Public Clearing House v. Coyne

194 U.S. 497, 24 S. Ct. 789, 48 L. Ed. 1092, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 689
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 31, 1904
Docket224
StatusPublished
Cited by156 cases

This text of 194 U.S. 497 (Public Clearing House v. Coyne) 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
Public Clearing House v. Coyne, 194 U.S. 497, 24 S. Ct. 789, 48 L. Ed. 1092, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 689 (1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after making the foregoing státement, delivered the opinion of the court.

By section 3929 of the Revised Statutes, as amended by the *505 act jqf September 19, 1890, 26 Stat. 465, “The Postmaster General may, upon evidence' satisfactory to him that any person or company is engaged in conducting any lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme for the distribution of money, or of any real or personal property by lot, chance, or drawing of any kind,, or that- any person or company is conducting any other scheme or device for obtaining money or property of any kind through the mails by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises, instruct postmasters at any post-office at which registered letters arrive directed to any such person or company ... to return all such registered letters to the postmaster at the office at which they were-originally mailed,-with the word ‘Fraudulent’ plainly written or stamped upon the outside thereof.”

By section 4041, the Postmaster General is authorized in similar terms to forbid the- payment by any postmaster of any postal money order drawn in favor of. any person engaged in the prohibited business; aiid by section 4 of the act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat. 963, the power thus conferred upon the Postmaster General by the preceding section, 3929, is extended and made applicable to all letters or other matter sent by mail.

These acts apply to two‘classes of cases: First, to schemes for the distribution of money, etc., by lot, chance or drawing of any kind; second, to all schemes or devices for obtaining money or property of any kind by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations or promises.

It seems the Postmaster General,- in issuing the fraud order in this case, acted upon the theory that the complainant, was engaged in conducting a scheme or device for obtaining money through the mails by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, etc., and not in conducting a lottery; but if the order detaining the letters was properly issued, in view of all the evidence introduced in the court below, we do not .think it was vitiated by the fact that the Postmaster General acted upon the hypothesis that the business in which complainant was engaged *506 was á fraudulent scheme instead of a lottery, since both are within the purview of these statutes.

We find no - difficulty in sustaining the constitutionality of these sections. The postal service is by no means an indispensable. adjunct to a civil government, and for hundreds, if • not for thousands, -of years the transmission of private letters was either entrusted to the hands of friends or to private enterprise. Indeed, it is only within the last .thrée hundred years that governments have undertaken the work of transmitting intelligence as a branch of their general administration. While it has' been known in this country since colonial times and was recognized in the Constitution' and in some of the earliest acts of Congress, the rates of postage were so high and th¿ methods of transmission so slow and uncertain that. it was not until 1845, when the postage was reduced to five and ten cents, according to; the distance, and a stamp or stamps introduced, that it assumed anything of the importance it now possesses.

It is not, however, a necessary part of the civil government in the same sense in which the protection of life, liberty and property, -the defence of the- government' against insurrection and foreign invasion,' and the administration of public justice are; but is a public function assumed and established by Congress for the general welfare, and in most countries its expenses are paid solely by the persons making use of its facilities; and it returns; or is presumed to return,.a revenue to the government, and really operates as a popular and efficient method of .taxation. Indeed, this seems to have been originally the purpose of Congress. The legislative body in thus establishing a postal service may annex such conditions to it as it chooses.

The' constitutional principles underlying the administration of the Post Office Department were discussed in the ojfinion of the court in Ex parte Jackson, 96 U. S. 727, in which we held that, the power vested in Congress to establish' post offices and post roads embraced the regulation'of the entire postal system *507 of the.country; that Congress might designate what might be carried in the mails and what excluded, and that in the enforcement of such regulations a distinction was made between letters and sealed packages subject to letter postage,-and'such other packages as were open to .inspection, such as hewspapérs, magazines, pamphlets and other printed matter, and that the constitutional guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures extended to letters but did not extend to printed matter. : In establishing such system Congress may restrict it's use to letters, and deny it to periodicals; it may include periodicals, and exclude books; it may admit books .to the mails and refuse to admit merchandise, or it may include all of these and fail to embrace within its regulations telegrams or large parcels of merchandise, although in most civilized countries of Europe these- are also ínadé a part of the postal ‘ service. It may also refuse to include in its mails, such printed matter or merchandise as may seem objectionable to it' upon the ground of public policy, as dangerous to its employes or injurious to other mail matter carried in the- same packages. The postal regulations of this, country,-issued in pursuance of. act of Congress, contain a long list of prohibited articles dan7 gerous in their nature, or to other articles with which they may come in contact-, such, for instance, as liquids, poisons, -explosives and inflammable articles, fatty substances, or live or dead animals, and substances which exhale a bad odor. It has never been supposed that the exclusion of these articles denied to their owners any of their constitutional rights. While -it may be assumed, for the- purpose of this case, that Congress would have no right to'extend to one the benefit of its postal service, and deny it to another person in the same class and standing in the' same relation to the Government, it does not follow that under its power to classify mailable matter, applying different rates of postage to different articles, and prohibiting some altogether, it may not also classify the recipients of such matter, and forbid the delivery of letters to such persons or corporations as in its judgment are making *508 use of the mails for the purpose of fraud or deception or the dissemination among its citizens of information of a character calculated to debauch the public morality. For mote than thirty years not only has the transmission of obscene matter been prohibited, but it has beep made a crime, punishable‘by fine or imprisonment, for a person to deposit such matter in the mails. The constitutionality of this law we believe has never been attacked. The same provision was by the same act extended to letters and circulars connected with lotteries and gift enterprises, the constitutionality of which was upheld by this court in In re Rapier, 143 U. S.

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Bluebook (online)
194 U.S. 497, 24 S. Ct. 789, 48 L. Ed. 1092, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-clearing-house-v-coyne-scotus-1904.