HUGHES, District Judge.
The petitioners are under arrest for trading in an article of commerce brought from another state. Their business would go to ruin if they were required to await all the proceedings in the state courts incident to appeal, and to reaching a final adjudication of their rights in the state court of final resort. This fact malíes these cases cases of emergency, demanding immediate action by this court. It was in this view that I directed these writs of habeas corpus to be issued. The facts agreed between the prosecuting officers of the state and the petitioners are as follows:
“The accused (Scott) was at the time of his arrest engaged in Norfolk. Virginia, in the business of a wholesale dealer in oleomargarine, under and in compliance with the laws of the United States regulating the sale of that article. At the time of the arrest of the accused, he had in his possession for sale, and was selling, in the original, unbroken, and imported package, the article known as ‘oleomargarine.’ The packages containing the same were distinctly stamped with the word ‘oleomargarine’ in plain, Homan letters, not less than half an inch square. The said article was manufactured by Swift & Co., in the state of Illinois, and shipped by them 1rom that state to the accused, at Norfolk, Virginia. Oleomargarine is nowhere manufactured in the state of Virginia, but is largely manufactured elsewhere, and enters extensively into the trade and commerce of this and other states of the Union. The printed copy of the- regulations concerning oleomargarine under the internal revenue laws of the United States may be used as evidence in this case.”
The question in these cases was before me, in the case of Ex parte Rebman, five years ago. 41 Fed. 867. There the state of Virginia had passed a law, which, stripped of its verbiage, was, in essence aud purpose, a law forbidding- the sale in this state of meats from animals slaughtered in other states. Tills law was held by me to be obnoxious to the provision of the national constitution giving to congress the exclusive power of regulating commerce [46]*46between tbe states. A dealer, in Norfolk, in canned and prepared meats, bad been arrested, tried, and imprisoned for violations of tbis meat' law of tbe state. Upon a writ of babeas corpus, and after a full bearing, I released Eebman. Tbe case was appealed to tbe supreme court of tbe United States, and was there accorded a privileged bearing. Whereupon that court unanimously affirmed tbe decision here. Brimmer v. Rebman, 138 U. S. 78, 11 Sup. Ct. 213. In that case I said:
“Section 8 of ¡article 1 of the constitution gives congress exclusive power to regulate commerce among the several states; and, when congress refrains from exercising that power in relation to any subject, commerce is free, and cannot be interfered with by the states. It was so held in Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 631, 5 Sup. Ct. 1091. In quite a number of subsequent cases the supreme court has held the same doctrine, in applying it to a constantly varying condition of facts.”
Mr. Justice Bradley, sitting in circuit court, truly and aptly said in Stockton v. Railroad Co., 32 Fed. 17:
“The power of. congress is supreme over the whole subject of interstate commerce, unimpeded and unembarrassed by state lines or state laws. On this matter the country is one, and the work to be accomplished is national; and state jealousies, state prejudices, and state interests do not require to be consulted. In matters of foreign and interstate commerce, there are no states.”
I went on, in tbe Rebman Case, to say as follows (but I shall now use tbe word “health,” instead of “inspection,” whenever tbe latter occurred):
“It is undeniable that a state of this Union, like other self-governing states, has the power to enact health laws for the public safety. It has as clear a right to this power as it has to existence. It may énact and enforce health laws adapted to secure the public safety, even though they trench upon, and more or less obstruct, the freedom of trade between the states. It is equally true, however, that health laws, to be within the sovereign prerogative of the state, and to stand superior to the cardinal ijrovisions of the national constitution, must be essentially and really such, in character, purpose, and operation. To call a law a health law does not make it one, competent to override any tenet of constitutional law. It must be a health law in spirit and in truth. It must be a reasonable law, properly devised for preventing the evil at which it is aimed; so devised as to no more than effectuate that purpose, and as not to subserve other objects not essential to the public safety. When health laws are abused for the latter ends, and thereby affect trade between the states obstructively or injuriously, it is competent for the national courts — it is declared to be our solemn duty — to pronounce them invalid, and to forbid their enforcement. And so it seems to mo that the question at bar is resolved into-the inquiry, whether or not the meat law of Virginia is reasonable and necessary, is directed against a dangerous evil, has an eye single to the prevention of that evil, and provides for its prevention in a manner less injurious to the constitutional rights of the citizens of our sister states than any other that could be devised.”
