1. The Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands has discretionary
jurisdiction, under § 516, Philippine Code of Civil Procedure,
to determine the validity of a new penal statute seriously
affecting numerous persons and extensive property interests, by a
writ of prohibition against criminal proceedings under it in the
Court of First Instance, rather than await judgment in those
proceedings and determine the question on review, in the usual way.
P.
271 U. S.
507.
2. Act No. 2972 of the Philippine legislature, approved February
21, 1921, making it a crime, punishable by fine and imprisonment,
for any person engaged in business for profit in the Islands to
keep his account books in any language other than English, Spanish,
or any local dialect must be taken as absolutely prohibiting
Chinese merchants from keeping any accounts in their own language
and writing. P.
271 U. S.
517.
3. This is made plain by the history as well as the language of
the enactment. P.
271 U. S.
513.
4. The Act is not susceptible of a construction limiting its
requirement to the keeping of such account books in English,
Spanish, or the Filipino dialects, as would be reasonably adapted
to the needs of the taxing officials in preventing and detecting
evasions of the local sales tax and other taxes, but leaving the
Chinese merchant free to keep books also in Chinese. P.
271 U. S.
515.
5. The duty of a court to construe an act of legislation in
harmony with the fundamental law does not authorize the court to
depart from the plain terms and intention of a statute, and thus in
effect to make a new law. P.
271 U. S.
518.
6. Especially is such a departure objectionable when the result
is to introduce uncertainty into the meaning of a highly penal
statute.
Id.
7. The court may not, in a criminal statute reduce its generally
inclusive terms by construction so as to limit its application to
that class of cases which it was within the power of the
legislature to enact, and thus save the statute from invalidity. P.
271 U. S.
522.
Page 271 U. S. 501
8. On a question of the construction of the Philippine Code of
Procedure adopted by the United States Philippine Commission, this
Court, in reviewing a decision of the Supreme Court of the
Philippines, may exercise its independent judgment. P.
271 U. S.
522.
9. The application of American constitutional limitations to a
Philippine statute dealing with the rights of persons living under
the government established there by the United States is not a
local one, especially when the persons are the subject of another
sovereignty with which the United States has made a treaty for
protection of their rights. P.
271 U. S.
523.
10. The limitations in the Philippine Bill of Rights are to be
enforced in the light of the construction by this Court of such
limitations as recognized by it since the foundation of our
government. P.
271 U. S.
523.
11. In view of the history of the Islands, the large and
important mercantile interests of Chinese residing there, who are
unacquainted with other languages than their own, the above Act of
the legislature, in prohibiting them from maintaining a set of
account books in Chinese, and thus preventing them from keeping
advised of their business and directing its conduct, is not within
the police power, but is arbitrary and discriminatory, and deprives
them of liberty and property without due process of law and denies
them the equal protection of the laws, in violation of the
Philippine Bill of Rights. P.
271 U. S.
524.
Reversed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the Supreme Court of the Philippine
Islands denying an original petition for a writ of prohibition
against officials in the Philippine Islands to prevent enforcement
by criminal proceedings of an Act of the legislature making it an
offense to keep business account books in any language except
English, Spanish, or a Filipino dialect.
Page 271 U. S. 506
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
*
This case comes here on a writ of certiorari to review a
decision of the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands denying an
original petition for prohibition against the enforcement by
criminal prosecution of Act No. 2972 of the Philippine Legislature,
known as the Chinese Bookkeeping Act, on the ground of its
invalidity. The petitioner, Yu Cong Eng, was charged by information
in the court of first instance of Manila, with its violation. He
was arrested, his books were seized, and the trial was about to
proceed when he and the other petitioner, Co Liam, on
Page 271 U. S. 507
their own behalf, and on behalf of all the other Chinese
merchants in the Philippines, filed the petition against the fiscal
or prosecuting attorney of Manila, and the collector of internal
revenue engaged in the prosecution, and against the judge
presiding.
By the Code of Civil Procedure of the Philippine Islands, §
516, the Philippine Supreme Court is granted concurrent
jurisdiction in prohibition with courts of first instance over
inferior tribunals or persons, and original jurisdiction over
courts of first instance, when such courts are exercising functions
without or in excess of their jurisdiction. It has been held by
that court that the question of the validity of a criminal statute
must usually be raised by a defendant in the trial court and be
carried regularly in review to the Supreme Court.
Cadwallader-Gibson Lumber Co. v. Del Rosario, 26
Philippine Reports 192. But, in this case, where a new act
seriously affected numerous persons and extensive property rights
and was likely to cause a multiplicity of actions, the Supreme
Court exercised its discretion to bring the issue of the Act's
validity promptly before it and decide it in the interest of the
orderly administration of justice. The court relied by analogy upon
the cases of
Ex parte Young, 209 U.
