
shall now consider in detail the action taken under the informed
guidance of the Interstate Commerce Commission in accordance with
the express terms of § 203(b).
The precise fundamental issue is not the identity, similarity,
diversity, or even repugnance, of the two statutes. The fundamental
issue is that of the presence or absence of congressional consent
to the sharing of its exclusive jurisdiction. The degree of
immediate or potential conflict between the statutes has a material
relation to the issue of congressional consent. Clear conflict
between the statutes would be practically conclusive against the
state. The less the conflict, the less obvious is the basis for the
objection of Congress to sharing its jurisdiction with the state.
However, even a complete absence of conflict, resulting in a mere
duplication of offenses, would not remove all basis for objection,
and would not necessarily establish the required congressional
consent. For example, the inherent objectionability of the double
punishment of an offender for a single act always argues against
its implied authorization. Similarly, the difficulties inherent in
diverse legislative and enforcement policies always argue against
the introduction of new state offenses, as distinguished from state
cooperation in prosecuting existing federal offenses. Here, there
was substantial potential conflict between the prescribed state
penalties and the federal penalties, although the prohibited acts
were the same. Likewise, there was a substantial difference between
the two statutes in the exceptions to their application and in such
related provisions
Page 336 U. S. 759
as those for the licensing of the travel bureaus, as
distinguished from the carriers. Furthermore, § 203(b)
expressly left it to the Interstate Commerce Commission to
determine the extent, if any, to which the federal jurisdiction
should be applied.
In the instant case, the most impressive material, emphasizing
the unwillingness of Congress to share its exclusive control with a
control through state legislation, is found in the legislative,
administrative, and judicial proceedings which led to the taking of
complete jurisdiction by Congress. When federal jurisdiction was
thus taken, in 1942, it was clear to Congress that there existed
highly unsatisfactory state regulation of the interstate
transactions in question. There is no evidence of a subsequent
change in the attitude of Congress. The course of events tells the
story. It suggests no consent by Congress to a duplication of
federal and state control. On the other hand, it demonstrates the
existence of ample reasons for taking and retaining exclusive
federal jurisdiction over this kind of interstate transportation.
It is an example of the effective integration of our federal and
state jurisdictions when each is given exclusive control over
designated activities, rather than simultaneous, dual, and
conflicting control over the same activities.
1.
June 5, 1931. -- A California statute was approved
defining motor carrier transportation agents (comparable to travel
bureaus arranging "share the expense" trips), and providing for the
State's regulation, supervision and licensing of such agents. This
Act referred expressly to transportation between points within
California and to transportation to the border of that State when
one of the points to be reached was outside the State. It expressly
permitted these state-licensed transportation agencies to arrange
for motor transportation by a motor carrier not holding a valid
certificate of public convenience
Page 336 U. S. 760
and necessity issued by the Railroad Commission of California.
In substance, the Act thus recognized and licensed travel bureaus
arranging for "share the expense" interstate, as well as
intrastate, motor trips by unlicensed carriers. 1931 Cal.Stat., c.
638, § 1, p. 1362
et seq.
2.
May 15, 1933. -- Another California statute repealed
the Act of June 5, 1931. The new statute declared it to be the
policy of California to regulate and control motor carrier
transportation agents acting as
"intermediaries between the public and those motor carriers of
passengers operating, as common carriers or otherwise, over the
public highways of the State, for compensation, that are not
required by law to obtain, or that have not obtained, a certificate
from the Railroad Commission of the California. . . ."
1933 Cal.Stat., c. 390, § 1, p. 1012. This statute, like
that of 1931, recognized and prescribed licenses for the travel
bureaus dealing in "share the expense" interstate, as well as
intrastate, motor trips by unlicensed carriers. This statute and
this declaration remained in effect until 1947. It was during this
same time that the Interstate Commerce Commission, after
investigation, declared that it found that such operations, at
least as applied to interstate commerce,
were contrary to
public policy. The Commission's extended investigation
resulted, in 1942, in the deliberate application of the Interstate
Commerce Act to these interstate operations under express authority
of Congress. The federal law thereupon expressly prohibited such
transportation by unlicensed carriers, in interstate commerce, and
also prohibited travel bureaus or brokers from selling or arranging
such unlicensed trips in interstate commerce. The conflict in
policy thus became clear at least by 1942.
The relation of the 1933 California Act to interstate commerce
and its conflict with the federal policy stated by the Interstate
Commerce Commission is emphasized
Page 336 U. S. 761
by the foregoing declaration of state policy which remained in
the State Act from 1933 until 1941:
"
until such time as Congress of the United States shall
act, the public welfare requires such regulation and control
of such intermediaries between the public and interstate motor
carriers, as well as between the public and intrastate motor
carriers."
(Emphasis added.)
Id. at p. 1012.
The California Act also included, until 1941, the following:
"The provision of this act shall apply regardless of whether such
transportation so sold, or offered to be sold, is interstate or
intrastate."
Id. at p. 1013. In general, the Act amplified
the plan of the 1931 Act. It required the bonding and licensing of
motor carrier transportation agents (or travel bureaus) arranging
for unlicensed interstate, as well as intrastate, motor carrier
transportation. Both State Acts contained a section providing
explicitly for the separability of any section, subsection,
sentence, clause or phrase which might be held
unconstitutional.
3.
August 9, 1935. -- Following an extended survey of
the rapidly increasing volume of interstate motor transportation,
the Motor Carrier Act, 1935, was enacted by Congress as Part II of
the Interstate Commerce Act. For the purposes of this case, the
most important feature of this Act was its provision for the
partial and conditional exemption from its operation of the kind of
motor carrier transportation here involved. Section 203(b)(9)
excluded from its operation, except for safety purposes,
"the casual, occasional, or reciprocal transportation of
passengers or property in interstate or foreign commerce for
compensation by any person not engaged in transportation by motor
vehicle as a regular occupation or business."
49 Stat. 546. This exclusion of casual and occasional motor
carriers was only a conditional exemption, expressive of federal
concern over the apparent inadequacy of the state control over
casual and occasional
Page 336 U. S. 762
transportation involving interstate trips. The condition applied
to the exclusion was --
"(b) Nothing in this part (Part II of the Interstate Commerce
Act), . . . shall be construed to include . . . [clauses (1) to
(7), incl.]; nor,
unless and to the extent that the (Interstate
Commerce) Commission shall from time to time find that such
application is necessary to carry out the policy of Congress
enunciated in section 202, [
Footnote 2/15] shall the provisions of this part,
except the provisions of section 204 relative to qualifications and
maximum hours of service of employees and safety of operation or
standards of equipment
apply to: (8). . . or (9) . . .
[casual, occasional or reciprocal transportation, as quoted
above]."
(Emphasis added.) 49 Stat. 545-546.
The close relation between the Commission, the policy of
Congress enunciated in the Act, and the federal control over the
casual and occasional motor carrier transportation of passengers
has been emphasized thus from the inception of the Motor Carrier
Act, 1935, to the present.
This provision conditionally exempted from federal control not
only the casual and occasional transportation service itself but,
by rendering such transportation not "subject to" Part II of the
Interstate Commerce Act, it also conditionally exempted, from the
federal brokerage license requirements, the travel bureaus which
sold or arranged for such casual and occasional unlicensed and
unregulated interstate transportation. [
Footnote 2/16]
4.