In my construction of tbe Virginia meat act, I beld that tbe negative of tbe propositions just stated was true of it, and beld it, therefore, to be an invalid law, as against tbe products of sister states. - I therefore released tbe petitioner, who bad been imprisoned under that law. When tbe case was before tbe supreme court of the United States, that court, in affirming tbe judgment of tbis court, said of tbe Virginia meat law: •
[47]*47“We are oí opinion that tlie statute of Tirginia, although avowedly enacted to protect its people against the sale oí unwholesome meats, has no real or substantial relation to such an object, hut, by its necessary operation, is a regulation of commerce, beyond the power of a state to establish.”
The Kebman Case is on all fours with the two now under consideration. On March 1,1892, the general assembly of Virginia enacted a law whose title declared it to he “An act to prevent the adulteration of hatter and cheese, and the sale of the same, and preserve the public health.” 1
Under this title the act went on to forbid the ipanufacture and sale of any compound made of substances other than such as are produced from cows’ milk, and of any compound made of such other substances as were imitations or semblances of the products of flows’ milk, and from coloring such other substances so as to make them similar to butter or cheese. Indeed, the very terms of the provisions of the act excluded the idea of the adulteration of butter and cheese. They referred exclusively -to compounds of things other than butter and cheese. As oleomargarine is not composed in any ingredient of butter or cheese, it can be in no contingency or possibility an adulteration of these products of the cow. And so this act of Virginia, purporting to he an act to prevent the adulteration of butter and cheese, was no more nor less than an act to forbid tlie manufacture and sale of oleomargarine in the state. As [48]*48to the manufacture of oleomargarine, the law was without the necessary raison d’etre.
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HUGHES, District Judge.
The petitioners are under arrest for trading in an article of commerce brought from another state. Their business would go to ruin if they were required to await all the proceedings in the state courts incident to appeal, and to reaching a final adjudication of their rights in the state court of final resort. This fact malíes these cases cases of emergency, demanding immediate action by this court. It was in this view that I directed these writs of habeas corpus to be issued. The facts agreed between the prosecuting officers of the state and the petitioners are as follows:
“The accused (Scott) was at the time of his arrest engaged in Norfolk. Virginia, in the business of a wholesale dealer in oleomargarine, under and in compliance with the laws of the United States regulating the sale of that article. At the time of the arrest of the accused, he had in his possession for sale, and was selling, in the original, unbroken, and imported package, the article known as ‘oleomargarine.’ The packages containing the same were distinctly stamped with the word ‘oleomargarine’ in plain, Homan letters, not less than half an inch square. The said article was manufactured by Swift & Co., in the state of Illinois, and shipped by them 1rom that state to the accused, at Norfolk, Virginia. Oleomargarine is nowhere manufactured in the state of Virginia, but is largely manufactured elsewhere, and enters extensively into the trade and commerce of this and other states of the Union. The printed copy of the- regulations concerning oleomargarine under the internal revenue laws of the United States may be used as evidence in this case.”
