Supreme Court of the United States
May 18, 1896.
In Error to the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana.
**1138 *538 This was a petition for writs of prohibition and
certiorari originally filed in the supreme court of the state by
Plessy, the plaintiff in error, against the Hon. John H. Ferguson,
judge of the criminal district court for the parish of Orleans, and
setting forth, in substance, the following facts:
That petitioner was a citizen of the United States and a resident of
the state of Louisiana, of mixed descent, in the proportion of
seven-eighths Caucasian and one-eighth African blood; that the
mixture of colored blood was not discernible in him, and that he was
entitled to every recognition, right, privilege, and immunity secured
to the citizens of the United States of the white race by its
constitution and laws; that on June 7, 1892, he engaged and paid for
a first-class passage on the East Louisiana Railway, from New Orleans
to Covington, in the same state, and thereupon entered a passenger
train, and took possession of a vacant seat in a coach where
passengers of the white race were accommodated; that such railroad
company was incorporated by the laws of Louisiana as a common
carrier, and was not authorized to distinguish between citizens
according to their race, but, notwithstanding this, petitioner was
required by the conductor, under penalty of ejection from said train
and imprisonment, to vacate said coach, and occupy another seat, in a
coach assigned by said company for persons not of the white race, and
for no other reason than that petitioner was of the colored race;
that, upon petitioner's refusal to comply with such order, he was,
with the aid of a police officer, forcibly ejected from **1139
said coach, and hurried off to, and imprisoned in, the parish jail
of *539 New Orleans, and there held to answer a charge made by
such officer to the effect that he was guilty of having criminally
violated an act of the general assembly of the state, approved July
10, 1890, in such case made and provided.
The petitioner was subsequently brought before the recorder of the
city for preliminary examination, and committed for trial to the
criminal district court for the parish of Orleans, where an
information was filed against him in the matter above set forth, for
a violation of the above act, which act the petitioner affirmed to be
null and void, because in conflict with the constitution of the
United States; that petitioner interposed a plea to such information,
based upon the unconstitutionality of the act of the general
assembly, to which the district attorney, on behalf of the state,
filed a demurrer; that, upon issue being joined upon such demurrer
and plea, the court sustained the demurrer, overruled the plea, and
ordered petitioner to plead over to the facts set forth in the
information, and that, unless the judge of the said court be enjoined
by a writ of prohibition from further proceeding in such case, the
court will proceed to fine and sentence petitioner to imprisonment,
and thus deprive him of his constitutional rights set forth in his
said plea, notwithstanding the unconstitutionality of the act under
which he was being prosecuted; that no appeal lay from such sentence,
and petitioner was without relief or remedy except by writs of
prohibition and certiorari. Copies of the information and other
proceedings in the criminal district court were annexed to the
petition as an exhibit.
Upon the filing of this petition, an order was issued upon the
respondent to show cause why a writ of prohibition should not issue,
and be made perpetual, and a further order that the record of the
proceedings had in the criminal cause be certified and transmitted to
the supreme court.
To this order the respondent made answer, transmitting a certified
copy of the proceedings, asserting the constitutionality of the law,
and averring that, instead of pleading or admitting that he belonged
to the colored race, the said Plessy declined and refused, either by
pleading or otherwise, to admit*540 that he was in any sense
or in any proportion a colored man.
The case coming on for hearing before the supreme court, that court
was of opinion that the law under which the prosecution was had was
constitutional and denied the relief prayed for by the petitioner (Ex
parte Plessy, 45 La. Ann. 80, 11 South. 948); whereupon petitioner
prayed for a writ of error from this court, which was allowed by the
chief justice of the supreme court of Louisiana.
Mr. Justice Harlan dissenting.
RAILROADS k226
320k226
Statute requiring railroads carrying passengers to provide equal but
separate accommodations for white or colored races was not
unconstitutional (Act La.1890, No. 111, p. 152, LSA-R.S. 45:528 et
seq.; LSA-Const. Amend. 13).
SLAVES k24
356k24
An act requiring white and colored persons to be furnished with
separate accommodations on railway trains does not violate
Const.Amend. 13, abolishing slavery and involuntary servitude. Ex
parte Plessy (1892) 11 So. 948, affirmed.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW k83(2)
92k83(2)
Act La.1890, No. 111, p. 152, enacting that all railway companies
carrying passengers shall provide equal, but separate, accommodations
for the white or colored races, by providing two or more passenger
coaches for each train, or by dividing passenger coaches, and
prohibiting persons from occupying seats in any coaches other than
the ones assigned to them on account of the race to which they
belong, does not violate Const.Amend. 13, abolishing slavery and
involuntary servitude.
A. W. Tourgee and S. F. Phillips, for plaintiff in error.
Alex. Porter Morse, for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing language,
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case turns upon the constitutionality of an act of the general
assembly of the state of Louisiana, passed in 1890, providing for
separate railway carriages for the white and colored races. Acts
1890, No. 111, p. 152.
The first section of the statute enacts 'that all railway companies
carrying passengers in their coaches in this state, shall provide
equal but separate accommodations for the white, and colored races,
by providing two or more passenger coaches for each passenger train,
or by dividing the passenger coaches by a partition so as to secure
separate accommodations: provided, that this section shall not be
construed to apply to street railroads. No person or persons shall be
permitted to occupy seats in coaches, other than the ones assigned to
them, on account of the race they belong to.'
By the second section it was enacted 'that the officers of such
passenger trains shall have power and are hereby required *541
to assign each passenger to the coach or compartment used for the
race to which such passenger belongs; any passenger insisting on
going into a coach or compartment to which by race he does not
belong, shall be liable to a fine of twenty-five dollars, or in lieu
thereof to imprisonment for a period of not more than twenty days in
the parish prison, and any officer of any railroad insisting on
assigning a passenger to a coach or compartment other than the one
set aside for the race to which said passenger belongs, shall be
liable to a fine of twenty-five dollars, or in lieu thereof to
imprisonment for a period of not more than twenty days in the parish
prison; and should any passenger refuse to occupy the coach or
compartment to which he or she is assigned by the officer of such
railway, said officer shall have power to refuse to carry such
passenger on his train, and for such refusal neither he nor the
railway company which he represents shall be liable for damages in
any of the courts of this state.'
