This Court will not disturb the judgment of a state court
resting on federal and nonfederal grounds if the latter are
sufficient to sustain the decision.
The state court determines the extent and limitations of powers
conferred by the state on its corporations.
A corporation is not entitled to all the immunities to which
individuals are entitled, and a state may withhold from its
corporations privileges and powers of which it cannot
constitutionally deprive individuals.
A state statute limiting the powers of corporations and
individuals may be constitutional as to the former although
unconstitutional as to the latter, and, if separable, it will not
be held unconstitutional at the instance of a corporation unless it
clearly appears that the legislature would not have enacted it as
to corporations separately.
The same rule that permits separable sections of a statute to be
declared unconstitutional without rendering the entire statute void
applies to separable provisions of a section of a statute.
The prohibition in § 1 of the Kentucky statute of 1904
against persons and corporations maintaining schools for both white
persons and negroes is separable, and even if an unconstitutional
restraint as to individuals, it is not unconstitutional as to
corporations, it being within the power of the state to determine
the powers conferred upon its corporations.
While the reserved power to alter or amend charters is subject
to reasonable limitations, it includes any alteration or amendment
which does not defeat or substantially impair the object of the
grant or vested rights.
A general statute which in effect alters or amends a charter is
to be construed as an amendment thereof, even if not in terms so
designated.
A state statute which permits education of both white persons
and negroes by the same corporation in different localities,
although prohibiting their attendance in the same place, does not
defeat the object of a grant to maintain a college for all persons,
and is not violative
Page 211 U. S. 46
of the contract clause of the federal Constitution, the state
law having reserved the right to repeal, alter and amend
charters.
123 Ky. 209 affirmed.
On October 8, 1904, the grand jury of Madison County, Kentucky,
presented in the circuit court of that county an indictment
charging:
"The said Berea College, being a corporation duly incorporated
under the laws of the State of Kentucky and owning, maintaining,
and operating a college, school, and institution of learning, known
as 'Berea College,' located in the Town of Berea, Madison County,
Kentucky, did unlawfully and willfully permit and receive both the
white and negro races as pupils for instruction in said college,
school, and institution of learning."
This indictment was found under an Act of March 22, 1904 (Acts
of Kentucky, 1904, c. 85, p. 181), whose first section reads:
"SEC. 1. That it shall be unlawful for any person, corporation,
or association of persons to maintain or operate any college,
school, or institution where persons of the white and negro races
are both received as pupils for instruction, and any person or
corporation who shall operate or maintain any such college, school,
or institution shall be fined $1,000, and any person or corporation
who may be convicted of violating the provisions of this act shall
be fined $100 for each day they may operate said school, college,
or institution after such conviction."
On a trial, the defendant was found guilty and sentenced to pay
a fine of $1,000. This judgment was, on June 12, 1906, affirmed by
the Court of Appeals of the state (123 Ky. 209), and from that
court brought here on writ of error.
Page 211 U. S. 53
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
There is no dispute as to the facts. That the act does not
violate the Constitution of Kentucky is settled by the decision of
its highest court, and the single question for our consideration is
whether it conflicts with the federal Constitution. The Court of
Appeals discussed at some length the general power of the state in
respect to the separation of the two races. It also ruled that
"the right to teach white and negro children in a private school
at the same time and place is not a property right. Besides,
appellant, as a corporation created by this state, has no natural
right to teach at all. Its right to teach is such as the state sees
fit to give to it. The state may withhold it altogether, or qualify
it.
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U. S.
578."
Upon this we remark that, when a state court decides a case upon
two grounds, one federal and the other nonfederal, this Court will
not disturb the judgment if the nonfederal ground, fairly
construed, sustains the decision.
Murdock v.
Memphis, 20 Wall. 590,
87 U. S. 636;
Eustis v. Bolles, 150 U. S. 361;
Giles v. Teasley, 193 U. S. 146-160;
Allen v. Arguimbau, 198 U. S. 149.
