1. A criminal statute which either forbids or requires the doing
of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must
guess at its meaning and differ as to its application lacks the
first essential of due process of law. P.
269 U. S.
391.
2. Oklahoma Comp.Stats. 1921, §§ 7255, 7257, imposing
severe, cumulative punishments upon contractors with the State who
pay their workmen less than the "current rate of per diem wages in
the locality where the work is performed"
held void for
uncertainty. P.
269 U. S.
393.
Appeal from a decree of the District Court awarding an
interlocutory injunction, upon the bill and a motion to dismiss it
(demurrer), in a suit to restrain state and county officials of
Oklahoma from enforcing a statute purporting,
inter alia,
to prescribe a minimum for the wages of workmen employed by
contractors in the execution of contracts with the State, and
imposing fine or imprisonment for each day's violation.
Page 269 U. S. 388
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to enjoin certain state and county officers of
Oklahoma from enforcing the provisions of §§ 7255 and
7257, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, challenged as
unconstitutional. Section 7255 creates an eight-hour day for all
persons employed by or on behalf of the state, etc., and
provides:
"[t]hat not less than the current rate of per diem wages in the
locality where the work is performed shall be paid to laborers,
workmen, mechanics, prison guards, janitors in public institutions,
or other persons so employed by or on behalf of the state, . . .
and laborers, workmen, mechanics, or other persons employed by
contractors or subcontractors in the execution of any contract or
contracts with the state, . . . shall be deemed to be employed by
or on behalf of the state. . . ."
For any violation of the section, a penalty is imposed by §
7257 of a fine of not less than $50 nor more than $500, or
imprisonment for not less than three nor more than six months. Each
day that the violation continues is declared to be a separate
offense.
Page 269 U. S. 389
The material averments of the bill, shortly stated, are to the
following effect: the construction company, under contracts with
the state, is engaged in constructing certain bridges within the
state. In such work, it employs a number of laborers, workmen, and
mechanics, with each of whom it has agreed as to the amount of
wages to be paid upon the basis of an eight-hour day, and the
amount so agreed upon is reasonable and commensurate with the
services rendered and agreeable to the employee in each case.
The Commissioner of Labor complained that the rate of wages paid
by the company to laborers was only $3.20 per day, whereas, he
asserted, the current rate in the locality where the work was being
done was $3.60, and gave notice that, unless advised of an
intention immediately to comply with the law, action would be taken
to enforce compliance. From the correspondence set forth in the
bill, it appears that the commissioner based his complaint upon an
investigation made by his representative concerning wages "paid to
laborers in the vicinity of Cleveland," Okl., near which town one
of the bridges was being constructed. This investigation disclosed
the following list of employers with the daily rate of wages paid
by each: City, $3.60 and $4; Johnson Refining Co., $3.60 and $4.05;
Prairie Oil & Gas, $4; Gypsy Oil Co., $4; Gulf Pipe Line Co.,
$4; Brickyard, $3 and $4; I. Hansen, $3.60; General Construction
Company, $3.20; Moore & Pitts Ice Company, $100 per month;
cotton gins, $3.50 and $4; Mr. Pitts, $4; Prairie Pipe Line
Company, $4; C. B. McCormack, $3; Harry McCoy, $3. The scale of
wages paid by the construction company to its laborers was stated
to be as follows: six men at $3.20 per day, 7 men at $3.60, 4 men
at $4.00, 2 men at $4.40, 4 men at $4.80, 1 man at $5.20, and 1 man
at $6.50.
In determining the rate of wages to be paid by the company, the
commissioner claimed to be acting under
Page 269 U. S. 390
authority of a statute of Oklahoma, which imposes upon him the
duty of carrying into effect all laws in relation to labor. In the
territory surrounding the bridges being constructed by plaintiff,
there is a variety of work performed by laborers, etc., the value
of whose services depends upon the class and kind of labor
performed and the efficiency of the workmen. Neither the wages paid
nor the work performed are uniform. Wages have varied since
plaintiff entered into its contracts for constructing the bridges
and employing its men, and it is impossible to determine under the
circumstances whether the sums paid by the plaintiff or the amount
designated by the commissioner or either of them constitute the
current per diem wage in the locality. Further averments are to the
effect that the commissioner has threatened the company, and its
officers, agents, and representatives, with criminal prosecutions
under the foregoing statutory provisions, and, unless restrained,
the county attorneys for various counties named will institute such
prosecutions; and that, under section 7257, providing that each
day's failure to pay current wages shall constitute a separate
offense, maximum penalties may be inflicted aggregating many
thousands of dollars in fines and many years of imprisonment.
