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caused it to be enacted. Finally, the convictions which arise from the fact of the postponement are made plain by a report on the bill made to the House of Representatives by the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, wherein it was said (Report No. 7641, dated February 16, 1907, p. 6):

"Owing to the probable necessity of changing in some instances division points, entailing the removal of employés, and to permit ample time to readjust themselves to the requirements of the law, it is not to become operative for one year after its approval."

For the reasons stated the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of Washington must be and it is Reversed, and the cause will be remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

RED "C" OIL MANUFACTURING COMPANY v. BOARD OF AGRICULTURE OF NORTH CAROLINA.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA.

No. 141. Argued December 21, 22, 1911.-Decided January 9, 1912.

This court will not lightly attribute improper motives to the lawmaking power, and will not, on a mere charge, regard a statute imposing inspection fees as an act to raise revenue. Ellis v. United States, 206 U. S. 246.

Prima facie, the charge for inspection in an act otherwise constitutional is reasonable. Western Union Tel. Co. v. New Hope, 187 U. S. 417.

The fact that oil inspection laws have been passed in a majority of the States shows that oil is a proper subject for police regulation. In this case this court cannot conclude that the charge for inspecting oil, provided by the North Carolina oil inspection law of 1909, is

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so seriously in excess of what is necessary for the object designed to be effected as to justify the imputation of bad faith and the conclusion that the law is one for revenue and not merely for inspection. Patapsco Guano Co. v. South Carolina, 171 U. S. 354. This court cannot determine what the actual operation of a statute will be after its enactment by going outside the record and taking judicial knowledge of what has happened since the filing of the transcript here.

If the inspection fees exacted under a state statute average largely more than enough to pay expenses, the presumption is that the State will reduce them to conform to the constitutional authority to impose fees solely to reimburse for expense of inspection. What relief shall be accorded to one who may sustain injury by the failure of a State to protect his rights under the Constitution, cannot be determined before there has been such failure.

A requirement by the legislature that illuminating oils must be safe, pure, and afford a satisfactory light, establishes a sufficient primary standard, and remitting to the proper state board the establishment of rules and regulations to determine what oils measure up to those standards does not amount to a delegation of legislative power. Where one complains that regulations promulgated under legislative authority by a state board are unreasonable and oppressive, he should seek relief by applying to that board to modify them.

A state police statute cannot be declared invalid because in the opintion of this court it does not accord with sound policy. The appeal for redress must be to the law-making power.

IN the year 1909, North Carolina passed an act for the inspection, under the control of the Board of Agriculture, of all kerosene or other illuminating oils sold, or offered for sale, in the State. (March 8, 1909, Pub. Laws 1909, c. 554, p. 911.) The object of such inspection was declared to be in order to determine the safety and value of such oils for illuminating purposes. A charge of one-half cent per gallon was fixed, which the law declared should be paid to the commissioner of agriculture for the purpose of defraying expenses connected with the inspection, testing and analyzing of oils in the State. It was provided that the act should go into effect on July 1, 1909.

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Two days after, viz., on July 3, 1909, this suit was commenced by the appellant, the Red "C" Oil Manufacturing Company, a corporation of the State of Maryland. The defendants named were the Board of Agriculture of North Carolina and the members of the board, and the object of the bill was to restrain the enforcement of the act referred to because it was charged to be not a proper exertion of the police power of the State, and, besides, was asserted to be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States.

The bill averred that the complainant was a large shipper of illuminating oils from the State of Maryland into the State of North Carolina, and that it did an extensive business in North Carolina in dealing in such oil. The provisions of the assailed act were set out in extenso, as also the terms of an act of the General Assembly approved on March 9, 1909 (Pub. Laws 1909, c. 441, p. 742), which forbade the collection of a tax upon dealers in oils, authorized by § 58 of the Revenue Act (March 8, 1909, Pub. Laws 1909, c. 438, p. 674), passed at the same session, "from any persons, dealers or corporations paying the taxes imposed under the inspection law enacted at the present session of the General Assembly, entitled 'An act to provide for the inspection of illuminating oils and fluids;' Provided, however, if the said Oil Inspection Act should be held invalid, section fifty-eight, Revenue Act, shall remain in full effect." In the preamble of this latter act it was recited that the "inspection tax" was much greater than the "tax" imposed under § 58 of the Revenue Act, and that "it is not the purpose of the General Assembly that the said taxes shall be cumulative." In addition to averring the appointment of inspectors by the Board of Agriculture, and the purpose of the board to enforce the collection of the inspection taxes, there were set forth the regulations adopted by the board under the authority of the statute.

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The particulars by which it was asserted the statutory charge was shown to be unlawful may be thus summarized: The charge or "tax" was not for the purpose of defraying the cost of the inspection of oil, but was imposed for revenue upon the goods of complainant shipped into the State of North Carolina from the State of Maryland, and was hence in conflict with the commerce clause and the Fourteenth Amendment. The law, it was charged, was not a police regulation, since an inspection of oil "for value and luminosity" was not within the competency of legislative action, and the public safety was not concerned, since illuminating oils, as the result of modern methods of manufacture, were no longer explosive. The charge or tax, it was averred, was more than double the amount necessary for the inspection proposed, and would realize annually a surplus for the state treasury of more than $20,000. It was further charged that the act fixed no standard for the guidance of the Board of Agriculture, but in effect arbitrary powers were conferred upon the board, and, indeed, legislative authority had been delegated to it. The power thus conferred, it was also alleged, had been exerted in an arbitrary manner, and tests prescribed which were not necessary "in order to procure the safety of oil, to protect the people from the sale of oils which are dangerous." Certain of the regulations promulgated by the board were also assailed as being uncertain, unreasonable, illegal and oppressive.

On the filing of the bill an order was entered temporarily restraining the defendants from enforcing, as against the complainant, the statute and the rules and regulations of the board thereunder. The restraining order was subsequently amended by requiring the complainant, "pending the final determination of this cause," to "pay the one-half cent per gallon upon all illuminating oils sold by it in the State, as prescribed in said act." The defendants jointly and severally answered the bill, and took

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issue upon all the matters alleged in the complaint. As regards the allegation that the inspection fee was unnecessarily high and would yield a large surplus over the expenses, the defendants said:

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'Defendants say that they have made no estimate that any excess may be left after paying all the proper and necessary expenses of inspection, and these defendants say that they have no means of actually approximating the amount that the tax of one-half cent per gallon will yield, or the expenses of equipping and maintaining a competent inspection force and department. That the legislature thought that one-half cent a gallon would be necessary to pay the expenses of inspection, and these defendants are informed and believe, and therefore aver, that this is as low an inspection tax as there is to be found in any State having oil inspection laws, and lower than the taxes in a great many of the States. In some States there is a graduated scale of taxation of more than onehalf cent for small quantities and less than one-half cent for large quantities. The said act expressly provides, in § 6, that the Commissioner of Agriculture shall include in his report to the General Assembly an account of the expenses under this act. The said act also provides that all money paid for inspection taxes shall be kept by the State Treasurer as a distinct fund to be styled, 'The Oil Inspection Fund.' At the end of one year, it can be seen exactly what the inspection costs and how much is paid for it by dealers in oil, and until it shall appear that said tax is excessive, a charge, to that effect, by complaint, is premature and ill-considered."

Both parties filed affidavits in support of their respective claims. The matter was heard upon a motion for an injunction upon the bill, answer and affidavits just referred to. Elaborately examining all the contentions, the court (172 Fed. Rep. 695), concluded that the complainant was not entitled to relief by injunction, and that

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