Page 211 U. S. 54
Again, the decision by a state court of the extent and
limitation of the powers conferred by the state upon one of its own
corporations is of a purely local nature. In creating a
corporation, a state may withhold powers which may be exercised by
and cannot be denied to an individual. It is under no obligation to
treat both alike. In granting corporate powers, the legislature may
deem that the best interests of the state would be subserved by
some restriction, and the corporation may not plead that, in spite
of the restriction, it has more or greater powers because the
citizen has.
"The granting of such right or privilege [the right or privilege
to be a corporation] rests entirely in the discretion of the state,
and, of course, when granted, may be accompanied with such
conditions as its legislature may judge most befitting to its
interests and policy."
Home Ins. Co. v. New York, 134 U.
S. 594,
134 U. S. 600;
Perrine v. Chesapeake &
Delaware Canal Co., 9 How. 172,
50 U. S. 184;
Horn Silver Mining Co. v. New York, 143 U.
S. 305,
143 U. S. 312.
The act of 1904 forbids "any person, corporation, or association of
persons to maintain or operate any college," etc. Such a statute
may conflict with the federal Constitution in denying to
individuals powers which they may rightfully exercise, and yet at
the same time be valid as to a corporation created by the
state.
It may be said that the Court of Appeals sustained the validity
of this section of the statute, both against individuals and
corporations. It ruled that the legislation was within the power of
the state, and that the state might rightfully thus restrain all
individuals, corporations, and associations. But it is unnecessary
for us to consider anything more than the question of its validity
as applied to corporation.
The statute is clearly separable, and may be valid as to one
class while invalid as to another. Even if it were conceded that
its assertion of power over individuals cannot be sustained, still
it must be upheld so far as it restrains corporations.
There is no force in the suggestion that the statute,
although
Page 211 U. S. 55
clearly separable, must stand or fall as an entirety on the
ground the legislature would not have enacted one part unless it
could reach all. That the Legislature of Kentucky desired to
separate the teaching of white and colored children may be
conceded; but it by no means follows that it would not have
enforced the separation so far as it could do so, even though it
could not make it effective under all circumstances. In other
words, it is not at all unreasonable to believe that the
legislature, although advised beforehand of the constitutional
question, might have prohibited all organizations and corporations
under its control from teaching white and colored children
together, and thus made at least uniform official action. The rule
of construction in questions of this nature is stated by Chief
Judge Shaw in
Warren v. Mayor of Charlestown, 2 Gray 84,
quoted approvingly by this Court in
Allen v. Louisiana,
103 U. S. 80,
103 U. S.
84:
"But if they are so mutually connected with and dependent on
each other, as conditions, considerations, or compensations for
each other, as to warrant a belief that the legislature intended
them as a whole, and that, if all could not be carried into effect,
the legislature would not pass the residue independently, and some
parts are unconstitutional, all the provisions which are thus
dependent, conditional, or connected must fall with them."
See also Loeb v. Township Trustees, 179 U.
S. 472,
179 U. S. 490,
in which this Court said:
"As one section of a statute may be repugnant to the
Constitution without rendering the whole act void, so one provision
of a section may be invalid by reason of its not conforming to the
Constitution, while all the other provisions may be subject to not
constitutional infirmity. One part may stand, while another will
fall, unless the two are so connected or dependent on each other in
subject matter, meaning, or purpose that the good cannot remain
without the bad. The point is not whether the parts are contained
in the same section, for the distribution into sections is purely
artificial, but whether
Page 211 U. S. 56
they are essentially and inseparably connected in substance --
whether the provisions are so interdependent that one cannot
operate without the other."
Further, inasmuch as the Court of Appeals considered the act
separable, and, while sustaining it as an entirety, gave an
independent reason which applies only to corporations, it is
obvious that it recognized the force of the suggestions we have
made. And when a state statute is so interpreted, this Court should
hesitate before it holds that the supreme court of the state did
not know what was the thought of the legislature in its enactment.