The constitutional grounds of attack, among others, are that the
statutory provisions, if enforced, will deprive plaintiff, its
officers, agents and representatives, of their liberty and property
without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the federal Constitution; that they contain no
ascertainable standard of guilt; that it cannot be determined with
any degree of certainty what sum constitutes a current wage in any
locality; and that the term "locality" itself is fatally vague and
uncertain. The bill is a long one, and, without further review, it
is enough to say that, if the constitutional attack upon the
statute be sustained, the averments justify the equitable relief
prayed.
Page 269 U. S. 391
Upon the bill and a motion to dismiss it, in the nature of a
demurrer attacking its sufficiency, an application for an
interlocutory injunction was heard by a court of three judges,
under § 266, Jud.Code, and granted; the allegations of the
bill being taken as true.
General Const. Co. v. Connally,
3 F.2d 666.
That the terms of a penal statute creating a new offense must be
sufficiently explicit to inform those who are subject to it what
conduct on their part will render them liable to its penalties is a
well recognized requirement, consonant alike with ordinary notions
of fair play and the settled rules of law, and a statute which
either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague
that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its
meaning and differ as to its application violates the first
essential of due process of law.
International Harvester Co. v.
Kentucky, 234 U. S. 216,
234 U. S. 221;
Collins v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. 634,
234 U. S.
638.
The question whether given legislative enactments have been thus
wanting in certainty has frequently been before this court. In some
of the cases, the statutes involved were upheld; in others,
declared invalid. The precise point of differentiation in some
instances is not easy of statement, but it will be enough for
present purposes to say generally that the decisions of the court
upholding statutes as sufficiently certain rested upon the
conclusion that they employed words or phrases having a technical
or other special meaning, well enough known to enable those within
their reach to correctly apply them,
Hygrade Provision Co. v.
Sherman, 266 U. S. 497,
266 U. S. 502;
Omaechevarria v. Idaho, 246 U. S. 343,
246 U. S. 348,
or a well settled common law meaning, notwithstanding an element of
degree in the definition as to which estimates might differ,
Nash v. United States, 229 U. S. 373,
229 U. S. 376;
International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, supra, at
234 U. S. 223,
or, as broadly stated by Mr. Chief Justice White in
United
States v. Cohen Grocery Co., 255 U. S. 81,
255 U. S.
92,
"that, for reasons found to
Page 269 U. S. 392
result either from the text of the statutes involved or the
subjects with which they dealt, a standard of some sort was
afforded."
See also Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas (No. 1),
212 U. S. 86,
212 U. S. 108.
Illustrative cases on the other hand are
International
Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, supra, Collins v. Kentucky, supra, and
United States v. Cohen Grocery Co., supra, and cases there
cited. The
Cohen Grocery case involved the validity of
§ 4 of the Food Control Act of 1917, which imposed a penalty
upon any person who should make "any unjust or unreasonable rate or
charge, in handling or dealing in or with any necessaries." It was
held that these words fixed no ascertainable standard of guilt, in
that they forbade no specific or definite act.
Among the cases cited in support of that conclusion is
United States v. Capital Traction Co., 34 App.D.C. 592,
where a statute making it an offense for any street railway company
to run an insufficient number of cars to accommodate passengers
"without crowding" was held to be void for uncertainty. In the
course of its opinion, that court said (pp. 596, 598):
"The statute makes it a criminal offense for the street railway
companies in the District of Columbia to run an insufficient number
of cars to accommodate persons desiring passage thereon, without
crowding the same. What shall be the guide to the court or jury in
ascertaining what constitutes a crowded car? What may be regarded
as a crowded car by one jury may not be so considered by another.
What shall constitute a sufficient number of cars in the opinion of
one judge may be regarded as insufficient by another. . . . There
is a total absence of any definition of what shall constitute a
crowded car. This important element cannot be left to conjecture,
or be supplied by either the court or the jury. It is of the very
essence of the law itself, and without it the statute is too
indefinite and uncertain to support an information or indictment.
"
Page 269 U. S. 393
". . . The dividing line between what is lawful and unlawful
cannot be left to conjecture. The citizen cannot be held to answer
charges based upon penal statutes whose mandates are so uncertain
that they will reasonably admit of different constructions. A
criminal statute cannot rest upon an uncertain foundation. The
crime, and the elements constituting it, must be so clearly
expressed that the ordinary person can intelligently choose, in
advance, what course it is lawful for him to pursue. Penal statutes
prohibiting the doing of certain things, and providing a punishment
for their violation, should not admit of such a double meaning that
the citizen may act upon the one conception of its requirements and
the courts upon another."
