Chicago, Wilmington & Vermilion Coal Co. v. People

54 N.E. 961, 181 Ill. 270, 1899 Ill. LEXIS 3044
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 961 (Chicago, Wilmington & Vermilion Coal Co. v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Wilmington & Vermilion Coal Co. v. People, 54 N.E. 961, 181 Ill. 270, 1899 Ill. LEXIS 3044 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the court:

Section 29 of article 4 of the constitution is as follows: “It shall be the duty of the General Assembly to pass such laws as may be necessary for the protection of operative miners, by providing for ventilation when the same may be required, and the construction of escapement shafts, or such other appliances as may secure safety in all-coal mines, and to provide for the enforcement of said laws by such penalties and punishments as may be deemed proper.” This provision requires the legislature to pass such laws as may be necessary, etc., and leaves to that body the determination of the policy of the State as to what legislation is necessary to conform to its requirements.

The legislature has seen proper, in the act entitled “An act providing for the health and safety of persons employed in coal mines,” approved May 28, 1879, and in force July 1, 1879, and by the amendments thereto, to require certain dnties to be done and performed by the owner, operator or manager of a coal mine. Some of these duties are as follows: Section 1 provides that the owner shall make or cause to be made an accurate map, to be furnished to the State inspector of mines of the district. Section 2 provides the inspector may make a map at the expense of the owner, should he neglect or refuse so to do. Section 3 is as to the manner of construction of escapement shafts, etc. Section 4 is as to the ventilation of mines. Section 5 requires that bore holes shall be kept twenty feet in advance of each working place, under certain circumstances. Section 6 is as to hoist-ways, and who may be employed, etc. Section 7 is as to operating the hoist-ways. Section 8 is as to the fencing the shaft. Section 11 provides for the division of the State into districts, for the appointment of inspectors, and prescribes their duties and fixes their salaries. This latter section was amended in 1895. Prior to that time the inspector was paid wholly by the State, but after the amendment of 1895, and by the amendment of 1897, it was provided that fees might be charged, which were required to be paid by the mine owner. It is these two amendatory statutes which the appellant contends are unconstitutional, as placing a burden that is unreasonable and unjust onto the mine owner.

The object and purpose of the statute are the protection of miners working in coal mines. Whilst the act is an effort on the part of the General Assembly to strictly comply with section 29 of article 4 of the constitution, by providing" for the ventilation of mines, the construction of escapement shafts, and such other appliances as shall secure safety in all coal mines, the General Assembly has seen proper to include a provision for the preparation of maps and the filing of the same with the chief mine inspector of the district, and that on neglect or default of the owner to make such map the inspector may make the same at his expense,—and this is one of the requirements of the statute which has bepn held constitutional by this court. In Daniels v. Hilgard, 77 Ill. 640, it was held (p. 643): “Our legislature, in an act having for its avowed object the providing for the health and safety of persons emploj^ed in coal mines, has thought it proper to incorporate this provision for the making of a map. The law-making powers elsewhere, as it is seen in their laws for the same object, have adopted this same provision. This would seem to indicate as the legislative understanding that the provision is one in aid of the accomplishment of the purpose of such acts,—the protection of persons engaged in such mines; a proper part of the system adopted to that end. The question is properly one of legislative determination. A court should not lightly interfere in such case. The legislature must have manifestly transcended its province for it to do so. We are óf opinion that it is not for a court to say that the provision here, which is called in question, is anything more than a fair and reasonable police regulation with reference to the subject matter of the act, which the legislature, in its discretion, has seen proper to adopt, and that it should not be set aside as unconstitutional.”

To a much greater extent the provisions of section 11, which prescribe the duties of the inspectors, and require his reports and statements to be ¡Dosted in a conspicuous place, showing the condition of the mine, and what, in his judgment, is necessary for the protection of the lives and health of persons employed in such mine, etc., are an exercise of the police power of the State. The examination of the condition of the mine would also necessarily require the inspector to examine and report as to whether the manner of construction of escapement shafts, air shafts and the ventilation of the mine is in conformity with the requirements of the statute. Inspections are necessary in determining health and quarantine laws, and also with reference to the examination of articles to be used as food, and it never has been held that a provision looking to the inspection of certain articles that may be offered for sale for the purposes of human food, or a law providing for inspection with reference to health, is an improper exercise of the police power. Nor could it be held -that the provision of the statute with reference to the appointment of inspectors for coal mines, who are to discharge the duties imposed upon them by section 11, is not a proper exercise of the police power of the State. The very purpose and object of the statute are in regard to the health and safety of miners, and requiring that mine owners should permit an inspection of their mines for this purpose is but an exercise of such police power.

We do not understand the contention of the appellant to be, however, that these provisions of the statute are an improper exercise of the police power, but understand the contention is that the provisions of the statute which require a fee to be paid for such inspection by the mine owner are an improper exercise of the police power. In was held in Morgan’s Steamship Co. v. Louisiana Board of Health, 118 U. S. 455, that an inspection fee imposed by the State of Louisiana on a vessel passing a quarantine station, for examination as to her sanitary condition and the ports from which she came, is a compensation for services rendered the vessel, and not a tax imposed, within the meaning of the provision of the constitution concerning" a tonnage tax imposed by the States, and that the act imposing such fee is a valid enactment.

Inspection fees are not taxes, but are imposed under the principle that they are compensation for services rendered in and about making such inspection, which is presumably beneficial to the person upon whom the fees are imposed under and by virtue of the general police powers of the State. City of Charleston v. Rogers, 2 McCord, 495; Cooley on Taxation, 413.

It was held in People v. Harper, 91 Ill. 357, that the legislature had full power to pass a law committing the inspection of grain to a board created for that purpose; that the expenses occasioned by such inspection may be required to be borne by those presumably benefited by it; that the fixing of fees for such services and prescribing the manner of their collection and upon whom they shall be imposed do not fall within the constitutional limitations concerning the imposition of a local burden by way of taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 961, 181 Ill. 270, 1899 Ill. LEXIS 3044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-wilmington-vermilion-coal-co-v-people-ill-1899.