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway v. McCann,
174 U. S. 580,
174 U. S. 586;
Tullis v. Lake Erie & Western Railroad, 175 U.
S. 348,
175 U. S.
353.
While the terms of the present charter are not given in the
record, yet it was admitted on the trial that the defendant was a
corporation organized and incorporated under the general statutes
of the State of Kentucky, and, of course, the state courts, as well
as this Court on appeal, take judicial notice of those statutes.
Further, in the brief of counsel for the defendant is given a
history of the incorporation proceedings, together with the
charters. From that it appears that Berea College was organized
under the authority of an act for the incorporation of voluntary
associations, approved March 9, 1854 (2 Stanton 553), which act was
amended by an Act of March 10, 1856 (2 Stanton 555), and which in
terms reserved to the general assembly
"the right to alter or repeal the charter of any associations
formed under the provisions of this act, and the act to which this
act is an amendment at any time hereafter."
After the Constitution of 1891 was adopted by the State of
Kentucky, and on June 10, 1899, the college was reincorporated
under the provisions of c. 32, Art. 8, Ky.Stat. (Carroll's Ky.Stat.
1903, p. 459), the charter defining its business in these
words:
"Its object is the education of all persons who may attend its
institution of learning at Berea, and, in the language of the
original articles, 'to promote the cause of Christ.' The
Constitution of 1891
Page 211 U. S. 57
provided in § 3 of the Bill of Rights that 'every grant of
a franchise, privilege, or exemption shall remain, subject to
revocation, alteration, or amendment.' Carroll's Ky.Stat. 1903, p.
86. So that the full power of amendment was reserved to the
legislature."
It is undoubtedly true that the reserved power to alter or amend
is subject to some limitations, and that, under the guise of an
amendment, a new contract may not always be enforceable upon the
corporation or the stockholders; but it is settled
"that a power reserved to the legislature to alter, amend, or
repeal a charter authorizes it to make any alteration or amendment
of a charter granted subject to it, which will not defeat or
substantially impair the object of the grant, or any rights vested
under it, and which the legislature may deem necessary to secure
either that object or any public right.
Inland Fisheries v.
Holyoke Water Power Co., 104 Mass. 446, 451;
Holyoke Water Power Co.
v. Lyman, 15 Wall. 500,
82 U. S.
522."
Close v. Glenwood Cemetery, 107 U.
S. 466,
107 U. S.
476.
Construing the statute, the Court of Appeals held that
"if the same school taught the different races at different
times, though at the same place, or at different times at the same
place, it would not be unlawful."
Now, an amendment to the original charter, which does not
destroy the power of the college to furnish education to all
persons, but which simply separates them by time or place of
instruction, cannot be said to "defeat or substantially impair the
object of the grant." The language of the statute is not in terms
an amendment, yet its effect is an amendment, and it would be
resting too much on mere form to hold that a statute which in
effect works a change in the terms of the charter is not to be
considered as an amendment because not so designated. The act
itself, being separable, is to be read as though it, in one
section, prohibited any person, in another section, any
corporation, and, in a third, any association of persons to do the
acts named. Reading the statute as containing a separate
prohibition on all corporations -- at least, all state corporations
--
Page 211 U. S. 58
it substantially declares that any authority given by previous
charters to instruct the two races at the same time and in the same
place is forbidden, and that prohibition, being a departure from
the terms of the original charter in this case, may properly be
adjudged an amendment.
Again, it is insisted that the Court of Appeals did not regard
the legislation as making an amendment, because another prosecution
instituted against the same corporation under the fourth section of
the act, which makes it a misdemeanor to teach pupils of the two
races in the same institution, even although one race is taught in
one branch and another in another branch, provided the two branches
are within twenty-five miles of each other, was held could not be
sustained, the court saying: "This last section, we think, violates
the limitations upon the police power: it is unreasonable and
oppressive." But, while so ruling, it also held that this section
could be ignored, and that the remainder of the act was complete,
notwithstanding. Whether the reasoning of the court concerning the
fourth section be satisfactory or not is immaterial, for no
question of its validity is presented, and the Court of Appeals,
while striking it down, sustained the balance of the act. We need
concern ourselves only with the inquiry whether the first section
can be upheld as coming within the power of a state over its own
corporate creatures.
