1. The usual and ordinary legislation of the states regulating
or prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors raises no question
under the Constitution of the United States prior to the Fourteenth
Amendment of that instrument.
2. The right to sell intoxicating liquors is not one of the
privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States which by
that amendment the states were forbidden to abridge.
3. But if a case were presented in which a person owning liquor
or other property at the time a law was passed by the state
absolutely prohibiting any sale of it, it would be a very grave
question whether such a law would not be inconsistent with the
provision of that amendment which forbids the state to deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property without due course of law.
4. While the case before the Court attempted to present that
question, it failed to do it, because the plea, which is taken as
true, did not state in due form and by positive allegation the time
when the defendant became the owner of the liquor sold, and
secondly because the record satisfied the Court that this was a
moot case, made up to obtain the opinion of this Court on a grave
constitutional question without the existence of the facts
necessary to raise that question.
5. In such a case, where the supreme court of the state to which
the writ of error is directed has not considered the question, this
Court will not feel at liberty to go out of its usual course to
decide it.
Page 85 U. S. 130
6. Per JUSTICES BRADLEY and FIELD. This case distinguished from
the
Slaughter-House Cases.
Bartemeyer, the plaintiff in error, was tried before a justice
of the peace on the charge of selling intoxicating liquors on the
8th of March, 1870, to one Timothy Hickey, in Davenport Township,
in the State of Iowa, and was acquitted. On an appeal to the
circuit court of the state, the defendant filed the following
plea:
"And now comes the defendant, F. Bartemeyer, and for plea to the
information in this cause says: he admits that at the time and
place mentioned in said information he did sell and deliver to one
Timothy Hickey one glass of intoxicating liquor called whisky, and
did then and there receive pay in lawful money from said Hickey for
the same. But defendant alleges that he committed no crime known to
the law by the selling of the intoxicating liquor hereinbefore
described to said Hickey, for the reason that he, the defendant,
was the lawful owner, holder, and possessor, in the State of Iowa,
of said property, to-wit, said one glass of intoxicating liquor,
sold as aforesaid to said Hickey, prior to the day on which the law
was passed under which these proceedings are instituted and
prosecuted, known as the act for the suppression of intemperance,
and being chapter sixty-four of the revision of 1860, and that,
prior to the passage of said act for the suppression of
intemperance, he was a citizen of the United States and of the
State of Iowa."
Without any evidence whatever the case was submitted to the
court on this written plea, the parties waiving a jury, and a
judgment was rendered that the defendant was guilty as charged, and
he was sentenced to pay a fine of $20 and costs. A bill of
exceptions was taken, and the case carried to the Supreme Court of
Iowa, and that court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court and
rendered a judgment for costs against the defendant, who now
brought the case here on error.
There was sufficient evidence that the main ground relied on to
reverse the judgment in the Supreme Court of Iowa
Page 85 U. S. 131
was, that the Act of the Iowa Legislature on which the
prosecution was based, was in violation of the Constitution of the
United States.
The opinion of that court was in the record, and, so far as the
general idea was involved, that acts for suppressing the use of
intoxicating drinks are opposed to that instrument, the court
contended themselves with a reference to the previous decisions of
that court, namely:
Our House, No. 2 v. State, [
Footnote 1]
Zumhof v. State,
[
Footnote 2]
Santo v.
state; [
Footnote 3] cases
in which the negative of the idea is maintained. But, referring to
the allegation in the plea that the defendant was the owner of the
liquor sold before the passage of the act under which he was
prosecuted, they said that the transcript failed to show that the
admissions and averments of the plea were all the evidence in the
case, and that other testimony may have shown that he did not so
own and possess the liquor. [This, however, rather seemed, as the
Reporter understood it, to be a mistake; at least the record,
[
Footnote 4] if he read it
correctly, stated, as he has already said, that the plea was all
the evidence given and received on the trial.]