The third section provides penalties for the refusal or neglect of
the officers, directors, conductors, and employes of railway
companies to comply with the act, with a proviso that 'nothing in
this act shall be construed as applying to nurses attending children
of the other race.' The fourth section is immaterial.
The information filed in the criminal district court charged, in
substance, that Plessy, being a passenger between two stations within
the state of Louisiana, was assigned by officers of the company to
the coach used for the race to which he belonged, but he insisted
upon going into a coach used by the race to which he did not belong.
Neither in the information nor plea was his particular race or color
averred.
The petition for the writ of prohibition averred that petitioner was
seven- eights Caucasian and one-eighth African blood; that the
**1140 mixture of colored blood was not discernible in him; and
that he was entitled to every right, privilege, and immunity secured
to citizens of the United States of the white race; and that, upon
such theory, he took possession of a vacant seat in a coach where
passengers of the white race were accommodated, and was ordered by
the conductor to vacate *542 said coach, and take a seat in
another, assigned to persons of the colored race, and, having refused
to comply with such demand, he was forcibly ejected, with the aid of
a police officer, and imprisoned in the parish jail to answer a
charge of having violated the above act.
The constitutionality of this act is attacked upon the ground that it
conflicts both with the thirteenth amendment of the constitution,
abolishing slavery, and the fourteenth amendment, which prohibits
certain restrictive legislation on the part of the states.
1. That it does not conflict with the thirteenth amendment, which
abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, except as a punishment
for crime, is too clear for argument. Slavery implies involuntary
servitude,--a state of bondage; the ownership of mankind as a
chattel, or, at least, the control of the labor and services of one
man for the benefit of another, and the absence of a legal right to
the disposal of his own person, property, and services. This
amendment was said in the Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36, to have
been intended primarily to abolish slavery, as it had been previously
known in this country, and that it equally forbade Mexican peonage or
the Chinese coolie trade, when they amounted to slavery or
involuntary servitude, and that the use of the word 'servitude' was
intended to prohibit the use of all forms of involuntary slavery, of
whatever class or name. It was intimated, however, in that case, that
this amendment was regarded by the statesmen of that day as
insufficient to protect the colored race from certain laws which had
been enacted in the Southern states, imposing upon the colored race
onerous disabilities and burdens, and curtailing their rights in the
pursuit of life, liberty, and property to such an extent that their
freedom was of little value; and that the fourteenth amendment was
devised to meet this exigency.
So, too, in the Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S. 3, 3 Sup. Ct. 18, it
was said that the act of a mere individual, the owner of an inn, a
public conveyance or place of amusement, refusing accommodations to
colored people, cannot be justly regarded as imposing any badge of
slavery or servitude upon the applicant, but *543 only as
involving an ordinary civil injury, properly cognizable by the laws
of the state, and presumably subject to redress by those laws until
the contrary appears. 'It would be running the slavery question into
the ground,' said Mr. Justice Bradley, 'to make it apply to every act
of discrimination which a person may see fit to make as to the guests
he will entertain, or as to the people he will take into his coach or
cab or car, or admit to his concert or theater, or deal with in other
matters of intercourse or business.'
A statute which implies merely a legal distinction between the white
and colored races--a distinction which is founded in the color of the
two races, and which must always exist so long as white men are
distinguished from the other race by color--has no tendency to
destroy the legal equality of the two races, or re-establish a state
of involuntary servitude. Indeed, we do not understand that the
thirteenth amendment is strenuously relied upon by the plaintiff in
error in this connection.
2. By the fourteenth amendment, all persons born or naturalized in
the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are made
citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside;
and the states are forbidden from making or enforcing any law which
shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States, or shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, or deny to any person within their
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
The proper construction of this amendment was first called to the
attention of this court in the Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
which involved, however, not a question of race, but one of exclusive
privileges. The case did not call for any expression of opinion as to
the exact rights it was intended to secure to the colored race, but
it was said generally that its main purpose was to establish the
citizenship of the negro, to give definitions of citizenship of the
United States and of the states, and to protect from the hostile
legislation of the states the privileges and immunities of citizens
of the United States, as distinguished from those of citizens of the
states.
*544 The object of the amendment was undoubtedly to enforce
the absolute equality of the two races before the law, but, in the
nature of things, it could not have been intended to abolish
distinctions based upon color, or to enforce social, as distinguished
from political, equality, or a commingling of the two races upon
terms unsatisfactory to either. Laws permitting, and even requiring,
their separation, in places where they are liable to be brought into
contact, do not necessarily imply the inferiority of either race to
the other, and have been generally, if not universally, recognized as
within the competency of the state legislatures in the exercise of
their police power. The most common instance of this is connected
with the establishment of separate schools for white and colored
children, which have been held to be a valid exercise of the
legislative power even by courts of states where the political rights
of the colored race have been longest and most earnestly
enforced.