We are of opinion, for reasons stated, that it does come within
that power, and, on this ground, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals of Kentucky is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES and MR. JUSTICE MOODY concur in the
judgment.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting:
This prosecution arises under the first section of an act of the
General Assembly of Kentucky, approved March 22, 1904.
Page 211 U. S. 59
The purpose and scope of the act is clearly indicated by its
title. It is "An Act to Prohibit White and Colored Persons from
Attending the Same School." Ky. Acts 1904, p. 181.
It is well to give here the entire statute, as follows:
"SEC. 1. That it shall be unlawful for any person, corporation,
or association of persons to maintain or operate any college,
school, or institution where persons of the white and negro races
are both received as pupils for instruction, and any person or
corporation who shall operate or maintain any such college, school,
or institution shall be fined $1,000, and any person or corporation
who may be convicted of violating the provisions of this act shall
be fined $100 for each day they may operate said school, college,
or institution after such conviction."
"SEC. 2. That any instructor who shall teach in any school,
college, or institution where members of said two races are
received as pupils for instruction shall be guilty of operating and
maintaining same and fined as provided in the first section
hereof."
"SEC. 3. It shall be unlawful for any white person to attend any
school or institution where negroes are received as pupils or
receive instruction, and it shall be unlawful for any negro or
colored person to attend any school or institution where white
persons are received as pupils or receive instruction. Any person
so offending shall be fined $50 for each day he attends such
institution or school:
Provided, That the provisions of
this law shall not apply to any penal institution or house of
reform."
"SEC. 4. Nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent any
private school, college, or institution of learning from
maintaining a separate and distinct branch thereof, in a different
locality, not less than twenty-five miles distant, for the
education exclusively of one race or color."
"SEC. 5. This act shall not take effect, or be in operation,
before the 15th day of July, 1904."
Acts 1904, c. 85, p. 181.
The plaintiff in error, Berea College, is an incorporation,
organized under the General Laws of Kentucky in 1859. Its original
articles of incorporation set forth that the object of
Page 211 U. S. 60
the founders was to establish and maintain an institution of
learning "in order to promote the cause of Christ." In 1899, new
articles were adopted which provided that the affairs of the
corporation should be conducted by twenty-five persons.
In 1904, the college was charged in a Kentucky state court with
having unlawfully and willfully received both white and negro
persons as pupils for instruction. A demurrer to the indictment was
overruled, and a trial was had which resulted in a verdict of
guilty and the imposition of a fine of $1,000 on the college. The
trial court refused an instruction asked by the defendant to the
effect that the statute was in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. A motion in
arrest of judgment and for a new trial having been overruled, the
case was taken to the highest court of Kentucky, where the judgment
of conviction was affirmed, one of the members of the court
dissenting.
The state court had before it and determined at the same time
(delivering one opinion for both cases) another case against Berea
College -- which was an indictment based on § 4 of the same
statute, under which the college was convicted of the offense of
"maintaining and operating a college, school, and institution of
learning where persons of the white and negro races are both
received, and within
a distance of twenty-five miles of each
other, as pupils for instruction." After observing that there
were fundamental limitations upon the police power of the several
states which could not be disregarded, the state court held §
4 of the statute to be in violation of those limitations because
"unreasonable and oppressive." Treating that particular section as
null and void and regarding the other sections as complete in
themselves and enforceable, the state court, in the first case (the
present case) based on § 1, affirmed, and, in the second case,
based on § 4 of the statute, reversed, the judgment. It held
it to be entirely competent for the state to adopt the policy of
the separation of the races, even in private schools, and concluded
its opinion in these words: "The right to teach white and negro
children in a private
Page 211 U. S. 61
school at the same time and place is not a property right." The
state court (but without any discussion whatever) added, as if
merely incidental to or a makeweight in the decision of the pivotal
question in this case, these words:
"Besides, appellant, as a
corporation created by this
state, has no natural right to teach at all. Its right to teach is
such as the state sees fit to give to it. The state may withhold it
altogether or qualify it.
