1. The system of compulsory arbitration of industrial disputes
set up by the Court of Industrial Relations Act of Kansas, and held
unconstitutional in
Wolff Packing Co. v. Court of Industrial
Relations, 262 U. S. 522, as
applied to packing plants, is, for the same reasons, invalid as
applied to coal mines of that state. P.
264 U. S.
289.
Page 264 U. S. 287
2.
Quaere whether, as a matter of statutory
construction, § 19 of this act, which declare that one who use
his position as a officer of a union or as an employer to influence
violations of the act or of valid orders of the Court of Industrial
Relations shall be deemed guilty of a felony, is separable from the
system of compulsory arbitration held invalid? P.
264 U. S.
290.
3. A declaration in a statute that it shall be conclusively
presumed the legislature would have passed the statute without any
part of it found invalid by the courts provides a rule which may
aid in determining the legislative intent, but is not an inexorable
command.
Id.
4. In reviewing a judgment of a state court, this Court may not
only correct errors, but may make such disposition of the case as
justice may require in view of change in law and fact that have
supervened since the judgment was entered. P.
264 U. S.
289.
5. Where a conviction under § 19 of the above-mentioned
statute was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Kansas before this
Court had, in another case, declared a closely related part of the
same act unconstitutional,
held that the question whether
§ 19 is separable should be remitted for primary determination
by that court. P.
264 U. S.
290.
112 Kans. 235 reversed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Kansas which
affirmed a judgment entered against the plaintiff in error in a
criminal prosecution, under § 19 of the Court of Industrial
Relations Act of Kansas.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Court of Industrial Relations Act was approved January 23,
1920. Laws of Kansas, 1920, Special Session,
Page 264 U. S. 288
c. 29. The purpose of the statute is to insure continuity of
operation in coal mining and other businesses declared to be
affected with a public interest. [
Footnote 1] The means provided for accomplishing this is a
system of compulsory arbitration of industrial disputes. The
instrument is the so-called industrial court. Upon it is conferred
power to investigate all matters involved in such controversies; to
make findings thereon; to issue such orders as it may deem needful,
fixing the wages to be paid, the hours of work, the rules for work,
and the working and living conditions. The provisions in aid of the
enforcement of this system are both comprehensive and detailed. The
employer is prohibited, among other things, from limiting or
ceasing operations with a view to defeating the purpose of the
statute. Likewise, every association of persons (
e.g.,
trade unions) is prohibited from acting to that end. In effect,
strikes and lockouts, the boycott and picketing, are made unlawful.
Any person violating any provision of the statute, or any order of
the so-called court, is declared guilty of a misdemeanor. Some of
the provisions of the act were considered in
Howat v.
Kansas, 258 U. S. 181, and
in
Charles Wolff Packing Co. v. Court of Industrial
Relations, 262 U. S. 522.
Section 19 provides that any officer of a union of workmen
engaged in an industry within the provisions of the act who shall
willfully use the power incident to his official position to
influence any other person to violate any provision of the statute
or any valid order of the Court of
Page 264 U. S. 289
Industrial Relations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony
punishable by a fine not to exceed $5,000, or by imprisonment at
hard labor, not to exceed two years, or by both such fine and
imprisonment. Under this section, an information was filed against
Dorchy, a union official, for calling a strike in a coal mine. He
was found guilty. The judgment entered was affirmed by the highest
court of the state, 112 Kan. 235, and a rehearing was denied. The
case is here on writ of error under § 237 of the Judicial Code
as amended. It is contended that § 19 is void because it
prohibits strikes, and that to do so is a denial of the liberty
guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
After the judgment under review was entered in the Supreme Court
of Kansas, this Court declared, in the
Wolff Packing Co. case,
supra, p.
262 U. S. 544,
that the system of compulsory arbitration as applied to packing
plants violates the federal Constitution. For the reasons there set
forth, it is unconstitutional also as applied to the coal mines of
that state. The question suggests itself whether § 19 has not
therefore necessarily fallen as a part of the system of compulsory
arbitration. If so, there is no occasion to consider the specific
objection to the provisions of that section. This Court has power
not only to correct errors in the judgment entered below, but, in
the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction, to make such
disposition of the case as justice may now require.
Gulf,
Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Dennis, 224 U.
S. 503,
224 U. S. 506.
In determining what justice requires, the Court must consider
changes in law and in fact which have supervened since the judgment
was entered below.
