The separate coach law of Kentucky, being operative only within
the state, and having been construed by the Supreme Court of that
state as applicable only to domestic commerce, is not an
infringement upon the exclusive power of Congress to regulate
interstate commerce.
This was a writ of error to review the conviction of the railway
company for failing to furnish separate coaches for the
transportation of white and colored passengers on the line of its
road in compliance with a statute of Kentucky enacted in 1892, the
first section of which reads as follows:
"§ 1. Any railroad company or corporation, person or
persons, running or otherwise operating railroad cars or coaches by
steam or otherwise on any railroad line or track within this
Page 179 U. S. 389
state, and all railroad companies, person, or persons, doing
business in this state, whether upon lines of railroad owned in
part or whole or leased by them, and all railroad companies,
person, or persons operating railroad lines that may hereafter be
built under existing charters, or charters that may hereafter be
granted in this state, and all foreign corporations, companies,
person, or persons organized under charters granted, or that may be
hereafter granted, by any other state, who may be now or may
hereafter be engaged in running or operating any of the railroads
of this state, either in part or whole, either in their own name or
that of others, are hereby required to furnish separate coaches or
cars for the travel or transportation of the white and colored
passengers on their respective lines of railroad. Each compartment
of a coach divided by a good and substantial wooden partition, with
a door therein, shall be deemed a separate coach within the meaning
of this act, and each separate coach or compartment shall bear in
some conspicuous place appropriate words in plain letters
indicating the race for which it is set apart."
The second section requires such companies to make no difference
or discrimination in the quality, convenience, or accommodations in
such coaches, and the fifth provides that conductors
"shall have power, and are hereby required, to assign to each
white or colored passenger his or her respective car, or coach, or
compartment, and should any passenger refuse to occupy the car,
coach, or compartment to which he or she might be assigned by the
conductor or manager, the latter shall have the right to refuse to
carry such passenger,"
and may put him off the train. The seventh section contains an
exception of employees of railroads, or persons employed as nurses,
or officers in charge of prisoners.
The indictment followed the language of the statute above
quoted. The defendant demurred upon the ground that the law was
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States in that it was a
regulation of interstate commerce. The demurrer was overruled, and
the case tried before a jury which found the defendant guilty and
fixed its fine at five hundred dollars. The case was carried by
appeal to the Court of Appeals, and
Page 179 U. S. 390
the conviction affirmed. The court delivered a brief opinion to
the effect that its judgment was concluded by the case of the
Ohio Valley Railways' Receiver v. Lander, 20 Ky.L.Rep.
913.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case turns exclusively upon the question whether the
separate coach law of Kentucky be an infringement upon the
exclusive power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce. The
law in broad terms requires all railroad companies operating roads
within the State of Kentucky, whether upon lines owned or leased by
them, as well as all foreign companies operating roads within the
state, to furnish separate coaches or cars for the travel or
transportation of white and colored passengers upon their
respective lines of railroad, and to post in some conspicuous place
upon each coach appropriate words in plain letters indicating the
race for which it is set apart.
Of course, this law is operative only within the state. It would
be satisfied if the defendant, which operates a continuous line of
railway from Newport News, Virginia, to Louisville, Kentucky,
should take on its westward bound trains a separate coach or
coaches for colored people at its first station in Kentucky, and
continue the same to Louisville, and upon its eastward bound trains
take off such coach at the same station before leaving the state.
The real question is whether a proper construction of the act
confines its operation to passengers whose journeys commence and
end within the boundaries of the state, or whether a reasonable
interpretation of the act requires colored passengers to be
assigned to separate coaches when traveling from or to points in
other states.
Similar questions have arisen several times in this Court. In
Hall v. De Cuir, 95 U. S. 485, an
act of the General Assembly
Page 179 U. S. 391
of Louisiana prohibited common carriers of passengers within
that state from making any rules or regulations discriminating on
account of race or color. Plaintiff took passage upon a steamboat
up the river from New Orleans to a landing place within the state,
and, being refused accommodations on account of her color in the
cabin especially set apart for white persons, brought an action
under the provisions of this act. The vessel was engaged in trade
between New Orleans and Vicksburg, Mississippi, and defendant
insisted that the act was void as a regulation of commerce between
these states. The state court held it to be constitutional. This
Court held
"that, while the act purported only to control the carrier when
engaged within the state, it must necessarily influence his conduct
to some extent in the management of his business throughout his
entire voyage. His disposition of passengers taken up and put down
within the state, or taken up within to be carried without, cannot
but affect in a greater or less degree those taken up without and
brought within, and sometimes those taken up and put down without.
A passenger in the cabin set apart for the use of whites without
the state must, when the boat comes within, share the
accommodations of that cabin with such colored persons as may come
on board afterwards, if the law is enforced."
In
Louisville &c. Railway Company v. Mississippi,
133 U. S. 587, an
act of the Legislature of Mississippi required, almost in the terms
of the Kentucky act, that
"all railroads carrying passengers in this state . . . shall
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 road was indicted for a violation of the statute in failing
to provide separate accommodations for the two races. It will be
observed that it was not a civil action brought by an individual to
recover damages for being compelled to occupy one particular
compartment, or for being prevented from riding on the train; but
in that case, as in this, the prosecution was public. As the
Supreme Court of Mississippi had held that the statute applied
solely to commerce within the state, 66 Miss. 662, that
construction was accepted as conclusive
Page 179 U. S. 392
here, and being a matter respecting commerce wholly within the
state, and not interfering with commerce between the states, there
was obviously no violation of the commerce clause of the federal
Constitution. Said MR. JUSTICE BREWER in delivering the opinion of
this Court:
"So far as the first section is concerned (and it is with that
alone we have to do), its provisions are fully complied with when
to trains within the state is attached a separate car for colored
passengers. This may cause an extra expense to the railroad
company, but not more so than state statutes requiring certain
accommodations at depots, compelling trains to stop at crossings of
other railroads, and a multitude of other matters confessedly
within the power of the state. No question arises under this
section as to the power of the state to separate in different
compartments interstate passengers or to 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 powers given to Congress by the commerce clause."
