Lehigh Valley Railroad v. Pennsylvania

145 U.S. 192, 12 S. Ct. 806, 36 L. Ed. 672, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2130
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 2, 1892
Docket275
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 145 U.S. 192 (Lehigh Valley Railroad v. Pennsylvania) 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
Lehigh Valley Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 145 U.S. 192, 12 S. Ct. 806, 36 L. Ed. 672, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2130 (1892).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Lehigh Valley Railroad Company is a Pennsylvania corporation, which Owns- and operates an extensive system of railroads in' that State, but has no line of its own to Philadelphia. . For the traffic from Mauch Chunk to Philadelphia, it makes .úse of two routes, one by the way of the Philadelphia and Reading road, being wholly within the State, and the other by its own line connecting with the lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad at Phillipsburg, New Jersey, and thence via Trenton, in that State, to Philadelphia. Detailed reports of its receipts show that the passenger traffic of the Lehigh Company to Philadelphia from Mauch OÍrnnk is almost wholly taken over the Philadelphia and Reading, -while its coal and general freight traffic reaches .Philadelphia by the other road. Phillipsburg, New Jersey, lies across the Delaware River, opposite Easton, Pennsylvania.. By the running arrangements *200 between the Lehigh and Pennsylvania Companies, the transportation of through freight and passengers is continuous from Mauch Chunk' to Philadelphia.

The receipts named in class two are confined to that part of the transportation from Mauch Chunk to Phillipsburg, and the taxation to the mileage wholly within the State of Pennsylvania ; and the question is whether this taxation in respect of such receipts from freight and passengers carried by continuous transportation to Philadelphia from Mauch Chunk by way of,Trenton, New Jersey, amounts to a regulation of interstate commerce.

The conflict between the commercial regulations of the several States was destructive to their harmony and fatal to their commercial interests abroad, and this was the mischief intended to be. obviated by the grant to the Congress of the. power to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the States. But, as was said by Chief Justice Marshall, the words of the grant do- not embrace that commerce which is completely internal, which is carried .on between man and man in a State, or between different parts of the same State, and which does not extend to nor affect other States. “ Commerce,” observed the Chief Justice, undoubtedly, is traffic, but it is something more; it-is intercourse. It describes the commercial intercourse between nations, and parts of-nations, in all its branches, and is regulated by prescribing rules for carrying on that intercourse.” Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 189. This is no more than .an expansion of its simplest signification, that of an exchange of goods, the bringing of them from the seller to the buyer, however vast the range now comprehended by the term in the progress of society.

Taxation is undoubtedly one of the forms of regulation, but the power of each State to tax its own internal commerce, and the franchises, property or business of its own corporations engaged in such commerce, has always been recognized, and the particular mode of taxation in this instance is conceded to be in itself not open to objection. And while interstate commerce cannot be regulated-by a State biy the laying of taxes thereon, in any form, yet whenever the subjects of taxation *201 can be separated so that that which arises from interstate commerce cap. be distinguished from that which arises from commerce wholly within the State, the distinction will be acted upon by the courts, and the State permitted to collect that arising upon commerce solely within its own territory. Ratterman v. West. Union Tel. Co., 127 U. S. 411, 424.

The tax under consideration here was determined in respect of receipts for the proportion of the transportation within the State, but the contention is that this could not be done because the transportation was an entire thing, and in its course passed through another State than that of the origin and destination of the particular freight and passengers. There was no breaking of bulk or transfer of passengers in New Jersey. The point of departure and the point of arrival were alike in Pennsylvania. The intercourse was between those points and'not between any other points. Is such intercourse, consisting of continuous transportation between two points in the same State, made interstate because in its accomplishment some portion of another State may be traversed ?. Is the transmission' o.f freight or messages between two places in the same State made interstate business by the deviation of the railroad or' telegraph line on to the soil of another State ?

If it has happened that through engineering difficulties, as the interposition of a mountain or a river, the linens deflected so as to cross the boundary and run. for the time being in another State than that of its principal location, does such .detour in itself im'press an external character, on internal intercourse? For example, the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway Company is a corporation created under the laws of Tennessee, and through freight and passengers transported from Nashville to Chattanooga pass over a few miles in Alabama and perhaps two miles in Georgia, but we had not supposed that that circumstance would render the taxation of that company, in respect of such business, by. the State of Tennessee invalid.

So as to'the traffic of the Erie Railway between the cities of New York and Buffalo, we do not'understand that that company escapes taxation in respect of that part of its busi *202 ness because some miles of its road are in Pennsylvania, while the New York Central is taxed as to its business .between the same places, because its rails are wholly within the State of New York.

. It should be remembered that the question does not arise as to the power of any other State than the State of the .termini, nor as to taxation upon the property of the company situated elsewhere than in Pennsylvania, nor as to the regulation by Pennsylvania of the operations of this or any other company elsewhere,- but it is simply whether, in the carriage of freight and passengers between two points in one State, the mere passage over the soil of another State renders that business foreign, which is domestic. We do not think-such a view can be reasonably entertained, and. are of opinion that this taxation is not open to constitutional, objection by reason of the particular way in which Philadelphia was reached from- Mauch Chunk.'

Nor is the contrary conclusion supported by Coe v. Errol, 116 U. S. 517, and Lord v. Steamship Company, 102 U. S. 541, much relied- on by plaintiff in error.

. In Coe v.

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Bluebook (online)
145 U.S. 192, 12 S. Ct. 806, 36 L. Ed. 672, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehigh-valley-railroad-v-pennsylvania-scotus-1892.