Allgeyer v. Louisiana,
165 U. S.
578."
It concluded: "We do not think the act is in conflict with the
federal Constitution."
Upon a review of the judgment below, this Court says that the
statute is "clearly separable, and may be valid as to one class,
while invalid as to another;" that
"even if it were conceded that its assertion of power over
individuals cannot be sustained, still the statute must be upheld
so far as it restrains corporations."
"It is unnecessary," this Court says,
"for us to consider anything more than the question of its
validity
as applied to corporations. . . . We need concern
ourselves only with the inquiry whether the first section can be
upheld as coming within the power of a state over its own
corporate creatures."
The judgment of the state court is now affirmed, and thereby
left in full force, so far as Kentucky and its courts are
concerned, although such judgment rests in part upon the ground
that the statute is not in any particular in violation of any
rights secured by the federal Constitution. In so ruling, it must
necessarily have been assumed by this Court that the legislature
may have regarded the teaching of white and colored pupils at the
same time and in the same school or institution, when maintained by
private individuals and associations, as wholly different in its
results from such teaching when conducted by the same individuals
acting under the authority of or representing a corporation. But,
looking at the nature or subject of the legislation, it is
inconceivable that the legislature consciously regarded the subject
in that light. It is absolutely certain that the legislature had in
mind to prohibit the teaching of the two races in the same private
institution
Page 211 U. S. 62
at the same time, by whomsoever that institution was conducted.
It is a reflection upon the common sense of legislators to suppose
that they might have prohibited a private
corporation from
teaching by its agents, and yet left individuals and unincorporated
associations entirely at liberty, by the same instructors, to teach
the two races in the same institution at the same time. It was the
teaching of pupils of the two races
together, or in the
same school, no matter by whom or under whose authority, which the
legislature sought to prevent. The manifest purpose was to prevent
the association of white and colored persons in the same school.
That such was its intention is evident from the title of the act,
which, as we have seen, was "to prohibit white and colored persons
from attending the same school." Even if the words in the body of
the act were doubtful or obscure, the title may be looked to in aid
of construction.
Smythe v.
Fiske, 23 Wall. 374.
Undoubtedly the general rule is that one part of a statute may
be stricken down as unconstitutional and another part, distinctly
separable and valid, left in force. But that general rule cannot
control the decision of this case.
Referring to that rule, this Court, in
Huntington v.
Worthen, 120 U. S. 97,
120 U. S. 102,
said that, if one provision of a statute be invalid, the whole act
will fall where "
it is evident the legislature would not have
enacted one of them without the other."
In
Spraigue v. Thompson, 118 U. S.
90,
118 U. S. 94-95,
the question arose as to the validity of a particular section of
the Georgia Code. The Supreme Court of that state held that so much
of a section of that Code as made certain illegal exceptions could
be disregarded, leaving the rest of the section to stand; this upon
the principle that a distinct, separable, and unconstitutional part
of a statute may be rejected and the remainder preserved and
enforced. "But," the Court took care by say,
"the insuperable difficulty with the application of that
principle of construction to the present instance is that, by
rejecting the exceptions intended by the Legislature of Georgia,
the statute is made to enact
what confessedly the legislature
never meant. "
Page 211 U. S. 63
In
Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649,
143 U. S. 696,
it was held that certain specified parts of the tariff act of 1890
could be adjudged invalid without affecting the validity of another
and distinct part covering a different subject. But that, as the
Court held, was because "they are entirely separate
in their
nature, and, in law, are wholly independent of each
other."