The case was submitted on printed arguments some time ago, and
when the
Slaughter-House Cases, reported in
83
U. S. 16th Wall. 36, were argued; the position of the
plaintiff in error in this case being, as it partly was in those,
that the act of the state legislature, the maintenance of which by
the courts below was the ground of the writ of error, was in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which
runs thus:
"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United
States and of the state where they reside."
"
No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge
the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor
shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. "
Page 85 U. S. 132
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, after stating the case, delivered the
opinion of the Court as follows:
The case has been submitted to us on printed argument. That on
the part of the plaintiff in error has taken a very wide range, and
is largely composed of the arguments familiar to all against the
right of the states to regulate traffic in intoxicating liquors. So
far as this argument deals with the mere question of regulating
this traffic, or even its total prohibition, as it may have been
affected by anything in the federal Constitution prior to the
recent amendments of that instrument, we do not propose to enter
into a discussion. Up to that time, it had been considered as
falling within the police regulations of the states, left of their
judgment and subject to no other limitations than such as were
imposed by the state constitution or by the general principles
supposed to limit all legislative power. It has never been
seriously contended that such laws raised any question growing out
of the Constitution of the United States.
But the case before us is supposed by counsel of the plaintiff
in error to present a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution, on the ground that the Act of the Iowa Legislature is
a violation of the privileges and immunities of citizens of the
United States which that amendment declares shall not be abridged
by the states, and that in his case it deprives him of his property
without due process of law.
As regards both branches of this defense, it is to be observed
that the statute of Iowa which is complained of was in existence
long before the amendment of the federal Constitution, which is
thus invoked to render it invalid. Whatever were the privileges and
immunities of Mr. Bartemeyer, as they stood before that amendment,
under the Iowa statute, they have certainly not been abridged by
any
Page 85 U. S. 133
action of the state legislature since that amendment became a
part of the Constitution. And unless that amendment confers
privileges and immunities which he did not previously possess, the
argument fails. But the most liberal advocate of the rights
conferred by that amendment have contended for nothing more than
that the rights of the citizen previously existing, and dependent
wholly on state laws for their recognition, are now placed under
the protection of the federal government, and are secured by the
federal Constitution. The weight of authority is overwhelming that
no such immunity has heretofore existed as would prevent state
legislatures from regulating and even prohibiting the traffic in
intoxicating drinks, with a solitary exception. That exception is
the case of a law operating so rigidly on property in existence at
the time of its passage, absolutely prohibiting its sale, as to
amount to depriving the owner of his property. A single case, that
of
Wynehamer v. People, [
Footnote 5] has held that as to such property the statute
would be void for that reason. But no case has held that such a law
was void as violating the privileges or immunities of citizens of a
state or of the United States. If, however, such a proposition is
seriously urged, we think that the right to sell intoxicating
liquors, so far as such a right exists, is not one of the rights
growing out of citizenship of the United States, and in this regard
the case falls within the principles laid down by this Court in the
Slaughter-House Cases. [
Footnote 6]
But if it were true and it was fairly presented to us that the
defendant was the owner of the glass of intoxicating liquor which
he sold to Hickey at the time that the State of Iowa first imposed
an absolute prohibition on the sale of such liquors, then we
concede that two very grave questions would arise, namely whether
this would be a statute depriving him of his property without due
process of law and secondly whether, if it were so, it would be so
far a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment in that regard as would
call for judicial action by this Court?
Page 85 U. S. 134
Both of these questions, whenever they may be presented to us,
are of an importance to require the most careful and serious
consideration. They are not to be lightly treated, nor are we
authorized to make any advances to meet them until we are required
to do so by the duties of our position.
In the case before us, the Supreme Court of Iowa, whose judgment
we are called on to review, did not consider it. They said that the
record did not present it.
It is true the bill of exceptions, as it seems to us, does show
that the defendant's plea was all the evidence given, but this does
not remove the difficulty in our minds. The plea states that the
defendant was the owner of the glass of liquor sold prior to the
passage of the law under which the proceedings against him were
instituted, being chapter sixty-four of the revision of 1860.
