Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Illinois

177 U.S. 514, 20 S. Ct. 722, 44 L. Ed. 868, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1821
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 30, 1900
Docket198
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 177 U.S. 514 (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Illinois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Illinois, 177 U.S. 514, 20 S. Ct. 722, 44 L. Ed. 868, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1821 (1900).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

New classes of cases have become more common of recent years'than those wherein the police power of the State over the vehicles of interstate commerce has been drawn in question. That such power exists and will be enforcéd, notwithstanding the constitutional authority of' Congress to regulate such commerce, is evident from the large number of cases in which we have sustained the validity of local laws designed’ to secure the safety and comfort of passengers, employes, persons crossing railway tracks, and adjacent property owners, as well as other regulations intended for the public good.

[517]*517We have recently applied, this doctrine to state laws requiring locomotive engineers to be examined and licensed by the state authorities, Smith v. Alabama, 124 U. S. 465; requiring such engineers to be examined from time to time with respect to their ability to distinguish colors, Nashville &c. Railway v. Alabama, 128 U. S. 96; requiring telegraph companies to receive dispatches and to transmit and deliver them with due diligence, as applied to messages from outside the State, Western Union Tel. Co. v. James, 162 U. S. 650; forbidding the running of freight trains on Sunday, Hennington v. Georgia, 163 U. S. 299; requiring railway companies to fix their rates annually for the transportation of passengers and freight, and also requiring them to post a printed copy of such rates at all their stations, Railway Company v. Fuller, 17 Wall. 560; forbidding the consolidation of parallel or competing lines of railway, Louisville &c. Nashville Railroad v. Kentucky, 161 U. S. 677; regulating the heating of passenger cars, and directing guards and guard posts to be placed on railroad bridges and trestles and the approaches thereto, N. Y., N. H. &c. Railroad Co. v. New York, 165 U. S. 628; providing that no contract shall exempt any railroad corporation from the liability of a common carrier or a carrier of passengers, which would have existed if no contract had been made, Chicago, Milwaukee &c. Railway v. Solan, 169 U. S. 133; and declaring that Avhen a common carrier accepts for transportation anything directed to a point of destination beyond the terminus of his OAvn line or route, he shall be deemed thereby to assume an obligation for its safe carriage to such point of destination, unless at the time of such acceptance such carrier be released or exempted from such liability by contract in Avriting, signed by the owner or his agent, Richmond &c. Allegheny Railroad v. Patterson Tobacco Co., 169 U. S. 311. In none of these cases Avas it thought that the regulations were unreasonable or operated in any just sense as a restriction upon interstate commerce.

But for the reason that these laws Avere considered unreasonable and to unnecessarily hamper commerce betAveen the States, Ave have felt ourselves constrained in a large number of cases to express our disapproval of such as provided for taxing di[518]*518rectly or indirectly the carrying on or the profits of interstate commerce. We have also held to be invalid a statute of Louisiana requiring those engaged in interstate commerce to give all persons upon public conveyances equal rights and privileges in all parts of the conveyance, without distinction or discrimination on account of race or color, Hall v. De Cuir, 95 U. S. 485; another regulating the charges of railway companies for passengers or freight between places in different States, Wabash St. Louis &c. Railway v. Illinois, 118 U. S. 557; another requiring telegraph companies to deliver dispatches by messenger to the persons to whom the same are addressed, so far as .they attempted to regulate the delivery of such dispatches at places situated in another State, Western Union Tel. Co. v. Pendleton, 122 U. S. 347; and still another forbidding common carriers from bringing intoxicating liquors into the State without being furnished with a certificate that the consignee was authorized to sell intoxicating liquors in the county, Bowman v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway, 125 U. S. 465.

Several acts in pari materia with the one under consideration have been before this court, and have been approved or disapproved as they have seemed reasonable or .unreasonable, or bore more or less heavily upon the power of railways to regulate their trains in the'respective and sometimes conflicting interests of local and through traffic. In the earliest of these cases, Illinois Central Railroad v. Illinois, 163 U. S. 142, the very statute of Illinois under consideration in this case, as construed and applied bjr the Supreme Court of that /State, was held to be an unreasonable restriction upon interstate traffic, in requiring a fast mail train from Chicago to places south of the Ohio Kiver, over an interstate highway established by authority of Congress,, to delay the transportation of its interstate passengers and United States mail, by turning aside from its direct route and running to a station (Cairo) three and one half miles, away from a point on that, rqute, and back again to the same point, before proceeding on its way; and to do this for the purpose of discharging and receiving passengers at that station, for whom the railroad company furnished other and ample ac-' commodation. ■ Said Mr. Justice Gray: The State may doubt[519]*519less compel the railroad company to perform the duty imposed by its charter of carrying passengers and goods between its. termini within the State. But so long, at least, as that duty is adequately performed by the company, the State cannot, under the guise of compelling its performance,, interfere with the performance of paramount duties to which the company has been subjected by the Constitution and laws of the United States.”

Upon the contrary, in Gladson v. Minnesota, 166 U. S. 427

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Bluebook (online)
177 U.S. 514, 20 S. Ct. 722, 44 L. Ed. 868, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-railway-co-v-illinois-scotus-1900.