A case very much in point here in that of
Connolly v. Union
Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U. S. 540,
184 U. S. 565.
Those were actions upon promissory notes and an open account. The
defense was that the notes and the account arose out of business
transactions with the Union Sewer Pipe Company, an Ohio corporation
doing business in Illinois, and which corporation, it was alleged,
was a trust and combination of a class or kind described in the
Illinois antitrust statute. That statute made certain combinations
of capital, skill, or acts by two or more persons for certain
defined purposes illegal in Illinois. The defense was based in part
on that statute, and the question was whether the statute was
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States in that, after
prescribing penalties for its violation, it provided by a distinct
section (§ 9) that its provisions "shall not apply to
agricultural products or livestock while in the hands of the
producer or raiser." The transactions out of which the notes and
account in suit arose had no connection whatever with agriculture
or with the business of raising livestock, and yet the question
considered and determined -- and which the court did not feel at
liberty to pass by -- was whether the entire statute was not
unconstitutional by reason of the fact that the ninth section
excepted from its operation agricultural products and livestock
while in the hands of the producer or raiser. This Court held that
section to be repugnant to the Constitution of the United States in
that it made such a discrimination in favor of agriculturists or
livestock dealers as to be a denial to all others of the equal
protection of the laws. The question then arose whether the other
provisions of the statute could not be upheld and enforced by
eliminating the ninth section. This Court held in the negative,
saying:
"The
Page 211 U. S. 64
principles applicable to such a question are well settled by the
adjudications of this Court. If different sections of a statute are
independent of each other, that which is unconstitutional may be
disregarded, and valid sections may stand and be enforced. But if
an obnoxious section is of such import that the other sections,
without it, would cause results
not contemplated or desired by
the legislature, then the
entire statute must be held
inoperative. . . . Looking, then, at all the sections
together, we must hold that the legislature would not have entered
upon or continued the policy indicated by the statute unless
agriculturalists and livestock dealers were excluded from its
operation and thereby protected from prosecution. The result is
that the statute must be regarded as an entirety, and, in that
view, it must be adjudged to be unconstitutional as denying the
equal protection of the laws to those within its jurisdiction who
are not embraced by the ninth section."
The general principle was well stated by Chief Justice Shaw,
who, after observing that, if certain parts of a statute are wholly
independent of each other, one party may be held void and the other
enforced, said in
Warren v. Mayor and Aldermen of
Charlestown, 2 Gray 84:
"But,if they are so mutually connected with and dependent on
each other, as conditions,
considerations, or
compensations for each other, as to warrant a belief that the
legislature intended them as a whole, and that, if all
could not be carried into effect, the legislature would not pass
the residue independently, and some parts are unconstitutional, all
the provisions which are thus dependent, conditional, or connected
must fall with them."
This statement of the principle was affirmed in
Allen v.
Louisiana, 103 U. S. 80,
103 U. S. 84,
and again in
Loeb v. Columbia Township Trustees,
179 U. S. 472,
179 U. S. 490,
cited by the Court. In the latter case, the Court said:
"One part [of a statute] may stand, while another will fall,
unless the two are so connected or dependent on each other in
subject matter, meaning, or purpose that the good cannot remain
without the bad. The point is not whether the parts are contained
in the same section, for the distribution into sections
Page 211 U. S. 65
is purely artificial; but whether they are essentially and
inseparably
connected in substance -- whether the
provisions are so interdependent that one cannot
operate
without the other."
All the cases are, without exception, in the same direction.