If this is to be treated as an allegation that the defendant was
the owner of that glass of liquor prior to 1860, it is
insufficient, because the revision of the laws of Iowa of 1860 was
not an enactment of new laws, but a revision of those previously
enacted, and there has been in existence in the State of Iowa, ever
since the code of 1851, a law strictly prohibiting the sale of such
liquors, the act in all essential particulars under which the
defendant was prosecuted, amended in some immaterial points. If it
is supposed that the averment is helped by the statement that he
owned the liquor before the law was passed, the answer is that this
is a mere conclusion of law. He should have stated when he became
the owner of the liquor, or at least have fixed a date when he did
own it and leave the court to decide when the law took effect and
apply it to his case. But the plea itself is merely argumentative,
and does not state the ownership as a fact, but says he is not
guilty of any offense because of such fact.
If it be said that this manner of looking at the case is narrow
and technical, we answer that the record affords to us on its face
the strongest reason to believe that it has been prepared from the
beginning for the purpose of obtaining the opinion of this Court on
important constitutional questions
Page 85 U. S. 135
without the actual existence of the facts on which such
questions can alone arise.
It is absurd to suppose that the plaintiff, an ordinary retailer
of drinks, could have proved, if required, that he had owned that
particular glass of whisky prior to the prohibitory liquor law of
1851.
The defendant, from his first appearance before the justice of
the peace to his final argument in the supreme court, asserted in
the record in various forms that the statute under which he was
prosecuted was a violation of the Constitution of the United
States. The act of the prosecuting attorney, under these
circumstances, in going to trial without any replication or denial
of the plea, which was intended manifestly to raise that question
but which carried on its face the strongest probability of its
falsehood, satisfies us that a moot case was deliberately made up
to raise the particular point when the real facts of the case would
not have done so. As the Supreme Court of Iowa did not consider
this question as raised by the record, and passed no opinion on it,
we do not feel at liberty, under all the circumstances, to pass on
it on this record.
The other errors assigned being found not to exist, the judgment
of the Supreme Court of Iowa is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
4 G. Greene 171.
[
Footnote 2]
Ib., 526.
[
Footnote 3]
2 Ia. 165.
[
Footnote 4]
See bottom of page 6 of the same.
[
Footnote 5]
3 Kernan 486.
[
Footnote 6]
83 U. S. 16 Wall.
36.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, concurring:
Whilst I concur in the conclusion to which the court has arrived
in this case, I think it proper to state briefly and explicitly the
grounds on which I distinguish it from the
Slaughter-House
Cases, which were argued at the same time. I prefer to do this
in order that there may be no misapprehension of the views which I
entertain in regard to the application of the Fourteenth Amendment
of the Constitution.
This was a prosecution for selling intoxicating liquor in Iowa
contrary to a law of that state which prohibits the sale of such
liquor. The defendant pleaded that he was the lawful owner of the
liquor in Iowa and a citizen of the United States prior to the day
on which the law was passed, being chapter sixty-four of the
revision of 1860. Judgment
Page 85 U. S. 136
was given against the defendant on his plea. The truth is that
the law in question was originally passed in 1851 and was
incorporated into the revision of 1860, in the chapter referred to
in the plea. Whether the plea meant to assert that the defendant
owned the liquor prior to the passage of the original law, or only
prior to its reenactment in the revision, is doubtful, and, being
doubtful, it must be interpreted most strongly against the pleader.
It amounts, therefore, only to an allegation that the defendant
became owner of the liquor at a time when it was unlawful to sell
it in Iowa. The law therefore was not in this case an invasion of
property existing at the date of its passage, and the question of
depriving a person of property without due process of law does not
arise. No one has ever doubted that a legislature may prohibit the
vending of articles deemed injurious to the safety of society,
provided it does not interfere with vested rights of property. When
such rights stand in the way of the public good they can be removed
by awarding compensation to the owner. When they are not in
question, the claim of a right to sell a prohibited article can
never be deemed one of the privileges and immunities of the
citizen. It is
toto coelo different from the right not to
be deprived of property without due process of law, or the right to
pursue such lawful avocation as a man chooses to adopt,
unrestricted by tyrannical and corrupt monopolies. By that portion
of the Fourteenth Amendment by which no state may make or enforce
any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities of
citizens of the United States, or take life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law, it has now become the fundamental law
of this country that life, liberty, and property (which include
"the pursuit of happiness") are sacred rights, which the
Constitution of the United States guarantees to its humblest
citizen against oppressive legislation, whether national or local,
so that he cannot be deprived of them without due process of law.