One of the earliest of these cases is that of Roberts v. City of
Boston, 5 Cush. 198, in **1141 which the supreme judicial
court of Massachusetts held that the general school committee of
Boston had power to make provision for the instruction of colored
children in separate schools established exclusively for them, and to
prohibit their attendance upon the other schools. 'The great
principle,' said Chief Justice Shaw, 'advanced by the learned and
eloquent advocate for the plaintiff [Mr. Charles Sumner], is
that, by the constitution and laws of Massachusetts, all persons,
without distinction of age or sex, birth or color, origin or
condition, are equal before the law. * * * But, when this great
principle comes to be applied to the actual and various conditions of
persons in society, it will not warrant the assertion that men and
women are legally clothed with the same civil and political powers,
and that children and adults are legally to have the same functions
and be subject to the same treatment; but only that the rights of
all, as they are settled and regulated by law, are equally entitled
to the paternal consideration and protection of the law for their
maintenance and security.' It was held that the powers of the
committee extended to the establishment *545 of separate
schools for children of different ages, sexes and colors, and that
they might also establish special schools for poor and neglected
children, who have become too old to attend the primary school, and
yet have not acquired the rudiments of learning, to enable them to
enter the ordinary schools. Similar laws have been enacted by
congress under its general power of legislation over the District of
Columbia (sections 281-283, 310, 319, Rev. St. D. C.), as well as by
the legislatures of many of the states, and have been generally, if
not uniformly, sustained by the courts. State v. McCann, 21 Ohio St.
210; Lehew v. Brummell (Mo. Sup.) 15 S. W. 765; Ward v. Flood, 48
Cal. 36; Bertonneau v. Directors of City Schools, 3 Woods, 177, Fed.
Cas. No. 1,361; People v. Gallagher, 93 N. Y. 438; Cory v. Carter, 48
Ind. 337; Dawson v. Lee, 83 Ky. 49.
Laws forbidding the intermarriage of the two races may be said in a
technical sense to interfere with the freedom of contract, and yet
have been universally recognized as within the police power of the
state. State v. Gibson, 36 Ind. 389.
The distinction between laws interfering with the political equality
of the negro and those requiring the separation of the two races in
schools, theaters, and railway carriages has been frequently drawn by
this court. Thus, in Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U. S. 303, it was
held that a law of West Virginia limiting to white male persons 21
years of age, and citizens of the state, the right to sit upon
juries, was a discrimination which implied a legal inferiority in
civil society, which lessened the security of the right of the
colored race, and was a step towards reducing them to a condition of
servility. Indeed, the right of a colored man that, in the selection
of jurors to pass upon his life, liberty, and property, there shall
be no exclusion of his race, and no discrimination against them
because of color, has been asserted in a number of cases. Virginia v.
Rivers, 100 U. S. 313; Neal v. Delaware, 103 U. S. 370; Bush v. Com.,
107 U. S. 110, 1 Sup. Ct. 625; Gibson v. Mississippi, 162 U. S. 565,
16 Sup. Ct. 904. So, where the laws of a particular locality or the
charter of a particular railway corporation has provided that no
person shall be excluded from the cars on account of *546
color, we have held that this meant that persons of color should
travel in the same car as white ones, and that the enactment was not
satisfied by the company providing cars assigned exclusively to
people of color, though they were as good as those which they
assigned exclusively to white persons. Railroad Co. v. Brown, 17
Wall. 445.
Upon the other hand, where a statute of Louisiana required those
engaged in the transportation of passengers among the states to give
to all persons traveling within that state, upon vessels employed in
that business, equal rights and privileges in all parts of the
vessel, without distinction on account of race or color, and
subjected to an action for damages the owner of such a vessel who
excluded colored passengers on account of their color from the cabin
set aside by him for the use of whites, it was held to be, so far as
it applied to interstate commerce, unconstitutional and void. Hall v.
De Cuir, 95 U. S. 485. The court in this case, however, expressly
disclaimed that it had anything whatever to do with the statute as a
regulation of internal commerce, or affecting anything else than
commerce among the states.
In the Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S. 3, 3 Sup. Ct. 18, it was held
that an act of congress entitling all persons within the jurisdiction
of the United States to the full and equal enjoyment of the
accommodations, advantages, facilities, and privileges of inns,
public conveyances, on land or water, theaters, and other places of
public amusement, and made applicable to citizens of every race and
color, regardless of any previous condition of servitude, was
unconstitutional and void, upon the ground that the fourteenth
amendment was prohibitory upon the states only, and the legislation
authorized to be adopted by congress for enforcing it was not direct
legislation on matters respecting which the states were prohibited
from making or enforcing certain laws, or doing certain acts, but was
corrective legislation, such as might be necessary or proper for
counter-acting and redressing the effect of such laws or acts. In
delivering the opinion of the court, Mr. Justice Bradley observed
that the fourteenth amendment 'does not invest congress with power to
legislate upon subjects that are within the *547 domain of
state legislation, but to provide modes of relief against
**1142 state legislation or state action of the kind referred to.
It does not authorize congress to create a code of municipal law for
the regulation of private rights, but to provide modes of redress
against the operation of state laws, and the action of state
officers, executive or judicial, when these are subversive of the
fundamental rights specified in the amendment. Positive rights and
privileges are undoubtedly secured by the fourteenth amendment; but
they are secured by way of prohibition against state laws and state
proceedings affecting those rights and privileges, and by power given
to congress to legislate for the purpose of carrying such prohibition
into effect; and such legislation must necessarily be predicated upon
such supposed state laws or state proceedings, and be directed to the
correction of their operation and effect.'
Much nearer, and, indeed, almost directly in point, is the case of
the Louisville, N. O. & T. Ry. Co. v. State, 133 U. S. 587, 10
Sup. Ct. 348, wherein the railway company was indicted for a
violation of a statute of Mississippi, enacting that all railroads
carrying passengers should provide equal, but separate,
accommodations for the white and colored races, by providing two or
more passenger cars for each passenger train, or by dividing the
passenger cars by a partition, so as to secure separate
accommodations. The case was presented in a different aspect from the
one under consideration, inasmuch as it was an indictment against the
railway company for failing to provide the separate accommodations,
but the question considered was the constitutionality of the law. In
that case, the supreme court of Mississippi (66 Miss. 662, 6 South.
