As the police power of the state extends to regulating coal
mining, it cannot be limited by moments of time and differences of
situation.
Where the highest court of the state has sustained a police
statute under the state constitution, this Court is only concerned
with questions of constitutionality under the federal
Constitution.
The Fifth Amendment is not applicable to the states.
The decision of the highest court of the state that the method
of calling a police statute into operation is proper does not
involve a federal question reviewable by this Court.
A police statute requiring owners of the mine to furnish certain
conveniences for coal miners on request of a specified number of
employees is not unconstitutional as denying equal protection of
the law because it may be applied to one mine where some of the
employees demand it, and not to another where such demand is not
made by the specified number.
McLean v. Arkansas,
211 U. S. 539.
Page 237 U. S. 392
The statute of Indiana requiring owners of coal mines to erect
and maintain wash-houses for their employees at the request of
twenty or more employees is not unconstitutional under the
Fourteenth Amendment either as depriving the mine owners of their
property without due process of law or as denying them the equal
protection of the law.
100 N.E. 563 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality under the due
process and equal protection provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment
of the coal mine wash-house law of Indiana, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 237 U. S. 393
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Error to review a judgment of conviction for the violation of a
statute of Indiana entitled
"An Act Requiring the Owners and Operators of Coal Mines and
Other Employers of Labor to Erect and Maintain Washhouses at
Certain Places where Laborers Are Employed, for the Protection of
the Health of the Employees, and Providing a Penalty for Its
Violation."
Section one reads as follows:
"
Coal Mining -- Washhouses for Laborers."
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State
of Indiana, That for the protection of the health of the employees
hereinafter mentioned, it shall be the duty of the owner, operator,
lessee, superintendent of, or other person in charge of every coal
mine or colliery, or other place where laborers employed are
surrounded by or affected by similar conditions as employees in
coal mines, at the request in writing of twenty (20) or more
employees of such mine or place, or in event there are less than
twenty (20) men employed, then upon the written request of
one-third (1/3) of the number of employees employed, to provide a
suitable wash room or washhouse for the use of persons employed, so
that they may change their clothing before beginning work, and wash
themselves, and change their clothing after working. That said
building or room shall be a separate building or room from the
engine or boiler room, and shall be maintained in good order, be
properly lighted and heated, and be supplied with clean cold and
warm water, and shall be provided with all necessary facilities for
persons to wash, and also provided with suitable lockers for the
safekeeping of clothing. Provided, however, that the owner,
operator, lessee, superintendent
Page 237 U. S. 394
of or other person in charge of such mine or place as aforesaid,
shall not be required to furnish soap or towels."
It is provided in § 2 that a violation of the act shall be
a misdemeanor and punished by a fine, to which may be added
imprisonment.
The prosecution was started by an affidavit charging Booth, he
being the superintendent of a mine belonging to the Indiana Coal
Company in one of the counties of the state, with a violation of
the act for failure to provide a washhouse or wash room as required
by the statute after request in writing from twenty of the
employees of the mine.
A motion to quash the affidavit and dismiss the charge was made
on the grounds, stated with elaborate specifications, that the
affidavit did not state an offense against the State of Indiana or
the United States, and that the statute violated both the
constitution of the state and the Constitution of the United
States.
The motion having been overruled, upon trial, Booth was found
guilty and fined one dollar and costs. He made a motion in arrest
of judgment, repeating without details the grounds that he had
charged in his motion to dismiss. The conviction was affirmed by
the supreme court of the state.
The record contains seventeen assignments of error. Plaintiff in
error, however, waives five of them, and is content to present his
contentions in the other twelve. These contentions are, stated in
broad generality, that the statute under review is in violation of
the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the
United States and certain articles of the Constitution of the State
of Indiana.
We are concerned only with the contention based on the
Fourteenth Amendment, as the Fifth Amendment is not applicable to
the states, and the conformity of the
Page 237 U. S. 395
statute to the Constitution of the State of Indiana has been
adjudged by the supreme court of the state.
The specifications under the Fourteenth Amendment are: (1) that
the statute deprives plaintiff in error of his property without due
process of law, and (2) denies him the equal protection of the
law.
The supreme court rejected both contentions, deciding that the
statute was a legal exercise of the police power of the state, and
the specific objection that the statute was invalid because it only
applies to coal mines, and not to other classes of business, the
court said was disposed of by
Barbier v. Connolly,
113 U. S. 27, and
Soon Hing v. Crowley, 113 U. S. 703,
113 U. S. 709.
The court quoted from the latter case as follows:
"The specific regulation of one kind of business, which may be
necessary for the protection of the public, can never by the just
ground of complaint because like restrictions are not imposed upon
other business of a different kind."
Plaintiff in error, to sustain his contentions and to combat the
conclusions of the supreme court, enters into a wide consideration
of the police power. It has been so often discussed that we may
assume that both its extent and limitations are known. Their
application in the present case can best be determined by
considering the objections to it.
The first objection in the case at bar seems to be that the
statute
"applies solely and specifically to a particular class, engaged
in a particular business, and is not in the interest of the public
generally, as distinct from a particular class."
