United States v. Nixon

235 U.S. 231, 35 S. Ct. 49, 59 L. Ed. 207, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1017
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1914
Docket427
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 235 U.S. 231 (United States v. Nixon) 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
United States v. Nixon, 235 U.S. 231, 35 S. Ct. 49, 59 L. Ed. 207, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1017 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lamar

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Grand Jury for the Western Division of the Western District of Missouri returned an indictment against the-St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company and its Receivers, charging that on August 16, 1913, Nixon, Biddle and West, as Receivers of said 'Company, were operating the property and business of said corporation as a common carrier of freight, and unlawfully transported cattle from a quarantine district in Oklahoma' to Kansas City, Missouri, without compliance with the rules and regulations established by the Secretary of Agriculture.

Both the indorsement and caption to this indictment described it as being for “violation of secs. 2.and 4 of the act of March 3, 1905, 33 Stat. 1264.” Those sections of that act provide that “no railroad company ... shall transport from any quarantine State ... to any other State any cattle . . .” except “in com *233 pliance with regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Agriculture.”

The defendants demurred on the ground “that the indictment does not charge any offense for which Receivers herein can be held.” The court treated the indictment as founded on the act of 1905 imposing a penalty upon railroad companies and after argument sustained the demurrer — filing a memorandum in which he held that, under the ruling in United States v. Harris, 177 U. S. 305, the statute did not create an offense for which Receivers could be punished.

The case is here under the Criminal Appeals Act (34 Stat., 1246) on a writ of error in which the Government excepts generally to the quashing of the indictment and specially to' the court’s construction of this act of 1905.

In view of the decision in United States v. Harris, the judgment of the court below would necessarily have to be affirmed if the case was to be determined solely by the provisions of the Quarantine Act'of 1905, which imposes a penalty for the transportation of cattle by a railroad company. But a Receiver is not a corporation, and, therefore, not within the terms of a statute applicable to railroad companies, even though cattle from an infected district transported by him would be as likely to transmit disease as'if they had been shipped over the same line while it was being operated by the company itself. And, no doubt in recognition of this fact, and’in order to make the remedy as broad as the evil sought to be cured, Congress, by the act of March 4, 1913, c. 145, 37 Stat. 828, 831, made all of the provisions of the original quarantine act of 1905 “apply to any railroad company or other common carrier, whose road or line forms any part of a route over which cattle or other live stock are transported in the course of shipment” from a quarantine State to any other State.

The statute, as thus amended, applied to transportation of live stock over short lines belonging to private individ *234 uals.or to lumber companies hauling freight for hire; to roads operated by Trustees under power contained in a mortgage; and also to the more common case where a railroad was being operated by a Receiver acting under judicial appointment. . For in so far as he transports passengers and property he is a common carrier with rights and civil responsibility as such (Eddy v. Lafayette, 163 U. S. 456, 464; Hutchison on Carriers, § 77). And there is no reason suggested why a Receiver, operating a railroad, should not álso be subject to the penal provisions of a statute prohibiting any common carrier from transporting live stock by rail from a quarantine district into another State. Erb v. Morasch, 177 U. S. 584; United States v. Ramsey, 197 Fed. Rep. 144.

But it is said that the Amendment, buried in the Agricultural Appropriation Act of 1913, w,as unknown to the Grand Jury when the indictment was fouhd and was not construed in deciding the motion to quash. And it is contended that, inasmuch as the Criminal Appeals Act only authorizes a review of a decision in so far as it was “based upon the . '. . construction of the statute upon which the indictment is founded” (March 2, 1907, c. 2564, 34 Stat. 1246), — the correct ruling that Receivers are not within the act of 1905 ought not to be reversed because it now appears that they are within the terms of the act of 1913 which was not brought to the attention of the District Judge and was not therefore construed by him in fact. It is pointed out that while there is a general assignment that the court erred in quashing the indictment, yet the Government itself specifically complains of the court’s construction of the act of 1905 — not the act of 1913. And to emphasize the fact that the indictment was not founded on the Amendment, attention is called to the fact that entries on the back and in the caption of the indictment describe it as being for “violation of Secs. 2 and 4 of the Act of March 3, 1905, 33 Stat. *235 1264,” which apply to railroad companies and not to Receivers.

These entries are useful and convenient means of reference and in case of doubt might possibly be of some assistance in determining what statute was alleged to have been violated. But these entries form no part of the indictment (Williams v. United States, 168 U. S. 382, 389) and neither add to nor take from the legal effect of the charge that the Receivers, while operating the business of the corporation as a common carrier, transported cattle “contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided.” What was that statute and on what statute the indictment was founded was to be determined as a matter of law from the facts therein charged.

There is no claim that it was quashed because of any defect in matter of pleading, and that being true, the ruling on the demurrer that “the indictment does not charge any offense for which the Receivers can be held,” necessarily involved a decision of the question as to whether there was any statute which punished the acts therein - set out. In determining that question it was ¡necessary that the indictment should be referred, not merely to the Act mentioned in argument, but to any statute which prohibited the transportation of cattle by the persons, in the manner, and on the date charged in that indictment. For the reasons already pointed out it was a misconstruction of the Act of 1913, to which the indictment was thus legally referred, to -hold that Receivers acting as common carriers were not within its terms.

Nor can a reversal be avoided by the claim that the act of 1913, though applicable to the facts charged in the indictment, had not been construed by the court. For within the meaning of the Criminal Appeals Act (34 Stat. 1246) the statute on which, as matter of law, an indictment is founded, may be misconstrued not only by misinter *236

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 U.S. 231, 35 S. Ct. 49, 59 L. Ed. 207, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-nixon-scotus-1914.