State ex rel. Abbott v. Hicks

44 La. Ann. 770
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1892
DocketNo. 11,057
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 La. Ann. 770 (State ex rel. Abbott v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Abbott v. Hicks, 44 La. Ann. 770 (La. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

Relator was prosecuted for a violation of Act No. Ill of 1890, entitled “An act to promote the comfort of passengers on railway trains; requiring all railway companies carrying passengers on their trains, in this State, to provide equal but separate accommodations for the white and colored races, by providing separate coaches or compartments so as to secure separate accommodations; defining the duties of the officers of such railways; directing them to assign passengers to the coaches or compartments set aside for the use of the race to which such passengers belong; authorizing them to refuse to carry on their trains such passengers as may refuse to occupy the coaches or compartments to which he or she is assigned; to exonerate such railway companies from any and all blame or-damages that might proceed from such refusal; to prescribe penalties for all violations of this act,” etc.

Relator appeared and filed, in limine, a plea to the jurisdiction of the court, coupled with a motion to quash the information, wherein-he alleged and set forth, in substance, the following facts, viz.:

1. That the act charged in the information was committed by him exclusively as an officer of Pullman’s Palace Car Company, in charge only of one Pullman car attached, to a train on the Texas & Pacific Railway Company.

2. That the negro, whom the information charged him with admitting into said car, was an interstate passenger, that is, a paa[773]*773senger traveling from a point in the State of Louisiana to his destination in the State of Texas.

And upon these alleged facts he propounded the following propositions of law, viz.:

1. That the Act No. Ill did not, under its terms, apply to the Pullman’s Palace Oar Company, or to its cars, or to its officers or employees.

2. That said Act No. Ill was not intended to apply and did not apply to any passenger traffic or commerce except such as is carried on exclusively withiu the State of Louisiana, and does not embrace or cover the acts charged in the information, which related exclusively to an interstate passenger.

3. That if the said act should be held to apply to interstate passengers, then the same is null and void as violating clause 3 of Sec. 8 of Art. 1 of the Constitution of the United States, which confers upon Congress alone the power “to regulate commerce. with foreign nations and among the States and with the Indian tribes.”

The district attorney, on behalf of the State, met the plea and motion by a demurrer on the ground that “the matters therein set forth are insufficient in law;” which demurrer the respondent judge sustained and overruled the plea and motion.

The case being unappealable and susceptible of no other remedy, relator applies for relief by certiorari and prohibition, his right to which is not questioned by respondent and does not seem to admit of question. State ex rel. Walker vs. Judge, 39 An. 134.

For the purposes of the demurrer, the facts set forth in the plea stand as admitted.

As we said in the case just quoted, “if the law for the violation of which relators are being prosecuted is unconstitutional, then it is not a law and no court can have power or jurisdiction to arraign, try and punish a citizen who is not charged with the violation of law.”

We shall pretermit consideration of the first ground relating to the applicability of the statute to the Pullman Company, its cars and employees, which involves a mere question of statutory construction, and shall confine ourselves to those arraigning the statute as an unauthorized regulation of interstate commerce.

Thus considered, the case presents two sharply defined questions, viz.:

1. Does the statute appiy to interstate passengers or is it con[774]*774fined in its application to passengers traveling exclusively within the borders of the State?

2. If the statute does apply to interstate passengers is it such a regulation of commerce between the States as violates the exclusive power over that subject conferred on Congress by the Constitution of the United States?

These questions are so closely connected that they may be considered together.

The State of Mississippi has a statute which we have very carefully compared with the statute of Louisiana involved in this case, and find the two to be so similar as to admit of not the least distinction as to their true meaning and effect, except that the Mississippi act subjected the railroad companies failing to supply the separate accommodations required, as well as the conductor, to prosecution as for a misdemeanor and to fine in case of conviction. Under this provision a railroad company was prosecuted for failure to comply with the act, and it defended on the ground that the act was a regulation of commerce between the States and unconstitutional. The Supreme Court of Mississippi, in passing upon that case, held as follows:

“It is assumed by counsel for appellant that the act under consideration was intended to regulate not only the transportation of passengers taken up and set down within the State, but those taken up within the State to be carried without, those taken up without to be brought within, and those taken up without to be carried across the State and into other States.

“An examination of the record shows that the omission for which the indictment was found was the neglect to provide the ‘separate’ accommodation required by paragraph 1 of the act, and not for failing to assign to such separate car or compartment interstate travelers upon appellant’s train. We are not, therefore, called upon to determine whether the legislation in question would be valid if applied to persons other than those taken up within the State to be set down within it.

* * if: >f: * * * *

“We concede it to be settled, as stated by counsel for appellant, that transportation of persons is as much commerce as transportation of property, and as a corollary that the interstate transportation of persons is interstate commerce, and that the State may not [775]*775regulate such commerce, since it is national in its character and requires uniformity of regulation. It may also be conceded that absence of legislation by Congress on the subject is indicative of its, will that such commerce shall be free and untrammeled. The question returns, whether the act under consideration is a regulation of interstate commerce, and upon its solution hinges the controversy.

* * * * Sfl * * 5*

“It is a matter of common knowledge that there are at present many State commissions for the regulation of State commerce, and one by the general government for the regulation of that between the States. Each occupies a field from which the other is excluded, and each is essential, or deemed so to be, to full control of the commerce of the country. By what authority can the transportation of domestic travelers be controlled, if not by that of the State? Congress has no jurisdiction over the subject, it being confined to commerce ‘ with foreign nations, and among the States, and with the Indian tribes.’ Suppose Congress should deem it advisable to enact a law similar to our statute for the regulation of interstate transportation of passengers, could it be contended that it controlled as to passengers taken up and set down within a State?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 La. Ann. 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-abbott-v-hicks-la-1892.