June 14, 1938. --
Frank Broker Application,
8 M.C.C. 15. Division 5 of the Interstate Commerce Commission made
an important ruling on this application. February 11, 1936, the
applicant, doing business as
Page 336 U. S. 763
Frank's Travel Bureau, of Dallas, Texas, filed an application
under § 211 of the Motor Carrier Act, 1935, for a broker's
license for the purpose of arranging motor transportation of
persons in interstate commerce. For five years, the applicant had
operated a "travel bureau" in Dallas, Texas. The nature of his
business was to bring together persons desiring to travel from
Dallas to any point as far west as Los Angeles, California, or as
far east as New York, New York. The applicant also sold tickets, on
a commission for certain competing licensed motor carriers. The
Commission held that it was necessary for the applicant to obtain a
broker's license under the Federal Act in order to continue to sell
tickets for the licensed carriers. The rest of the applicant's
interstate business, however, was that of a typical travel bureau,
arranging for transportation by unlicensed carriers. The
Commission's opinion discussed this activity at length and reached
a conclusion that throws light on the future policy of the
Commission and on the future course of the federal and state
legislation. It demonstrates that the Commission, when taking its
stand against this type of interstate transportation, did so, at
least in California, in the face of a contrary state policy which
then favored the continuance, rather than the prohibition, of such
operations. The Commission finally issued the broker's license,
but only upon the express condition that the applicant would
discontinue his travel bureau operations in arranging for the
above-described unlicensed interstate transportation which the
Commission found to be not in the public interest. It said
(pp. 19-20):
"
The record convinces us that applicant's method of doing
that portion of his business, namely, the bringing together of
prospective passengers and private individuals, not motor carriers,
in order that they may enter into an arrangement whereby the
passenger for compensation is transported in interstate
Page 336 U. S. 764
or foreign commerce by the private individual, is not in the
public interest. Applicant's limited knowledge of the
passenger and owner-driver, and his inability to secure
authoritative information with respect to each, of necessity makes
it impossible for him to safeguard the rights of either. As a
result of this practice, an unscrupulous passenger or owner-driver
is given an opportunity to defraud honest citizens. Under section
204(a)(4) of the act, we are authorized, among other things, to
establish reasonable requirements with respect to the practices of
a broker. We are of the opinion that
it is reasonable to
require applicant to discontinue his practice of securing private
individuals not engaged in business as carriers, to transport
passengers for compensation in interstate or foreign commerce, and
the license granted herein will be subject to this condition and
limitation."
"We find that applicant is fit, willing, and able to perform the
brokerage service proposed and to conform to the provisions of the
act and our requirements, rules, and regulations thereunder; that
the proposed service,
subject to the condition and limitation
stated in the next preceding paragraph, is consistent with the
public interest and the policy declared in section 202(a)
[
Footnote 2/17]
of the
act, and that a brokerage license should be issued to
him."
(Emphasis added.)
5.
February 6, 1939. --
Michaux Broker
Application, 11 M.C.C. 317. Division 5 of the Interstate
Commerce Commission denied this application, filed in June, 1936,
for a broker's license under the Federal Act. The applicant sought
to carry on an interstate travel bureau operation in Chicago. The
Commission found that, if the
Page 336 U. S. 765
operation were strictly limited to arrangements for interstate
transportation by casual or occasional carriers, "the
transportation would not be subject to the act."
Id. at p.
318. The applicant, accordingly, would not require a broker's
license for that activity. The Commission, however, said (p.
318):
"The extent of applicant's past operations gives rise to doubt
that such a volume of business could be achieved without the
employment of some persons regularly engaged in transportation of
passengers by motor vehicle as an occupation."
He disclaimed intention to engage in such operations in the
future. The Commission thereupon denied his request for a broker's
license for those operations because no such license was required
for them. The Commission warned him of the penalties for unlawful
operations, and denied his application on the ground that he
had
"not shown that his operation as broker will be consistent with
the public interest or with the policy declared in section 202(a)
[
Footnote 2/18] of the act. . .
."
(P. 318.) His operations as thus described and condemned were of
a type comparable to those
previously condemned by the
Commission in its decision on the Frank Broker Application, supra,
but approved in California's statutory declaration of a contrary
policy then in effect.
6.
May 1, 1940, and May 17, 1940. [
Footnote 2/19] -- The Interstate Commerce
Commission entered upon its important investigations known,
respectively, as
Ex parte No. MC-35, 33 M.C.C. 69, and
Ex parte No. 36, 32 M.C.C. 267. The first was made --
"into the practices with respect to the casual, occasional, or
reciprocal transportation of passengers in interstate or foreign
commerce for compensation, for the purpose of determining whether
the exemption
Page 336 U. S. 766
of such transportation as provided in section 203(b)(9) of the
Interstate Commerce Act should be removed to the extent of making
applicable all provisions of part II of the act to such
transportation . . . [when sold under travel bureau
practices]."
Ex parte No. MC-35, 33 M.C.C. 69, 70. The second was an
investigation into the subject of rules and regulations to govern
brokers of passenger transportation subject to Part II of the
Interstate Commerce Act. The first investigation later disclosed,
among other things, that the --
"Board of Public Utilities and Transportation of the city of Los
Angeles during the latter part of 1939 and the early part of 1940
received an average of 8 complaints daily involving travel bureaus.
At other cities, abandoned passengers, who were usually found to be
without funds, were assisted by private or public charity. In
general, the testimony of the witnesses for such organizations as
better business bureaus, and travelers' aid societies, based upon a
knowledge acquired in the performance of their duties, corroborates
that of passengers who testified with regard to the difficulties
they encountered while traveling by means of transportation
arranged through travel bureaus."
"The law enforcement officials and representatives of
eleemosynary and
quasi-public organizations who testified
favor the removal of the exemption in section 203(b)(9) of the
casual, occasional, and reciprocal transportation of passengers for
compensation, when such transportation is arranged through travel
bureaus, and believe that regulation by this Commission of such
transportation is necessary. Their opinions are based principally
on the grounds that this type of transportation as now conducted is
the cause of inconvenience and hardship to the traveling
Page 336 U. S. 767
public using such transportation, for which adequate redress
cannot be obtained, that numerous violations of State and local
laws and regulations occur in connection therewith,
that State
and local officials are unable properly to regulate such operations
because of the fact that a large proportion of the transportation
is interstate, and that, because of the present practices in
connection with such transportation, an unreasonable burden is
placed upon private and public charities in caring for passengers
abandoned or injured while traveling by this means of
transportation."
(Emphasis added.)
Id. at pp. 75-76.
7.
September 18, 1940. -- Amendments were enacted to
Part II, Interstate Commerce Act. Although the final report in
Ex parte No. MC-35 was not made until 1942, some of the
conditions referred to above were reflected in an amendment made to
§ 203(b)(9) in 1940. [
Footnote
2/20] Congress still left the casual transportation operations
generally unlicensed and unregulated by the Commission. Yet,
through this 1940 Amendment, Congress did expressly provide that at
least when the sales or arrangements for the casual or occasional
interstate transportation were made by a licensed broker, then
those sales and arrangements were to be considered "subject to"
the
Page 336 U. S. 768
Act. The effect of this was to prohibit brokers licensed under
the Interstate Commerce Commission from also conducting an
unlicensed travel bureau business. This was therefore an express
congressional recognition of the policy announced by the Commission
in the
Frank Broker Application, supra.
In substance, this amounted to a congressional assumption of
jurisdiction, in 1940, in conflict with a part of the existing
California policy which approved and attempted to regulate these
transactions not only in intrastate, but also in interstate
transactions. This action of Congress, conforming to the
Commission's declaration of policy in the
Broker
Application cases, substituted this federal prohibition in
place of state regulation of these interstate activities. This
attitude was strongly reenforced in 1942, and there has been no
contrary federal action at any time.
See also Copes Broker
Application, 27 M.C.C. 153, 155-156, 169-172, decided by the
full Commission, December 20, 1940.
8.
April 28, 1941. --
California v. Thompson,
313 U. S. 109.
This case overruled
Di Santo v. Pennsylvania, 273 U. S.
34. It held that the 1933 California Act, at least prior
to 1940, was valid, but the Court made it clear that it did so
because
Congress had not then taken jurisdiction over
travel bureau or brokerage operations in selling or arranging for
casual or occasional interstate motor carrier transportation of
passengers. The opinion of the Court is full of reservations as to
what might be the contrary effect of the taking of federal
jurisdiction over these transactions. For example, the Court
said:
"Congress has not undertaken to regulate the acts for which
respondent was convicted or the interstate transportation to which
they related. . . . Hence, we are concerned here only with the
constitutional authority of the state to regulate those who, within
the state, aid or participate in a form of interstate
Page 336 U. S. 769
commerce over which Congress has not undertaken to exercise its
regulatory power."
Id. at
313 U. S. 112,
and see pp.
313 U. S. 114
and
313 U. S.
115.
9.