In the light of these principles and decisions, then, we come to
the consideration of the legislation now under review, requiring
the contractor, at the risk of incurring severe and cumulative
penalties, to pay his employees "not less than the current rate of
per diem wages in the locality where the work is performed."
We are of opinion that this provision presents a double
uncertainty, fatal to its validity as a criminal statute. In the
first place, the words "current rate of wages" do not denote a
specific or definite sum, but minimum, maximum, and intermediate
amounts, indeterminately, varying from time to time and dependent
upon the class and kind of work done, the efficiency of the
workmen, etc., as the bill alleges is the case in respect of the
territory surrounding the bridges under construction.
* The statutory
phrase reasonably cannot be confined to any of these amounts, since
it imports each and all of them. The
Page 269 U. S. 394
"current rate of wages" is not simple, but progressive -- from
so much (the minimum) to so much (the maximum), including all
between; and to direct the payment of an amount which shall not be
less than one of several different amounts, without saying which,
is to leave the question of what is meant incapable of any definite
answer.
See People ex rel. Rodgers v. Coler, 166 N.Y. 1,
24-25.
Nor can the question be solved by resort to the established
canons of construction that enable a court to look through awkward
or clumsy expression, or language wanting in precision, to the
intent of the Legislature. For the vice of the statute here lies in
the impossibility of ascertaining, by any reasonable test, that the
legislature meant one thing, rather than another, and in the
futility of an attempt to apply a requirement which assumes the
existence of a rate of wages single in amount to a rate in fact
composed of a multitude of gradations. To construe the phrase
"current rate of wages" as meaning either the lowest rate or the
highest rate, or any intermediate rate, or, if it were possible to
determine the various factors to be considered, an average of all
rates, would be as likely to defeat the purpose of the legislature
as to promote it.
See State v. Partlow, 91 N.C. 550, 553;
Commonwealth v. Bank of Pennsylvania, 3 Watts & S.
173, 177.
In the second place, additional obscurity is imparted to the
statute by the use of the qualifying word "locality." Who can say
with any degree of accuracy what areas constitute the locality
where a given piece of work is being done? Two men, moving in any
direction from the place of operations, would not be at all likely
to agree upon the point where they had passed the boundary which
separated the locality of that work from the next locality. It is
said that this question is settled for us by the decision of the
state Supreme Court on rehearing in
State v. Tibbetts, 205
P. 776, 779. But all the court did there was to define the word
"locality" as meaning "place,"
Page 269 U. S. 395
"near the place," "vicinity," or "neighborhood." Accepting this
as correct, as of course we do, the result is not to remove the
obscurity, but rather to offer a choice of uncertainties. The word
"neighborhood" is quite as susceptible of variation as the word
"locality." Both terms are elastic and, dependent upon
circumstances, may be equally satisfied by areas measured by rods
or by miles.
See Schmidt v. Kansas City Distilling Co., 90
Mo. 284, 296;
Woods v. Cochrane and Smith, 38 Iowa 484,
485;
State ex rel. Christie v. Meek, 26 Wash. 405,
407-408;
Millville Imp. Co. v. Pitman, etc., Gas Co., 75
N.J.Law, 410, 412;
Thomas v. Marshfield, 10 Pick. 364,
367. The case last cited held that a grant of common to the
inhabitants of a certain neighborhood was void because the term
"neighborhood" was not sufficiently certain to identify the
grantees. In other connections or under other conditions, the term
"locality" might be definite enough, but not so in a statute, such
as that under review, imposing criminal penalties. Certainly, the
expression "near the place" leaves much to be desired in the way of
a delimitation of boundaries, for it at once provokes the inquiry,
"how near?" And this element of uncertainty cannot here be put
aside as of no consequence, for, as the rate of wages may vary --
as, in the present case, it is alleged it does vary -- among
different employers and according to the relative efficiency of the
workmen, so it may vary in different sections. The result is that
the application of the law depends not upon a word of fixed meaning
in itself, or one made definite by statutory or judicial
definition, or by the context or other legitimate aid to its
construction, but upon the probably varying impressions of juries
as to whether given areas are or are not to be included within
particular localities. The constitutional guaranty of due process
cannot be allowed to rest upon a support so equivocal.
Interlocutory decree affirmed.
Page 269 U. S. 396
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES and MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS concur in the
result, on the ground that the plaintiff was not violating the
statute by any criterion available in the vicinity of
Cleveland.
* The commissioner's own investigation shows that wages ranged
from $3 to $4.05 per day, and the scale of wages paid by the
construction company to its laborers, 25 in number, ranged from
$3.20 to $6.50 per day, all but 6 of them being paid $3.60 or
more.