D. E. Foote & Co. v. Clagett

81 A. 511, 116 Md. 228, 1911 Md. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 81 A. 511 (D. E. Foote & Co. v. Clagett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. E. Foote & Co. v. Clagett, 81 A. 511, 116 Md. 228, 1911 Md. LEXIS 60 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered thé opinion of the Court.

This case originated in a bill of complaint filed by D. E. Foote and Company, a corporation under the laws of Delaware, and William H. McGee, trading as William H. McGee & Co., in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, against William B. Clagett, Comptroller of the State of Maryland, and Thomas M. Jaxnart, a constable of the City of Baltimore, to restrain the collection by them of a tax or charge of two cents per bushel upon certain quantities of oysters in the shell, bought by said plaintiffs at their respective factories for the packing of oysters in Baltimore City, during the oyster season of 1910 and 1911, and prior to December 10th, 1910; which tax or charge was imposed by Chapter 735 of the Acts of 1910. Subsequently, J. Langrall and Company, a corporation; The O. L. Applegarth Company, a corporation, and William H. Killian, trading as W. H. Killian & Co., were, upon their respective petitions, made parties plaintiffs, and prayed for similar injunctions upon like grounds, they being oyster packers in like condition as the original plaintiffs, and preliminary injunctions were accordingly granted to the original plaintiffs.

*230 The hill alleged that the plaintiffs were each oyster packers in Baltimore City, and large buyers of oysters in the shell taken from oyster beds located within the States of Maryland, Virginia and Few Jersey, and brought therefrom in vessels and cars to said factories. The bill then set out the material provisions of Chapter 735 of 1910, as follows: Chapter 735 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland passed at the Session of 1910, entitled “An Act to increase the productivity of the natural oyster beds or bars of the State, and for that purpose to repeal section 69 of Article 72 of the Code of Public General Laws and to re-enact said section with amendments and to add to said article a new section, to come in after section 69, aud to- be known as section 6 9A. And to add five other new sections to said article to come in after section 119, and to be known as sections 120, 121, 122, 123 and 124 respectively,” provides in part as follows: '

“Sec. 69. It shall be thé duty of the Commander of the State Fishery Force, at the commencement of or during the' oyster season in each yeav, to appoint from the counties producing oysters for packing purposes in the State, not exceeding twenty special inspectors to be appointed as follows: Two each from Anne Arundel, St. Mary’s, Talbot and Wicomico Counties; three each from Dorchester, Somerset and Queen Anne’s Counties, and one each from Kent, Calvert and Charles Counties, at a salary of forty-five dollars per month, during the oyster season, and they shall be' stationed at such places as in the judgment of the Commander of the State Fishery Force their services may be needed. Before assuming the duties of their offices the said special inspectors shall take an oath, to be administered by said Commander, to diligently and faithfully discharge the duties of their said offices. The said special inspectors shall inspect all oysters in the district to which he is assigned upon the inspection of any such oysters each special inspector shall make a certificate of the number of bushels in triplicate, one of which shall be given to the purchaser; one to the seller and the other daily to the general measurer and inspector of the district where such inspection occurred.' A charge of two cents per *231 bushel is hereby levied, one-half of which is to help defray the expense of such inspection (of oysters), and the other expenses of the State Fishery Force, and the other half of which is to be expended in re-shelling and otherwise cultivating and improving the natural oyster beds and bars in the waters of the State, to be charged equally to the buyer and seller, but to be paid weekly to the Comptroller of the State Treasury, or his agent, by the buyers, the certificate given the General líeasurer and Inspector shall be by him mailed weekly to the Comptroller, or his agent, and in case the amounts of money shown to be due, not paid in one wreek thereafter to the Comptroller, or his agent, which is hereby required to be done, the properties of the parties so indebted may be levied on and sold by the said Comptroller, or his agent, as in cases of taxes in default, without other process of law. The tax of two cents per bushel hereby levied is also made a charge on oysters sold by commission merchants and others selling by less than the cargo, and also a tax of six cents per barrel containing not more than three bushels, on oysters in bag, a tax of four cents per bag, containing not more than two bushels, and all transportation companies carrying oysters in the shell consigned to Baltimore shall furnish to the oyster inspector or collector of oyster tax a copy of his manifest, showing the number of bushels on board on arrival of steamer and to whom consigned, and the special inspectors are charged with the duty of seeing that proper returns are made for the purpose of this Act, by such commission merchants or retailers, and in the performance of the duty the said special inspectors are authorized and directed to visit the places where oysters less than cargoes are sold and get from such sellers a statement, under oath, as to the number of bushels sold from time to time, and to return to the general measurers and inspectors a certificate thereof to be forwarded to the Comptroller, as is required in the case of the certificates for cargoes. And the payments of the amounts so found to be due shall be similarly enforced. All such special inspectors may be removed at any time by the Commander for neglect or malfeasance in office, and said Commander shall report to the Governor any neglect of a general measurer or inspector. The Commander of the State of Fishery Force shall furnish to each of said special inspectors certificates *232 in book form supplied with carbon paper, so that each of said triplicate certificates shall be exactly the same. The form of the certificate shall be as follows:
19-.
I hereby certify that I have this day inspected for Captain Schooner a cargo of oysters, sold to-;-and found the same to contain-bushels of merchantable oysters.
Signed-
69A. The Comptroller of the State Treasury shall pass one-half of the amounts paid in by the buyers, as provided in section 69, to the credit of a'fund to be known as a ‘FTatural Oyster Bed Re-Shelling Fund.’ ”

The bill then avers that said act is unconstitutional and void:

(u) Because it is in violation of Article 1, section 8, of the Constitution of the United States, which vests in Congress exclusive power to regulate commerce between the States.

(5) Because it violates Article 1, section 10, oBthe Constitution of the United States, which prohibits any State, without the consent of Congress, from laying any duties upon imports or exports, except such as are absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws.

(c) Because the title of the act is insufficient under Article 3, section 29, of the Constitution of the State of Maryland.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 511, 116 Md. 228, 1911 Md. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-e-foote-co-v-clagett-md-1911.