June 2, 1941. -- The 1933 California Act, which had
been slightly revised in 1935, was substantially amended. The
Amendment struck out the express application of the Act to
interstate, as well as intrastate, transportation. While the Act
evidently still applied, through its general language, to both
types of transportation, the omission reflected the State's
anticipation of the coming federal control over the interstate
transactions. This anticipation was expressly stated in an
amendment to § 2 limiting the State's regulation of these
interstate transactions to a period in
"the absence of action on the part of Congress or the Interstate
Commerce Commission regulating or requiring licenses of motor
carrier transportation agents acting as such for motor carriers
carrying passengers in interstate commerce. . . . [
Footnote 2/21]"
This demonstrated California's recognition of the lack of the
necessity for, or even the lack of propriety in, its attempting to
exercise state control in the face of federal control. This
provision was later held by the Superior Court of
Page 336 U. S. 770
California to cut off completely and voluntarily the state
control after the anticipated federal action was taken in 1942.
People v. Van Horn, 76 Cal. App. 2d
753, 174 P.2d 12.
10.
March, 21, 1942. -- This is the most significant
date in these proceedings. It marked the issuance of the order of
the Interstate Commerce Commission, effective May 15, 1942, in
Ex parte No. MC-35, 33 M.C.C. 69, 49 C.F.R.Cum.Supp.
§ 210.1. [
Footnote 2/22]
That order expressly removed the above-mentioned exemption, which
theretofore had excluded from regulation, under Part II of the
Interstate Commerce Act, the casual, occasional and reciprocal
transportation of passengers by motor vehicle in interstate
commerce for compensation as provided in § 203(b)(9). This
order removed that exemption
"to the extent necessary to make applicable all provisions of
Part II of the Act to such transportation when sold . . . or
arranged for, by any person who sells, . . . or arranges for such
transportation for compensation or as a regular occupation or
business. [
Footnote 2/23]"
It thus expressly
Page 336 U. S. 771
brought under federal control the interstate passenger
transportation arranged for through travel bureaus, and it also
brought those travel bureaus themselves under federal control. It
required a license or permit to be secured for the trip and a
broker's license to be secured by the bureau. §§
203(b)(9) and 211(a), 49 Stat. 546,
Page 336 U. S. 772
554, 54 Stat. 921, 49 U.S.C. §§ 303(b)(9) and 311(a).
The federal control was coextensive with the problem, and carefully
adjusted to it. There was no need, desire, or willingness expressed
to accept duplicate parallel state control of these interstate
operations. On the other hand, it was expressly stated that it was
the inability of the state and local officials properly to regulate
such interstate operations that convinced the Commission of the
necessity of federal control.
Ex parte No. MC-35, supra,
p. 76.
The intent of Congress and of its specially qualified Interstate
Commerce Commission to take complete control of these interstate
operations and to supersede the existing state regulation had been
indicated in the amendment to § 203(b)(9), made September 18,
1940. It was demonstrated beyond question in the Commission's
report in
Ex parte No. MC-35, supra. That report
summarized two years of nationwide investigations. It dealt with
the travel bureau problem, especially upon an interstate basis. It
made specific reference to interstate operations between California
and Texas. Typical excerpts from the report have been quoted
supra, pp.
336 U. S.
765-767.
Page 336 U. S. 773
Bearing further upon the unsuitability of state and local
control over the interstate features of this kind of transportation
and upon the need for a more uniform and complete federal control,
the report said:
"There can be little doubt that the removal of the exemption
may, in some instances, work a hardship upon casual, occasional, or
reciprocal transporters of passengers, and upon persons traveling
as passengers by that means of transportation, as well as upon
travel bureaus. On the other hand, substantial benefits to the
general public would result from the proper regulation of such
transportation. If it were properly regulated, passengers using
such transportation would not encounter many of the difficulties
arising at present. In their testimony, briefs, and exceptions,
several travel bureaus admit that reasonable rules and regulations
governing the operations of travel bureaus in their appropriate and
legitimate field are desirable and necessary. Casual, occasional,
and reciprocal transportation of passengers cannot be regulated
unless the exemption in section 203(b)(9) is at least partially
removed. The act does not give us power, without the removal of the
exemption referred to, to prescribe reasonable rules and
regulations governing, or to regulate in any other manner the
operations of, travel bureaus. Proper regulation of travel bureaus
engaged in legitimate operations can be accomplished only by
amendment of the act."
Id. at p. 80.
See also pp. 76-81.
The validity and binding effect of this order was upheld by the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
November 18, 1942.
See Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
Law in
Levin v. United States, sub nom., T. A. Drake et al. v.
United States et al., 3 Fed.Car.Cas. (CCH) � 80,100,
judgment affirmed per curiam, 319 U.S. 728.
Page 336 U. S. 774
11.
November 8, 1946. --
People v. Van
Horn, 76 Cal. App. 2d
753, 174 P.2d 12. There could be no doubt that the Federal
Government had thus taken jurisdiction over the regulation of
travel bureaus engaged in selling or arranging motor transportation
in interstate commerce, or that the federal statute prohibited such
transportation without a federal license or permit. The effect of
this action as relating to California was tested in 1945. The
operator of a travel bureau arranging for casual interstate motor
transportation between San Diego and points outside of California
was charged with violation of the 1933 California Act, as amended
by the Act of 1941. The Appellate Department of the Superior Court
of that State, in
People v. Van Horn, supra, thereupon
held that the California statute no longer applied to such
interstate commerce because, under its 1941 Amendment, that Act was
made to apply only in
"the absence of action on the part of Congress or the Interstate
Commerce Commission regulating or requiring licenses of motor
carrier transportation agents acting as such for motor carriers
carrying passengers in interstate commerce. . . ."
1941 Cal.Stat., c. 539, § 2, p. 1863. The court recognized
that, since 1942, that condition had been met. Accordingly,
although California formerly had regulated these transactions, it
was held that it had voluntarily abandoned such regulation in favor
of the Federal Government. [
Footnote
2/24]
12.
July 8, 1947. -- The present California statute was
approved. It repealed the Act of 1933, as amended in 1935 and 1941.
While the application of the new Act to interstate transactions is
not express, it was interpreted
Page 336 U. S. 775
by the court below as being thus applicable. [
Footnote 2/25] It may indicate therefore a change
in the legislative policy of California toward intrastate
operations and an attempted change toward interstate operations but
there is no evidence of a change in the policy of Congress.
Jurisdiction over these interstate transactions was assumed by
Congress after thorough investigation of the need for such action.
That legislation enacted was supreme, and therefore exclusive. This
does not mean that it might not have been shared with the states if
Congress had so provided. We believe, however, that it does mean
that, in order for the federal jurisdiction to have been so shared,
there must have been some express or implied consent by Congress to
do so. The position of Congress was perfectly clear in 1942. There
has been no evidence of a change in it.
In
336
U.S. 725appc|>Appendix C,
infra there are placed in
convenient juxtaposition the principal circumstances in this case
which demonstrate conflicts between the California and federal
legislation and policies, classified as follows:
(1) Conflicts inherent in the statutory texts.
(2) Emphasis expressly placed upon the mutual exclusiveness of
the state and federal regulations.
(3) Conflicts between state and federal policies which led to
the taking of federal jurisdiction over travel bureaus and "share
the expense" motor transportation engaged in casual interstate
operations.
In the absence of controverting evidence, the above list of
circumstances presents a convincing argument against the conclusion
that Congress, in this instance, either expressly or impliedly
consented to share with California the regulation of casual,
occasional or reciprocal transportation of passengers by motor
vehicle in interstate commerce.
Page 336 U. S. 776
While it may be uncertain where the line of exclusive federal
jurisdiction impinges upon that of the states in the absence of the
exercise of federal jurisdiction by Congress, there is no doubt
that, when Congress has asserted its exclusive jurisdiction, it is
for Congress to indicate the extent, if any, to which a state may
then share it. To whatever extent that this is not so, federal law
will have lost its constitutional supremacy over state law.
For these reasons, we believe that the judgment should be
affirmed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See 336
U.S. 725appa|>Appendix A,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/2]
1933 Cal.Stats., c. 390, § 1, p. 1012.
[
Footnote 2/3]
1941 Cal.Stats., c. 539, § 2, p. 1863.
[
Footnote 2/4]
§ 203(b), 49 Stat. 545-546, of the Motor Carrier Act, 1935,
which became Part II, Interstate Commerce Act, 49 Stat. 543, 54
Stat. 919.
[
Footnote 2/5]
§ 203(b)(9) of Part II, Interstate Commerce Act, 54 Stat.
921, 49 U.S.C. § 303(b)(9). For text,
see 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(2),
infra.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Ex parte No. MC-35, 33 M.C.C. 69, 49 C.F.R., Cum.Supp.
§ 210.1.