203) had held that the statute applied solely to commerce within the
state, and, that being the construction of the state statute by its
highest court, was accepted as conclusive. 'If it be a matter,' said
the court (page 591, 133 U. S., and page 348, 10 Sup. Ct.),
'respecting commerce wholly within a state, and not interfering with
commerce between the states, then, obviously, there is no violation
of the commerce clause of the federal constitution. * * * No question
arises under this section as to the power of the state to separate in
different compartments interstate passengers, *548 or affect,
in any manner, the privileges and rights of such passengers. All that
we can consider is whether the state has the power to require that
railroad trains within her limits shall have separate accommodations
for the two races. That affecting only commerce within the state is
no invasion of the power given to congress by the commerce
clause.'
A like course of reasoning applies to the case under consideration,
since the supreme court of Louisiana, in the case of State v. Judge,
44 La. Ann. 770, 11 South. 74, held that the statute in question did
not apply to interstate passengers, but was confined in its
application to passengers traveling exclusively within the borders of
the state. The case was decided largely upon the authority of
Louisville, N. O. & T. Ry. Co. v. State, 66 Miss. 662, 6 South,
203, and affirmed by this court in 133 U. S. 587, 10 Sup. Ct. 348. In
the present case no question of interference with interstate commerce
can possibly arise, since the East Louisiana Railway appears to have
been purely a local line, with both its termini within the state of
Louisiana. Similar statutes for the separation of the two races upon
public conveyances were held to be constitutional in Railroad v.
Miles, 55 Pa. St. 209; Day v. Owen 5 Mich. 520; Railway Co. v.
Williams, 55 Ill. 185; Railroad Co. v. Wells, 85 Tenn. 613; 4 S. W.
5; Railroad Co. v. Benson, 85 Tenn. 627, 4 S. W. 5; The Sue, 22 Fed.
843; Logwood v. Railroad Co., 23 Fed. 318; McGuinn v. Forbes, 37 Fed.
639; People v. King (N. Y. App.) 18 N. E. 245; Houck v. Railway Co.,
38 Fed. 226; Heard v. Railroad Co., 3 Inter St. Commerce Com. R. 111,
1 Inter St. Commerce Com. R. 428.
While we think the enforced separation of the races, as applied to
the internal commerce of the state, neither abridges the privileges
or immunities of the colored man, deprives him of his property
without due process of law, nor denies him the equal protection of
the laws, within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment, we are not
prepared to say that the conductor, in assigning passengers to the
coaches according to their race, does not act at his peril, or that
the provision of the second section of the act that denies to the
passenger compensation *549 in damages for a refusal to
receive him into the coach in which he properly belongs is a valid
exercise of the legislative power. Indeed, we understand it to be
conceded by the state's attorney that such part of the act as exempts
from liability the railway company and its officers is
unconstitutional. The power to assign to a particular coach obviously
implies the power to determine to which race the passenger belongs,
as well as the power to determine who, under the laws of the
particular state, is to be deemed a white, and who a colored, person.
This question, though indicated in the brief of the plaintiff in
error, does not properly arise upon the record in this case, since
the only issue made is as to the unconstitutionality of the act, so
far as it requires the railway to provide separate accommodations,
and the conductor to assign passengers according to their race.
It is claimed by the plaintiff in error that, in any mixed community,
the reputation of belonging to the dominant race, in this instance
the white race, is 'property,' in the same sense that a right of
action or of inheritance is property. Conceding this to be so, for
the purposes of this case, we are unable to see how this statute
deprives him of, or in any way affects his right to, such property.
If he be a white man, and assigned to a colored coach, he may have
his **1143 action for damages against the company for being
deprived of his so-called 'property.' Upon the other hand, if he be a
colored man, and be so assigned, he has been deprived of no property,
since he is not lawfully entitled to the reputation of being a white
man.
In this connection, it is also suggested by the learned counsel for
the plaintiff in error that the same argument that will justify the
state legislature in requiring railways to provide separate
accommodations for the two races will also authorize them to require
separate cars to be provided for people whose hair is of a certain
color, or who are aliens, or who belong to certain nationalities, or
to enact laws requiring colored people to walk upon one side of the
street, and white people upon the other, or requiring white men's
houses to be painted white, and colored men's black, or their
vehicles or business signs to be of different colors, upon the theory
that one side *550 of the street is as good as the other, or
that a house or vehicle of one color is as good as one of another
color. The reply to all this is that every exercise of the police
power must be reasonable, and extend only to such laws as are enacted
in good faith for the promotion of the public good, and not for the
annoyance or oppression of a particular class. Thus, in Yick Wo v.
Hopkins, 118 U. S. 356, 6 Sup. Ct. 1064, it was held by this court
that a municipal ordinance of the city of San Francisco, to regulate
the carrying on of public laundries within the limits of the
municipality, violated the provisions of the constitution of the
United States, if it conferred upon the municipal authorities
arbitrary power, at their own will, and without regard to discretion,
in the legal sense of the term, to give or withhold consent as to
persons or places, without regard to the competency of the persons
applying or the propriety of the places selected for the carrying on
of the business. It was held to be a covert attempt on the part of
the municipality to make an arbitrary and unjust discrimination
against the Chinese race. While this was the case of a municipal
ordinance, a like principle has been held to apply to acts of a state
legislature passed in the exercise of the police power. Railroad Co.
v. Husen, 95 U. S. 465; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Kentucky, 161
U. S. 677, 16 Sup. Ct. 714, and cases cited on page 700, 161 U. S.,
and page 714, 16 Sup. Ct.; Daggett v. Hudson, 43 Ohio St. 548, 3 N.
E. 538; Capen v. Foster, 12 Pick. 485; State v. Baker, 38 Wis. 71;
Monroe v. Collins, 17 Ohio St. 665; Hulseman v. Rems, 41 Pa. St. 396;
Osman v. Riley, 15 Cal. 48.
