District of Columbia v. Brooke

214 U.S. 138, 29 S. Ct. 560, 53 L. Ed. 941, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1899
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 17, 1909
Docket117
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 214 U.S. 138 (District of Columbia v. Brooke) 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
District of Columbia v. Brooke, 214 U.S. 138, 29 S. Ct. 560, 53 L. Ed. 941, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1899 (1909).

Opinion

Me. Justice McKenna,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant in error, to sustain her contention that the. record does not show notice to her of the proposed work, says that it shows only that a “parcel” was mailed to her, not a letter, and that the contents of the parcel are not disclosed. To the extreme technicality of this contention the Court of Appeals answered that no objection was made to the return, and that it averred that the officers and agents of the District made diligent search for defendant in error in the District, and that she could not be found there, and that plaintiff in error believed that she was a citizen and resident of the State of Maryland. The court also pointed out that the return alleged that notice was given to her by publication, as required by the act of Congress, and by registered letter, postage prepaid, which was received by her. A registry return receipt, with her signature attached thereto, was made part of the return. Commenting on this, the court said that if there was a defect in the return it was purely technical, and could have been corrected. “Upon the granting of the writ,” the court observed, “had objection been made to the adoption by the-Commissioners of their preliminary return, the court undoubtedly would have permitted an amendment to the record for the purpose of supplying the defects now complained of by petitioner [defendant in error here.]' Having then made no objection to the form of the return, it is too late to do so now.” If we could concede that the record justifies the distinction made by defendant in error between a parcel and a letter, we should adopt without hesitation the reply made by the Court *148 of Appeals to the contention based on that distinction, or upon any defect in the return, which could have been removed if objection had been seasonably made.

The second contention of defendant in error is that the record fails to disclose that any nuisance existed on her property, or that the means of drainage already there was unsanitary or insufficient, or that any necessity existed for making the connection. This contention seems to be made in this court for the first time. It certainly received no notice from the Court of Appeals, and the fact that it assumes that there was means of drainage on defendant in error’s lot is not alleged in her petition. But suppose the fact had been alleged, a property owner cannot urge against the drainage system of the District that he had adopted a system of his own and challenge a comparison with that of the District, and obey or disobey the law according to the result of the comparison. The contention virtually denies any power in Congress to create a system of drainage to which a lot owner must conform.

Finally, defendant in error attacks the validity of the law, and bases the attack, to use her words, “upon certain salient vices in the act which are apparent on its face, of which the principal are — ■

(a) The attempt to give controlling evidential effect to the mere existence of an improvement in case of improved property, and to the ex parte certificate of the health officer in the case of unimproved property, thus violating the ‘ due process ’ clause of the Constitution.
“ (6) Because the act lacks the requisite uniformity, inasmuch as it undertakes to provide one law for property of resident and another for property of non-resident owners in said District. ■
“"(c) Because the act is not capable of universal enforcement, and creates unequal burdens.
(d) Because the act is incapable of uniform enforcement as against all property in the District of Columbia.”

The first objection was not expressed in the petition nor *149 made in the lower courts, and we might therefore decline to entertain it. At' best, defendant in' error can only be heard against “the; evidential effect of the' mere existence of an improvement,” because her property does not come within the category of unimproved property. Her improvements are dwelling houses, and their mere existence indicated the necessity for drainage. That they may sometimes be vacant is unimportant. What rights owners of lots differently improved or owners of unimproved property may have is of no concern of-defendant in error. Her contention, therefore, that the act deprives her of due process of law is unsound.

The other objections expressed the same fundamental idea, to wit, that the act discriminates between resident and nonresident owners of property, and because it does it is void. The Court of Appeals yielded to this contention, following the authority of McGuire v. District of Columbia, 24 App. D. C. 22.

The defendant in error asserts this discrimination and argues its consequences at some length, but does not refer to any provision of the Constitution of the United States which prohibits Congress from enacting laws which discriminate in their operation between persons or things. If there is no express prohibition of such power, may prohibition be implied from our form of government? Upon that proposition we need not express an opinion. If prohibition exists it must rest on all the powers conferred by the Constitution. This court, however, has just held, in the case of United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U. S. 366, that Congress may in the exercise of the powers to regulate commerce among the States, discriminate between commodities and between carriers engaged in such commerce. And it was said that the assertion that “injustice and. favoritism” might “be operated thereby,” could “have no weight in passing upon the question of power.” In the case at bar we are dealing with an exercise of the police power, one of the most essential of powers, at times the most insistent, and always one of the least limitable of the powers of government.

*150 However, the question of the power of Congress, broadly-considered, to discriminate in its legislation is not necessary to decide, for whether such power is expressly or impliedly prohibited, the prohibition cannot be stricter or more extensive than the Fourteenth Amendment is upon the States. That Amendment is unqualified in its declaration that a State shall not “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” Passing on that Amendment, we have repeatedly decided — so often that a citation of the cases is unnecessary — that it does not take from the States the power of classification. And also that such classification need not be either logically appropriate or scientifically accurate. The problems which are met in the government of human beings are different' from those involved in the examination of the objects of the physical world and assigning them to their proper associates. A wide range of discretion, therefore, is necessary in legislation to malee it practical, and we have often said that the courts cannot be made a refuge from ill-advised, unjust or oppressive laws. Billings v. Illinois,

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Bluebook (online)
214 U.S. 138, 29 S. Ct. 560, 53 L. Ed. 941, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-brooke-scotus-1909.