Watts, Watts & Co. v. Unione Austriaca
di Navigazione, 248 U. S. 9,
248 U. S. 21. If
§ 19 falls as the result of the decision in the
Wolff
Packing Co. case, the effect is the same as if the section had
been repealed without any reservation.
A statute bad in part is not necessarily void in its entirety.
Provisions within the legislative power may stand
Page 264 U. S. 290
if separable from the bad.
Berea College v. Kentucky,
211 U. S. 45,
211 U. S. 54-56;
Carey v. South Dakota, 250 U. S. 118,
250 U. S. 121.
But a provision inherently unobjectionable cannot be deemed
separable unless it appears both that, standing alone, legal effect
can be given to it and that the legislature intended the provision
to stand in case others included in the act and held bad should
fall. Section 19 does not in terms prohibit the calling of strikes
or influencing workingmen to strike. It merely declares that one
who uses his official position or his position as an employer
to
"influence, impel, or compel any other person to violate any of
the provisions of this act, or any valid order of said Court of
Industrial Relations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony."
Most of the provisions of the original act are very intimately
connected with the system of compulsory arbitration. Whether §
19 is so interwoven with the system held invalid that the section
cannot stand alone is a question of interpretation and of
legislative intent.
Compare Butts v. Merchants Transportation
Co., 230 U. S. 126.
Section 28 of the act, [
Footnote
2] (which resembles that discussed in
Hill v. Wallace,
259 U. S. 44,
259 U. S. 70-71)
provides a rule of construction which may sometimes aid in
determining that intent. But it is an aid merely; not an inexorable
command.
The task of determining the intention of the state legislature
in this respect, like the usual function of interpreting a state
statute, rests primarily upon the state court. Its decision as to
the severability of a provision is conclusive upon this Court.
Gatewood v. North Carolina, 203 U.
S. 531,
203 U. S. 543;
Guinn v. United States, 238 U. S. 347,
238 U. S.
366;
Page 264 U. S. 291
Schneider Granite Co. v. Gast Realty Co., 245 U.
S. 288,
245 U. S. 290.
In cases coming from the lower federal courts, such questions of
severability, if there is no controlling state decision, must be
determined by this Court.
Compare Myers v. Anderson,
238 U. S. 368,
238 U. S. 381;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Garrett, 231 U.
S. 298,
231 U. S. 311.
In cases coming from the state courts, this Court, in the absence
of a controlling state decision, may, in passing upon the claim
under the federal law, decide also the question of severability.
But it is not obliged to do so. The situation may be such as to
make it appropriate to leave the determination of the question to
the state court. We think that course should be followed in this
case.
The Supreme Court of Kansas has already dealt, to some extent,
with the effect of our decision upon other sections of the act.
When a motion was made there in the
Wolff Packing Co. case
to spread the mandate of this Court upon its record, the state
court held that the order of the Court of Industrial Relations
under review remains in force insofar as it regulates hours of
labor and weekly rest periods. 114 Kan. 304. The judgment then
entered was modified November 10, 1923, upon a rehearing. [
Footnote 3] The relation of § 19
to the provisions held invalid is a different matter. So far as
appears, the state court has not passed upon the question whether
§ 19, being an intimate part of the system of compulsory
arbitration held to be invalid, falls with it. In order that the
state court may pass upon this question, its judgment in this case,
which was rendered before our decision in the
Wolff Packing
Co. case, should be vacated.
Compare Gulf, Colorado &
Santa Fe Ry. v. Dennis, supra, p.
224 U. S. 509.
To this end, the judgment is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 2 of the statute, as enacted, conferred upon the Court
of Industrial Relations the functions theretofore performed by the
Public Utilities Commission. These functions were restored to a
Public Utilities Commission by c. 260, Laws of 1921. There was
conferred upon the Court of Industrial Relations by c. 262 of the
Laws of 1921 the functions theretofore performed by the
Commissioner of Labor and Industry, and by c. 263 of the Laws of
1921 the functions theretofore performed by the Industrial Welfare
Commission. These latter powers were also enlarged.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 28:
"If any section or provision of this act shall be found invalid
by any court, it shall be conclusively presumed that this act would
have been passed by the legislature without such invalid section or
provision, and the act as a whole shall not be declared invalid by
reason of the fact that one or more sections or provisions may be
found to be invalid by any court."
[
Footnote 3]
The action of the state court has been brought here for review
by proceedings entered February 16, 1924, and not yet disposed
of.