Congress passed §§ 1990 and 526, Rev.Stat., and §
269, Criminal Code, abolishing and prohibiting peonage under the
authority conferred by § 2 of the Thirteenth Amendment to
enforce § 1 of that amendment, thereby undertaking to strike
down all laws, regulations and usages in the states and territories
which attempted to maintain and enforce, directly or indirectly,
the voluntary or involuntary service or labor of any persons as
peons in the liquidation of any debt or obligation.
Peonage is a condition of compulsory service based upon the
indebtedness of the peon to the master. The basal fact is
indebtedness.
Clyatt v. United States, 197 U.
S. 207.
Where a person charged with crime has, after confession, been
sentenced to pay a fine and costs and then been released on the
payment of a fine by a surety with whom he has made an agreement to
work continuously for a specified period for the specified amount
so paid for the fine and costs, as provided by the laws of Alabama,
and he is liable to separate punishment if he fails to carry out
the contract, the relation established between that person and the
surety is that of peonage, and falls within the prohibition of the
Thirteenth Amendment and the laws enacted to enforce it.
Constant fear of punishment under the criminal law renders work
compulsory.
Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.
S. 219.
While this Court follows the decisions of the state court in
determining the constitutionality of state statutes under the state
constitution, and ordinarily follows the construction given to such
statutes by the state court, where such a decision really
determines the legal effect of a state statute in a case involving
the Constitution and laws of the United States, this Court
determines for itself whether that statute does or does not violate
the Constitution of the United States and the laws passed in
pursuance thereof.
Page 235 U. S. 134
The validity of a system of state law will be adjudged by its
operation and effect upon rights secured by the federal
Constitution and offenses punished by federal statute.
213 F. 345, 352 reversed.
The facts, which involve the construction of certain penal
statutes of Alabama and their constitutionality under the
Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, and also of the Peonage
Laws of the United States, are stated in the opinion.
Page 235 U. S. 138
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases were argued and considered together, and may be
disposed of in a single opinion. They come here under the Criminal
Appeals Act of March 2, 1907, 34 Stat. 1246, c. 2564, as involving
the construction of the statutes of the United States which have
for their object the prohibition and punishment of peonage. Case
No. 478,
United States v. Reynolds, was decided upon
demurrer and objections to a plea filed to the indictment. The
case
Page 235 U. S. 139
against Broughton, No. 479, was decided upon demurrer to the
indictment. In both cases, the district court held that no offense
was charged. 213 F. 345, 352. Both indictments for holding certain
persons in a state of peonage were found under § 1990 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States, as follows:
"The holding of any person to service or labor under the system
known as peonage is abolished and forever prohibited in the
Territory of New Mexico, or in any other territory or state of the
United States, and all acts, laws, resolutions, orders,
regulations, or usages of the Territory of New Mexico, or of any
other territory or state, which have heretofore established,
maintained, or enforced, or by virtue of which any attempt shall
hereafter be made to establish, maintain, or enforce, directly or
indirectly, the voluntary or involuntary service or labor of any
persons as peons, in liquidation of any debt or obligation, or
otherwise, are declared null and void"
and § 269 of the Criminal Code (§ 5526, Rev.Stat.),
which provides that
"Whoever holds, arrests, returns, or causes to be held,
arrested, or returned, or in any manner aids in the arrest or
return, of any person to a condition of peonage shall be fined not
more than five thousand dollars, or imprisoned not more than five
years, or both."
The facts to be gathered from the indictments and pleas, upon
which the court below decided the cases and determined that no
offense was charged against the statutes of the United States as
above set forth, are substantially these: in No. 478, one Ed
Rivers, having been convicted in a court of Alabama of the offense
of petit larceny, was fined $15, and costs, $43.75. The defendant
Reynolds appeared as surety for Rivers, and a judgment by
confession was entered up against him for the amount of the fine
and costs, which Reynolds afterwards paid to the state. On May 4,
1910, Rivers, the convict, entered into a written contract with
Reynolds to work for him as a
Page 235 U. S. 140
farmhand for the term of nine months and twenty-four days at the
rate of six dollars per month to pay the amount of fine and costs.