[
Footnote 2/7]
"The point made on appeal is that the acts charged and proved
against defendants were done in interstate commerce, and that, for
that reason and because of certain Federal legislation, the state
law cannot be applied to those acts. We find this contention well
founded. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"Respondent [The People of the State of California] concedes and
even demonstrates that, under the circumstances of this case, the
Federal law and section 654.1, Penal Code, forbid and punish the
same acts, but contends that this is permissible, and does not
invalidate the state law, even as applicable to acts in
interstate commerce. If we look to the rule in California for
determining whether a city ordinance is in conflict with a state
law, and for that reason void, the city being limited by our
Constitution to such police regulations 'as do not conflict with
general laws,' we find it established that 'there is a conflict
where the ordinance and the general law punish precisely the same
acts.' . . . Respondent contends that this is not the rule
applicable as between State and Federal legislation, but, on review
of the authorities,
we conclude that the rule in interstate
commerce matters has substantially the same effect as that above
stated. Of such a case, the United States Supreme Court said
long ago: 'This legislation [enacted by Congress] covers the same
ground as the New York Statute, and they cannot coexist.' (
New
York v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique (1883),
107 U. S.
59,
107 U. S. 63.)"
"
* * * *"
"We conclude, therefore, that section 654.1, Penal Code, cannot
be
validly applied to transportation in interstate
commerce, and, since the complaint herein expressly limits itself
to such transportation, it states no offense punishable under the
section and the demurrer should have been sustained."
(Emphasis added.)
People v. Zook, 87 Cal. App.
2d Supp. 921, 197 P.2d 851, 852, 854.
[
Footnote 2/8]
People v. Zook, supra. The material statutory
provisions include: The Penal Code of California, §§
654.1-654.3, added by 1947 Cal.Stat. c. 1215, pp. 2723-2725. For
text,
see 336
U.S. 725appa|>Appendix A,
infra. National
Transportation Policy, inserted before Part I of the Interstate
Commerce Act, 54 Stat. 899, 49 U.S.C. note preceding § 1. For
text,
see 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(1),
infra. Part II,
Interstate Commerce Act, §§ 202(a), jurisdiction in
Interstate Commerce Commission; 202(b), powers of states;
203(b)(9), partial and conditional exemption of casual and
occasional transportation; 211(a), licenses, certificates, permits;
222(a), penalties; 49 Stat. 543,
et seq., as amended by 52
Stat. 1029, 1237, 54 Stat. 920,
et seq.; 49 U.S.C.
§§ 302(a) and (b), 303(b)(9), 311(a), 322(a). For text,
see 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(2),
infra. 49
C.F.R.Cum.Supp. § 210.1, as to removal of exemption as
provided in § 203(b)(9) of Part II, Interstate Commerce Act.
For text,
see 336
U.S. 725fn2/23|>note 23,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/9]
"
COMPLAINT -- Filed January 8, 1948"
"Personally appeared before me, this 8th day of January, 1948,
E. W. Hively of Los Angeles City, who, first being duly sworn,
complains and says: That, on or about the 7th day of January, 1948,
at and in Los Angeles City, in the County of Los Angeles,
California, a misdemeanor, to-wit: Violation of Section 654.1 of
the Penal Code of the California was committed by Berl B. Zook and
Wilmer K. Craig (whose true name to affiant is unknown), who at the
time and place last aforesaid, did willfully and unlawfully at 925
West 7th Street, in the City of Los Angeles, sell, and offer to
sell, negotiated, provided and arranged for, and advertised and
held themselves out as persons who sell and offer to sell and
negotiate, provide and arrange for the transportation of persons on
an individual fare basis over the public highways of the California
by a carrier other than a carrier having a valid and existing
certificate of convenience and necessity or other valid and
existing permit from the Public Utilities Commission of the
California or from the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United
States authorizing such holder of a certificate or other permit to
provide such transportation of passengers in that the said Berl B.
Zook and Wilmer K. Craig, held themselves out as persons willing to
sell and negotiate for the above described transportation and sold
to James A. Moss and Dorothy Mae Elbag, transportation from Los
Angeles to Fort Worth, Texas, over a carrier which was not licensed
in any manner by the California or the Interstate Commerce
Commission to carry passengers for compensation or hire and
negotiated for the sale of such transportation and arranged for
such transportation."
"All of which is contrary to the form of the Statute in such
cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity
provided, and against the peace and dignity. Said Complainant
therefore prays that a warrant may be issued for the arrest of said
Defendant. . . . . . . . (whose true name. . . . . . . . to affiant
is unknown) and that. . . . . . . . he . . . . . . . . may be dealt
with according to law."
"Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8th day of January,
1948, E. W. Hively."
"Urban F. Emma, Clerk of the Municipal Court of Los Angeles
City, in said County and State. By G. Lander (Seal.) Deputy
Clerk."
[File endorsement omitted]
Issued by Ray L. Chesebro, City Attorney
By Boyd A. Taylor, Deputy City Attorney
The respondents demurred to this complaint. The demurrer was
overruled by the Municipal Court of the City of Los Angeles,
California. The respondents, upon a stipulated statement of facts,
were convicted and sentenced by that court. Their motion in arrest
of judgment was denied. The Appellate Department of the Superior
Court of the California, in and for the County of Los Angeles,
reversed the judgment and remanded the cause to the Municipal Court
with directions to sustain the demurrer. The appeal from the order
in arrest of judgment was dismissed.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Cf. § 654.2 of the Penal Code of California
with § 203(b) of the Interstate Commerce Act;
see § 211(a) as to broker's license and, generally,
Appendices
336
U.S. 725appa|>A and
336
U.S. 725appb|>B,
infra. For a detailed
juxtaposition of the conflict,
see 336
U.S. 725appc|>Appendix C,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Under § 654.3 of the Penal Code of California, assuming
this to be the respondents' first offense, each respondent was
subject to a maximum fine of $250 or imprisonment for not over 30
days, or both. In the instant case, the court fined each respondent
$250 and required that, in default of the payment of the respective
fines before 5 p.m. on the date of judgment, they were to be
imprisoned in the city jail in the proportion of one day's
imprisonment for each $2 of the fines until paid, not exceeding 125
days. For a second conviction, the punishment prescribed is limited
to imprisonment for not less than 30 days and not more than 180
days. Upon a third or subsequent conviction, the punishment is
limited to imprisonment for not less than 90 days and not more than
one year, without eligibility for probation. Violations of the
corresponding § 211(a) of the Interstate Commerce Act are
punishable, under § 222(a), by a fine of not more than $100
for the first offense and not more than $500 for any subsequent
offense. Each day of violation constitutes a separate offense.
[
Footnote 2/12]
"The Congress shall have Power . . . To regulate Commerce . . .
among the several States. . . ." (U.S.Const. Art. I, § 8.)
"This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which
shall be made in Pursuance thereof . . . shall be the supreme Law
of the Land, and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby,
any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary
notwithstanding."
(
Id. Art. VI.)
[
Footnote 2/13]
". . . it would seem, upon just principles of construction, that
the legislation of Congress, if constitutional, must supersede all
state legislation upon the same subject, and, by necessary
implication, prohibit it. For if Congress have a constitutional
power to regulate a particular subject, and they do actually
regulate it in a given manner, and in a certain form, it cannot be
that the state legislatures have a right to interfere, and, as it
were, by way of compliment to the legislation of Congress, to
prescribe additional regulations, and what they may deem auxiliary
provisions for the same purpose. In such a case, the legislation of
Congress, in what it does prescribe, manifestly indicates that it
does not intend that there shall be any farther legislation to act
upon the subject matter. Its silence as to what it does not do is
as expressive of what its intention is as the direct provisions
made by it. This doctrine was fully recognised by this Court in the
case of
Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat. 1,
18
U. S. 21-22; where it was expressly held that, where
Congress have exercised a power over a particular subject given
them by the Constitution, it is not competent for state legislation
to add to the provisions of Congress upon that subject; for that
the will of Congress upon the whole subject is as clearly
established by what it had not declared as by what it has
expressed."
Id. at
41 U. S.
617-618.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The constitutional principle of the supremacy of federal
jurisdiction here discussed puts a limitation upon the legislative
jurisdiction of the states in the absence of congressional consent.