So far, then, as a conflict with the fourteenth amendment is
concerned, the case reduces itself to the question whether the
statute of Louisiana is a reasonable regulation, and with respect to
this there must necessarily be a large discretion on the part of the
legislature. In determining the question of reasonableness, it is at
liberty to act with reference to the established usages, customs, and
traditions of the people, and with a view to the promotion of their
comfort, and the preservation of the public peace and good order.
Gauged by this standard, we cannot say that a law which authorizes or
even requires the separation of the two races in public
conveyances *551 is unreasonable, or more obnoxious to the
fourteenth amendment than the acts of congress requiring separate
schools for colored children in the District of Columbia, the
constitutionality of which does not seem to have been questioned, or
the corresponding acts of state legislatures.
We consider the underlying fallacy of the plaintiff's argument to
consist in the assumption that the enforced separation of the two
races stamps the colored race with a badge of inferiority. If this be
so, it is not by reason of anything found in the act, but solely
because the colored race chooses to put that construction upon it.
The argument necessarily assumes that if, as has been more than once
the case, and is not unlikely to be so again, the colored race should
become the dominant power in the state legislature, and should enact
a law in precisely similar terms, it would thereby relegate the white
race to an inferior position. We imagine that the white race, at
least, would not acquiesce in this assumption. The argument also
assumes that social prejudices may be overcome by legislation, and
that equal rights cannot be secured to the negro except by an
enforced commingling of the two races. We cannot accept this
proposition. If the two races are to meet upon terms of social
equality, it must be the result of natural affinities, a mutual
appreciation of each other's merits, and a voluntary consent of
individuals. As was said by the court of appeals of New York in
People v. Gallagher, 93 N. Y. 438, 448: 'This end can neither be
accomplished nor promoted by laws which conflict with the general
sentiment of the community upon whom they are designed to operate.
When the government, therefore, has secured to each of its citizens
equal rights before the law, and equal opportunities for improvement
and progress, it has accomplished the end for which it was organized,
and performed all of the functions respecting social advantages with
which it is endowed.' Legislation is powerless to eradicate racial
instincts, or to abolish distinctions based upon physical
differences, and the attempt to do so can only result in accentuating
the difficulties of the present situation. If the civil and political
rights of both races be equal, one cannot be inferior to the other
civilly *552 or politically. If one race be inferior to the
other socially, the constitution of the United States cannot put them
upon the same plane.
It is true that the question of the proportion of colored blood
necessary to constitute a colored person, as distinguished from a
white person, is one upon which there is a difference of opinion in
the different states; some holding that any visible admixture of
black **1144 blood stamps the person as belonging to the
colored race (State v. Chavers, 5 Jones [N. C.] 1); others,
that it depends upon the preponderance of blood (Gray v. State, 4
Ohio, 354; Monroe v. Collins, 17 Ohio St. 665); and still others,
that the predominance of white blood must only be in the proportion
of three-fourths (People v. Dean, 14 Mich. 406; Jones v. Com., 80 Va.
544). But these are questions to be determined under the laws of each
state, and are not properly put in issue in this case. Under the
allegations of his petition, it may undoubtedly become a question of
importance whether, under the laws of Louisiana, the petitioner
belongs to the white or colored race.
The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.
Mr. Justice BREWER did not hear the argument or participate in the
decision of this case.
Mr. Justice HARLAN dissenting.
By the Louisiana statute the validity of which is here involved, all
railway companies (other than street-railroad companies) carry
passengers in that state are required to have separate but equal
accommodations for white and colored persons, 'by providing two or
more passenger coaches for each passenger train, or by dividing the
passenger coaches by a partition so as to secure separate
accommodations.' Under this statute, no colored person is permitted
to occupy a seat in a coach assigned to white persons; nor any white
person to occupy a seat in a coach assigned to colored persons. The
managers of the railroad are not allowed to exercise any discretion
in the premises, but are required to assign each passenger to some
coach or compartment set apart for the exclusive use of his race. If
a passenger insists upon going into a coach or compartment not set
apart for persons of his race, *553 he is subject to be fined,
or to be imprisoned in the parish jail. Penalties are prescribed for
the refusal or neglect of the officers, directors, conductors, and
employes of railroad companies to comply with the provisions of the
act.
Only 'nurses attending children of the other race' are excepted from
the operation of the statute. No exception is made of colored
attendants traveling with adults. A white man is not permitted to
have his colored servant with him in the same coach, even if his
condition of health requires the constant personal assistance of such
servant. If a colored maid insists upon riding in the same coach with
a white woman whom she has been employed to serve, and who may need
her personal attention while traveling, she is subject to be fined or
imprisoned for such an exhibition of zeal in the discharge of
duty.
While there may be in Louisiana persons of different races who are
not citizens of the United States, the words in the act 'white and
colored races' necessarily include all citizens of the United States
of both races residing in that state. So that we have before us a
state enactment that compels, under penalties, the separation of the
two races in railroad passenger coaches, and makes it a crime for a
citizen of either race to enter a coach that has been assigned to
citizens of the other race.
Thus, the state regulates the use of a public highway by citizens of
the United States solely upon the basis of race.
However apparent the injustice of such legislation may be, we have
only to consider whether it is consistent with the constitution of
the United States.
That a railroad is a public highway, and that the corporation which
owns or operates it is in the exercise of public functions, is not,
at this day, to be disputed. Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking for this
court in New Jersey Steam Nav. Co. v. Merchants' Bank, 6 How. 344,
382, said that a common carrier was in the exercise 'of a sort of
public office, and has public duties to perform, from which he should
not be permitted to exonerate himself without the assent of the
parties concerned.' Mr. Justice Strong, delivering the judgment of
*554 this court in Olcott v. Supervisors, 16 Wall. 678, 694,
said: 'That railroads, though constructed by private corporations,
and owned by them, are public highways, has been the doctrine of
nearly all the courts ever since such conveniences for passage and
transportation have had any existence. Very early the question arose
whether a state's right of eminent domain could be exercised by a
private corporation created for the purpose of constructing a
railroad. Clearly, it could not, unless taking land for such a
purpose by such an agency is taking land for public use. The right of
eminent domain nowhere justifies taking property for a private use.