S. 123,
Truax v. Raich, 239 U. S.
33, and
Wilson v. New, 243 U.
S. 332. Although objection to the jurisdiction was
raised by demurrer to the petition, this is now disclaimed on
behalf of the respondents, and both parties ask a decision on the
merits. In view of broad powers in prohibition granted to that
court under the Island Code, we acquiesce in the desire of the
parties.
Act No. 2972, the validity of which is attacked, was passed by
the Philippine Legislature, and approved February 21, 1921. It
reads as follows:
"No. 2972. An act to provide in what languages account books
shall be kept, and to establish penalties for its violation. "
Page 271 U. S. 508
"Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
Philippines in legislature assembled and by the authority of the
same:"
"Section 1. It shall be unlawful for any person, company, or
partnership or corporation engaged in commerce, industry or any
other activity for the purpose of profit in the Philippine Islands,
in accordance with existing law, to keep its account books in any
language other than English, Spanish, or any local dialect."
"Sec. 2. Any person violating the provisions of this act shall,
upon conviction, be punished by a fine of not more than ten
thousand pesos, or by imprisonment for not more than two years, or
both."
"Sec. 3. This act shall take effect on November 1st, nineteen
hundred and twenty-one."
This was amended as to its date by a subsequent act, and it did
not take effect until January 1, 1923. Various efforts were made to
repeal the act or amend it, but they were defeated.
The petition, after setting out the prosecution in the court of
first instance, and the text of the Act, avers that the petitioner
Yu Cong Eng is a Chinese merchant engaged in the wholesale lumber
business in Manila; that he neither reads, writes nor understands
the English or Spanish language or any local dialect; that he keeps
the books of account of his business in Chinese characters; that,
by reason of his ignorance of the English and Spanish languages and
of all local dialects he is unable to keep his books in any other
language than his own; that, even if he should employ a bookkeeper
capable of keeping his books in the English or Spanish language, he
would have no means of personally revising or ascertaining the
contents or correctness of the books thus kept; that the employment
of such a bookkeeper, unless he should be a linguist, would entail
as a necessary consequence the employment of a translator or
interpreter familiar with the
Page 271 U. S. 509
Chinese language and the language or dialect in which such books
might be kept, in order to enable the petitioner to ascertain by
hearsay the contents thereof; that he would be completely at the
mercy of such employees, who, if dishonest, might cheat and defraud
him of the proceeds of his business, and involve him in criminal or
civil liability in its conduct; that, under the provisions of the
Act, he is prohibited from even keeping a duplicate set of accounts
in his own language, and would, in the event of the enforcement of
the law, be compelled to remain in total ignorance of the status of
his business, and that the enforcement of the Act would drive the
petitioner and many other Chinese merchants in the Philippines, who
do 60 percent of the business of the Islands and who are in like
circumstance, out of business.
The petition avers that the other petitioner in this case, Co
Liam, is a Chinese person and conducts a small general merchandise
business in Manila, commonly known in the Philippines as a Chinese
tienda; that he carries a stock of goods of about 10,000 pesos, or
$5,000; that his sales taxes amount to from 40 to 60 pesos per
quarter; that he neither reads, writes, nor understands the English
or Spanish language or any local dialect; that he keeps books of
account of his small business in Chinese, the only language known
to him, without the assistance of a bookkeeper; that he has been
losing money for some time in the operation of his business, but
that, even in prosperous times, his profits could never be
sufficient to justify the employment of a Filipino bookkeeper, and
that, without the opportunity to keep Chinese books, be would be
kept completely ignorant of the changing condition of his business
were he compelled to keep his books in English, Spanish, or a local
dialect, and that the enforcement of the Act would drive him and
all the small merchants or tienda keepers in the Islands who are
Chinese out of business.
Page 271 U. S. 510
The petitioners aver that the Act, if enforced, will deprive the
petitioners, and the 12,000 Chinese merchants whom they represent,
of their liberty and property without due process of law, and deny
them the equal protection of the laws, in violation of the
Philippine Autonomy Act of Congress of August 29, 1916, c. 416,
§ 3, 39 Stat. 546.
An amendment to the petition set up the rights of the
petitioners under the treaty now in force between the United States
and China, alleging that, under it, the petitioners are entitled to
the same rights, privileges, and immunities as the citizens and
subjects of Great Britain and Spain, and that the treaty has the
force and effect of a law of Congress, which this law violates.