It does not restrict cooperation of the states in the enforcement
of federal statutes. Such cooperation, for example, is an
appropriate accompaniment of the National Transportation Policy
under the Interstate Commerce Act. This cooperation does not,
however, require the creation of separate state offenses
paralleling or nearly paralleling the federal offenses. It calls,
rather, for cooperation in enforcing the existing federal
offenses.
The petitioner, in aid of its argument, has pointed to the
declaration of policy as originally stated in the Motor Carrier
Act, 1935. There is no aid for the petitioner there. That
declaration contained the general phrase,
"It is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress to . . .
cooperate with the several States and the duly authorized officials
thereof and with any organization of motor carriers in the
administration and enforcement of this part."
49 Stat. 543. For full text,
see 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(1),
infra. When this
declaration was repealed in 1940 and largely incorporated in a
statement of the "National Transportation Policy," preceding Part I
of the Interstate Commerce Act, Congress added language emphasizing
the federal, rather than the state, features of the policy. The
material clauses then read:
"It is hereby declared to be the national transportation policy
of the Congress . . . to cooperate with the several States and the
duly authorized officials thereof; . . . all to the end of
developing, coordinating, and preserving a national transportation
system by water, highway, and rail, as well as other means,
adequate to meet the needs of the commerce of the United States, of
the Postal Service, and of the national defense. . . ."
54 Stat. 899. For full text and comment,
see 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(1),
infra.
It was because the Commission, in 1942, found it necessary in
order to carry out this National Transportation Policy that it
withdraw the exemption in § 203(b)(9) which is now before us
and which theretofore, to a large extent, had kept interstate
travel bureaus and interstate "share the expense" operators exempt
from the Interstate Commerce Act.
[
Footnote 2/15]
See 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(1),
infra.
[
Footnote 2/16]
§ 211(a), 49 Stat. 547, 49 U.S.C. § 311(a). For text,
see 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(2),
infra.
[
Footnote 2/17]
See 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(1),
infra.
[
Footnote 2/18]
See 336
U.S. 725appb|>Appendix B(1),
infra.
[
Footnote 2/19]
Orders directing investigations, 5 Fed.Reg. 1830, 1845.
[
Footnote 2/20]
Clause(9) of § 203(b) was amended to read as follows, the
new language being italicized:
"(9) the casual, occasional, or reciprocal transportation of
passengers or property by motor vehicle in interstate or foreign
commerce for compensation by any person not engaged in
transportation by motor vehicle as a regular occupation or
business,
unless, in the case of transportation of passengers,
such transportation is sold or offered for sale, or provided or
procured or furnished or arranged for, by a broker, or by any other
person who sells or offers for sale transportation furnished by a
person lawfully engaged in the transportation of passengers by
motor vehicle under a certificate or permit issued under this part
or under a pending application for such a certificate or
permit."
(Emphasis added.) 54 Stat. 921, 49 U.S.C. § 303(b)(9).
[
Footnote 2/21]
"SEC. 2. Section 2 of the act cited in the title hereof is
hereby amended to read as follows:"
"
* * * *"
"In the absence of action on the part of Congress or the
Interstate Commerce Commission regulating or requiring licenses of
motor carrier transportation agents acting as such for motor
carriers carrying passengers in interstate commerce (in this
paragraph referred to as 'interstate motor carrier transportation
agents') this act shall apply to and regulate such interstate motor
carrier transportation agents to the same extent and in the same
manner that it regulates or requires the licensing of motor carrier
transportation agents acting as such for motor carriers carrying
passengers in intrastate commerce (in this paragraph referred to as
'intrastate motor carrier transportation agents')."
1941 Cal.Stat., c. 539, pp. 1862, 1863, amending 1933 Cal.Stat.,
c. 390, which was the Act cited in the title of this 1941 Act.
[
Footnote 2/22]
It was preceded, on February 3, 1942, by the report and order in
Ex parte No. MC-36, 32 M.C.C. 267, effective April 1,
1942, 49 C.F.R. Cum.Supp. § 200.300. That order prescribed the
kind of information that must be recorded, under federal control,
by every passenger broker licensed under § 211 of Part II of
the Interstate Commerce Act.
[
Footnote 2/23]
"
ORDER"
"At a Session of the INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION, Division 5,
held at its office in Washington, on the 21st day of March, A.D.
1942."
"
EX PARTE NO. MC-35"
"EXEMPTION OF CASUAL, OCCASIONAL, OR RECIPROCAL TRANSPORTATION
OF PASSENGERS BY MOTOR VEHICLE"
"
It appearing That, by order of May 1, 1940, the
Commission division 5, entered into an investigation into practices
with respect to the casual, occasional, or reciprocal
transportation of passengers in interstate or foreign commerce for
compensation for the purpose of determining whether the exemption
of such transportation as provided in section 203(b)(9) of the act
should be removed to the extent necessary to make applicable all
provisions of the act to such transportation when it is sold, or
offered for sale, or provided, or procured, or furnished, or
arranged for by any person who holds himself or itself out as one
who sells, or offers for sale transportation wholly or partially
subject to the act, or who negotiates for, or holds himself out by
solicitation, advertisement, or otherwise, as one who sells,
provides, furnishes, contracts, or arranges for, such
transportation;"
"
And it further appearing That a full investigation of
the matters and things involved has been made and that the
division, on the date hereof, has made and filed a report
containing its findings of fact and conclusions thereon, which
report is hereby referred to and made a part hereof: "
"
It is ordered That the Code of Federal Regulations be,
and it is hereby, amended by adding the following: "
"Title 49 -- Transportation and Railroads"
"Chapter 1 -- Interstate Commerce Commission"
"Subchapter B -- Carriers by Motor Vehicle"
"Part 210 -- Exemptions"
" Sec. 210. 1
Casual, occasional, or reciprocal
transportation of passengers for compensation when such
transportation is sold or arranged by anyone for compensation.
The partial exemption from regulation under the provisions of Part
II of the Interstate Commerce Act of the casual, occasional, and
reciprocal transportation of passengers by motor vehicle in
interstate or foreign commerce for compensation as provided in
section 203(b)(9) of the act be, and it is hereby, removed to the
extent necessary to make applicable all provisions of Part II of
the act to such transportation when sold or offered for sale, or
provided or procured or furnished or arranged for, by any person
who sells, offers for sale, provides, furnishes, contracts, or
arranges for such transportation for compensation or as a regular
occupation or business. Sec. 203(b)(9), 49 Stat. 546, 54 Stat. 919,
921, 49 U.S.C. 303(b)(9)."
"
It is further ordered That this order shall become
effective May 15, 1942."
"
And it is further ordered That notice of this order be
given to the general public affected thereby by publishing it in
the Federal Register and by depositing copies thereof in the office
of the Secretary of the Commission in Washington, D.C."
"By the Commission, division 5."
[Signed] W. P. Bartel
Secretary
We are indebted to the Interstate Commerce Commission for the
full text of the above order. The amendment to the Code of Federal
Regulations made by this order appears in 49 C.F.R. Cum.Supp.
§ 210.1.
[
Footnote 2/24]
See also People v. Edmondson, decided March 15, 1946,
by the Appellate Department of the Superior Court, County of Los
Angeles, California. The opinion of that court is not officially
reported, but appears in 1946 L.A.Crim. App. 2160.
Cert.
denied October 14, 1946, 329 U.S. 716.
[
Footnote 2/25]
See 336
U.S. 725fn2/7|>note 7,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/26]
See Appendix B(1),
supra.
|
336
U.S. 725appa|
APPENDIX A
"
The California Act of 1947"
"
An act to repeal "An act to define motor carrier
transportation agent; to provide for the regulation, supervision
and licensing thereof, and to provide for the enforcement of said
act and penalties for the violation thereof, and repealing an act
entitled An act to define motor carrier transportation agent;
to provide for the regulation, supervision and licensing thereof,
and to provide for the enforcement of said act and penalties for
the violation thereof,' approved June 5, 1931, and all acts or
parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act,"
approved May 15, 1933, and to add Sections 654.1, 654.2, and 654.3
to the Penal Code, relating to transportation of
persons."
"[Approved by Governor July 8, 1947. Filed with Secretary of
State July 8, 1947.]"
"
The people of the California do enact as follows:"
"SECTION 1. The act cited in the title hereof is repealed."