Yet it is a doctrine universally accepted that a state legislature
may authorize a private corporation to take land for the construction
of such a road, making compensation to the owner. What else does this
doctrine mean if not that building a railroad, though it be built by
a private corporation, is an act done for a public use?' So, in
Township of Pine Grove v. Talcott, 19 Wall. 666, 676: 'Though the
corporation [a railroad company] was private, its work was
public, as much so as if it were to be constructed by the state.' So,
in Inhabitants of Worcester v. Western R. Corp., 4 Metc. (Mass.) 564:
'The establishment of that great thoroughfare is regarded as a public
work, established by public authority, intended for the public use
and benefit, the use of which is secured to the whole community, and
constitutes, therefore, like a canal, turnpike, or highway, a public
easement.' 'It is true that the real and personal property, necessary
to the establishment and management of the railroad, is vested
**1145 in the corporation; but it is in trust for the
public.'
In respect of civil rights, common to all citizens, the constitution
of the United States does not, I think, permit any public authority
to know the race of those entitled to be protected in the enjoyment
of such rights. Every true man has pride of race, and under
appropriate circumstances, when the rights of others, his equals
before the law, are not to be affected, it is his privilege to
express such pride and to take such action based upon it as to him
seems proper. But I deny that any legislative body or judicial
tribunal may have regard to the *555 race of citizens when the
civil rights of those citizens are involved. Indeed, such legislation
as that here in question is inconsistent not only with that equality
of rights which pertains to citizenship, national and state, but with
the personal liberty enjoyed by every one within the United
States.
The thirteenth amendment does not permit the withholding or the
deprivation of any right necessarily inhering in freedom. It not only
struck down the institution of slavery as previously existing in the
United States, but it prevents the imposition of any burdens or
disabilities that constitute badges of slavery or servitude. It
decreed universal civil freedom in this country. This court has so
adjudged. But, that amendment having been found inadequate to the
protection of the rights of those who had been in slavery, it was
followed by the fourteenth amendment, which added greatly to the
dignity and glory of American citizenship, and to the security of
personal liberty, by declaring that 'all persons born or naturalized
in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are
citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside,'
and that 'no state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge
the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor
shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty or property
without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.' These two amendments,
if enforced according to their true intent and meaning, will protect
all the civil rights that pertain to freedom and citizenship.
Finally, and to the end that no citizen should be denied, on account
of his race, the privilege of participating in the political control
of his country, it was declared by the fifteenth amendment that 'the
right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or
abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race,
color or previous condition of servitude.'
These notable additions to the fundamental law were welcomed by the
friends of liberty throughout the world. They removed the race line
from our governmental systems. They had, as this court has said, a
common purpose, namely, to secure 'to a race recently emancipated, a
race that through *556 many generations have been held in
slavery, all the civil rights that the superior race enjoy.' They
declared, in legal effect, this court has further said, 'that the law
in the states shall be the same for the black as for the white; that
all persons, whether colored or white, shall stand equal before the
laws of the states; and in regard to the colored race, for whose
protection the amendment was primarily designed, that no
discrimination shall be made against them by law because of their
color.' We also said: 'The words of the amendment, it is true, are
prohibitory, but they contain a necessary implication of a positive
immunity or right, most valuable to the colored race,--the right to
exemption from unfriendly legislation against them distinctively as
colored; exemption from legal discriminations, implying inferiority
in civil society, lessening the security of their enjoyment of the
rights which others enjoy; and discriminations which are steps
towards reducing them to the condition of a subject race.' It was,
consequently, adjudged that a state law that excluded citizens of the
colored race from juries, because of their race, however well
qualified in other respects to discharge the duties of jurymen, was
repugnant to the fourteenth amendment. Strauder v. West Virginia, 100
U. S. 303, 306, 307; Virginia v. Rives, Id. 313; Ex parte Virginia,
Id. 339; Neal v. Delaware, 103 U. S. 370, 386; Bush v. Com., 107 U.
S. 110, 116, 1 Sup. Ct. 625. At the present term, referring to the
previous adjudications, this court declared that 'underlying all of
those decisions is the principle that the constitution of the United
States, in its present form, forbids, so far as civil and political
rights are concerned, discrimination by the general government or the
states against any citizen because of his race. All citizens are
equal before the law.' Gibson v. State, 162 U. S. 565, 16 Sup. Ct.
904.
The decisions referred to show the scope of the recent amendments of
the constitution. They also show that it is not within the power of a
state to prohibit colored citizens, because of their race, from
participating as jurors in the administration of justice.
It was said in argument that the statute of Louisiana does
*557 not discriminate against either race, but prescribes a rule
applicable alike to white and colored citizens. But this argument
does not meet the difficulty. Every one knows that the statute in
question had its origin in the purpose, not so much to exclude white
persons from railroad cars occupied by blacks, as to exclude colored
people from coaches occupied by or assigned to white persons.
Railroad corporations of Louisiana did not make discrimination among
whites in the matter of commodation for travelers. The thing to
accomplish was, under the guise of giving equal accommodation for
whites and blacks, to compel the latter to keep to themselves while
traveling in railroad passenger coaches. No one would be so wanting
in candor as to assert the contrary. The fundamental **1146
objection, therefore, to the statute, is that it interferes with the
personal freedom of citizens. 'Personal liberty,' it has been well
said, 'consists in the power of locomotion, of changing situation, or
removing one's person to whatsoever places one's own inclination may
direct, without imprisonment or restraint, unless by due course of
law.' 1 Bl. Comm. *134. If a white man and a black man choose to
occupy the same public conveyance on a public highway, it is their
right to do so; and no government, proceeding alone on grounds of
race, can prevent it without infringing the personal liberty of
each.
