Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/129/217/
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 08:25:51+00:00

Document:
Section 4059 of the Code of Iowa, which provides that a person having in his possession "Texas cattle" shall be liable for any damages which may accrue from allowing them to run at large and thereby spread the disease known as the "Texas fever," is not in conflict with the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States; nor is it a denial to citizens of other states of any rights and privileges which are accorded to citizens of Iowa, and thus in conflict with Subdivision 1 of Section 2 of Article IV of the Constitution.
through any part of this state or having in possession any Texas cattle between the first day of November and the first day of April following."
"SEC. 4059. If any person now or hereafter has in his possession in this state any such Texas cattle, he shall be liable for any damages that may accrue from allowing said cattle to run at large and thereby spreading the disease among other cattle known as the Texas fever, and shall be punished as is prescribed in the preceding section."
The action is based upon this latter section. The petition of the plaintiff alleges that in June, 1885, the defendants were the owners of and had in their possession and under their control a herd of Texas cattle which had not been wintered north of the southern boundary of Missouri or Kansas and which were purchased at or near Fort Smith, in Arkansas; that said cattle, while in the possession and under the control of the defendants, were allowed by them to run at large in Union Township, Harrison County, Iowa, contrary to the provisions of § 4059 of its code; and that the said cattle were infected by a disease known as "Texas cattle fever," which was spread and disseminated by them among the cattle of the plaintiff, whereby they sickened and died, to his damage of five thousand dollars, for which he prays judgment.
To this petition the defendants demurred on the grounds first that §§ 4058 and 5049 are in conflict with Section 8, Article I, of the Constitution of the United States in that the Legislature of Iowa undertakes to regulate and interfere with interstate commerce, and second that the sections are in conflict with Section 2 of Article IV of the Constitution of the United States relative to the privileges and immunities of citizens of the several states.
points of disagreement be certified to this court, and upon this certificate * the case has been heard.
In order to understand § 4059 of the Code of Iowa, it must be read in connection with the preceding section, 4058, to which it refers. It must also be known what is meant by "Texas cattle," and what influence a winter north has upon the disease called "Texas Fever," with which such cattle are liable to be infected. Section 4058 is leveled against the importation of Texas cattle which have not been wintered north of the southern boundary of Missouri or Kansas. Any person bringing into the state Texas cattle, unless they have been thus wintered, is subject to be fined or imprisoned. When, therefore, § 4059 refers to the possession in the State of any "such Texas cattle," it means cattle which have not been wintered north, as mentioned in the preceding section. It is only when they have not been thus wintered that apprehension is felt that they may be infected with the disease and spread it among other cattle.
not material for the disposition of this case. Cattle coming from both of those states and from that territory during the spring and summer months are often infected with what is known as "Texas Fever." It is supposed that they become infected with the germs of this distemper while feeding, during those months, on the low and moist grounds of those states and territory, constituting what are called their malarial districts, which are largely covered with a thick vegetable growth. These germs are communicated to domestic cattle by contact or by feeding in the same range or pasture. Scientists are not agreed as to the causes of the malady, and it is not important for our decision which of the many theories advanced by them is correct. That cattle coming from those sections of the country during the spring and summer months are often infected with a contagious and dangerous fever is a notorious fact, as is also the fact that cold weather, such as is usual in the winter north of the southern boundary of Missouri and Kansas, destroys the virus of the disease and thus removes all danger of infection. It is upon these notorious facts that the legislation of Iowa for the exclusion from their limits of these cattle unless they have passed a winter north is based. See Missouri Pacific Railway Company v. Finley, 38 Kan. 556. Also First Annual Report to the Commissioner of Agriculture of the Bureau of Animal Industry for 1884, p. 426, and Second Annual Report of same bureau for 1885, 310.
into the state of such cattle unless they have been wintered north, is before us, and that a consideration of its validity is necessary in passing upon § 4059, but this is a mistake. Section 4058 is before us only that we may ascertain from it the meaning intended by certain terms used in the subsequent section referring to it, and not upon any question of its constitutionality.
"that the statute interposes a direct prohibition against the introduction into the State of all Texas, Mexican, or Indian cattle during eight months of each year, without any distinction between such as may be diseased and such as are not."
"You shall not bring into the state any Texas cattle or any Mexican cattle or Indian cattle between March 1st and December 1st in any year, no matter whether they are free from disease or not, no matter whether they may do an injury to the inhabitants of the state or not, and if you do bring them in, even for the purpose of carrying them through the state without unloading them, you shall be subject to extraordinary liabilities."
question would have been presented for the consideration of the Court. Certainly all animals thus infected may be excluded from the state by its laws until they are cured of the disease, or at least until some mode of transporting them without danger of spreading it is devised.
Railroad Company v. Husen gives no support to the contention of the defendant. There is no necessary dependence of the provisions of § 4059, imposing a civil liability, upon those of § 4058 so that the one may not stand without the other. If the criminal liability created by § 4058 is open to doubt, which we do not affirm, the civil liability may remain for the damages caused by the willful conduct designated in § 4059. Packet Company v. Keokuk, 95 U. S. 80; Allen v. Louisiana, 103 U. S. 80.
The case is therefore reduced to this: whether the state may not provide that whoever permits diseased cattle in his possession to run at large within its limits shall be liable for any damages caused by the spread of the disease occasioned thereby, and upon that we do not entertain the slightest doubt. Our answer, therefore, to the first question upon which the judges below differed is in the negative -- that the section in question is not unconstitutional by reason of any conflict with the commercial clause of the Constitution.
Reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
"1st. Is § 4059 of the Code of Iowa repugnant to and in conflict with the provisions of Sec. 8 of Article I of the Constitution of the United States relative to the regulation of commerce among the several states, and by reason thereof unconstitutional?"
"2nd. Is § 4059 of the Code of Iowa repugnant to or in conflict with Sec. 2 of Article IV of the Constitution of the United States relative to the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states, and by reason thereof unconstitutional?"

References: § 4059
 § 4059
 § 4059
 v. 
 § 4059
 v. 
 § 4059
 § 4058
 § 4058
 § 4059
 v. 
 v. 
 § 4059
 § 4059