"SEC. 2. Section 654.1 is added to the Penal Code, to read:
"
" 654.1. It shall be unlawful for any person, acting
individually or as an officer or employee of a corporation, or as a
member of a copartnership or as a commission
Page 336 U. S. 777
agent or employee of another person, firm or corporation, to
sell or offer for sale or, to negotiate, provide or arrange for, or
to advertise or hold himself out as one who sells or offers for
sale or negotiates, provides or arranges for transportation of a
person or persons on an individual fare agent; to provide for the
regulation, of California unless such transportation is to be
furnished or provided solely by, and such sale is authorized by, a
carrier having a valid and existing certificate of convenience and
necessity, or other valid and existing permit from the Public
Utilities Commission of the California, or from the Interstate
Commerce Commission of the United States, authorizing the holder of
such certificate or permit to provide such transportation."
"SEC. 3. Section 654.2 is added to the Penal Code, to read:
"
" 654.2. The provisions of Section 654.1 of the Penal Code shall
not apply to the selling, furnishing or providing of transportation
of any person or persons"
" (1) When no compensation is paid or to be paid, either
directly or indirectly, for such transportation;"
" (2) To the furnishing or providing of transportation to or
from work, of employees engaged in farm work on any farm of the
California;"
" (3) To the furnishing or providing of transportation to and
from work of employees of any nonprofit cooperative association,
organized pursuant to any law of the California;"
" (4) To the transportation of persons wholly or substantially
within the limits of a single municipality or of contiguous
municipalities;"
" (5) To transportation of persons over a route wholly or partly
within a national park or state park where such transportation is
sold in conjunction with or as part of a rail trip or trip over a
regularly operated motor bus transportation system or line; "
Page 336 U. S. 778
" (6) To the transportation of passengers by a person who is
driving his own vehicle and the transportation of persons other
than himself and members of his family when transporting such
persons to or from their place of employment and when the owner of
such vehicle is driving to or from his place of employment;
provided that arrangements for any such transportation provided
under the provisions of this subsection shall be made directly
between the owner of such vehicle and the person who uses or
intends to use such transportation."
"SEC. 4. Section 654.3 is added to the Penal Code, to read:
"
" 654.3. Violation of Section 654.1 shall be a misdemeanor, and
upon first conviction the punishment shall be a fine of not over
two hundred fifty dollars ($250), or imprisonment in jail for not
over 90 days, or both such fine and imprisonment shall be second
conviction the punishment shall be imprisonment in jail for not
less than 30 days and not more than 180 days. Upon a third or
subsequent conviction, the punishment shall be confinement in jail
for not less than 90 days and not more than one year, and a person
suffering three or more convictions shall not be eligible to
probation, the provisions of any law to the contrary
notwithstanding."
1947 Cal.Stat., c. 1215, pp. 2723-2725.
|
336
U.S. 725appb|
APPENDIX B.
"
(1) National Transportation Policy"
"It is hereby declared to be the national transportation policy
of the Congress to provide for fair and impartial regulation of all
modes of transportation subject to the provisions of this Act, so
administered as to recognize and preserve the inherent advantages
of each; to promote safe, adequate, economical, and efficient
service and foster
Page 336 U. S. 779
sound economic conditions in transportation and among the
several carriers; to encourage the establishment and maintenance of
reasonable charges for transportation services, without unjust
discriminations, undue preferences or advantages, or unfair or
destructive competitive practices; to cooperate with the several
States and the duly authorized officials thereof, and to encourage
fair wages and equitable working conditions -- all to the end of
developing, coordinating, and preserving a national transportation
system by water, highway, and rail, as well as other means,
adequate to meet the needs of the commerce of the United States, of
the Postal Service, and of the national defense. All of the
provisions of this Act shall be administered and enforced with a
view to carrying out the above declaration of policy."
Inserted before Part I of the Interstate Commerce Act 54 Stat.
899, 49 U.S.C. note preceding § 1.
The foregoing "National Transportation Policy" has, for many
purposes, superseded the declaration of the policy of Congress
enunciated in the original § 202 of the Motor Carrier Act,
1935, to which a cross reference was made expressly in §
203(b), 49 Stat. 545. This cross reference prescribed that, in
order to make Part II of the Interstate Commerce Act applicable to
the kind of interstate transportation described in 203(b)(9), the
Commission must "find that such application is necessary to carry
out the policy of Congress enunciated in Section 202. . . ." The
policy of Congress thus referred to as being enunciated in §
202 was contained in the original form of § 202(a), 49 Stat.
543. It read as follows:
"SEC. 202.(a) It is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress
to regulate transportation by motor carriers in such manner as to
recognize and preserve the inherent advantages of, and foster sound
economic conditions in, such transportation and among such carriers
in the public
Page 336 U. S. 780
interest; promote adequate, economical, and efficient service by
motor carriers, and reasonable charges therefor, without unjust
discriminations, undue preferences or advantages, and unfair or
destructive competitive practices; improve the relations between,
and coordinate transportation by and regulation of, motor carriers
and other carriers; develop and preserve a highway transportation
system properly adapted to the needs of the commerce of the United
States and of the national defense, and cooperate with the several
States and the duly authorized officials thereof and with any
organization of motor carriers in the administration and
enforcement of this part."
The foregoing original § 202(a) was repealed September 18,
1940, 54 Stat. 920. At the same time, the designation of the
original § 202(b) and (c) were changed respectively to §
202(a) and (b). (Both of these subsections are material, and they
are printed in Appendix B(2),
infra.)
Accordingly, § 202 of Part II of the Interstate Commerce
Act ceased to contain any statement of the general "policy of
Congress" corresponding to that contained in the original form of
§ 202(a). On the other hand, the very same Act which this
removed this declaration of policy from Part II of the Interstate
Commerce Act inserted "before Part I" of that Act a new paragraph
entitled "National Transportation Policy." This is the paragraph
quoted above from 54 Stat. 899. In the codification of Title 49, a
reference to this new paragraph was substituted for the original
reference to § 202. The codified clause thus required the
Commission to "find that such application is necessary to carry out
the national transportation policy declared in the Interstate
Commerce Act. . . ." 49 U.S.C. § 303(b), instead of "the
policy of Congress enunciated in section 202. . . ." We have
adopted that interpretation in this opinion.
Page 336 U. S. 781
(2) Material Provisions of Part II of the Interstate
Commerce Act.
"SEC. 202. (a) The provisions of this part apply to the
transportation of passengers or property by motor carriers engaged
in interstate or foreign commerce and to the procurement of and the
provision of facilities for such transportation, and the regulation
of such transportation, and of the procurement thereof, and the
provision of facilities therefor, is hereby vested in the
Interstate Commerce Commission."
"(b) Nothing in this part shall be construed to affect the
powers of taxation of the several States or to authorize a motor
carrier to do an intrastate business on the highways of any State,
or to interfere with the exclusive exercise by each the power of
regulation of intrastate commerce by motor carriers on the highways
thereof."
49 Stat. 543, as amended, 54 Stat. 920, 49 U.S.C. § 302(a)
and (b) .
"SEC. 203. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"(b) Nothing in this part, except the provisions of section 204
relative to qualifications and maximum hours of service of
employees and safety of operation or standards of equipment shall
be construed to include (1) motor vehicles employed solely in
transporting school children and teachers to or from school; or (2)
taxicabs, or other motor vehicles performing a bona fide taxicab
service, having a capacity of not more than six passengers and not
operated on a regular route or between fixed termini; or (3) motor
vehicles owned or operated by or on behalf of hotels and used
exclusively for the transportation of hotel patrons between hotels
and local railroad or other common carrier stations; or (4) motor
vehicles operated, under authorization, regulation, and control of
the Secretary of the Interior, principally for the purpose of
transporting persons in and about the national parks and
Page 336 U. S. 782
national monuments; or (4a) motor vehicles controlled and
operated by any farmer when used in the transportation of his
agricultural commodities an products thereof, or in the
transportation of supplies to his farm; or (5) motor vehicles
controlled and operated by a cooperative association as defined in
the Agricultural Marketing Act, approved June 15, 1929, as amended,
or by a federation of such cooperative associations, if such
federation possesses no greater powers or purposes than cooperative
associations so defined; or (6) motor vehicles used in carrying
property consisting of ordinary livestock, fish (including
shellfish), or agricultural commodities (not including manufactured
products thereof), if such motor vehicles are not used in carrying
any other property, or passengers, for compensation; (7) motor
vehicles used exclusively in the distribution of newspapers; or
(7a) the transportation of persons or property by motor vehicle
when incidental to transportation by aircraft; nor, unless and to
the extent that the Commission shall from time to time find that
such application is necessary to carry out the policy of Congress
enunciated in section 202, [
Footnote
2/26] shall the provisions of this part, except the provisions
of section 204 relative to qualifications and maximum hours of
service of employees and safety of operation or standards of
equipment apply to: (8) The transportation of passengers or
property in interstate or foreign commerce wholly within a
municipality or between contiguous municipalities or within a zone
adjacent to and commercially a part of any such municipality or
municipalities, except when such transportation is under a common
control, management, or arrangement for a continuous carriage or
shipment to or from a point without such municipality,
municipalities, or zone, and provided that the motor carrier
engaged in such transportation of passengers over regular or
irregular route
Page 336 U. S. 783
or routes in interstate commerce is also lawfully engaged in the
intrastate transportation of passengers over the entire length of
such interstate route or routes in accordance with the laws of each
State having jurisdiction; or (9) the casual, occasional, or
reciprocal transportation of passengers or property by motor
vehicle in interstate or foreign commerce for compensation by any
person not engaged in transportation by motor vehicle as a regular
occupation or business, unless, in the case of transportation of
passengers, such transportation is sold or offered for sale, or
provided or procured or furnished or arranged for, by a broker, or
by any other person who sells or offers for sale transportation
furnished by a person lawfully engaged in the transportation of
passengers by motor vehicle under a certificate or permit issued
under this part or under a pending application for such a
certificate or permit."