The indictment charges that he entered into the service of
Reynolds, and under threats of arrest and imprisonment if he ceased
to perform such work and labor, he worked until the sixth day of
June, when he refused to labor. Thereupon he was arrested upon a
warrant issued at the instance of Reynolds from the County Court of
Alabama, on the charge of violating the contract of service. He was
convicted and fined the sum of one cent for violating this
contract, and additional costs in the amount of $87.05, for which
he again confessed judgment with G. W. Broughton as surety, and
entered into a similar contract with Broughton to work for him as a
farm hand at the same rate, for a term of fourteen months and
fifteen days.
In No. 479, the case against Broughton, E. W. Fields, having
been convicted in an Alabama state court at the July, 1910, term,
of the offense of selling mortgaged property, was fined $50 and
costs in the additional sum of $69.70. Thereupon Broughton, as
surety for Fields, confessed judgment for the sum of fine and
costs, and afterwards paid the same to the state. On the eighth day
of July, 1910, a contract was entered into by which Fields agreed
to work for Broughton as a farm and logging hand for the term of
nineteen months and twenty-nine days at the rate of six dollars per
month to pay the fine and costs. He entered into the service of
Broughton, and, it was alleged, under threats of arrest and
imprisonment if he ceased to labor, he continued so to do until the
fourteenth day of September, 1910, when he refused to labor
further. Thereupon Broughton caused the arrest of Fields upon a
charge of violating his contract, and upon a warrant issued upon
this charge, Fields was again arrested.
The rulings in the court below upon the plea and demurrers were
that there was no violation of the federal
Page 235 U. S. 141
statutes, properly construed, and also held that the conduct of
the defendants was justified by the provisions of the Alabama Code
upon which they relied. These provisions are as follows:
"7632. Confession of Judgment by Defendant for Fine and Costs.
-- When a fine is assessed, the court may allow the defendant to
confess judgment, with good and sufficient sureties, for the fine
and costs."
"7633. Execution Issues as in Civil Cases. -- Execution may
issue for the fine and costs, or any portion thereof remaining
unpaid, as in civil cases."
"7634. On Default in Payment of Fine and Costs, Imprisonment or
Hard Labor Imposed. -- If the fine and costs are not paid, or a
judgment confessed according to the provisions of the preceding
section, the defendant must either be imprisoned in the county
jail, or, at the discretion of the court, sentenced to hard labor
for the county as follows: if the fine does not exceed $20, ten
days; if it exceeds $20 and does not exceed $50, twenty days; if it
exceeds $50 and does not exceed $100, thirty days; if it exceeds
$100 and does not exceed $150, fifty days; if it exceeds $150 and
does not exceed $200, seventy days; if it exceeds $200 and does not
exceed $300, ninety days, and for every additional $100, or
fractional part thereof, twenty-five days."
"7635. When Additional Hard Labor Imposed for Costs; Rules in
Reference to. -- If, on conviction, judgment is rendered against
the accused that he perform hard labor for the county, and if the
costs are not presently paid or judgment confessed therefor as
provided by law, then the court may impose additional hard labor
for the county for such period, not to exceed ten months, as may be
sufficient to pay the costs at the rate of seventy-five cents per
day, and the court must determine the time required
Page 235 U. S. 142
to work out such costs at that rate, and such convict must be
discharged from the sentence against him for costs on the payment
thereof, or any balance due thereon, by the hire of such convict or
otherwise, and the certificate of the judge or clerk of the court
in which the conviction was had, that the costs, or the residue
thereof, after deducting the amount realized from the hire of the
convict, have been paid, or that the hire or labor of the convict,
as the case may be, amounts to a sum sufficient to pay the costs,
shall be sufficient evidence to authorize such discharge."
"6846. Failure of Defendant to Perform Contract with Surety
Confessing Judgment for Fine and Costs. -- Any defendant, on whom a
fine is imposed on conviction for a misdemeanor, who in open court
signs a written contract, approved in writing by the judge of the
court in which the conviction is had whereby, in consideration of
another's becoming his surety on a confession of judgment for the
fine and costs, agrees to do any act, or perform any service for
such person, and who, after being released on such confession of
judgment, fails or refuses, without good and sufficient excuse, to
be determined by the jury, to do the act, or perform the service,
which in such contract he promised or agreed to do or perform,
must, on conviction, be fined not less than the amount of the
damages which the party contracting with him has suffered by such
failure or refusal, and not more than $500, and the jury shall
assess the amount of such damages; but no conviction shall be had
under this section unless it is shown on the trial that such
contract was filed for record in the office of the judge of probate
of the county in which the confession of judgment was had within
ten days after the day of the execution thereof."