An answer was filed by the Fiscal which is a general denial of
the averments of the petition as to the effect of the law. He avers
that the law is valid and necessary, and is only the exercise of
proper legislative power, because the government of the Philippine
Islands depends upon the taxes and imposts which it may collect in
order to carry out its functions, and the determination of whether
the mercantile operations of the merchants are or are not subject
to taxation, as well as the fixing of its amount, cannot and ought
not to be left to the mercy of those who are to bear it; that, due
to the inability of the officials of the internal revenue to revise
and check up properly the correctness of the books of account which
the Chinese merchants keep in their own language, the public
treasury loses every year very large sums.
Evidence was taken on the issues made. A majority of the Supreme
Court held that, if the Act were construed and enforced literally,
it would probably be invalid, but, by giving it an interpretation
different from the usual meaning of the words employed, it could
stand. Two of the justices dissented on the ground that the
Page 271 U. S. 511
court had exceeded its powers and, by legislation, made it a
different act.
There are two tax laws from which a substantial part of the
revenue of the Islands is derived. There is a sales tax of 1 1/2
percent on the gross sales of businesses and occupations, for which
a quarterly return is required. Administrative Code, § 1453,
et seq., Act 3065. There is also an income tax. The annual
revenue accruing from the sales tax is roughly 10,000,000 pesos,
and that from the income tax about 2,000,000 pesos.
Another statute is the so-called Code of Commerce, brought over
from the Spanish Code, the thirty-third article of which provides
that all merchants shall keep a book of inventories and balances, a
day book, a ledger, a copy book of telegrams, letters, etc., and
such other books as may be required by special laws. Under the
provisions of that Code and the internal revenue law, the collector
of internal revenue is authorized to require the keeping of daily
records of sales, and makes regulations prescribing the manner in
which the proper books, invoices and other papers should be kept
and entries made therein by the persons subject to the sales tax.
R. 1164, Act No. 2339, §§ 5, 6; Administrative Code,
§ 1424(j).
Chinese merchants are said to have been in the Philippines even
before the arrival of the Spaniards in 1520. The Chinese written
language is an ancient language, with a literature and with
characters quite different from those used in European languages.
There are many different native dialects in the Philippines.
Forty-three is said to be the number, but there are less than a
dozen of these which may be regarded as important -- the Tagalog,
the Visayan, with two distinct main dialects, the Ilocano, the
Bical, the Pampangan, the Ibanag, the Pangasananian, and the Moro.
Perhaps from 7 to 10 percent of the Filipinos speak Spanish. A
great many (how large the percentage one cannot tell) of the
younger people in the
Page 271 U. S. 512
Islands speak English. It is a polygot situation, and presents
many difficulties in government. Comparatively few of the Chinese
speak English or Spanish, or the native dialects, with any facility
at all, and less are able to write or to read either. But, with
capacity and persistence in trade, by signs and by a patois, they
communicate with the Filipinos and others with whom they do
business, making their calculations with the abacus, an instrument
for mechanical calculation, and keeping their books in Chinese
characters in ink, applied by a brush to strong paper, securely
bound. They have a scientific system of double entry
bookkeeping.
There are 85,000 merchants in the Philippines to whom the
bookkeeping law applies. Of these, 71,000 are Filipinos, who may
use their own dialects; 1,500 are Americans, or British or Spanish
subjects; 500 are of other foreign nationalities, most of whom know
the Spanish or English language. The remainder, some 12,000 in
number, are Chinese. The aggregate commercial business transacted
by these is about 60 percent of the total business done by all the
merchants in the Islands. The total amount of their sales in 1923
was more than 320 millions of pesos, distributed among 3,335
wholesale merchants, of whom 50 did a business of 1,000,000 pesos
each, 150 of 500,000 each, 400 of 100,000 each, and 2,735 of 40,000
each. There were 8,445 retail merchants, whose annual incomes on
the average would not exceed 500 pesos each. In 1913, certain
revenue statistics were reported by the then collector of internal
revenue to the court of first instance in the case of
Young v.
Rafferty, 33 Philippine Reports 556, in which the validity of
an order by the collector requiring the keeping of certain books by
taxpayers in Spanish and English was at issue. The figures given
above are based on this report. The report showed that Chinese
merchants paid about 60 percent of the taxes, but this is
Page 271 U. S. 513
now in dispute, and evidence was introduced by the present
collector to show that the proportion of taxes paid by them in 1918
and 1922 was much less, and that examination of the books of 400
Chinese taxpayers showed a very considerable loss, probably due to
evasion and fraud.
The evidence of the president of the largest company in the
Philippine Islands, an American who has been 21 years in business
in the Philippines, as to the business activities of the Chinese
was accepted by the court below as reliable. He says that the
Chinese system of distribution covers the Philippine Islands
through the medium of middlemen in the principal centers, and then
by the small Chinese storekeepers throughout the Islands, extending
even to the remotest barrios or small settlements. The Chinese are
the principal distributing factors in the Philippines of imported
goods, and the principal gatherers of goods for exportation in the
same remote places. He said that, if they were driven out of
business, there would be no other system of distribution available
throughout the Islands, for the reason that there are not Filipino
merchants sufficiently numerous, with resources and experience, to
provide a substitute.