In
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.
S. 537, the petitioner Plessy had engaged and paid for a
first-class passage on the East Louisiana Railway from New Orleans
to Covington, in the same state, took possession of a vacant seat
in the coach where white passengers were accommodated, and was
ejected therefrom under the separate coach law of Louisiana, which
was practically in the same terms as the statute of Kentucky under
consideration. Upon being subjected to a criminal charge, he
applied for a writ of prohibition upon the ground of the
unconstitutionality of the act. The Supreme Court of Louisiana held
the law to be constitutional, and denied the prohibition. On writ
of error from this Court, it was held that no question of
interference with interstate commerce could possibly arise, since
the East Louisiana Railway was purely a local line, with both its
termini within the State of Louisiana. Indeed, the act was not
claimed to be unconstitutional as an interference with interstate
commerce, but its invalidity was urged upon the ground that it
abridged the privileges or immunities of citizens, deprived the
Page 179 U. S. 393
petitioner of his property without due process of law, and also
denied him the equal protection of the laws. His contention was
overruled, and the statute held to be no violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
As already stated, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky did not
discuss the constitutionality of the act in question, but held
itself concluded by its previous opinion in the
Lander
case. That was an action instituted by Lander and his wife against
the receiver of the Ohio Valley Railway, running from Evansville,
Indiana, to Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Plaintiff's wife, who was
joined with him in the suit, purchased a first-class ticket from
Hopkinsville to Mayfield, both within the State of Kentucky; took
her place in what was called the "ladies' coach," and was ejected
therefrom by the conductor and assigned a seat in a smoking car,
which was alleged to be small, badly ventilated, unclean, and
fitted with greatly inferior accommodations. It was held by the
Court of Appeals that the decisions of this Court in
Louisville, New Orleans &c. Railway v. Mississippi,
133 U. S. 587, and
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U. S. 537,
were conclusive of the constitutionality of the act so far as
plaintiffs were concerned, and that the mere fact that the railroad
extended to Evansville, in the State of Indiana, could in nowise
render the statute in question invalid as to the duty of the
railroad to respect it. It was urged in that case, as it is in
this, that the act undertook to regulate or control as to
interstate passengers, and that that portion of the statute was
invalid as being in conflict with the interstate commerce clause of
the Constitution, and further that the act was inseparable, and
therefore must all be held invalid. In disposing of this, the Court
observed:
"We do not think that such contention is tenable. It seems to us
that such contention is in conflict with the decision hereinbefore
referred to [in the
Mississippi case], and also in
conflict with the well settled rules of construction."
In winding up its opinion, the court made the following
observation:
"If it were conceded (which is not) that the statute is invalid
as to interstate passengers, the proper construction to be given it
would then be that the legislature did not so intend it, but only
intended it to apply to transportation within the
Page 179 U. S. 394
state, and therefore it should be held valid as to such
passengers. It seems to us that a passenger taking passage in this
state, and railroad companies receiving passengers in this state,
are bound to obey the law in respect to this matter so long as they
remain within the jurisdiction of the state."
This ruling effectually disposes of the argument that the act
must be construed to regulate the travel or transportation on
railroads of all white and colored passengers, while they are in
the state, without reference to where their journey commences and
ends, and of the further contention that the policy would not have
been adopted if the act had been confined to that portion of the
travel which commenced and ended within the state lines. Indeed, it
places the Court of Appeals of Kentucky in line with the Supreme
Court of Mississippi in
Louisville &c. Railway Co. v.
Mississippi, 66 Miss. 662, which had held the separate coach
law of that state valid as applied to domestic commerce. Granting
that the last sentence from the opinion of the Court of Appeals,
above cited, would seem to justify the railroad in placing
interstate colored passengers in separate coaches, we think that
this prosecution does not necessarily involve that question, and
that the act must stand so far as it is applicable to passengers
traveling between two points in the state.
Indeed, we are by no means satisfied that the Court of Appeals
did not give the correct construction to this statute in limiting
its operation to domestic commerce. It is scarcely courteous to
impute to a legislature the enactment of a law which it knew to be
unconstitutional, and if it were well settled that a separate coach
law was unconstitutional as applied to interstate commerce, the law
applying on its face to all passengers should be limited to such as
the legislature were competent to deal with. The Court of Appeals
has found such to be the intention of the general assembly in this
case, or at least, that, if such were not its intention the law may
be supported as applying alone to domestic commerce. In thus
holding the act to be severable, it is laying down a principle of
construction from which there is no appeal.
While we do not deny the force of the railroad's argument
Page 179 U. S. 395
in this connection, we cannot say that the General Assembly
would not have enacted this law if it had supposed it applied only
to domestic commerce, and if we were in doubt on that point, we
should unhesitatingly defer to the opinion of the Court of Appeals,
which held that it would give it that construction if the case
called for it. In view of the language above quoted from the
Lander case, it would be unbecoming for us to say that the
Court of Appeals would not construe the law as applicable to
domestic commerce alone, and if it did, the case would fall
directly within the
Mississippi case,
133 U.
S. 587. We therefore feel compelled to give it that
construction ourselves, and so construing it, there can be no doubt
as to its constitutionality.
Plessy v. Ferguson,
163 U. S. 537.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore
Affirmed.