Now can it for a moment be doubted that the legislature intended
all the sections of the statute in question to be looked at, and
that the purpose was to forbid the teaching of pupils of the two
races together in the same institution at the same time,
whether the teachers represented natural persons or
corporations? Can it be said that the legislature would have
prohibited such teaching by corporations, and yet consciously
permitted the teaching by private individuals or unincorporated
associations? Are we to attribute such folly to legislators? Who
can say that the legislature would have enacted one provision
without the other? If not, then, in determining the intent of the
legislature, the provisions of the statute relating to the teaching
of the two races together by
corporations cannot be
separated in its operation from those in the same section that
forbid such teaching by individuals and unincorporated
associations. Therefore the Court cannot, as I think, properly
forbear to consider the validity of the provisions that refer to
teachers who do not represent corporations. If those provisions
constitute, as in my judgment they do, an essential part of the
legislative scheme or policy, and are invalid, then, under the
authorities cited, the whole act must fall. The provision as to
corporations may be valid, and yet the other clauses may be so
inseparably connected with that provision and the policy underlying
it that the validity of all the clauses necessary to effectuate the
legislative intent must be considered. There is no magic in the
fact of incorporation which will so transform the act of teaching
the two races in the same school at the same time that such
teaching can be deemed lawful when conducted by private
individuals, but unlawful when conducted by the representatives of
corporations.
There is another line of thought. The state court evidently
regarded it as necessary to consider the entire act; for it
adjudged
Page 211 U. S. 66
it to be competent for the state to forbid
all teaching
of the two races together, in the same institution at the same
time, no matter by whom the teaching was done. The reference at the
close of its opinion, in the words above quoted, to the fact that
the defendant was a corporation, which could be controlled as the
state saw fit, was, as already suggested, only incidental to the
main question determined by the court as to the extent to which the
state could control the teaching of the two races in the same
institution. The state court upheld the authority of the state,
under its general police power, to forbid the association of the
two races in the same institution of learning, although it adjudged
that there were limitations upon the exercise of that power, and
that, under those limitations, § 4 was invalid because
unreasonable and oppressive. If it had regarded the authority of
the state over its own corporations as being, in itself, and
without reference to any other view, sufficient to sustain the
statute so far as the defendant corporation is concerned, it need
only have said that much and omitted all consideration of the
general power of the state to forbid the teaching of the two races
together by anybody in the same institution at the same time. It
need not, in that view, have made any reference whatever to the
twenty-five-mile provision in the fourth section as being
"unreasonable and oppressive," whether applied to teaching by
individuals or by corporations, or held such provision to be void
on that special ground.
Some stress is laid upon the fact that, when Berea College was
incorporated, the state reserved the power to alter, amend, or
repeal its charter. If the state had, in terms, and in virtue of
the power reserved,
repealed outright the charter of the
college, the case might present a different question. But the
charter was not repealed. The corporation was left in existence.
The statute here in question does not purport to
amend the
charter of any particular corporation, but assumes to establish a
certain rule applicable alike to all individuals, associations, or
corporations that assume to teach the white and black races
Page 211 U. S. 67
together in the same institution. Besides, it should not be
assumed that the state intended, under the guise of impliedly
amending the charter of a private corporation, to destroy, or that
it could destroy, the substantial, essential purposes for which the
corporation was created, and yet leave the corporation in
existence. The authorities cited by this Court in its opinion
establish the proposition that, under the reserved power to amend
or alter a charter, no amendment or alteration can be made which
will "defeat or substantially impair the object of the grant."
Holyoke v.
Lyman, 15 Wall. 500;
Close v. Glenwood
Cemetery, 107 U. S. 466,
107 U. S.
476.
In my judgment, the Court should directly meet and decide the
broad question presented by the statute. It should adjudge whether
the statute, as a whole, is or is not unconstitutional in that it
makes it a crime against the state to maintain or operate a private
institution of learning where white and black pupils are received
at the same time for instruction. In the view which I have as to my
duty, I feel obliged to express my opinion as to the validity of
the act as a whole. I am of opinion that, in its essential parts,
the statute is an arbitrary invasion of the rights of liberty and
property guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment against hostile
state action, and is therefore void.