The Chinese consul general testified that not more than eight
Chinese merchants in the Islands can read or write proficiently in
any other language than Chinese, and that the great majority of
them could not comply with the Act. The merchants' establishments
are made up of young Chinese persons, who come from China, begin at
the beginning, and are promoted from time to time to become the
head of the business. The books are always kept in the Chinese
language, and each Chinese establishment is completely separated
from the native mode of living.
Apparently there has always been some complaint in respect to
the avoidance of taxes by the Chinese, because
Page 271 U. S. 514
of the difficulty of determining what their sales tax should be.
There has always been a sales tax in the Philippines. It is a
method of taxation to which the people are used. Dr. Pardo de
Tavera, the Philippine librarian and historian, testified in this
case that efforts to enforce such a law as this in the Spanish
times against the Chinese failed, and became a dead letter.
Governor General Harrison made a general recommendation looking to
a law requiring the Chinese to keep books in other than Chinese
language, so that their business might be investigated, saying
that, until it was done, taxes would be evaded. Since the passage
of the law in 1921, as already said, its enforcement has been
postponed. Governor General Wood has sought to have the law
repealed or changed in such a way that exceptions might be made to
it, or that the books of the Chinese should be kept on stamped
paper with the pages registered, for the purpose of making it
difficult for the Chinese taxpayer to change the records of his
business. Protests from the Chinese government, from members of the
insular committee of the House of Representatives, from Chambers of
Commerce in the United States and elsewhere were brought to the
attention of the Philippine Legislature, and the repeal or
modification of the law came up for discussion, but all proposed
changes were defeated. The great weight of the evidence sustains
the view that the enforcement by criminal punishment of an
inhibition against the keeping of any Chinese books of account by
Chinese merchants in the Islands would seriously embarrass all of
them, and would drive out of business a great number.
Nor is there any doubt that the Act as a fiscal measure was
chiefly directed against the Chinese merchants. The discussion over
its repeal in the Philippine Legislature leaves no doubt on this
point. So far as the other merchants in the Islands are concerned,
its results would be
Page 271 U. S. 515
negligible, and would operate without especial burden on other
classes of foreign residents. The Supreme Court, in its opinion in
this case, refers to the Act as popularly known as the Chinese
Bookkeeping Act.
Evidence was introduced on behalf of the defendants to show the
difficulty of securing competent Chinese bookkeepers who could act
as inspectors of Chinese books for the tax collecting authorities,
and while the failure of the government to employ a sufficient
number was charged to the fact that sufficient salaries were not
paid to secure them, it is undoubtedly true that a lack of proper
and reliable Chinese accountants presents a real difficulty in the
examination of Chinese merchants' books.
The majority of the Philippine court, in its opinion, after
quoting a number of authorities showing the duty of a court in
determining whether a law is unconstitutional or not, first to give
every intendment possible to its validity, and second to reach a
reasonable construction by which it may be preserved, said:
"We come to the last question suggested, a construction of Act
No. 2972 which allows the court legally to approve it."
"A literal application of the law would make it unlawful for any
Chinese merchant to keep his account books in any language other
than English, Spanish, or a local dialect. The petitioners say the
law is susceptible of that interpretation. But such interpretation
might, and probably would, cause us to hold the law
unconstitutional."
"A second interpretation is that the Chinese merchant, while
permitted to keep his books of account in Chinese, must also keep
another set of books in either English, Spanish, or a native
dialect. The respondents claim the law is susceptible of such
construction. It occurs to us, however, that this construction
might prove as unsatisfactory
Page 271 U. S. 516
as the first. Fraud is possible in any language. As
approximation to governmental convenience and an approximation to
equality in taxation is the most which may be expected."
"A third construction which is permissible in view of the
history of the legislation and the wording of the statute is that
the law only intended to require the keeping of such books as were
necessary in order to facilitate governmental inspection for tax
purposes. It has not escaped our notice that the law does not
specify what books shall be kept. It is stated by competent
witnesses that a cash book, a journal, and a ledger are
indispensable books of account for an efficient system of
accounting, and that, in the smaller shops, even simpler entries
showing merely the daily records of sales and record of purchases
of merchandise would be sufficient. The keeping of records of
sales, and possibly further records of purchases, in English,
Spanish, or a native dialect, and the filling out of the necessary
forms would serve the purpose of the government while not being
oppressive. Actually, notations in English, Spanish, or a dialect
of all sales in sales books, and of data in other specified forms
are insisted upon by the Bureau of Internal Revenue, although, as
appears from Exhibit 2, it is doubtful if all Chinese merchants
have complied with these regulations. The faithful observance of
such rules by the Chinese is not far removed from the offer of
cooperation oft made for them by the petitioners of the
'translation of the account books' oft mentioned and explained by
the respondents."