"6848. Damages Paid to Injured Party out of Fine Imposed. --
From the fine imposed under the two preceding sections, when
collected, the damages sustained by
Page 235 U. S. 143
the party contracting with such defendant must be paid to such
person by the officer collecting the same."
The defendants having justified under this system of law, the
question for consideration is, were the defendants well charged
with violating the provisions of the federal statutes to which we
have referred notwithstanding they undertook to act under the
Alabama laws, particularly under the provisions of § 6846 of
the Alabama Code, authorizing sureties to appear and confess
judgment and enter into contracts such as those we have
described?
The Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States provides:
"Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as
a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States or any place
subject to their jurisdiction."
"Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by
appropriate legislation."
It was under the authority herein conferred to enforce the
provisions of this amendment by appropriate legislation that
Congress passed the sections of the Revised Statutes here under
consideration.
Clyatt v. United States, 197 U.
S. 207;
Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U.
S. 219.
By these enactments, Congress undertook to strike down all laws,
regulations, and usages in the states and territories which
attempted to maintain and enforce, directly or indirectly, the
voluntary or involuntary service or labor of any persons as peons
in the liquidation of any debt or obligation. To determine whether
the conduct of the defendants charged in the indictments amounted
to holding the persons named in a state of peonage, it is essential
to understand what Congress meant in the use of that term
prohibiting and punishing those guilty of maintaining it. Extended
discussion of this subject is rendered unnecessary in view of the
full consideration thereof in the prior adjudications of this
Page 235 U. S. 144
Court.
Clyatt v. United States and
Bailey v.
Alabama, supra.
Peonage is a
"condition of compulsory service, based upon the indebtedness of
the peon to the master. The basal fact is indebtedness. . . . One
fact existed universally -- all were indebted to their masters. . .
. Upon this is based a condition of compulsory service. Peonage is
sometimes classified as voluntary or involuntary, but this implies
simply a difference in the mode of origin, but none in the
character of the servitude. The one exists where the debtor
voluntarily contracts to enter the service of his creditor. The
other is forced upon the debtor by some provision of law. But
peonage, however created, is compulsory service, involuntary
servitude. The peon can release himself therefrom, it is true, by
the payment of the debt, but otherwise the service is enforced. A
clear distinction exists between peonage and the voluntary
performance of labor or rendering of services in payment of a debt.
In the latter case, the debtor, though contracting to pay his
indebtedness by labor or service, and subject like any other
contractor to an action for damages for breach of that contract,
can elect at any time to break it, and no law or force compels
performance or a continuance of the service."
Clyatt v. United States, 197 U.
S. 207,
197 U. S.
215.
Applying this definition to the facts here shown, we must
determine whether the convict was in reality working for a debt
which he owed the surety, and whether the labor was performed under
such coercion as to become a compulsory service for the discharge
of a debt. If so, it amounts to peonage within the prohibition of
the federal statutes. The actual situation is this: the convict,
instead of being committed to work and labor as the statute
provides for the state, when his fines and costs are unpaid, comes
into court with a surety and confesses judgment in the amount of
fine and costs, and agrees
Page 235 U. S. 145
with the surety, in consideration of the payment of that fine
and costs, to perform service for the surety after he is released
because of the confession of judgment. The form of the contract,
said to be the usual one entered into in such cases, in given in
the record, and reads:
"
LABOR CONTRACT"
"The State of Alabama, Monroe county:"
"Whereas at the May term, 1910, of the county court, held in and
for said county, I, Ed. Rivers, was convicted in said court of the
offense of petit larceny and fined the sum of $15, and judgment has
been rendered against me for the amount of said fine, and also in
the further and additional sum of forty-three and 75/100 dollars,
cost in said case, and whereas J. A. Reynolds, together with A.C.
Hixon, have confessed judgment with me in said court for said fine
and costs. Now, in consideration of the premises, I, the said Ed.