49 Stat. 545-546, as amended by 52 Stat. 1029, 1237, 54 Stat.
921, 49 U.S.C. § 303(b).
"SEC. 211. (a) No person shall for compensation sell or offer
for sale transportation subject to this part or shall make any
contract, agreement, or arrangement to provide, procure, furnish,
or arrange for such transportation or shall hold himself or itself
out by advertisement, solicitation, or otherwise as one who sells,
provides, procures, contracts, or arranges for such transportation,
unless such person holds a broker's license issued by the
Commission to engage in such transactions:
Provided,
however, That no such person shall engage in transportation
subject to this part unless he holds a certificate or permit as
provided in this part. In the execution of any contract, agreement,
or arrangement to sell, provide, procure, furnish, or arrange for
such transportation, it shall be unlawful for such person to employ
any carrier by motor vehicle who or which is not the lawful holder
of an effective certificate or permit issued as provided in this
part:
And provided further, That the provisions of this
paragraph shall not apply to any carrier holding a certificate
Page 336 U. S. 784
or a permit under the provisions of this part or to any bona
fide employee or agent of such motor carrier, so far as concerns
transportation to be furnished wholly by such carrier or jointly
with other motor carriers holding like certificates or permits, or
with a common carrier by railroad, express, or water."
49 Stat. 554, 49 U.S.C. § 311(a).
"SEC. 222. (a) Any person knowingly and willfully violating any
provision of this part, or any rule, regulation, requirement, or
order thereunder, or any term or condition of any certificate,
permit, or license, for which a penalty is not otherwise herein
provided, shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined not more than
$100 for the first offense and not more than $500 for any
subsequent offense. Each day of such violation shall constitute a
separate offense."
49 Stat. 564, 49 U.S.C. § 322(a).
|
336
U.S. 725appc|
bwm:
APPENDIX C.
Summary of conflicts between California and federal
legislation and policies
(1) Conflicts inherent in the statutory texts.
CALIFORNIA STATUTE FEDERAL STATUTE
(
See Appendix A,
supra) (
See Appendix
B(2),
supra)
(a) Persons Affected and Activities Prohibited.
SEC. 203. (a) As used in this part --
654.1. It shall be unlawful for any (1) The term
"
person" means any
individual,
person,
acting individually or as an off- firm,
copartnership, corporation, company,
icer or employee of a corporation, or as association,
or joint-stock association, and
a member of a copartnership or as a com- includes any trustee,
receiver, assignee, or
mission agent or employee of another per- or personal
representative thereof. 49 Stat.
son, firm or corporation, to sell or offer 544, 49 U.S.C. §
303(a)(1).
for sale or to negotiate, provide, or ar-
range for, or to advertise or hold him- SEC. 211. (a)
No
person shall for com-
self out as one who sells or offers for
pensation sell
or offer for sale transporta-
sale or negotiates, provides, or arranges tion subject to this
part or shall make any
for transportation of a person or persons contract, agreement,
or arrangement to pro-
on an individual fare basis over the pub- vide, procure,
furnish, or arrange for such
lic highways of the State of California transportation or shall
hold himself or it-
unless such transportation is to be fur- self out by
advertisement, solicitation, or
nished or provided solely by, and such otherwise as one who
sells, provides, pro-
sale is authorized by, a carrier having cures, contracts, or
arranges for such trans-
a valid and existing certificate of con- portation,
unless
such persons holds a bro-
venience and necessity, or other valid
ker's license issued
by the Commission to
and existing
permit from the Public Util- engage in
such transactions:
Provided, how-
ities Commission of the State of Califor-
ever, That
no such person shall engage in
nia or from the Interstate Commerce Com-
transportation subject to this part unless
mission of the United States authorizing
he holds a
certificate or permit as provided
the holder of such certificate or per-
in this part. In
the execution of any con-
mit to provide such transportation. tract, agreement, or
arrangement to sell,
provide, procure, furnish, or arrange for
(In addition to the textual varia- such transportation, it shall
be unlawful
tions between the state and federal pro- for such person to
employ any carrier by
hibitions, this measure differs from the motor vehicle who or
which is not the law-
federal measure because this merely pro- ful holder of an
effective certificate or
hibits
travel bureau operations as such permit issued
as provided in this part: . . .
unless the carrier has a state or fed-
eral license or permit
and it does not (In addition to
the textual variations
require that the broker selling or ar- between the
state and federal prohibitions,
ranging for the transportation must be this differs
from the state measure because
a licensed broker.) this measure not only prohibits
interstate
travel bureau operations as such unless the
carrier holds a federal license or permit,
but it also requires that the broker selling
or arranging for the transportation must
hold a federal broker's license.)
(b) Exemptions.
654.2. The provisions of Section 654.1 SEC. 211. (a) . . .
And provided further,
of the Penal Code
shall not apply to the That the
provisions of this paragraph
shall
selling, furnishing, or providing of
not apply to any
carrier holding a certifi-
transportation of any person or persons
cate or a permit
under the provisions of this
part or to any bona fide employee or agent of
(1)
When no compensation is paid or to such motor
carrier, so far as concerns trans-
be paid, either directly or indirectly, portation to be
furnished wholly by such car-
for such transportation; rier or jointly with other motor
carriers
holding like certificates or permits, or with
(2) To the furnishing or providing of a common carrier by
railroad, express, or
transportation to or from work, of
employ- water.
ees engaged in farm work on any farm of the
State of California; SEC. 203. . . .