The monopoly created by the Legislature of Louisiana, which was
under consideration in the
Slaughter-House Cases, was, in
my judgment, legislation of this sort
Page 85 U. S. 137
and obnoxious to this objection. But police regulations,
intended for the preservation of the public health and the public
order, are of an entirely different character. So much of the
Louisiana law as partook of this charter was never objected to. It
was the unconscionable monopoly, of which the police regulation was
a mere pretext, that was deemed by the dissenting members of the
court an invasion of the right of the citizen to pursue his lawful
calling. A claim of right to pursue an unlawful calling stands on
very different grounds, occupying the same platform as does a claim
of right to disregard license laws and to usurp public franchises.
It is greatly to be regretted, as it seems to me, that this
distinction was lost sight of (as I think it was) in the decision
of the court referred to.
I am authorized to say that JUSTICES SWAYNE and FIELD concur in
this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, concurring:
I concur in the views expressed by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, but will
add a few observations.
I accept the statement made in the opinion of the Court that the
Act of Iowa of 1860, to which the plea of the defendant refers, was
only a revision of the Act of 1851, and agree that for this reason
the averment of the ownership of the liquor sold prior to the
passage of the Act of 1860 did not answer the charge for which the
defendant was prosecuted. I have no doubt of the power of the state
to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors when such regulation
does not amount to the destruction of the right of property in
them. The right of property in an article involves the power to
sell and dispose of such article as well as to use and enjoy it.
Any act which declares that the owner shall neither sell it nor
dispose of it nor use and enjoy it confiscates it, depriving him of
his property without due process of law. Against such arbitrary
legislation by any state the Fourteenth Amendment affords
protection. But the prohibition of sale in any way, or for any use,
is quite a different
Page 85 U. S. 138
thing from a regulation of the sale or use so as to protect the
health and morals of the community. All property, even the most
harmless in its nature, is equally subject to the power of the
state in this respect with the most noxious.
No one has ever pretended, that I am aware of, that the
Fourteenth Amendment interferes in any respect with the police
power of the state. Certainly no one who desires to give to that
amendment its legitimate operation has ever asserted for it any
such effect. It was not adopted for any such purpose. The judges
who dissented from the opinion of the majority of the Court in the
Slaughter-House Cases never contended for any such
position. But, on the contrary, they recognized the power of the
state in its fullest extent, observing that it embraced all
regulations affecting the health, good order, morals, peace, and
safety of society, that all sorts of restrictions and burdens were
imposed under it, and that when these were not in conflict with any
constitutional prohibition or fundamental principles, they could
not be successfully assailed in a judicial tribunal. But they said
that under the pretense of prescribing a police regulation, the
state could not be permitted to encroach upon any of the just
rights of the citizen, which the Constitution intended to guard
against abridgment, and because, in their opinion, the act of
Louisiana then under consideration went far beyond the province of
a police regulation and created an oppressive and odious monopoly,
thus directly impairing the common rights of the citizens of the
state, they dissented from the judgment of the Court.