"The law, in speaking of any person, company, partnership, or
corporation, makes use of the expression 'its account books.' Does
the phrase 'its account books' mean that all the account books of
the person, company, partnership, or corporation must be kept
exclusively in English, Spanish, or any local dialect? The
petitioners
Page 271 U. S. 517
argue that the law has this meaning. Or does the phrase 'its
account books' mean that the persons, company, partnership, or
corporation shall keep duplicate sets of account books, one set in
Chinese and the other a translation into English, Spanish, or any
local dialect? Counsel for the respondents urge this construction
of the law upon the court. Or does the phrase 'its account books'
mean that the person, company, partnership, or corporation must
keep such account books as are necessary for taxation purposes?
This latter interpretation occurs to us as a reasonable one, and as
best safeguarding the rights of the accused."
The court in effect concludes that what the legislature meant to
do was to require the keeping of such account books in English,
Spanish, or the Filipino dialects as would be reasonably adapted to
the needs of the taxing officers in preventing and detecting
evasion of taxes, and that this might be determined from the
statutes and regulations then in force. What the court really does
is to change the law from one which by its plain terms forbids the
Chinese merchants to keep their account books in any language
except English, Spanish, or the Filipino dialects, and thus forbids
them to keep account books in the Chinese, into a law requiring
them to keep certain undefined books in the permitted languages.
This is to change a penal prohibitive law to a mandatory law of
great indefiniteness to conform to what the court assumes was, or
ought to have been, the purpose of the legislature, and which in
the change would avoid a conflict with constitutional
restriction.
It would seem to us, from the history of the legislation and the
efforts for its repeal or amendment, that the Philippine
Legislature knew the meaning of the words it used, and intended
that the Act as passed should be prohibitory, and should forbid the
Chinese merchants from keeping the account books of their business
in Chinese.
Page 271 U. S. 518
Had the legislature intended only what the Supreme Court has
construed it to mean, why should it not have amended it
accordingly? Apparently the legislature thought the danger to the
revenue was in the secrecy of the Chinese books, and additional
books in the permitted languages would not solve the
difficulty.
We fully concede that it is the duty of a court in considering
the validity of an act to give it such reasonable construction as
can be reached to bring it within the fundamental law. But it is
very clear that amendment may not be substituted for construction,
and that a court may not exercise legislative functions to save the
law from conflict with constitutional limitation.
One of the strongest reasons for not making this law a nose of
wax, to be changed from that which the plain language imports, is
the fact that it is a highly penal statute authorizing sentence of
one convicted under it to a fine of not more than 10,000 pesos, or
by imprisonment for not more than two years, or both. If we change
it to meet the needs suggested by other laws and fiscal regulations
and by the supposed general purpose of the legislation, we are
creating by construction a vague requirement, and one objectionable
in a criminal statute. We are likely thus to trespass on the
provision of the Bill of Rights that the accused is entitled to
demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him, and to
violate the principle that a statute which requires the doing of an
act so indefinitely described that men must guess at its meaning
violates due process of law.
Connally v. Construction Co.,
269 U. S. 385;
United States v. Cohen Grocery Co., 255 U. S.
81;
International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky,
234 U. S. 216;
United States v. Reese, 92 U. S. 214,
92 U. S.
219.
The main objection to the construction given to the Act by the
court below is that, in making the Act indefinitely mandatory
instead of broadly prohibitory, it creates a
Page 271 U. S. 519
restriction upon its operation to make it valid that is not in
any way suggested by its language. In several cases, this Court has
pointed out that such strained construction, in order to make a law
conform to a constitutional limitation, cannot be sustained.
In
United States v. Reese, 92 U. S.
214, the question for decision arose on a demurrer to an
indictment against inspectors of municipal election for refusing to
receive and count the vote of a colored man. The power of Congress
to forbid such an act was confined under the Fifteenth Amendment to
a refusal to receive such a vote from a colored man on account of
his race, color, or previous condition of servitude, but the
section under which the indictment was brought did not specifically
confine the offense to a refusal for such a reason or to such
discrimination, although, in previous sections of the Act, there
was a general purpose disclosed in the Act to enforce the Fifteenth
Amendment. The demurrer was sustained on the ground that the
section was invalid.
