1. This Court, in certiorari cases, confines itself to the
ground upon which the writ was asked for and granted. P.
298 U. S.
604.
2. A New York Act, Laws of 1933, c. 584, declares it to be
against public policy for any employer to employ any woman at an
oppressive or unreasonable wage, defined as one which is
"both less than the fair and reasonable value of the services
rendered and less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of
living necessary for health;"
it defines "a fair wage" as one "fairly and reasonably
commensurate with the value of the service or class of service
rendered," and empowers a commissioner, if he be of the opinion
that any substantial number of women in any occupation are
receiving "oppressive and unreasonable" wages, to appoint a wage
board to make inquiry and report its recommendations as to minimum
fair wage standards. Standards so reported, when accepted by the
commissioner, after publication and further hearings, may be
enforced by his mandatory order, violation of which is punishable
by fine and imprisonment. The New York Court of Appeals in this
case construed the statute as requiring that the minimum wages to
be fixed under it shall be not only equal to the fair and
reasonable value of the services rendered, but also sufficient to
meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health, and decided
that, so construed, it was unconstitutional.
Held:
(1) This Court is bound to accept the state court's construction
of the statute. Pp.
298 U. S. 605,
298 U. S.
609.
(2) So far as concerns the validity of this Act, the restraint
imposed by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment upon
the legislative power of the State is the same as that imposed by
the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment upon the legislative
power of the United States. P.
298 U. S.
610.
(3) The Act, as construed by the state court, is in conflict
with the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Adkins
v. Children's Hospital, 261 U. S. 525. P.
298 U. S. 609
et seq.
3. The decision in
Adkins v. Children's Hospital,
supra, and the reasoning upon which it rests, clearly show
that the State is without power by any form of legislation to
prohibit, change, or
Page 298 U. S. 588
nullify contracts between employers and adult women workers as
to the amount of wages to be paid. The dominant issue in that case
was whether Congress had power to establish minimum wages for adult
women workers in the District of Columbia. The opinion directly
answers in the negative. The ruling that defects in the prescribed
standard stamped the Act of Congress as arbitrary and invalid was
an additional ground of subordinate consequence. P.
298 U. S.
610.
4. The "factual background" of this case does not distinguish it
in principle from the
Adkins case,
supra. P.
298 U. S.
614.
270 N.Y. 233 affirmed.
Certiorari, 297 U.S. 702, to review a judgment of the Supreme
Court of New York, entered on remittitur from the Court of Appeals.
Tipaldo had been placed in custody on a charge of disobeying an
administrative order prescribing minimum wages for women employees.
The trial court's dismissal of a writ of habeas corpus was reversed
by the decision under review.
Page 298 U. S. 602
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a habeas corpus case originating in the Supreme Court of
New York. Relator was indicted in the County Court of Kings County
and sent to jail to await trial upon the charge that, as manager of
a laundry, he failed to obey the mandatory order of the state
industrial commissioner prescribing minimum wages for women
employees.
Page 298 U. S. 603
The relator's petition for the writ avers that the statute, c.
584 of the Laws of 1933 (Consol.Law, c. 31, art. 19), under which
the commissioner made the order, insofar as it purports to
authorize him to fix women's wages, is repugnant to the due process
clause, Art. 1, § 6, of the Constitution of the State and the
due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States. The application for the writ is grounded upon
the claim that the state statute is substantially identical with
the minimum wage law enacted by Congress for the District of
Columbia, 40 Stat. 960, which, in 1923, was condemned by this Court
as repugnant to the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Adkins v. Children's Hospital, 261 U.
S. 525.
The warden's return, without disclosing the commissioner's
order, the prescribed wages, the findings essential to his
jurisdiction to establish them, things done in pursuance of the
Act, or the allegations of the indictment, merely shows that, under
an order of the county court, he was detaining relator for trial.
The case was submitted on petition and return. The court dismissed
the writ.
People ex rel. Tipaldo v. Morehead, 156 Misc.
522, 282 N.Y.S. 576. Relator took the case to the Court of Appeals.
It held the Act repugnant to the due process clauses of the State
and Federal Constitutions. 270 N.Y. 233, 200 N.E. 799. The
remittitur directed that the order appealed from be reversed, the
writ sustained, and the prisoner discharged; it certified that the
federal constitutional question was presented and necessarily
passed on. The supreme court entered judgment as directed. We
granted a writ of certiorari.
The act extends to women and minors in any "occupation"
which
"shall mean an industry, trade or business or branch thereof or
class of work therein in which women or minors are gainfully
employed, but shall not include domestic service in the home of the
employer or labor
Page 298 U. S. 604
on a farm."
