State Activities and Instrumentalities
Today it is apparent that the Tenth Amendment does not shield the States nor their political subdivisions from the impact of the authority affirmatively granted to the Federal Government. It was cited to no avail in Case v. Bowles,[38] where a State officer was enjoined from selling timber on school lands at a price in excess of the maximum prescribed by the Office of Price Administration. When California violated the Federal Safety Appliance Act in the operation of the State Belt Railroad as a common carrier in interstate commerce it was held liable for the statutory penalty.[39] At the suit of the Attorney General of the United States, the Sanitary District of Chicago was enjoined from diverting water from Lake Michigan in excess of a specified rate. On behalf of a unanimous court, Justice Holmes wrote: "This is not a controversy among equals. The United States is asserting its sovereign power to regulate commerce and to control the navigable waters within its jurisdiction. * * * There is no question that this power is superior to that of the States to provide for the welfare or necessities of their inhabitants."[40] Some years earlier, in a suit brought by Kansas to prevent Colorado from using the waters of the Arkansas River for irrigation, the Attorney General of the United States had unsuccessfully advanced the claim that the Federal Government had an inherent legislative authority to deal with the matter. In a petition to intervene in the suit he had taken the position, as summarized by the Supreme Court, that "the National Government * * * has the right to make such legislative provision as in its judgment is needful for the reclamation of all these arid lands and for that purpose to appropriate the accessible waters. * * * All legislative power must be vested in either the state or the National Government; no legislative powers belong to a state government other than those which affect solely the internal affairs of that State; consequently all powers which are national in their scope must be found vested in the Congress of the United States."[41] The petition to intervene was dismissed on the ground that the authority claimed for the Federal Government was incompatible with the Tenth Amendment; but this could hardly happen today.[42] Under its superior power of eminent domain, the United States may condemn land owned by a State even where the taking will interfere with the State's own project for water development and conservation.[43] The rights reserved to the States are not invaded by a statute which requires a reduction in the amount of a federal grant-in-aid of the construction of highways upon failure of a State to remove from office a member of the State Highway Commission found to have violated federal law by participating in a political campaign.[44]
Federal legislation frequently has been challenged as an unconstitutional interference with the prerogative of the States to control the entities they create, but the attack has been successful only once, in Hopkins Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Cleary.[45] There an act of Congress authorizing the conversion of State building and loan associations without State consent was found to contravene the Tenth Amendment. Thirty years earlier, in Northern Securities Co. v. United States,[46] a closely divided Court had ruled that this amendment was no barrier to the application of the Sherman Antitrust Act to prevent one corporation from restraining commerce by means of stock ownership in two competing corporations. It announced the general proposition that: "No State can, by merely creating a corporation, or in any other mode, project its authority into other States, and across the continent, so as to prevent Congress from exerting the power it possesses under the Constitution over interstate and international commerce, or so as to exempt its corporation engaged in interstate commerce from obedience to any rule lawfully established by Congress for such commerce. It cannot be said that any State may give a corporation, created under its laws, authority to restrain interstate or international commerce against the will of the nation as lawfully expressed by Congress. Every corporation created by a State is necessarily subject to the supreme law of the land."[47] Even a charter contract between a State and an intrastate railroad, limiting the rates of the latter, is no barrier to enforcement of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission requiring an increase in local rates to remove a discrimination against interstate commerce.[48] An order of the Federal Power Commission prescribing the methods of keeping the accounts of an electric company was sustained over the objection that it violated the reserved right of the States under the Tenth Amendment.[49] A similar objection to the levy of a special surtax on any corporation formed or availed of to prevent the imposition of a surtax upon its shareholders was rejected, since the taxing statute did not limit in any way the power of the corporations to declare or withhold dividends as permitted by State law.[50] Likewise, the Court held that the failure to allow a credit against the undistributed profits tax for earnings which could not be distributed under State law did not infringe the reserved power of the State over its corporate offspring.[51]
Notes
[1] United States v. Sprague, 282 U.S. 716, 733 (1931).
[2] II Annals of Congress 1897 (1791).
[3] 4 Wheat. 316 (1819).
[4] Ibid. 372.
[5] Ibid. 406.
[6] 11 Wall. 113 (1871).