Millard v. Roberts
Millard v. Roberts
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
As we understand it, there are two questions raised by the appellant in this case: (1) That the appropriation of the money of the District of Columbia towards the payment of the expense provided by the acts of Congress in question is that of public money for a private use, and is therefore unconstitutional and void; and (2) that the acts are void because they are revenue measures and originated in the Senate instead of the House of Representatives, in which latter body the Constitution of the United States requires that all bills for raising revenue shall originate. We will first consider the second question.
1. It is conceded that the acts in question originated in the Senate. It is so alleged in the bill, and conceded by the demurrer, and the statement is not controverted. But the plain answer to this contention is that the acts in question are not bills for the raising of revenue, but, at the utmost, bills for the expenditure of revenue, or appropriation bills, where the appropriation is incidental to some other purpose. It may be that the general appropriation bills, so called, as well as bills for the raising of revenue, should originate in the House of Representatives; and we believe the fact to be that they always do so originate. But a bill plainly for another purpose, and which only incidentally carries an appropriation with it in order to give it effect, although such an appropriation may in
2. The appellant’s second contention is more plausible; namely, that the appropriation of money in the acts of Congress mentioned is an appropriation of public money for private use, which it is not lawful for the legislature to make. Here also the principle is sound for which the appellant contends. It is contrary to right and justice, and to the fundamental principles of our government, to take the property raised by taxation for public purposes, and to devote it to private uses, even under the pretense that these private uses subserve the general interest of the public. The authorities, if authorities are needed, are believed to be uniform in support of this proposition, although there are, no doubt, great divergencies of opin
The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company had a valid contract with the District of Columbia, sanctioned by Congress, whereby it was authorized to procure the site of its present station, and to establish and maintain that station there until the year 1910. It is now proposed to take that station away from it and to compel it to incur vast expense for the construction of a new station upon another site. This it is perfectly competent for Congress to do, but not without payment for the property taken and without some compensation for the change required to be made. And the case is not substantially different with the Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington Railroad Company. On the face of the acts of Congress the appropriation purports to be in compensation for the rights and privileges which the railroad companies agree to surrender, and for the magnitude of the work, otherwise perhaps needless, which they agree to perform. The case is practically that of a contract between the United States and the District of Columbia on the one side, and the railroad companies on the other, whereby the railroad companies agree to surrender certain rights, rights of property as well as other rights, and to construct a work of great magnitude, greater perhaps than their own needs require, but which Congress deems to be demanded for the best interest of the national capital and by the public at large; and for this surrender of right and this work of magnitude commensurate with the public demand, Congress agrees to pay a certain sum, partly out of the funds of the United States and partly out of the funds of the District of Columbia. It is a simple case of bargain and sale, like any other purchase. Some persons there may be who may think the amount of the purchase money too great; but that is a consideration for Congress, not for the courts.
Much of the argument on behalf of the appellant is devoted to the subject of taxation, and the matter of direct and indirect taxation; but, in the view which we take of this case, the argu
Recognizing, as we do, the patriotic purpose of the appellant to defend and protect the rights of the citizen against unlawful misappropriation of the public funds, raised from him and others by taxation, yet we find here no case of excess or abuse of its power by the legislative authority. We should be slow in any event to question the constitutionality of congressional legislation; and the case should not be a doubtful one where the courts will assume to declare such legislation invalid.
We are of opinion that the decree apj>ealed from was right, and that it should be affirmed, with costs. And it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
An appeal by the appellant to the Supreme Court of the United States was prayed and allowed March 22, 1905.
Reference
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- MILLARD v. ROBERTS
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- Constitutional Law; Revenue Legislation; Congbessional Appbopkiation of Public Monet to Pbivate Use. 1. While under the Constitution of the United States all bills for raising revenue must originate in the House of Representatives, a bill which only incidentally carries an appropriation with it in order to give it effect, although such appropriation may in fact be a necessity for the efficiency of the bill, is not constitutionally barred from originating in the Senate. 2. The provision of the acts of Congress of February 12, 1901, 31 Stat. at L. 774, chap. 354, and February 28, 1903, 32 Stat. at L. 909, ohap. 856 (which acts relate to the elimination of grade crossings of railroads and the erection of a union station in this District), for the payment to two railroad companies of $3,000,000 as the share of the District in carrying the acts into effect, is not an- appropriation of public money for private use which it was unlawful for Congress to make; but the appropriation is in compensation for the rights and privileges which the railroad companies agree to surrender, and for the magnitude of the work, otherwise perhaps needless, which they agree to perform.