Harmon v. City of Chicago

29 N.E. 732, 140 Ill. 374
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 732 (Harmon v. City of Chicago) 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
Harmon v. City of Chicago, 29 N.E. 732, 140 Ill. 374 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the- opinion of the Court:

The statement preceding this opinion contains the entire evidence as it appears in the bill of exceptions, but the facts, more briefly, are these: On the 26th day of September, 1888, the plaintiff was the owner and manager of twelve steam tugs, each of twenty tons burden or over, all of which were enrolled and licensed for the coasting trade by the United States authorities in the Northern District of Illinois, in pursuance of the provisions of the Federal Statutes, and were engaged in the coasting and foreign trade and in commerce and navigation, that is to say, in towing vessels engaged in inter-state and foreign commerce into and out of the Chicago river and. harbor from and to Lake Michigan, and in pursuance of said' trade were navigating said Chicago river, the waters of Lake, Michigan, and the tributaries thereto. The Chicago river and harbor are both within the territorial limits and jurisdiction, of the city of Chicago, and said river is, from time to time, deepened for purposes of navigation by dredging, under the direction and at the expense of said city.

At the date above mentioned, there was in force an ordinance of the common council of said city providing that no person should keep, use or let for hire, any tug, steam-barge or tow-boat for towing vessels or craft in the Chicago river, its branches or the slips connecting therewith, or in or about the harbor of the city' of Chicago, without first obtaining a license therefor, and providing further that such licenses should issue on payment to the city collector of $25 for each tug, steam-barge or tow-boat, 'and that any person violating any of the provisions of said ordinance should be subject to a fine of not less than $5 nor more than $50.

On said 26th day of September, 1888, said city collector notified the plaintiff to take out licenses in pursuance of the requirements of said ordinance for each of his said steam-tugs, and to pay the sum of $25 for each of said tugs, being $300 in the aggregate, and the plaintiff thereupon, claiming that as his tugs were licensed for the coasting trade in accordance with the laws of the United States, and were engaged in such trade said ordinance was invalid- and said city had no power to require him to take out said license, refused to take the same out or pay the sum charged therefor. Said collector then caused the plaintiff to be arrested upon a warrant issued for that purpose, and while under arrest, the plaintiff paid for and took out said license the amount so paid being $300, which money was by said collector paid into the treasury of said city.

The only controversy here is, as to the validity of said ordinance and the power of the city to require the plaintiff to take out said license and pay the license fee, in view of the fact that his tugs had been enrolled and licensed by the proper authorities of the United States, under the provisions of the Federal Statutes, for the coasting trade, and were engaged in that trade on the Chicago river- and the waters of Lake Michigan.

The power of the city council to pass said ordinance is to-be found in the thirty-fourth clause of section 1, article 5, of the general act in relation to the incorporation of cities and villages, where authority is given to city councils in cities, “To license, regulate and prohibit wharf-boats, tugs and other boats used about the harbor or within such jurisdiction,” that is, within the jurisdiction of the city. As bearing on the same subject, reference may also be made to the thirty-eighth clause of said section which gives authority, “To make regulations in regard to the use of harbors, towing of vessels, opening and passing of bridges.” It can not be doubted that, by these provisions, the General Assembly, so far as it could constitu- ■ tionally do so, had vested in the city council of the city of' ■Chicago the power to pass an ordinance of the character of' the one in question.

But it is claimed that said ordinance, so far as it applies to tugs and other boats licensed by the United States for the coasting trade, or engaged in that trade, amounts to a regu-' lation of inter-state commerce, and is violative of that clause, of section 8, article 1, of the Constitution of the United States which provides that, “Congress shall have power to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several States' and with the Indian tribes.” If said ordinance is in any. proper sense a regulation of inter-state commerce, it must be. admitted that, so far as it is so, it is repugnant to this constitutional provision and void. Since Congress has exercised. its power in that behalf, its authority is exclusive, and all attempted regulations of inter-state commerce by State authority are necessarily invalid.

When the case was first presented to this court, the counsel for the city sought to sustain the validity of said ’ ordinance upon the sole ground, that its enforcement was merely an exercise of the police power, a power which has not been surrendered to the General Government, but is reserved to the States. In considering that proposition, we reached the con•elusion that it was untenable, and as no other ground was suggested upon which the ordinance could he upheld, we held it to be invalid and rendered judgment accordingly. In their petition for a rehearing, counsel have raised an entirely new proposition, viz., that as the Chicago river is kept in repair and made fit for navigation by being from time to,time dredged and deepened under the direction and at the expense of the city, the money charged the owners of tugs and other similar vessels as a license fee, may and should be regarded as only .a proper compensation and equivalent for the use of the river in its improved condition, and is therefore in no proper sense .a tax upon the commerce in which such vessels are engaged.

Where new propositions are raised for the first time on petition for a rehearing, this court may and usually does refuse to consider them, and if our decision in this case had been one which would extend in its results no further than merely to determine whether the city should repay to the plaintiff the $300 sued for, we should have been disposed to adopt that • course here. Counsel should not present their cases to this court by piece-meal, but should be prepared, when the ease is heard, to urge every consideration upon which they expect to rely. But as our decision involves not merely the title of the city to the small sum of money sued for, but also determines, as a collateral result, the right of the city to collect license fees from all tugs and like vessels navigating the Chicago river which are licensed by the General Government for the coasting trade, we have thought proper, in the exercise of our discretion, to depart from the ordinary rule, and allow the case to be again heard upon all the propositions which counsel, after more mature investigation, should see proper to urge.

We are of the opinion that the ordinance in question can not be sustained on the ground that it is an exercise of the police power. This question is one as to which the decisions •of the Supreme Court of the United States are of paramount. authority, and nothing remains for us to do but to apply the principles laid down by that high tribunal.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 732, 140 Ill. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1892.