The question in these cases was before me, in the case of Ex parte Rebman, five years ago. 41 Fed. 867. There the state of Virginia had passed a law, which, stripped of its verbiage, was, in essence aud purpose, a law forbidding- the sale in this state of meats from animals slaughtered in other states. Tills law was held by me to be obnoxious to the provision of the national constitution giving to congress the exclusive power of regulating commerce [46]*46between tbe states. A dealer, in Norfolk, in canned and prepared meats, bad been arrested, tried, and imprisoned for violations of tbis meat' law of tbe state. Upon a writ of babeas corpus, and after a full bearing, I released Eebman. Tbe case was appealed to tbe supreme court of tbe United States, and was there accorded a privileged bearing. Whereupon that court unanimously affirmed tbe decision here. Brimmer v. Rebman, 138 U. S. 78, 11 Sup. Ct. 213. In that case I said:
“Section 8 of ¡article 1 of the constitution gives congress exclusive power to regulate commerce among the several states; and, when congress refrains from exercising that power in relation to any subject, commerce is free, and cannot be interfered with by the states. It was so held in Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 631, 5 Sup. Ct. 1091. In quite a number of subsequent cases the supreme court has held the same doctrine, in applying it to a constantly varying condition of facts.”
Mr. Justice Bradley, sitting in circuit court, truly and aptly said in Stockton v. Railroad Co., 32 Fed. 17:
“The power of. congress is supreme over the whole subject of interstate commerce, unimpeded and unembarrassed by state lines or state laws. On this matter the country is one, and the work to be accomplished is national; and state jealousies, state prejudices, and state interests do not require to be consulted. In matters of foreign and interstate commerce, there are no states.”
I went on, in tbe Rebman Case, to say as follows (but I shall now use tbe word “health,” instead of “inspection,” whenever tbe latter occurred):
“It is undeniable that a state of this Union, like other self-governing states, has the power to enact health laws for the public safety. It has as clear a right to this power as it has to existence. It may énact and enforce health laws adapted to secure the public safety, even though they trench upon, and more or less obstruct, the freedom of trade between the states. It is equally true, however, that health laws, to be within the sovereign prerogative of the state, and to stand superior to the cardinal ijrovisions of the national constitution, must be essentially and really such, in character, purpose, and operation. To call a law a health law does not make it one, competent to override any tenet of constitutional law. It must be a health law in spirit and in truth. It must be a reasonable law, properly devised for preventing the evil at which it is aimed; so devised as to no more than effectuate that purpose, and as not to subserve other objects not essential to the public safety. When health laws are abused for the latter ends, and thereby affect trade between the states obstructively or injuriously, it is competent for the national courts — it is declared to be our solemn duty — to pronounce them invalid, and to forbid their enforcement. And so it seems to mo that the question at bar is resolved into-the inquiry, whether or not the meat law of Virginia is reasonable and necessary, is directed against a dangerous evil, has an eye single to the prevention of that evil, and provides for its prevention in a manner less injurious to the constitutional rights of the citizens of our sister states than any other that could be devised.”
In my construction of tbe Virginia meat act, I beld that tbe negative of tbe propositions just stated was true of it, and beld it, therefore, to be an invalid law, as against tbe products of sister states. - I therefore released tbe petitioner, who bad been imprisoned under that law. When tbe case was before tbe supreme court of the United States, that court, in affirming tbe judgment of tbis court, said of tbe Virginia meat law: •
[47]*47“We are oí opinion that tlie statute of Tirginia, although avowedly enacted to protect its people against the sale oí unwholesome meats, has no real or substantial relation to such an object, hut, by its necessary operation, is a regulation of commerce, beyond the power of a state to establish.”
The Kebman Case is on all fours with the two now under consideration. On March 1,1892, the general assembly of Virginia enacted a law whose title declared it to he “An act to prevent the adulteration of hatter and cheese, and the sale of the same, and preserve the public health.” 1
Under this title the act went on to forbid the ipanufacture and sale of any compound made of substances other than such as are produced from cows’ milk, and of any compound made of such other substances as were imitations or semblances of the products of flows’ milk, and from coloring such other substances so as to make them similar to butter or cheese. Indeed, the very terms of the provisions of the act excluded the idea of the adulteration of butter and cheese. They referred exclusively -to compounds of things other than butter and cheese. As oleomargarine is not composed in any ingredient of butter or cheese, it can be in no contingency or possibility an adulteration of these products of the cow. And so this act of Virginia, purporting to he an act to prevent the adulteration of butter and cheese, was no more nor less than an act to forbid tlie manufacture and sale of oleomargarine in the state. As [48]*48to the manufacture of oleomargarine, the law was without the necessary raison d’etre. None was manufactured in the state; none has been or is manufactured here; and, if the manufacture of it is an evil, it is one that did not exist, and as to which the act is brutum fulmen. Stripped of its verbiage, and of its useless inhibition óf a nonexistent manufacture, the law is nothing more nor less than a prohibition of the sale in Virginia of oleomargarine imported from one of our sister states. It is in palpable conflict with the national constitution. It is a fact of common knowledge that oleomargarine has been subjected to the severest scientific scrutiny, and has been adopted by every leading government in Europe, as well as America, for use by their armies and navies. Though not originally invented by us, it is a gift of American enterprise and progressive invention to the world. It has become one of the conspicuous articles of interstate commerce, and furnishes a large income to the general government annually. Its chemical properties and preparation are such that it is adopted for the use of the armies and navies of the great nations as more desirable and safe than to run the risk of rancid butters and animated cheeses. It is entering rapidly into domestic use, and the trade in oleomargarine has become large and important. The attention of the national government has been attracted to it as a [49]*49source of revenue. Its manufacture and sale Rave been made Tbe subject of careful regulation by congress, and tbe national revenue derived from it is considerable. Manufacturers pay a tax of $600 per annum; wholesale dealers, $480; and retail dealers, $48. These petitioners had paid these taxes to tbe United States, which were heavy, and were doing business under the imprimatur of the national government; and it was for doing that business that they were arrested, tried, and jailed in this city of Norfolk. State legislation against it is therefore regarded as invidious by the national authorities, and the right of dealing in it will not be allowed by them to be capriciously overthrown. Provincial prejudice against this now staple article of commerce is natural, but a city of the size and prospects of Norfolk as a world's entrepot ought not to be foremost in manifesting such a prejudice. My recollection is that there were no prosecutions under the meat act anywhere in the state, except in Norfolk. I regret that it has been necessary to bring such cases as those at bar before me. I regret that the necessity for doing so has arisen in Norfolk; the criminal court of Richmond having refused to entertain such prosecutions, holding the act of March 1, 1892, obnoxious to the state constitution, as I hold it to be obnoxious to the national constitution. I think it is palpably obnoxious to both.
I will enter judgment for the petitioners, and order them to- be released from custody. If appeal is desired, they may be bailed to await the judgment of the supreme court at Washington. If an appeal is taken, the case will be accorded there a privileged hearing; and I will facilitate, as far as I can do so, the appeal and an early hearing.
Although unnecessary, I will append here a notice of the recent decision of the United States supreme court in the case of Plumley v. Com., 15 Sup. Ct. 154. In that case the court had under review a statute of Massachusetts prohibiting tbe sale in that state of oleomargarine if it was got up “in imitation of yellow butter,” hut allowing it to he sold “in a separate and distinct form, and in such a manner as will advise the consumer of its real character, free from coloration or ingredient that canses it to look like butter.” The supreme court held that, though the act would have been invalid if it had prohibited the sale of oleomargarine generally in undisguised form, yet that so far as it prohibited the coloring of oleomargarine yellow, so as to imitate butter, and thereby deceive the consumer, the law' was pro tanto valid. Even in restricting its decision to the mere yellowing of oleomargarine, the court was held, by three of the justices, to have gone too far. The court were unanimous as t:o the invalidity of any state law which should inhibit the sale within its borders of oleomargarine, when prepared, labeled, and sold as such, without deceit or fraud. Such is the case as to the article for selling which the petitioners now before me have been prosecuted, and the case of Plumley v. Com. is authority and warrant for my order setting them at liberty.