Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co. v. Territory of Hawaii

305 U.S. 306, 59 S. Ct. 202, 83 L. Ed. 189, 1938 U.S. LEXIS 1081
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
Docket94
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 305 U.S. 306 (Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co. v. Territory of Hawaii) 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
Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co. v. Territory of Hawaii, 305 U.S. 306, 59 S. Ct. 202, 83 L. Ed. 189, 1938 U.S. LEXIS 1081 (1938).

Opinion

*308 Mr. Justice Black

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioner, a Hawaiian corporation, is a common carrier of freight and passengers by water between different points in the Territory. A' substantial part of its gross income is derived from transporting freight destined for trans-shipment to foreign or mainland ports. In 1913 a statute of the Territory created a Public Utilities Commission, prescribed its duties and levied a uniform semiannual tax — denominated a fee 1 — upon all public utilities doing business in the Territory, partially to defray the Commission’s expenses. Petitioner paid the tax until 1923, when it refused to malee further payments, contending the tax could not validly be applied to it. In this suit, the Territory recovered judgment in the territorial court for the taxes assessed for the years 1923 to 1930, inclusive. The Supreme Court of Hawaii and the Circuit Court of Appeals both affirmed. 2

The Hawaiian “Utilities Act of 1913,” 3 under which the challenged taxes have been levied, invested the territorial Commission with broad powers to investigate all public utilities doing business in the Territory, with reference to the safety and accommodation of the public; safety, working hours and wages of employees; rates and fares; valuation; issuance of securities; amount and disposition of- *309 income; business relations with others; compliance with territorial and federal laws and provisions of franchises, charters, and articles of association; regulations, practices and service; accidents, in connection with utility operations, believed by the Commission to require investigation and “all matters of every nature affecting the relations and transactions between . . . [such utilities] and the public, or persons, or corporations.”

This territorial Commission was empowered to make its investigations “notwithstanding that the same may be within the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission, or within the jurisdiction of any court or other body, and when after such examination the [territorial] commission shall be of the opinion that the circumstances warrant, it shall be its duty to effect the necessary relief or remedy by the institution and prosecution of appro-' priate proceedings or otherwise before the Interstate Commerce Commission, or such court, or other body, in its own name or the name of the Territory, . . .”

The taxes in question accrued under § 17 of the Act of 1913, providing that “There shall ... be paid to the commission in each of the months of March and September in each year by each public utility which is subject to investigation by the commission a fee which will be equal to one-twentieth of one per centum of the gross income from the public utility business carried on by such public utility in the Territory during the preceding year, plus one-fiftieth of one per centum of the par value of the stock issued by such public utility and outstanding on December 31 of the preceding year, . . .” After collection, the taxes “shall be deposited in the treasury of the Territory to the credit of a special fund to be called the 'Public Utilities Commission Fund’ ” to be used — with any appropriations made available by the territorial legislature — to pay necessary expenses of the Commission in the performance of its duties under the Act.

*310 The Organic Act granting legislative power to the territorial government of Hawaii provides that “the legislature shall not grant to any corporation, association, or individual any special or exclusive privilege, immunity, or franchise without the approval of Congress; ...” 4 Pursuant to the Organic Act, and prior to the effective date of the Utilities Act of 1913, the territorial legislature passed Act 135 S. L. Haw. 1913 — to take effect upon the approval by Congress — providing that all public utilities previously granted franchises should “be subject as to reasonableness of rates, prices, and charges and in all other respects to the provisions of . . . [the Utilities Act of 1913] and all amendments thereof for the regulation of public utilities inosaid Territory; ...” March 28, 1916, 5 Congress expressly ratified, approved and confirmed this Hawaiian Act 135.

Act 135 as enacted by the Territory applied only to Hawaiian utilities specially described in the Act. However, Congress in ratifying and approving, broadened the Act by amendment so as to include not only the described utilities but “all public utilities and public-utilities companies organized or operating within the Territory of Hawaii.” By further amendment Congress provided that nothing in Act 135 should “limit the jurisdiction or powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission” and that all actions of the Hawaiian Public Utility Commission should “be subject to review by the courts of the . . . Territory.”

September 7, 1916, Congress enacted the “Shipping Act of 1916.” 6 For the purposes of the Shipping Act, “The term ‘common carrier by water in interstate commerce’ ” was given a statutory definition to include *311 “a common carrier ... by water of passengers or property ... on regular routes from port to port between . . .” places in the same “Territory, District or possession.” This Act created the'United States Shipping Board, with broad powers to investigate and supervise carriers by water in foreign and interstate commerce as defined therein.

We accept the conclusion of the Supreme Court of Hawaii that petitioner is a public utility as defined by the Hawaiian Act. 7 However, petitioner contends that the Territory cannot validly apply this tax to it. We have examined all of the grounds upon which this contention rests. None is sufficient to remove petitioner from the operation of the Utilities Act of 1913 as applied here.

First. Petitioner contends that the passage of the Shipping Act by Congress completely ousted the territorial Commission of all jurisdiction over it in any respect, or for any purpose, and thus withdrew the Commission’s power to collect the fees in question.

The Supreme Court of Hawaii held in this case, as heretofore, 8 that the Shipping Act did deprive the territorial Commission of authority, under the Act of 1913, to regulate by its own order the rates of this petitioner. In the present case, however, that court concluded that the Shipping Act did not withdraw the territorial Commission’s power to investigate water carriers — such as petitioner— as to rates and other matters, either for the exercise of its own permitted supervisory powers or for presentation of the public’s case before appropriate governmental bodies. 9 The territorial Act of 1913 — to which Congress *312

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Bluebook (online)
305 U.S. 306, 59 S. Ct. 202, 83 L. Ed. 189, 1938 U.S. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-island-steam-navigation-co-v-territory-of-hawaii-scotus-1938.