(3) To the furnishing or providing of (b)
Nothing in this
part, except the pro-
transportation to and from work of
employ- visions
of section 204 relative to qualifica-
ees of any nonprofit cooperative associa- tions and
maximum hours of service of emplo-
tion organized pursuant to any law of the yees and
safety of operation or standards of
State of California; equipment shall be construed
to include (1)
motor vehicles employed solely in transport-
(4) To the transportation of persons ing
school children and
teachers to or from
wholly
within the limits of a single mun- school; or
(2)
taxicabs, or other motor ve-
icipality or of contiguous municipalities; hicles
performing a bona fide taxicab serv-
ice, having a capacity of not more than six
(5) To transportation of persons over passengers and not
operated on a regular
a route
wholly or partly within a nation- route or
between fixed termini; or (3) motor
al park or state park where such trans- vehicles owned
or operated
by or on behalf
portation is sold in conjunction with or of
hotels and used exclusively for the trans-
as a part of a rail trip or trip over a portation of
hotel patrons between hotels and
regularly operated motor bus transporta- local railroad
or other common carrier sta-
tion system or line; tions; or (4) motor vehicles
operated, under@
authorization, regulation, and control of the
(6) To the transportation of passengers
Secretary of the
Interior, principally for
by a person who is driving his own vehicle
the purpose of
transporting persons in and
and the transportation of persons other
about the national
parks and national monu-
than himself and members of his family when
ments; or
(4a) motor vehicles controlled and
transporting such persons to or from their operated
by any
farmer when used in the
place of employment and when the
owner of
transportation of his agricultural commodi-
such vehicle is driving to and from his ties and
products thereof, or in the trans-
place of employment; provided that arrange- portation
of supplies to his farm; or (5)
ments for any such transportation provid- motor vehicles
controlled and operated
by
ed under the provisions of this subsection
a cooperative
association as defined in the
shall be made directly between the owner
Agricultural
Marketing Act, approved June
of such vehicle and the person who uses or 15, 1929, as amended,
or by a federation of
intends to use such transportation. such cooperative
associations, if such fed-
eration possesses no greater powers or pur-
poses than cooperative associations so de-
fined; or (6) motor vehicles used in
carry-
ing property consisting of ordinary live-
stock, fish (including shellfish), or agri-
cultural commodities (not including manu-
factured products thereof), if such motor
vehicles are not used in carrying any other
property, or passengers, for compensation;
or (7) motor vehicles used exclusively in
the distribution of newspapers; or (7a)
the transportation of persons or property
by motor vehicle
when incidental to trans-
portation by aircraft; nor, unless and to
the extent that the Commission shall from
time to time find that such application is
necessary to carry out the policy of Cong-
ress enunciated in section 202, shall the
provisions of this part, except the provi-
sions of section 204 relative to qualifi-
cations and maximum hours of service of
employees and safety of operation or stan-
dards of equipment apply to: (8) the trans-
portation of passengers or property in in-
terstate or foreign commerce
wholly within
a municipality or between contiguous muni-
cipalities or within a zone adjacent to and
commercially a part of any such municipality
or municipalities except when such transpor-
tation is under a common control, manage-
ment, or arrangement for a continuous carri-
age or shipment to or from a point within
such municipality, municipalities, or zone,
and provided that the motor carrier engaged
in such transportation of passengers over
regular or irregular route or routes in in-
terstate commerce is also lawfully engaged
in the intrastate transportation of passen-
gers over the entire length of such inter-
state route or routes in accordance with
the laws of each State having jurisdiction;
or (9)
the casual, occasional, or recipro-
cal transportation of passengers or proper-
ty by motor vehicle in interstate or for-
eign commerce for compensation by any per-
son not engaged in transportation by motor
vehicle as a regular occupation or busi-
ness, unless, in the case of transporta-
tion of passengers, such transportation is
sold or offered for sale, or provided or
procured or furnished or arranged for @by a
broker@ or by any other person who sells or
offers for sale transportation furnished
by a person lawfully engaged in the trans-
portation of passengers by motor vehicle
under a certificate or permit issued under
this part or under a pending application
for such a certificate or permit.
(c) Penalties.
654.3. Violation of Section 654.1 shall SEC. 222. (a) Any person
knowingly and
be a misdemeanor, and upon
first convic- willfully
violating any provision of this
tion the punishment shall be a fine of not part, or any
rule, regulation, requirement,
over two hundred fifty dollars ($250), or or order thereunder,
or any term or condi-
imprisonment in jail for not over 90 days, tion of any
certificate, permit, or license
or both such find and imprisonment. Upon for which a penalty is
not otherwise herein
second conviction, the punishment shall be provided
shall, upon conviction thereof, be
imprisonment in jail for not less than 30 fined not more than
$100 for the
first of-
days and not more than 180 days. Upon a
fense and not
more than $500 for
any subse-
third or subsequent conviction, the pun-
quent
offense. Each day of such violation
ishment shall be confinement in jail for shall constitute a
separate offense.
not less than 90 days and not more than one
year, and a person suffering three or more
convictions shall not be eligible to pro-
bation, the provisions of any law to the
contrary notwithstanding.
(2)
Emphasis expressly placed upon the mutual exclusiveness
of
the state and federal regulations assigning intrastate
regulation
to the states and interstate regulation to the Interstate
Commerce
Commission upon its finding it necessary.
Federal Act -- Motor Carrier Act, 1935,
1933 California Act. 1935, Part II, Interstate Commerce Act.
The state policy of regulation of motor "The provisions of this
part apply to the
carrier transportation agents and unlic- transportation of
passengers or property by
ensed "share the expense" motor carriers motor carriers engaged
in
interstate or for-
was to apply to
interstate, as well as in- eign
commerce . . .
and the regulation of
trastate, transportation "until such time such
transportation . . . is hereby vested in
as Congress of the United States shall the
Interstate Commerce Commission." § 202(a),
act. . . ." P. 760,
supra. Appendix B(2),
supra.
"
Nothing in this part shall be construed
. . . to interfere with the exclusive exercise
by each State of the power of regulation of
intrastate commerce by motor carriers on the
highways thereof." § 202(b), Appendix B(2),
supra.
Nothing in this part was to include the
casual, occasional, or reciprocal transporta-
tion of passengers by motor vehicle in
inter-
state commerce for compensation by any per-
son not engaged in such transportation as a
regular occupation or business "
unless and to
the extent that the Commission shall from
time to time find that such application is
necessary to carry out the policy of Congress
enunciated in section 202. . . ." § 203(b),
Appendix B(2),
supra.
Federal Act -- 1940 Amendment to Part II of
1941 California Amendments. the Interstate Commerce Act.
The state regulation of the
interstate This
partly
removed the exemption of the
transportation was limited to a period in Federal
Act from the casual, occasional, or
"the absence on the part of Congress or reciprocal
transporters of persons or prop-
the Interstate Commerce Commission regula- erty in
interstate commerce. The removal ap-
ting or requiring licenses of motor car- plied to cases, for
example, where the trans-
rier transportation agents acting as such portation was sold or
arranged for by a bro-
for motor carriers carrying passengers in ker. Note 20,
supra.
interstate commerce. . . ." P. 769,
supra.
Federal Order -- 1942 Order of the Inter-
1947 California Act. state Commerce Commission.
This repealed the 1933 Act, as amend- This
further removed
the exemption from
ed in 1941, and mentioned only "transpor-
the casual,
occasional, or reciprocal trans-
tation . . . over the public highways of porters of persons or
property in @interstate
the State of California. . . ." Appendix commerce.@ This federal
order brought these
A,
supra. This could be interpreted as interstate
operations under the Federal Act
limited to intrastate transportation, but and under the
regulation of the Commission.
it was interpreted by the court below as By virtue of
the self-terminating provisions
an invalid attempt to invade the federal of the
California Act,
this order cut off the
jurisdiction over interstate commerce. state
regulation of these interstate opera-
Note 7,
supra. tions. Note 23,
supra.
(3)
Conflicts between state and federal policies which led
to the
taking of federal jurisdiction over travel bureaus and
"share the
expense" motor transportation engaged in casual
interstate
operations.
The 1931 California Act recognized and In 1935 and 1940, Part II
of the Interstate
licensed travel bureaus arranging "share Commerce Act
gave warning that federal control
the expense" interstate, as well as in-
would be
taken when the Interstate Commerce Com-
trastate,
motor trips by unlicensed car- mission found
it necessary in order to carry out@
riers.
Pp. 759-760, supra. the policy of Congress.@ Pp.
751-762, 767-768,
supra.
The 1933 California Act continued this
policy as to interstate, as well as intra-
state, transportation. It stated, howev-
er, that such application to
interstate
transportation would continue only until
such time as the Congress of the United
States took action. Pp. 760-761,
supra.
The 1941 California Amendments
empha- In 1940, the
Interstate Commerce Commis-
sized the limitation upon state regula- sion began its
expressly authorized
investi-
tion of interstate transportation. Pp.
gations
into the operation of travel bureaus
769-770,
supra. and "share the expense" interstate
motor
transportation. Pp. 765-767,
supra. In 1942,
these resulted in the
Commission's conclusion
that such operations, as applied to interstate
commerce, were contrary to public policy. It
declined to issue a license even to a regular
transportation broker unless he agreed to re-
frain from such operations. It expressly
found that state and local officials were un-
able to regulate such operations because a
large proportion of the transportation was
interstate.
In 1942,
the anticipated federal ac- In 1942, the
Interstate Commerce Commis-
tion automatically cut off the California sion order
largely removed the statutory ex-
regulation of these interstate operations. emption
of these travel bureaus and opera-
Pp. 770-774,
supra. tions from the Interstate
Commerce Act, and
federal control has been continuously exer-
cised over them since that date. Pp. 770-
773,
supra.
ewm: