State v. Railroad
State v. Railroad
Opinion of the Court
after stating the case: The statutes of North Carolina, Laws 1901, chapter 479, sec. 4, subsec. b, authorize the Commissioner of Agriculture, by and with the advice and consent of the board, “to make investigations adapted to promote the improvement of milk and beef cattle, and especially investigations relating to the diseases of cattle and other domestic animals, and shall publish and distribute from time to time information relative to any contagious diseases of stock and suggest remedies therefor, and shall have power in such cases -to quarantine the infected animals and to regulate the transportation of stock in this State, or from one section of it to another, and may co-operate with the United States Department of Agriculture in establishing and maintaining cattle districts or quarantine lines to prevent the infection of cattle from splenic or Spanish fever.”
Under and by virtue of this enactment, the State Commissioner, acting with the State Board of Agriculture at its May meeting, 1903, adopted, as regulations of the State Board, the “Annual Regulations of the United States Department of Agriculture, concerning interstate cattle transportation.” These regulations prohibit during the year 1903 the ship
It is a well established principle that the courts will take judicial notice of the political subdivisions of their States, and of the boundary lines of counties therein when fixed and declared by public statutes, of the geographical positions of cities and towns within the limits of their jurisdiction, and also of the existence and placing of prominent water courses within such limits when referred to in public statutes. 17 Am. & Eng. Enc., pp. 904, 912; State v. Snow, 117 N. C., 774; Montgomery v. Plank Road, 31 Ala., 76; De Baker v. Railway, 106 Cal., 257; Wood v. Fowler, 26 Kan., 682. The quarantine line and the designation of the protected territory having been indicated by the border line of counties in the State fixed by public statutes, except a portion of the protected .territory designated as “that part of the county of Burke lying south of the Catawba River,” when it is proved that the defendant, within the period covered by the regulations, has shipped cattle from Burlington, N. C., to Morganton, N. C., we judicially know that this shipment has been across the line fixed as a quarantine line; and, assuming that the department regulations have also been established by proper proof, we are of opinion that there has been a criminal violation of law and the defendant has been- properly convicted. The general objections urged against the validity of this conviction can none of them be sustained.
It is contended, first, that the commissioner, with the consent and advice of the board, is only given -authority to regulate the transportation of the cattle, and that this does not authorize the prohibition of such transportation. But this is a misconception of the scope and meaning of the statute. It does confer the power to make regulations about transporting cattle, but the additional power is given, and this is the main and controlling purpose of this section “to establish and maintain cattle districts and quarantine lines, to prevent the infection of cattle from splenic or Spanish
Again, it is urged that the prosecution must fail because the statute is an unwarranted delegation of legislative power tc the Board of Agriculture, which is a branch of the executive department of the government. The answer, here too, is that the statute does not do what is ascribed to it. The crime is fixed and declared by the Legislature as expressed in the act. The commissioner and board are only given power to establish the conditions and certain administrative regulations under and upon which the statute is made to apply. In 8 Cyc., p. 830, it is said that “while a legislative body cannot delegate the power to legislate, the Legislature may delegate the power to determine some facts or state of things upon which a statute makas or intends to make its own action depend,” — citing numerous authorities. The principle is well established with us and is applied in various instances. Express Co. v. Railroad, 111 N. C., pp. 463, 472.
It is further insisted that there are numerous statutes in this State, passed both before and since the one now being considered, requiring the defendant to receive and ship freights under severe penalties in case of wilful failure or refusal, and that these statutes should be so construed as to modify or repeal the act in question and protect the defendant from prosecution. This, we hold, would not be in accord with sound and accepted principles of statutory construction. Tt
Applying these rules to the question here raised, we are of opinion that the correct interpretation of these ‘statutes would
The defendant, however, contends that a new trial should be awarded for erroneous rulings of the trial court on questions of evidence: 1. In admitting the resolutions of the State Board of Agriculture. 2. In admitting the pamphlet containing the regulations of the U. S. Department of Agriculture.
The first was certified under the hand of T. K. Bruner, the secretary, with the seal of the Department of Agriculture affixed, and, if proof were required, this would seem to be in exact compliance with the provisions of the statute. Revisal, sections 1616 and 1617.
On the second objection: The pamphlet containing the department regulations was not, we think, properly authenticated nor otherwise competent for admission as testimony. The paper was not certified by any officer of the U. S. Department of Agriculture and had no seal attached. It did not purport to have been issued or published by authority of the department, and had nothing to indicate that the paper had any connection with that department, except that it contained as a printed heading “United States Department of Agriculture,” “Regulations Concerning Cattle Transportation.” If proof of these regulations, therefore, had been necessary, the paper writing was not admissible in evidence, and its admission -would have constituted reversible error. No such significance or effect, however, can attach to the ruling of the judge below in this respect, because the court is of opinion that these regulations were of such a character that the courts of this State are required to take judicial
It is a well recognized principle sanctioned by the great weight of authority that when in pursuance of a public statute one of the principal departments of our government frames and establishes regulations, concerning the public interests and by which the general public are to be controlled, such regulations, when properly made and framed by virtue of the statute, have the force of a public law; and the courts having jurisdiction of questions arising thereunder must take judicial notice of their existence. As said in Low v. Hanson, 72 Me., 105: “Rules and regulations of one of the departments established in accordance with a statute have the force of law, and the courts take judicial notice of them” — citing Gratiot v. U. S., 4 How., 80, and Ex Parte Reed, 100 U. S., 13. To same effect are Caha v. U. S., 152 U. S., 211, 222; Larson v. Bank, 66 Neb., 595, 598; 16 Cyc., 903. There are authorities to the contrary, but an examination will disclose that in most instances these cases were concerning regulations which originated with the department, or, if made pursuant to a statute, they were departmental regulations simply, not affecting the general public, and not designed or intended to control its conduct.
It is argued that our State statutes (sections 1594, 1616, 1617,) provide for a simple method of proof in cases of this character, and that the establishment of this method gives indication that such proof should be required. Section 1594 provides for a method of proof by establishing laws, proclamations, edicts, ordinances of Other States, Territories and foreign countries. As heretofore stated, a department regulation made pursuant to the public statutes, designed and intended to control the conduct of the general public, has the force of law. When such a regulation by the Federal Government operates and takes effect in the State of North Carolina, it is in no sense a foreign law, and section 1594
It is further contended that it might, in certain instances,. operate with great harshness to apply the principle “of taking judicial notice” to these departmental regulations. But this position, while it has no real bearing on the legal aspect of the question, is not well considered. The principle is only one of procedure, relieving the State of necessity of producing proof of these regulations at the trial, and has no direct bearing as to their force and effect on the conduct of the citizen. So far as the public are concerned, and it is only here that an enforcement without actual notice might operate with some severity, the regulations having the force of law, the citizen must take notice of them at his peril, and this, regardless of how they must be established at the trial. This result is in no way affected by the present decision, which only holds on this question, that at the trial the prosecution is not required to produce proof of regulations which have the force of public law.
As a matter of fact we are informed that our State Department of Agriculture, mindful 'as it ever has been of its.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. RAILROAD
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published