Chief Justice Waite, in delivering the opinion of the Court,
said at
92 U. S.
221:
"We are therefore directly called upon to decide whether a penal
statute enacted by Congress, with its limited powers, which is in
general language broad enough to cover wrongful acts without as
well as within the constitutional jurisdiction, can be limited by
judicial construction so as to make it operate only on that which
Congress may rightfully prohibit and punish. For this purpose, we
must take these sections of the statute as they are. We are not
able to reject a part which is unconstitutional and retain the
remainder, because it is not possible to separate that which is
unconstitutional, if there be any such, from that which is not. The
proposed effect is not to be attained by striking out or
disregarding words that are in the section, but by inserting those
that are not now there. Each of the sections must stand as a
Page 271 U. S. 520
whole or fall altogether. The language is plain. There is no
room for construction unless it be as to the effect of the
Constitution. The question, then, to be determined is whether we
can introduce words of limitation into a penal statute so as to
make it specific when, as expressed, it is general only. It would
certainly be dangerous if the legislature could set a net large
enough to catch all possible offenders, and leave it to the courts
to step inside and say who could be rightfully detained and who
should be set at large. This would, to some extent, substitute the
judicial for the legislative department of the government."
And again, the Chief Justice said: "To limit this statute in the
manner now asked for would be to make a new law, not to enforce an
old one. This is no part of our duty."
The same principle was laid down, and this language approved by
this Court in the
Trade-Mark Cases, 100 U. S.
82, in which, to save the validity of a general statute
providing for trademarks, the Court was asked to construe the
statute to apply only to trademarks in interstate commerce. It was
held this could not be done. Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the
Court at
100 U. S. 98,
said:
"It has been suggested that, if Congress has power to regulate
trademarks used in commerce with foreign nations and among the
several states, these statutes shall be held valid in that class of
cases, if no further. To this there are two objections: first, the
indictments in these cases do not show that the trademarks which
are wrongfully used were trademarks used in that kind of commerce;
secondly, while it may be true that, when one part of a statute is
valid and constitutional, and another part is unconstitutional and
void, the court may enforce the valid part where they are
distinctly separable so that each can stand alone, it is not within
the judicial province to give to the words used by Congress a
narrower meaning
Page 271 U. S. 521
than they are manifestly intended to bear in order that crimes
may be punished which are not described in language that brings
them within the constitutional power of that body."
The case of
Butts v. Merchants' & Miners' Transportation
Co., 230 U. S. 126,
concerned the application of the Civil Rights Act of March 1, 1875,
to vessels of the United States engaged in the coastwise trade. In
the
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S. 3, it was
held that the Civil Rights Act of 1875, to protect all citizens in
their civil and legal rights, and in accordance with the terms of
which a defendant was indicted for denying the privileges and
accommodations of a theater in a state to a person on account of
her color, was unconstitutional because power to enact and enforce
such legislation in a state was in the state legislature only. The
declaration in the
Butts Case was brought to recover
penalties for violation of the Act against a corporation engaged in
the transportation of passengers and freight between Boston,
Massachusetts, and Norfolk, Virginia, and the discrimination
occurred on the high seas and in the jurisdiction of the United
States, and not within any state. It was contended that the federal
Civil Rights Act could therefore apply in such a case. The Court
pointed out the all-inclusive words of the Act of Congress and held
that they could not be cut down to include only what was strictly
within the federal jurisdiction. The Court said:
"Only by reason of the general words indicative of the intended
uniformity can it be said that there was a purpose to embrace
American vessels upon the high seas, the District of Columbia, and
the territories. But how can the manifest purpose to establish an
uniform law for the entire jurisdiction of the United States be
converted into a purpose to create a law for only a small fraction
of that jurisdiction? How can the use of general terms denoting an
intention to enact a law which should be applicable
Page 271 U. S. 522
alike in all places within that jurisdiction be said to indicate
a purpose to make a law which should be applicable to a minor part
of that jurisdiction and inapplicable to the major part? Besides,
it is not to be forgotten that the intended law is both penal and
criminal,"
citing the case of
United States v. Reese, and the
Trade-Mark Cases, supra, as well as
United States v.
Harris, 106 U. S. 629,
106 U. S. 642;
Baldwin v. Franks, 120 U. S. 678,
120 U. S. 685;
James v. Bowman, 190 U. S. 127,
190 U. S. 140;
United States v. Ju Toy, 198 U. S. 253,
198 U. S. 262;
Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. McKendree, 203 U.
S. 514,
203 U. S.
529-530;
Karem v. United States, 121 F. 250,
259.