They could not then, and do not now, see anything in the act
which fell under the denomination of a police or sanitary
regulation except the provisions requiring the landing and
slaughtering of animals below the City of New Orleans and the
inspection of the animals before they were slaughtered, and of
these provisions no complaint was made. All else was a mere grant
of special and exclusive privileges. And it was incomprehensible to
them then, and it is incomprehensible to them now, how, in a
district of country nearly as large as the state of Rhode Island
and embracing a population
Page 85 U. S. 139
of over two hundred thousand souls, any conditions of health or
morals should require that the preparation of animal food, a prime
necessity of life, should be entrusted to a single corporation for
twenty-five years, or how in all that vast district, embracing
eleven hundred and fifty-four square miles, there could be only one
locality and one building in which animals could with safety to the
public health be sheltered and slaughtered. And with all the light
shed upon the subject by the elaborate opinion of the majority,
they do not yet understand that it belongs to the police power of
any state to require the owner of animals to give to the butcher a
portion of each animal slaughtered. If the state can say the owner
shall give the horns and the hoofs, it may say he shall give the
hide and the tallow, or any part of the animal. It may say that the
butcher shall retain the four quarters and return to the owner only
the head and the feet. The owner may require the very portions he
is compelled to surrender for his own business -- the horns, for
example, for the manufacture of combs, and the hoofs for the
manufacture of glue, and other portions for equally useful
purposes.
It was because the act of Louisiana transcended the limits of
police regulation and asserted a power in the state to farm out the
ordinary avocations of life that dissent was made to the judgment
of the Court sustaining the validity of the act.
It was believed that the Fourteenth Amendment had taken away the
power of the state to parcel out to favored citizens the ordinary
trades and callings of life, to give to A. the sole right to bake
bread; to B. the sole right to make hats; to C. the sole right to
sow grain or plow the fields, and thus, at discretion, to grant to
some the means of livelihood and withhold it from others. It was
supposed that there were no privileges or immunities of citizens
more sacred than those which are involved in the right to "the
pursuit of happiness," which is usually classed with life and
liberty, and that in the pursuit of happiness, since that amendment
became part of the fundamental law, everyone was free to
Page 85 U. S. 140
follow any lawful employment without other restraint than such
as equally affects all other persons.
Before this amendment and the Thirteenth Amendment were adopted,
the states had supreme authority over all these matters, and the
national government, except in a few particulars, could afford no
protection to the individual against arbitrary and oppressive
legislation. After the civil war had closed, the same authority was
asserted, and, in the states recently in insurrection, was
exercised to the oppression of the freedmen, and towards citizens
of the North seeking residence there or citizens resident there who
had maintained their loyalty during the war for nationality, a
feeling of jealousy and dislike existed which could not fail soon
to fined expression in discriminating and hostile legislation. It
was to prevent the possibility of such legislation in future and
its enforcement where already adopted that the Fourteenth Amendment
was directed. It grew out of the feeling that a union which had
been maintained by such costly sacrifices was, after all, worthless
if a citizen could not be protected in all his fundamental rights
everywhere -- North and South, East and West -- throughout the
limits of the republic. The amendment was not, as held in the
opinion of the majority, primarily intended to confer citizenship
on the negro race. It had a much broader purpose; it was intended
to justify legislation, extending the protection of the national
government over the common rights of all citizens of the United
States, and thus obviate objections to the legislation adopted for
the protection of the emancipated race. It was intended to make it
possible for all persons, which necessarily included those of every
race and color, to live in peace and security wherever the
jurisdiction of the nation reached. It therefore recognized, if it
did not create, a national citizenship, and made all persons
citizens except those who preferred to remain under the protection
of a foreign government, and declared that their privileges and
immunities, which embrace the fundamental rights belonging to
citizens of all free governments, should not be abridged by any
state. This national citizenship
Page 85 U. S. 141
is primary, and not secondary. It clothes its possessor, or
would do so if not shorn of its efficiency by construction, with
the right, when his privileges and immunities are invaded by
partial and discriminating legislation, to appeal from his state to
his nation, and gives him the assurance that, for his protection,
he can invoke the whole power of the government.
This case was considered by the Court in connection with the
Slaughter-House Cases, although its decision has been so
long delayed. I have felt therefore called upon to point out the
distinction between this case and those cases, and as there has
been some apparent misapprehension of the views of the dissenting
judges, to restate the grounds of their dissent.
I concur in the judgment in this case.