Rivers, agree to work and labor for him, the said J. A. Reynolds,
on his plantation in Monroe County, Alabama, and under his
direction as a farm hand to pay fine and costs for the term nine
months and twenty-four days at the rate of $6.00 per month,
together with my board, lodging, and clothing during the said time
of hire, said time of hire commencing on the 4 day of May, 1910,
and ending on the 28 day of February, 1911, provided said work is
not dangerous in its character."
"Witness our hands this 4 day of May, 1910."
"ED (his x mark) RIVERS"
"J. A. REYNOLDS"
"Witness:"
"JOHN M. COXWELL"
It also stands admitted in this record that the sureties in fact
paid the judgment confessed. Looking, then, to the substance of
things, and through the mere form which they have taken, we are to
decide the question whether the labor of the convict, thus
contracted for, amounted to
Page 235 U. S. 146
involuntary service for the liquidation of a debt to the surety,
which character of service it was the intention of the acts of
Congress to prevent and punish. When thus at labor, the convict is
working under a contract which he has made with his surety. He is
to work until the amount which the surety has paid for him -- the
sum of the fine and costs -- is paid. The surety has paid the
state, and the service is rendered to reimburse him. This is the
real substance of the transaction. The terms of that contract are
agreed upon by the contracting parties, as the result of their own
negotiations. The statute of the state does not prescribe them. It
leaves the making of contract to the parties concerned, and this
fact is not changed because of the requirement that the judge shall
approve of the contract. When the convict goes to work under this
agreement, he is under the direction and control of the surety, and
is in fact working for him. If he keeps his agreement with the
surety, he is discharged from its obligations without any further
action by the state. This labor is performed under the constant
coercion and threat of another possible arrest and prosecution in
case he violates the labor contract which he has made with the
surety, and this form of coercion is as potent as it would have
been had the law provided for the seizure and compulsory service of
the convict. Compulsion of such service by the constant fear of
imprisonment under the criminal laws renders the work compulsory,
as much so as authority to arrest and hold his person would be if
the law authorized that to be done.
Bailey v. Alabama,
219 U. S. 244;
Ex Parte Hollman, 79 S.C. 9.
Under this statute, the surety may cause the arrest of the
convict for violation of his labor contract. He may be sentenced
and punished for this new offense, and undertake to liquidate the
penalty by a new contract of a similar nature, and, if again
broken, may be again prosecuted, and the convict is thus kept
chained to an ever-turning
Page 235 U. S. 147
wheel of servitude to discharge the obligation which he has
incurred to his surety, who has entered into an undertaking with
the state, or paid money in his behalf. The rearrest of which we
have spoken is not because of his failure to pay his fine and costs
originally assessed against him by the state. He is arrested at the
instance of the surety, and because the law punishes the violation
of the contract which the convict has made with him.
Nor is the labor for the surety by any means tantamount to that
which the state imposes if no such contract has been entered into,
as these cases afford adequate illustration. In the case against
Reynolds, Rivers was sentenced to pay $15 fine and $43.75 costs.
Under the Alabama Code, he might have been sentenced to hard labor
for the county for ten days for the nonpayment of the fine, and
assuming that he could be sentenced for nonpayment of costs under
§ 7635 of the Alabama Code, he could have worked it out at the
rate of 75 cents per day, an additional fifty-eight days might have
been added, making sixty-eight days as his maximum sentence at hard
labor. Under the contract now before us, he was required to labor
for nine months and twenty-four days, thus being required to
perform a much more onerous service than if he had been sentenced
under the statute, and committed to hard labor. Failing to perform
the service, he may be again rearrested, as he was in fact in this
case, and another judgment confessed to pay a fine of one cent and
$87.05 costs, for which the convict was bound to work for another
surety for the term of fourteen months and seventeen days. In the
case against Broughton, Fields was fined $50 and $69.70 costs.
Under the law, he might have been condemned to hard labor for less
than four months. By the contract described, he was required to
work for Broughton for a period of nineteen months and twenty-nine
days.