It is one thing for railroad carriers to furnish, or to be required
by law to furnish, equal accommodations for all whom they are under a
legal duty to carry. It is quite another thing for government to
forbid citizens of the white and black races from traveling in the
same public conveyance, and to punish officers of railroad companies
for permitting persons of the two races to occupy the same passenger
coach. If a state can prescribe, as a rule of civil conduct, that
whites and blacks shall not travel as passengers in the same railroad
coach, why may it not so regulate the use of the streets of its
cities and towns as to compel white citizens to keep on one side of a
street, and black citizens to keep on the other? Why may it not, upon
like grounds, punish whites and blacks who ride together in street
cars or in open vehicles on a public road *558 or street? Why
may it not require sheriffs to assign whites to one side of a court
room, and blacks to the other? And why may it not also prohibit the
commingling of the two races in the galleries of legislative halls or
in public assemblages convened for the consideration of the political
questions of the day? Further, if this statute of Louisiana is
consistent with the personal liberty of citizens, why may not the
state require the separation in railroad coaches of native and
naturalized citizens of the United States, or of Protestants and
Roman Catholics?
The answer given at the argument to these questions was that
regulations of the kind they suggest would be unreasonable, and could
not, therefore, stand before the law. Is it meant that the
determination of questions of legislative power depends upon the
inquiry whether the statute whose validity is questioned is, in the
judgment of the courts, a reasonable one, taking all the
circumstances into consideration? A statute may be unreasonable
merely because a sound public policy forbade its enactment. But I do
not understand that the courts have anything to do with the policy or
expediency of legislation. A statute may be valid, and yet, upon
grounds of public policy, may well be characterized as unreasonable.
Mr. Sedgwick correctly states the rule when he says that, the
legislative intention being clearly ascertained, 'the courts have no
other duty to perform than to execute the legislative will, without
any regard to their views as to the wisdom or justice of the
particular enactment.' Sedg. St. & Const. Law, 324. There is a
dangerous tendency in these latter days to enlarge the functions of
the courts, by means of judicial interference with the will of the
people as expressed by the legislature. Our institutions have the
distinguishing characteristic that the three departments of
government are co-ordinate and separate. Each much keep within the
limits defined by the constitution. And the courts best discharge
their duty by executing the will of the law-making power,
constitutionally expressed, leaving the results of legislation to be
dealt with by the people through their representatives. Statutes must
always have a reasonable construction. Sometimes they are to be
construed strictly, sometimes literally, in order to carry out the
legislative *559 will. But, however construed, the intent of
the legislature is to be respected if the particular statute in
question is valid, although the courts, looking at the public
interests, may conceive the statute to be both unreasonable and
impolitic. If the power exists to enact a statute, that ends the
matter so far as the courts are concerned. The adjudged cases in
which statutes have been held to be void, because unreasonable, are
those in which the means employed by the legislature were not at all
germane to the end to which the legislature was competent.
The white race deems itself to be the dominant race in this country.
And so it is, in prestige, in achievements, in education, in wealth,
and in power. So, I doubt not, it will continue to be for all time,
if it remains true to its great heritage, and holds fast to the
principles of constitutional liberty. But in view of the
constitution, in the eye of the law, there is in this country no
superior, dominant, ruling class of citizens. There is no caste here.
Our constitution is color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates
classes among citizens. In respect of civil rights, all citizens are
equal before the law. The humblest is the peer of the most powerful.
The law regards man as man, and takes no account of his surroundings
or of his color when his civil rights as guarantied by the supreme
law of the land are involved. It is therefore to be regretted that
this high tribunal, the final expositor of the fundamental law of the
land, has reached the conclusion that it is competent for a state to
regulate the enjoyment by citizens of their civil rights solely upon
the basis of race.
In my opinion, the judgment this day rendered will, in time, prove to
be quite as pernicious as the decision made by this tribunal in the
Dred Scott Case.
It was adjudged in that case that the descendants of Africans who
were imported into this country, and sold as slaves, were not
included nor intended to be included under the word 'citizens' in the
constitution, and could not claim any of the rights and privileges
**1147 which that instrument provided for and secured to citizens
of the United States; that, at time of the adoption of the
constitution, they were 'considered as a subordinate and inferior
class of beings, who had been subjugated by the dominant *560
race, and, whether emancipated or not, yet remained subject to their
authority, and had no rights or privileges but such as those who held
the power and the government might choose to grant them.' 17 How.
393, 404. The recent amendments of the constitution, it was supposed,
had eradicated these principles from our institutions. But it seems
that we have yet, in some of the states, a dominant race,--a superior
class of citizens,--which assumes to regulate the enjoyment of civil
rights, common to all citizens, upon the basis of race. The present
decision, it may well be apprehended, will not only stimulate
aggressions, more or less brutal and irritating, upon the admitted
rights of colored citizens, but will encourage the belief that it is
possible, by means of state enactments, to defeat the beneficent
purposes which the people of the United States had in view when they
adopted the recent amendments of the constitution, by one of which
the blacks of this country were made citizens of the United States
and of the states in which they respectively reside, and whose
privileges and immunities, as citizens, the states are forbidden to
abridge. Sixty millions of whites are in no danger from the presence
here of eight millions of blacks. The destinies of the two races, in
this country, are indissolubly linked together, and the interests of
both require that the common government of all shall not permit the
seeds of race hate to be planted under the sanction of law. What can
more certainly arouse race hate, what more certainly create and
perpetuate a feeling of distrust between these races, than state
enactments which, in fact, proceed on the ground that colored
citizens are so inferior and degraded that they cannot be allowed to
sit in public coaches occupied by white citizens? That, as all will
admit, is the real meaning of such legislation as was enacted in
Louisiana.
