State v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

71 N.W. 400, 68 Minn. 381, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 27, 1897
DocketNos. 10,474, 10,476, 10,479, 10,485—(52, 53, 54, 55)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 71 N.W. 400 (State v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 71 N.W. 400, 68 Minn. 381, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 413 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

MITCHELL. J.

The defendants in these actions were severally indicted for a refusal to turn over to a public warehouseman certain goods which had not been called for by the consignee, pursuant to the provisions of Laws 1895, c. 149, § 11, entitled

“An act to license and regulate the business of storage companies and public warehousemen (other than warehousemen of grain in bulk) and to provide a penalty for violation of the same.”

Section one of the act provides that

“the governor may license any suitable person, persons, or corpor[384]*384ations established under the laws of this state, and having their place or places of business within this state, to carry on the business of storage companies or public warehousemen, who may keep and maintain public warehouses for the storage of goods, wares and merchandise, etc., excepting grain in bulk. Said license must be obtained within thirty days from and after the passage of this bill, upon the payment into the treasury of the state of the sum of ten dollars, and annually thereafter, by the payment of a like sum, to be credited to the school fund of the state.”

Section nine makes it unlawful for any one not duly licensed under the provisions of the act to conduct or carry on the business of a storage company or warehouseman in this state. Section ten makes a violation of the provisions of sections nine and eleven a misdemeanor punishable by fine.. Section eleven, under which the indictments were drawn, reads as follows:

“Sec. 11. This act shall not be construed to apply to any railroad or transportation company who holds goods, wares, or merchandise in cars, freight houses or warehouses for a period not exceeding twenty days after receipt. Provided, such railroad or transportation company shall, within forty-eight hours after the receipt of such goods, wares, and merchandise, notify the consignee of the arrival thereof in writing, and in case such consignee, or his assigns, fails and neglects to call for or receive said goods, wares or merchandise within twenty days after such receipt of same by any railroad or transportation company as aforesaid, said railroad or transportation company must then turn over said goods, wares, or merchandise to a storage company or public warehouseman, licensed as in this act provided, upon the payment of the charges of said carrier thereon, which charges thus paid by said storage company or warehouseman to said carrier shall be a lien on said goods, wares or merchandise, and en-forcible in accordance with sections one, two, three and four, chapter two hundred and two of the General Laws of 1885.”

Among other objections to the sufficiency of these indictments, it is urged that the act in question is unconstitutional. The act is certainly a remarkable one. Its provisions contain strong intrinsic evidence that the real purpose of it was not the protection of the public by regulating public warehousemen or by adopting reasonable regulations for the preservation of unclaimed property in the hands of common carriers, but to subserve the interests of a certain class of ware-housemen. We have no doubt that the public storage and ware[385]*385house business is one that is subject to the police power of the state to adopt such reasonable regulations as the legislature may deem necessary for the protection of the public who intrust their property to those carrying on such a business. We may also admit that it is within the police power of the state to adopt any reasonable regulations for the preservation and protection of property which has been transported to the place of its consignment by a common carrier, and is abandoned, or not claimed within a reasonable time, by the consignee or owner. It is also true that, where a business is a proper subject of police regulation, the legislature may, in the exercise of that power, adopt any measures they see fit, provided, only, that they adopt such as have some relation to and have some tendency to accomplish the desired end; and if the measures adopted have such relation or tendency, and do not violate some provision of the constitution, the courts will not assume to determine whether they are wise or the best that might have been adopted. .

But, while the police power of the state is a very extensive one, it is not without limits. A law enacted in the exercise of the police power must be a police regulation in fact. If it will not conduce to any legitimate police purpose, or if it amounts to an arbitrary and unwarranted interference with the right of the citizen to pursue any lawful business, the courts have a right, and it is their duty, to declare the law unconstitutional. The business of a common carrier and the storage and warehouse business are both lawful without any license or authority from the state. Every one has a right to engage in them, subject only to such regulations and restrictions as are necessary to promote the general welfare. Neither of them is a business which the state has any right to prohibit altogether, or to limit to a favored few by giving them a monopoly of it. Therefore the police power must, when exercised over them, be confined to such restrictions and burdens as are necessary to promote the public welfare, or, in other words, to prevent the infliction of a public injury.

If the first section of this act is to be construed literally as it reads, it would give a monopoly of the public storage and warehouse business to those to whom the governor granted licenses “within thirty days from and after the passage of the act.” Under such a construction, the act would be clearly unconstitutional. Again, while the act [386]*386requires every storage company or warehouseman to receive and store all property offered for such purposes by any person, without discrimination, it nowhere, at least in express terms, requires them to advance the charges of the carrier. If they may consent or decline, at their option, to advance these charges, the law would have no reasonable tendency to protect and preserve unclaimed property. It would permit the storage company or warehouseman to accept from the carrier only such business as he might deem to his own personal advantage, and reject the balance. Further, if the proviso to section eleven is to be construed as it seems to read, it would absolutely compel every common carrier in every instance to notify the consignee of the arrival of the goods within 48 hours, and, in case he did not call for or receive the goods within 20 days, to turn them over to a warehouseman, without regard to what agreement or arrangement to the contrary there might be between the carrier and the consignor or consignee, as, for example, that the goods should be shipped or held by the carrier for future delivery. If this is the proper construction of the act, it is clearly unconstitutional, as being an arbitrary and unwarranted interference with the right of parties to contract with reference to the disposition of their own property.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.W. 400, 68 Minn. 381, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-minn-1897.