Neil, Moore & Co. v. State

44 U.S. 720, 11 L. Ed. 800, 3 How. 720, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 26, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 U.S. 720 (Neil, Moore & Co. v. State) 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
Neil, Moore & Co. v. State, 44 U.S. 720, 11 L. Ed. 800, 3 How. 720, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 460 (1845).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice TANEY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case has arisen out- of two acts of Assembly, passed by;the . ■ legislature of Ohio, one in 1837, and the other in 1838, and an order of the Board of Public Works of that state, whereby a toll has been imposed upon passengers travelling in the mail-stage on the Cumberland road.

We have already, at the present term, fully expressed the opinion of this court, in relation to the compacts between the United States and the states of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and .Virginia, concerning this road, and the rules by which they ought to be interpreted! It is only necessary, therefore, on this occasipn, to apply the principles there-stated to'the case before uS.

The material parts of the laws in question are the 4th section of the act of 1837, and the 24th section of the act of 1838. The first imposes a toll of three oents on .every passengér in the mail-stage, at each toll-gate; and the secondauthorizes the Board of Public Works to revise and mddify the rates of toll to be paid by persons using the ' road; and in pursuance of this authority the board passed an order raising the toll- on each passenger in -the mail-stage to ten cents. But no toll is charged, either by the law or the order of the board, upon persons travelling in any other carriage.

The 4th section of the act of 1831 / whereby the state of Ohio proposed, with the assent of -Congress, to take charge of the road and keep it in repair, contains a specific enumeration of the tolls she intended to charge, upon carriages of every description, and other properly ; and after making this enumeration, the section concludes with the following proviso: “ That no toll should be received or collected for the passage of any stage .or coaph conveying the United States, mail, or Jhorses bearing the-same, or any wTagon or carriage laden with the property of the United States, or any cavalry or other troops, arms or military stores belonging, to the same or to any of the. states comprising this union, or any person or persons on'duty *741 in the military service of the United States, 4>r .of the militia of aoy of the states.” -,

We shall hereafter speak of .the 15th .section of-this act, which has been supposed to justify,the toll in question. But, subject to the ■modifications, if any, authorized by thafc-section, the entire Contract in relation to the tolls,, offered by the state and ac cepted by '<£on-gress, is to be found in the 4th; the residue of the act containing nothing more than detailed regulations for the collection and appli- ' cation of the tolls'.

At the time this compact was made, it was well known that thé mail was always transported by contractors, and that whenever it’, was.conveyed in carriages, the vehicles belonged tO them, and wer-e their own private property, and not the property of the United States. It was equally well known that upon this road, as well as many others, the postmaster-general,- in his contracts, uniformly required that the mail should be carried in a stage or coach capable pf accommodating a certain number of passengers, the presence of . the passengers being regarded as adding to-the safety of the mail, , • and superseding the necessity of any other guard.

This mode of transporting the mail ^must have been perfectly ■ known to the state in 1831, when the. agreement was made; and in providing for the exemption of carriages conveying the United States mail, both parties must hav.e.intended to exempt the vehicles usually employed in that service; and' that carriages belonging to the contractors, although carrying passengers, were to pay no toll, while all other vehicles were to be charged at the rate specified in the law. The reason of this exemption is evident; for a toll charged upon the. carriages of the contractor would, in effect, be a charge upon the Post-office 'Department, since the contractor would be obliged to make provision for this expense when bidding for the contract, and regulate his bid so as to cover it..'

In the proposition made by Ohio, nothing was said of a toll on the passengers in a carriage of any kind, but the charge is made upon the carriage itself, according to its description, and the number of horses, without any regard to the number of persons that may be .travelling in it; and it. is évident that it was at that time supposed that the rates specified and agreed 'on would prove sufficient to keep the road'in repair, and.that the United States would always thereafter have the free use.of it, for mail-carriages,of the usual kind,, .without any burden upon them, direct or indirect.

If the expectations of the parties had been realized, and the tolls mentioned in the law had produced revenue enough to preserve the road, no one, we think, would have supposed that tolls could'be collected from passengers in the mail-stage, or that the specified .charges upon the carriages could have been reduced, and the deficiency supplied by a toll upon persons traveUing in the carriages which conveyed the mail.

*742 Lx the case of Searight v. Stokes and others, we have alrdady. said, that with an agreement like this before us between the United States and a state, we must look 'at the relation in which the parties stood to one another, as’ well as to the subject-matter of the contract,, ■and the object which the high contracting parties intended to attain; and we must expound it upon principles of justice, so as to accomplish the purposes for which it was made, and not defeat their manifest intention, by a narrow and literal interpretation of its words. •And regarding it in this point of view, we think it very clear that no part of -the burden of supporting this road was intended to be levied upon the United .States, but was to be obtained altogether from other sources; and' that the relative position and privileges of the mail-coaches in regard to tolls, as prescribed ih the law, were to be always afterwards maintained, unless a deficiency or superar bundance of revenue should render it necessary to increase or dir minish the rates fixed in the law. For if this were not the case, the whole detailed and particular .provision in relation to the things to be charged, and the rates to be imposed, as set forth in thé law-of Ohio, and so cautiously recited in the act of Congress consenting to the. surrender of the road, would -be nugatory and without an object. On the. other hand, this mode of proceeding was the natural and proper one, where two sovereignties .were contracting with each other by means of legislative action; and it was obviously adopted by the parties in this instance in order to show the terms proffered by Ohio, and assented to by Congress, and forms the con- ■ ditions of the compact between them, so far as tkfeir respective rights were concerned.

We proceed to apply these principles to the question before us The law of the state, and the order of its. Board of Public'Works, impose a toll upon every one travelling in -the mail-stage, while the passengers in every other.vehicle are allowed to go free.. If this can be done, it is manifest that the United States will derive no benefit from the compact, and so far from enjoying the privilege for which they stipulated, and for which they paid-so heavily in the construction of the road, a large portion, -of the* burden of repairs will be thrown upon them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 U.S. 720, 11 L. Ed. 800, 3 How. 720, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-moore-co-v-state-scotus-1845.