And it is further said that
"it is a matter of common knowledge, of which courts take
judicial notice, that the 'class' to which the act applies
constitutes a very small percentage of population, and this being
true, the act could not possibly be in the interest of the public
health of the commonwealth."
The objection is answered by the cases already cited, by
Page 237 U. S. 396
Holden v. Hardy, 169 U. S. 366, and
McLean v. Arkansas, 211 U. S. 539, and
further comment is unnecessary.
But a distinction is sought to be made between what a
legislature may require for the safety and protection of a miner
while actually in service below ground and that which may be
required when he has ceased or has not commenced his labors. Cases
are cited which, upon that distinction, have decided that, when a
miner has ceased his work and has reached the surface of the earth,
his situation is not different from that of many other workmen, and
that therefore his rights are not greater than theirs, and will not
justify a separate classification.
We are unable to concur in this reasoning, or to limit the power
of the legislature by the distinctions expressed. Having the power,
in the interest of the public health, to regulate the conditions
upon which coal mining may be conducted, it cannot be limited by
moments of time and differences of situation. The legislative
judgment may be determined by all of the conditions and their
influence. The conditions to which a miner passes or returns from
are very different from those which an employee in work above
ground passes to or returns from, and the conditions of actual
service in the cases are very different, and it cannot be
judicially said that a judgment which makes such differences a
basis of classification is arbitrarily exercised, certainly not in
view of the wide discretion this Court has recognized, and
necessarily has recognized, in legislation to classify its
objects.
It is further said that the act
"is inoperative, in itself, for the reason that it can only be
put into operation by the will and election of a specific number of
the 'class' to which it applies, and consequently it fastens a
burden upon the owners and operators of coal mines, which is 'a
manifest injustice by positive law.'"
The purpose of the comment, other than to give accent to the
contention that the act has special operation, is part of the view
elsewhere
Page 237 U. S. 397
urged that the provision is a delegation of legislative power.
But with this objection we are not concerned. The supreme court of
the state decided that the law could be called into operation by
petition, and in the decision no federal question is involved.
It is, however, further objected that the law discriminates
because it may be applied to one mine and not to another, all other
conditions being the same but the desire of the miners -- indeed,
discriminates upon a distinction more arbitrary than that, upon the
desire of twenty in one mine as against a lesser number, nineteen,
it may be, in another. The objection is a familiar one, and has an
instance and answer in
McLean v. Arkansas, supra. It is
the usual ground of attack upon a distinction based on degree, and
seems to have a special force when the distinction depends upon a
difference in numbers.
But there are many practical analogies. The jurisdiction of a
court is often made to depend upon amounts apparently arbitrarily
fixed. For instance, the jurisdiction of the district court of the
United States (formerly the circuit court) is limited to civil
suits in law and equity in certain instances in which the amount in
controversy is $3,000. It could be objected, as it is here
objected, that the amount is arbitrary, and that there cannot be
any difference in principle between suits for $3,000 and suits for
$2,999 -- a distinction dependent upon one dollar. Indeed, in more
acute illustration, the distinction may be made of one cent only.
And so might there be objection to any amount which might be
selected, as it might be also to any number of petitioning miners
which the Legislature of Indiana might have selected. Indeed, would
not an objection have the same legal strength if the law had been
made to depend upon anything less than unanimity of desire? To
require that, it might well have been thought by the legislature,
would render the legislation nugatory, and that a lesser number
would call it into exercise and
Page 237 U. S. 398
attain its object. The conception, no doubt, was that a lesser
number -- indeed, the number selected -- would be fairly
representative of the desire and necessity of the miners, and that
use would breed a habit, example induce imitation, and a healthful
practice starting with a limited number might become that of all.
And such consummation justified the effort, the manner adopted
attaining the end sought as well as, if not better than, a direct
and peremptory requirement of the miners and mine owners. The
choice of manner was, under the circumstances, for the legislature,
and its choice was legal if it had the power to enact the law at
all. Plaintiff in error disputes such power, and thereby presents
in its most general form his contention against the validity of the
statute.
The contention seems to be independent of the objections that we
have considered, and yet, in counsel's discussion, those objections
and others are so mingled that it is impossible to discern which
they consider especially vitiate the law and take it out of the
power of government to enact.
The charge of its special application to coal mines and its
other features of discrimination we have passed upon. The charge
that it has no relation to health we are not disposed to dwell
upon. Counsel seem to think if the washing places were required to
be put underground in connection with or in proximity to the
working places, the law would be relieved from some criticism.
There remains to be considered only the contention that the law
"is, within itself, a dead letter." And it is said that "it would
forever lie dormant if not called into exercise and activity by the
request of private persons." Or, as plaintiff in error otherwise
expresses what he thinks to be the evil of the law,
"it is not enforceable by any power which the state government
possesses, under its Constitution, or its laws enacted thereunder,
but it is enforceable only upon the demand, the whim, or the
election
Page 237 U. S. 399
of a limited number of employees in the coal mining
business."
And it is declared that "this is the exercise of an arbitrary
power, for an arbitrary private right, and against a private
business."
We have quoted counsel's language in order to give them the
strength of their own expressions of what they consider the vice of
the law, but manifestly it is but a generalization from the
particular objections which we have considered, and those
objections we have sufficiently discussed.
Judgment affirmed.