The sure guaranty of the peace and security of each race is the
clear, distinct, unconditional recognition by our governments,
national and state, of every right that inheres in civil freedom, and
of the equality before the law of all citizens of the United States,
without regard to race. State enactments regulating the enjoyment of
civil rights upon the basis of race, and cunningly devised to defeat
legitimate results of the *561 war, under the pretense of
recognizing equality of rights, can have no other result than to
render permanent peace impossible, and to keep alive a conflict of
races, the continuance of which must do harm to all concerned. This
question is not met by the suggestion that social equality cannot
exist between the white and black races in this country. That
argument, if it can be properly regarded as one, is scarcely worthy
of consideration; for social equality no more exists between two
races when traveling in a passenger coach or a public highway than
when members of the same races sit by each other in a street car or
in the jury box, or stand or sit with each other in a political
assembly, or when they use in common the streets of a city or town,
or when they are in the same room for the purpose of having their
names placed on the registry of voters, or when they approach the
ballot box in order to exercise the high privilege of voting.
There is a race so different from our own that we do not permit those
belonging to it to become citizens of the United States. Persons
belonging to it are, with few exceptions, absolutely excluded from
our country. I allude to the Chinese race. But, by the statute in
question, a Chinaman can ride in the same passenger coach with white
citizens of the United States, while citizens of the black race in
Louisiana, many of whom, perhaps, risked their lives for the
preservation of the Union, who are entitled, by law, to participate
in the political control of the state and nation, who are not
excluded, by law or by reason of their race, from public stations of
any kind, and who have all the legal rights that belong to white
citizens, are yet declared to be criminals, liable to imprisonment,
if they ride in a public coach occupied by citizens of the white
race. It is scarcely just to say that a colored citizen should not
object to occupying a public coach assigned to his own race. He does
not object, nor, perhaps, would he object to separate coaches for his
race if his rights under the law were recognized. But he does object,
and he ought never to cease objecting, that citizens of the white and
black races can be adjudged criminals because they sit, or claim the
right to sit, in the same public coach on a public highway.
*562 The arbitrary separation of citizens, on the basis of
race, while they are on a public highway, is a badge of servitude
wholly inconsistent with the civil freedom and the equality before
the law established by the constitution. It cannot be justified upon
any legal grounds.
If evils will result from the commingling of the two races upon
public highways established for the benefit of all, they will be
infinitely less than those that will surely come from state
legislation regulating the enjoyment of civil rights upon the basis
of race. We boast of the freedom enjoyed by our people above all
other peoples. But it is difficult to reconcile that boast with a
state of the law which, practically, puts the brand of servitude and
degradation upon a large class of our fellow citizens,--our equals
before the law. The thin disguise of 'equal' accommodations for
passengers in railroad coaches will not mislead any one, nor atone
for the wrong this day done.
The result of the whole matter is that while this court has
frequently adjudged, and at the present term has recognized the
doctrine, that **1148 a state cannot, consistently with the
constitution of the United States, prevent white and black citizens,
having the required qualifications for jury service, from sitting in
the same jury box, it is now solemnly held that a state may prohibit
white and black citizens from sitting in the same passenger coach on
a public highway, or may require that they be separated by a
'partition' when in the same passenger coach. May it not now be
reasonably expected that astute men of the dominant race, who affect
to be disturbed at the possibility that the integrity of the white
race may be corrupted, or that its supremacy will be imperiled, by
contact on public highways with black people, will endeavor to
procure statutes requiring white and black jurors to be separated in
the jury box by a 'partition,' and that, upon retiring from the court
room to consult as to their verdict, such partition, if it be a
movable one, shall be taken to their consultation room, and set up in
such way as to prevent black jurors from coming too close to their
brother jurors of the white race. If the 'partition' used in the
court room happens to be stationary, provision could be made for
screens with openings through *563 which jurors of the two
races could confer as to their verdict without coming into personal
contact with each other. I cannot see but that, according to the
principles this day announced, such state legislation, although
conceived in hostility to, and enacted for the purpose of
humiliating, citizens of the United States of a particular race,
would be held to be consistent with the constitution.
I do not deem it necessary to review the decisions of state courts to
which reference was made in argument. Some, and the most important,
of them, are wholly inapplicable, because rendered prior to the
adoption of the last amendments of the constitution, when colored
people had very few rights which the dominant race felt obliged to
respect. Others were made at a time when public opinion, in many
localities, was dominated by the institution of slavery; when it
would not have been safe to do justice to the black man; and when, so
far as the rights of blacks were concerned, race prejudice was,
practically, the supreme law of the land. Those decisions cannot be
guides in the era introduced by the recent amendments of the supreme
law, which established universal civil freedom, gave citizenship to
all born or naturalized in the United States, and residing here,
obliterated the race line from our systems of governments, national
and state, and placed our free institutions upon the broad and sure
foundation of the equality of all men before the law.
I am of opinion that the state of Louisiana is inconsistent with the
personal liberty of citizens, white and black, in that state, and
hostile to both the spirit and letter of the constitution of the
United States. If laws of like character should be enacted in the
several states of the Union, the effect would be in the highest
degree mischievous. Slavery, as an institution tolerated by law,
would, it is true, have disappeared from our country; but there would
remain a power in the states, by sinister legislation, to interfere
with the full enjoyment of the blessings of freedom, to regulate
civil rights, common to all citizens, upon the basis of race, and to
place in a condition of legal inferiority a large body of American
citizens, now constituting a part of the political community, called
the *564 'People of the United States,' for whom, and by whom
through representatives, our government is administered. Such a
system is inconsistent with the guaranty given by the constitution to
each state of a republican form of government, and may be stricken
down by congressional action, or by the courts in the discharge of
their solemn duty to maintain the supreme law of the land, anything
in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary
notwithstanding.
For the reason stated, I am constrained to withhold my assent from
the opinion and judgment of the majority.
END OF DOCUMENT