The effect of the authorities we have quoted is clear to the
point that we may not in a criminal statute reduce its generally
inclusive terms so as to limit its application to only that class
of cases which it was within the power of the legislature to enact,
and thus save the statute from invalidity. What it is proposed to
do here is much more radical, for it is to ignore and hold for
naught a plain prohibition of the keeping of account books in
Chinese and insert in the Act an affirmative requirement that
account books not definitely determined which are adapted to the
needs of the taxing officials be kept in the permitted languages.
This is quite beyond the judicial power.
The suggestion has been made in argument that we should accept
the construction put upon a statute of the Philippine Islands by
their supreme court as we would the construction of a state court
in passing upon the federal constitutionality of a state statute.
The analogy is not complete. The Philippines are within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States government, with
complete power of legislation in Congress over them, and when the
interpretation of a Philippine statute comes before us for review,
we may, if there be need therefor, reexamine it for ourselves as
the court of last resort on
Page 271 U. S. 523
such a question. It is very true that, with respect to questions
turning on questions of local law or those properly affected by
custom inherited from the centuries of Spanish control, we defer
much to the judgment of the Philippine or Porto Rican courts.
Cami v. Central Victoria, Ltd., 268 U.
S. 469;
Diaz v. Gonzales, 261 U.
S. 102. But, on questions of statutory construction, as
of the Philippine Code of Procedure adopted by the United States
Philippine Commission, this Court may exercise an independent
judgment. In
Philippine Sugar Co. v. Philippine Islands,
247 U. S. 385,
involving the effect of § 285 of that Code, this Court said at
p.
247 U. S.
390:
"It is also urged that, since the construction of § 285 is
a matter of purely local concern, we should not disturb the
decision of the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands. This Court
is always disposed to accept the construction which the highest
court of a territory or possession has placed upon a local statute.
Phoenix Ry. Co. v. Landis, 231 U. S.
578. But that disposition may not be yielded to, where
the lower court has clearly erred.
Carrington v. United
States, 208 U. S. 1."
The question of applying American constitutional limitations to
a Philippine or Porto Rican statute dealing with the rights of
persons living under the government established by the United
States is not a local one, especially when the persons affected are
subjects of another sovereignty with which the United States has
made a treaty promising to make every effort to protect their
rights. The fundamental law we administer in the Philippine bill of
rights was a marked change from that which prevailed in the Islands
before we took them over, and is to be enforced in the light of the
construction by this Court of such limitations as it has recognized
them since the foundation of our own government. In its application
here, we must determine for ourselves the necessary meaning of a
statute officially enacted in English and its conformity with
fundamental limitations.
Page 271 U. S. 524
We cannot give any other meaning to the Bookkeeping Act than
that which its plain language imports, making it a crime for anyone
in the Philippine Islands engaged in business to keep his account
books in Chinese. This brings us to the question whether the law,
thus construed to mean what it says, is invalid.
The Philippine Bill of Rights, already referred to, provides
that:
"No law shall be enacted in said Islands which shall deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or
deny to any person therein the equal protection of the laws."
In
Serra v. Mortiga, 204 U. S. 470, at
204 U. S. 474,
this Court said:
"It is settled that, by virtue of the Bill of Rights, enacted by
Congress for the Philippine Islands, 32 Stat. 691, 692, that
guaranties equivalent to the due process and equal protection of
the law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the twice in jeopardy
clause of the Fifth Amendment, and the substantial guaranties of
the Sixth Amendment, exclusive of the right to trial by jury, were
extended to the Philippine Islands. It is further settled that the
guaranties which Congress has extended to the Philippine Islands
are to be interpreted as meaning what the like provisions meant at
the time when Congress made them applicable to the Philippine
Islands.
Kepner v. United States, 195 U. S.
100."
"For the purpose, therefore, of passing on the errors assigned,
we must test the correctness of the action of the court below by
substantially the same criteria which we would apply to a case
arising in the United States and controlled by the bill of rights
expressed in the amendments to the Constitution of the United
States."
In view of the history of the Islands and of the conditions
there prevailing, we think the law to be invalid because it
deprives Chinese persons situated as they are,
Page 271 U. S. 525
with their extensive and important business long established, of
their liberty and property without due process of law, and denies
them the equal protection of the laws.
Of course, the Philippine government may make every reasonable
requirement of its taxpayers to keep proper records of their
business transactions in English or Spanish or Filipino dialect by
which an adequate measure of what is due from them in meeting the
cost of government can be had. How detailed those records should be
we need not now discuss, for it is not before us. But we are
clearly of opinion that it is not within the police power of the
Philippine Legislature, because it would be oppressive and
arbitrary, to prohibit all Chinese merchants from maintaining a set
of books in the Chinese language, and in the Chinese characters,
and thus prevent them from keeping advised of the status of their
business and directing its conduct. As the petitioner, Yu Cong Eng,
well said in his examination, the Chinese books of those merchants
who know only Chinese and do not know English and Spanish (and they
constitute a very large majority of all of them in the Islands) are
their eyes in respect of their business. Without them, such
merchants would be a prey to all kinds of fraud, and without
possibility of adopting any safe policy. It would greatly and
disastrously curtail their liberty of action, and be oppressive and
damaging in the preservation of their property. We agree with the
Philippine Supreme Court in thinking that the statute construed as
we think it must be construed is invalid.