We are cited to a series of Alabama cases in which it is
Page 235 U. S. 148
held that the confessed judgment and the contract do not satisfy
the law nor pay the penalty imposed, but the hirer becomes the
transferee of the right of the state to compel the payment of the
fine and costs, and by this exaction of involuntary servitude, the
convict has only changed masters, and that, under the Alabama
Constitution, the law is constitutional, and that the convict is
not being imprisoned for indebtedness. It is to be observed that
the same learned court, in one of its later deliverances (
State
v. Etowah Lumber Co., 153 Ala. 77, 78), has said, in speaking
of this contract,
"the state was in no sense a party to the contract by which the
company acquired the custody of Falkner [the convict in that case].
It is true it [the state] permitted the making of the contract, and
provides a punishment for its breach."
Here is a direct utterance of that court that the state was not
a party to the surety's agreement, but its connection with it was
to permit it, and provide the punishment for its breach.
True it is that this Court follows the decisions of the state
courts in determining the constitutionality of its statutes under
the constitutions of the states, and in considering the
constitutionality of statutes ordinarily accepts their meaning as
construed by the state courts. The Alabama decisions to which we
have been referred are, more strictly speaking, determinations of
the legal effect of these statutes than interpretation of any
doubtful meaning which may be found within their terms. Moreover,
we are here dealing with a case which involves the Constitution and
statutes of the United States, as to which this Court, by force of
the Constitution and the several judiciary acts which have been
enacted by Congress, is the ultimate arbiter. In such cases, this
Court must determine for itself whether a given enactment violates
the Constitution of the United States or the statutes passed in
pursuance thereof. The validity of this system of state law must be
judged by its operation and effect upon rights
Page 235 U. S. 149
secured by the Constitution of the United States and offenses
punished by the federal statutes. If such state statutes, upon
their face or in the manner of their administration, have the
effect to deny rights secured by the federal Constitution, or to
nullify statutes passed in pursuance thereto, they must fail.
Bailey v. Alabama, supra; Henderson v. Mayor, 92 U.
S. 268.
Nor do we think this case is controlled by
Freeman v. United
States, 217 U. S. 539,
cited by counsel for defendants in error. In that case, it was held
that a money penalty imposed for embezzlement which went to the
creditor, and not into the treasury, under the Penal Code of the
Philippine Islands did not make imprisonment for the nonpayment of
such penalty equivalent to imprisonment for debt. In that case,
although the penalty affixed went to the creditor, it was part of
the sentence imposed by the law as a punishment for the crime. In
the present case, the contract under which the convict serves for
the surety is made between the parties concerned, who determine and
fix its terms, and is not fixed by the state as the punishment for
the commission of an offense.
There can be no doubt that the state has authority to impose
involuntary servitude as a punishment for crime. This fact is
recognized in the Thirteenth Amendment, and such punishment
expressly excepted from its terms. Of course, the state may impose
fines and penalties which must be worked out for the benefit of the
state, and in such manner as the state may legitimately prescribe.
See Clyatt v. United States, supra, and
Bailey v.
Alabama, supra. But here, the state has taken the obligation
of another for the fine and costs, imposed upon one convicted for
the violation of the laws of the state. It has accepted the
obligation of the surety, and, in the present case, it is recited
in the record that the money has been if fact paid by the surety.
The surety and convict have made a new contract for service, in
regard to the terms of which the
Page 235 U. S. 150
state has not been consulted. The convict must work it out to
satisfy the surety for whom he has contracted to work. This
contract must be kept, under pain of rearrest, and another similar
proceeding for its violation, and perhaps another and another.
Thus, under pain of recurring prosecutions, the convict may be kept
at labor to satisfy the demands of his employer.
In our opinion, this system is in violation of rights intended
to be secured by the Thirteenth Amendment, as well as in violation
of the statutes to which we have referred, which the Congress has
enacted for the purpose of making that Amendment effective.
It follows that the judgment of the district court must be
reversed.
Judgment accordingly.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, concurring:
There seems to me nothing in the Thirteenth Amendment or the
Revised Statutes that prevents a state from making a breach of
contract, as well a reasonable contract for labor as for other
matters, a crime and punishing it as such. But impulsive people
with little intelligence or foresight may be expected to lay hold
of anything that affords a relief from present pain, even though it
will cause greater trouble by and by. The successive contracts,
each for a longer term than the last, are the inevitable, and must
be taken to have been the contemplated, outcome of the Alabama
laws. On this ground, I am inclined to agree that the statutes in
question disclosed the attempt to maintain service that the Revised
Statutes forbid.