Kansas City Breweries Co. v. Trickett

195 F. 840, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5417
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJune 17, 1907
DocketNo. 8,523
StatusPublished

This text of 195 F. 840 (Kansas City Breweries Co. v. Trickett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Breweries Co. v. Trickett, 195 F. 840, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5417 (D. Kan. 1907).

Opinion

POLLOCK, District Judge.

Complainant, a citizen of the state of Missouri, presented its bill of complaint against C. W. Trickett, the duly appointed assistant Attorney General of the state, in Wyandotte county, James Porter, the sheriff, and Joseph Taggart, the county attorney of said county, David R. Bowden, the chief of police, and Ralph Kelson, city attorney of Kansas City, Kan., and Newton V. Reieheueker, agent for the receivers appointed by the Supreme Court of the state in litigation therein pending and also a deputy sheriff of Wyandotte county, praying an injunction against said defendants, and each of them, restraining them from unlawfully interfering with the complainant, its agents, servants, and employés, in the carrying on of its lawful and established business of selling, within the state of Missouri, its manufactured products, consisting of beer, malt, ale, malt extract, and other like products, to citizens of this state and making delivery thereof to inhabitants and residents of this state in the completion of such contracts of purchase so made in the state of Missouri. The hill charges, in substance: That while engaged in the conduct of such lawful interstate business, in a lawful manner, defendants, their agents and servants, without authority or right to so do, did seize and hold the teams, wagons, and harness of complainant and those employed by it to make deliveries of its products so sold, and did arrest, or cause to be arrested, the drivers of the teams and others lawfully engaged in making deliveries of its goods so sold to persons resident in this state. That complainant has built up and has a large, well-established, and lucrative business in the city of Kansas City, Mo., in which city and state, under the laws thereof/ the manufacture, sale, and delivery of malt liquors by complainant is a legitimate and lawful business. That complainant has, at large cost and expense, built up and lias a lucrative trade and established business with inhabitants and residents of this state, in the transaction of which business it sells in the state of Missouri to residents and inhabitants of this state its malt products and makes delivery thereof in the original boxes, bottles, and packages to such purchasers in good faith, in pursuance of sales made in the state of Missouri. That defendants threaten to, and unless enjoined and restrained by order of this court will, by unlawful interference and violence, break up and destroy the business of complainant so lawfully done and performed under the Constitution and laws of this country. On the presentation [842]*842of" this bill duly Verified, a restraining order was issued. Thereafter the cause came on for hearing on this application for a temporary' injunction, and the same stands submitted on affidavits and oral arguments of solicitors.

The law of the case presented by the bill is well settled by the repeated decisions of the Supreme Court. In Vance v. W. A. Vandercook Company, 170 U. S. 438, 18 Sup. Ct. 674, 42 L. Ed. 1100, Mr. Justice White, delivering the opinion of the court, says:

“In the inception it is necessary to bear in mind a few elementary propositions, which are so entirely concluded by the previous adjudications of this court that they need only be briefly recapitulated:
“(a) Beyond dispute the respective states have plenary power to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors within their borders, and the scope and extent of such regulations depend solely on the judgment of the lawmaking power of the states, provided always they do not transcend the limits of state authority by invading rights which are secured by the Constitution of the United States, and provided, further, that the regulations as adopted do not operate a"discrimination against the rights of residents or citizens of other states of the Union.
“(b)' Equally well established is the proposition that the right to send liquors from one state into another, and the act of sending the same, is interstate commerce, the regulation whereof has been committed by the Constitution of the United States to Congress, and hence that a state law which denies such a right, or substantially interferes with or hampers the same, is in conflict with the Constitution of the United States.”

In Rhodes v. Iowa, 170 U. S. 412, 18 Sup. Ct. 664, 42 L. Ed. 1088, Mr. Justice White, delivering the opinion of the court, says:

“We think that, interpreting the statute by the light of all its provisions, it was not intended to and did not cause the power of the state to attach to an' interstate commerce shipment, whilst the merchandise was in transit under such shipment, and until its arrival at the point of destination and delivery there to the consignee, and of course this conclusion renders it entirely unnecessary to consider whether, if the act of Congress had submitted the right to make interstate commerce shipments to state control, it would be repugnant to the Constitution.”

The same learned justice, in delivering the opinion of the court in Heymann v. Southern Railway Company, 203 U. S. 270, 27 Sup. Ct. 104, 51 L. Ed. 178, 7 Ann. Cas. 1130, says:

“As the general principle is that goods moving in interstate commerce cease to bé such commerce only after delivery and sale in the original package, and as the settled rule is that the Wilson law was not an abdication of the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce, since that law simply affects an incident of such commerce by allowing the state power to attach after delivery and before sale, we are not concerned with whether, under the law of any particular state, the liability of a railroad company as carrier ceases and becomes that of a warehouseman on the goods reaching their ultimate destination before notice and before the expiration of a reasonable time for the consignee to receive the goods from the carrier. For, whatever may be the divergent legal rules in the several states concerning the precise time when the liability of a carrier as such in respect to the carriage of goods ends, they cannot affect the general principle as to when an interstate shipment ceases to be under the protection of the commerce clause of the Constitution, and thereby comes under the cbntrol of the state authority.”

Mr. Justice Brewer, delivering the opinion of the court in Express Company v. Kentucky, 206 U. S. 129, 27 Sup. Ct. 606, 59 L. Ed. 987, [843]*843decided May 13th of the present year, in reversing the court of Appeals of Kentucky says:

“Much as we may sympathize with the efforts to put a stop to the sales of intoxicating liquors in defiance of the policy of a state, we are not at liberty to recognize any rule which will nullify or lend to weaken the power vested by the Constitution in Congress over interstate commerce.”

In the light of the above-adjudicated cases and many others from the Supreme Court, there can be no question but that complainant may in Missouri lawfully sell to a resident of this state its beer, or other malt liquor products,' and that, in pursuance of such contract of sale, it may deliver its product so sold in this state to the purchaser.

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Related

Rhodes v. Iowa
170 U.S. 412 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Vance v. W. A. Vandercook Co.
170 U.S. 438 (Supreme Court, 1898)
American Express Co. v. Iowa
196 U.S. 133 (Supreme Court, 1905)
Heyman v. Southern Railway Co.
203 U.S. 270 (Supreme Court, 1906)
Adams Express Co. v. Kentucky
206 U.S. 129 (Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 F. 840, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-breweries-co-v-trickett-ksd-1907.