In
Lawton v. Steele, 152 U. S. 133,
152 U. S. 137,
the Court said:
"To justify the state in thus interposing its authority in
behalf of the public, it must appear, first, that the interests of
the public generally, as distinguished from those of a particular
class, requires such interference; and, second, that the means are
reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the purpose, and not
unduly oppressive
Page 271 U. S. 526
upon individuals. The legislature may not, under the guise of
protecting the public interests, arbitrarily interfere with private
business or impose unusual and unnecessary restrictions upon lawful
occupations. In other words, its determination as to what is a
proper exercise of its police powers is not final or conclusive,
but is subject to the supervision of the courts."
In
Holden v. Hardy, 169 U. S. 366,
169 U. S. 398, the
Court said:
"The question in each case is whether the legislature has
adopted the statute in exercise of a reasonable discretion, or
whether its action be a mere excuse for an unjust discrimination,
or the oppression or spoliation of a particular class."
In the case of
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.
S. 390, this Court considered the validity of state
legislation making it unlawful to teach a foreign language to
children, adopted on the theory that the state had the right to
protect children likely to become citizens from study of a
particular language in which they might read and learn doctrine
inimical to the Constitution of the United States and to the
nation, and forbidding the teachers of the language from pursuing
their occupation on this account, and held it invalid. The Court
said:
"While this Court has not attempted to define with exactness the
liberty thus guaranteed, the term has received much consideration,
and some of the included things have been definitely stated.
Without doubt, it denotes not merely freedom from bodily restraint,
but also the right of the individual to contract, to engage in any
of the common occupations of life, to acquire useful knowledge, to
marry, establish a home and bring up children, to worship God
according to the dictates of his own conscience, and generally to
enjoy those privileges long recognized at common law as essential
to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men. . . . The
established doctrine is that this liberty may not be interfered
with under the guise of protecting
Page 271 U. S. 527
the public interest, by legislative action which is arbitrary or
without reasonable relation to some purpose within the competency
of the state to effect. Determination by the legislature of what
constitutes proper exercise of police power is not final or
conclusive, but is subject to supervision by the courts."
The same principle is laid down in
Pierce v. Society of
Sisters, 268 U. S. 510, in
Truax v. Raich, 239 U. S. 33, and
in
Adams v. Tanner, 244 U. S. 590, in
which this Court has held legislative attempts arbitrary and
oppressively to interfere with the liberty of the individual in the
pursuit of lawful occupations to involve a lack of due process.
In
Adams v. Tanner, supra, an act to restrict the
maintenance of employment agencies by forbidding the collection of
fees from those seeking work, to avoid the extortion to which such
workers were often subjected, was held unconstitutional. The Court
said, at p.
244 U. S.
594:
"Because abuses may, and probably do, grow up in connection with
this business is adequate reason for hedging it about by proper
regulations. But this is not enough to justify destruction of one's
right to follow a distinctly useful calling in an upright way.
Certainly there is no profession, possibly no business, which does
not offer peculiar opportunities for reprehensible practices, and,
as to every one of them, no doubt, some can be found quite ready
earnestly to maintain that its suppression would be in the public
interest. Skillfully directed agitation might also bring about
apparent condemnation of any one of them by the public. Happily for
all, the fundamental guaranties of the Constitution cannot be
freely submerged if and whenever some ostensible justification is
advanced and the police power invoked."
In
Truax v. Raich, supra, the people of the State of
Arizona adopted an Act, entitled "An Act to protect the
Page 271 U. S. 528
citizens of the United States in their employment against
noncitizens of the United States," and provided that an employer of
more than five workers at any one time in that state should not
employ less than 80 percent qualified electors or native-born
citizens, and that any employer who did so should be subject upon
conviction to the payment of a fine and imprisonment. It was held
that such a law denied aliens an opportunity of earning a
livelihood and deprived them of their liberty without due process
of law, and denied them the equal protection of the laws. As
against the Chinese merchants of the Philippines, we think the
present law which deprives them of something indispensable to the
carrying on of their business, and is obviously intended chiefly to
affect them, as distinguished from the rest of the community, is a
denial to them of the equal protection of the laws.
We hold the law in question to be invalid.
Judgment reversed.
* The opinion was announced by MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, the CHIEF
JUSTICE being absent.