The capacity to impart instruction to others is given by the
Almighty for beneficent purposes, and its use may not be forbidden
or interfered with by government -- certainly not unless such
instruction is, in its nature, harmful to the public morals or
imperils the public safety. The right to impart instruction,
harmless in itself or beneficial to those who receive it, is a
substantial right of property -- especially where the services are
rendered for compensation. But even if such right be not strictly a
property right, it is beyond question part of one's liberty as
guaranteed against hostile state action by the Constitution of the
United States. This Court has more than once said that the liberty
guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment embraces "the right of the
citizen to be free in the enjoyment
Page 211 U. S. 68
of all his faculties," and "to be free to use them in all lawful
ways."
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U.
S. 578;
Adair v. United States, 208 U.
S. 161,
208 U. S. 173.
If pupils of whatever race -- certainly if they be citizens --
choose, with the consent of their parents or voluntarily, to sit
together in a private institution of learning while receiving
instruction which is not in its nature harmful or dangerous to the
public, no government, whether federal or state, can legally forbid
their coming together, or being together temporarily, for such an
innocent purpose. If the Commonwealth of Kentucky can make it a
crime to teach white and colored children together at the same time
in a private institution of learning, it is difficult to perceive
why it may not forbid the assembling of white and colored children
in the same Sabbath school for the purpose of being instructed in
the Word of God, although such teaching may be done under the
authority of the church to which the school is attached as well as
with the consent of the parents of the children. So, if the state
court be right, white and colored children may even be forbidden to
sit together in a house of worship or at a communion table in the
same Christian church. In the cases supposed, there would be the
same association of white and colored persons as would occur when
pupils of the two races sit together in a private institution of
learning for the purpose of receiving instruction in purely secular
matters. Will it be said that the cases supposed and the case here
in hand are different in that no government in this country can lay
unholy hands on the religious faith of the people? The answer to
this suggestion is that, in the eye of the law, the right to enjoy
one's religious belief, unmolested by any human power, is no more
sacred nor more fully or distinctly recognized than is the right to
impart and receive instruction not harmful to the public. The
denial of either right would be an infringement of the liberty
inherent in the freedom secured by the fundamental law. Again, if
the views of the highest court of Kentucky be sound, that
commonwealth may, without infringing the Constitution of the United
States, forbid the
Page 211 U. S. 69
association in the same private school of pupils of the
Anglo-Saxon and Latin races respectively, or pupils of the
Christian and Jewish faiths, respectively. Have we become so
inoculated with prejudice of race than an American government,
professedly based on the principles of freedom and charged with the
protection of all citizens alike, can make distinctions between
such citizens in the matter of their voluntary meeting for innocent
purposes simply because of their respective races? Further, if the
lower court be right, then a state may make it a crime for white
and colored persons to frequent the same marketplaces at the same
time, or appear in an assemblage of citizens convened to consider
questions of a public or political nature, in which all citizens,
without regard to race, are equally interested. Many other
illustrations might be given to show the mischievous, not to say
cruel, character of the statute in question, and how inconsistent
such legislation is with the great principle of the equality of
citizens before the law.
Of course what I have said has no reference to regulations
prescribed for public schools, established at the pleasure of the
state and maintained at the public expense. No such question is
here presented, and it need not be now discussed. My observations
have reference to the case before the court, and only to the
provision of the statute making it a crime for any person to impart
harmless instruction to white and colored pupils together at the
same time, in the same private institution of learning. That
provision is, in my opinion, made an essential element in the
policy of the statute, and, if regard be had to the object and
purpose of this legislation, it cannot be treated as separable, nor
intended to be separated from the provisions relating to
corporations. The whole statute should therefore be held void;
otherwise, it will be taken as the law of Kentucky, to be enforced
by its courts, that the teaching of white and black pupils at the
same time, even in a
private institution, is a crime
against that commonwealth, punishable by fine and imprisonment.
Page 211 U. S. 70
In my opinion, the judgment should be reversed upon the ground
that the statute is in violation of the Constitution of the United
States.
MR. JUSTICE DAY also dissents.