§ 551(6). It is not an emergency law. It does not regulate
hours or any conditions affecting safety or protection of
employees. It relates only to wages of adult women and minors. As
the record is barren of details in respect of investigation,
findings, amounts being paid women workers in laundries or
elsewhere prior to the order, or of things done to ascertain the
minimum prescribed, we must take it as granted that, if the State
is permitted, as against employers and their women employees, to
establish and enforce minimum wages, that power has been validly
exerted. It is to be assumed that the rates have been fairly made
in accordance with the procedure prescribed by the Act and in full
compliance with the defined standards. If, consistently with the
due process clause, the State may not enter upon regulation of the
sort undertaken by the challenged enactment, then plainly it
cannot, by diligence to insure the establishment of just
minima, create power to enter that field.
Cf. St.
Joseph Stock Yards Co. v. United States, ante, p.
298 U. S. 38;
Baltimore & Ohio R. v. United States, ante, p.
298 U. S. 349.
The
Adkins case, unless distinguishable, requires
affirmance of the judgment below. The petition for the writ sought
review upon the ground that this case is distinguishable from that
one. No application has been made for reconsideration of the
constitutional question there decided. [
Footnote 1] The validity of the principles upon which that
decision rests is not challenged. This Court confines itself to the
ground upon which the writ was
Page 298 U. S. 605
asked or granted.
Alice State Bank v. Houston Pasture
Co., 247 U. S. 240,
247 U. S. 242;
Clark v. Williard, 294 U. S. 211,
294 U. S. 216.
Here, the review granted was no broader than that sought by the
petitioner.
Johnson v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 289 U.
S. 479,
289 U. S. 494.
He is not entitled, and does not ask, to be heard upon the question
whether the
Adkins case should be overruled. He maintains
that it may be distinguished on the ground that the statutes are
vitally dissimilar.
The District of Columbia Act provided for a board to ascertain
and declare "standards of minimum wages" for women in any
occupation, and what wages were "inadequate to supply the necessary
cost of living to any such women workers to maintain them in good
health and to protect their morals." § 9. Violations were
punishable by fine and imprisonment. § 18. The declared
purposes were to protect women from conditions detrimental to their
health and morals, resulting from wages inadequate to maintain
decent standards of living. § 23.
The New York Act declares it to be against public policy for any
employer to employ any woman at an oppressive and unreasonable wage
(§ 552) defined as one which is "both less than the fair and
reasonable value of the services rendered and less than sufficient
to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health." §
551(7). "A fair wage" is one "fairly and reasonably commensurate
with the value of the service or class of service rendered." §
551(8). If the commissioner is of opinion that any substantial
number of women in any occupation are receiving oppressive and
unreasonable wages, he shall appoint a wage board to report upon
the establishment of minimum fair wage rates. § 554. After
investigation, the board shall submit a report including its
recommendations as to minimum fair wage standards. § 555.
And for administrative guidance, the Act declares:
"In establishing a minimum fair wage for any service or
class
Page 298 U. S. 606
of service under this article, the commissioner and the wages
board, without being bound by any technical rules of evidence or
procedure, (1) may take into account all relevant circumstances
affecting the value of the service or class of service rendered,
and (2) may be guided by like considerations as would guide a court
in a suit for the reasonable value of services rendered where
services are rendered at the request of an employer without
contract as to the amount of the wage to be paid, and (3) may
consider the wages paid in the state for work of like or comparable
character by employers who voluntarily maintain minimum fair wage
standards."
§ 551(8).
If the commissioner accepts the report, he shall publish it, and
a public hearing must be held. § 556. If, after the hearing,
he approves the report, he "shall make a directory order which
shall define minimum fair wage rates." § 557. Upon hearing and
finding of disobedience, the commissioner may publish the name of
an employer as having failed to observe the directory order. §
559. If, after a directory order has been in effect for nine
months, the commissioner is of opinion that persistent
nonobservance is a threat to the maintenance of the prescribed
standards, he may, after hearing, make the order mandatory. §
560. Violation of a mandatory order is a misdemeanor punishable by
fine, imprisonment or both. § 565(2).
Thus, it appears: the minimum wage provided for in the District
Act was one not less than adequate "to supply the necessary cost of
living to any such women workers to maintain them in good health
and to protect their morals." § 9. The New York Act defines an
oppressive and unreasonable wage as containing two elements. The
one first mentioned is: "less than the fair and reasonable value of
the services rendered." The other is: "less than sufficient to meet
the minimum cost of living necessary for health." § 551(7).
The basis last mentioned is not to be distinguished
Page 298 U. S. 607
from the living wage defined in the District Act. The exertion
of the granted power to prescribe minimum wages is by the state act
conditioned upon a finding by the commissioner or other
administrative agency that a substantial number of women in any
occupation are receiving wages that are oppressive and unreasonable
--
i.e., less than value of the service and less than a
living wage. That finding is essential to jurisdiction of the
commissioner. In the state court, there was controversy between the
parties as to whether the "minimum fair wage rates" are required to
be established solely upon value of service, or upon that value and
the living wage. Against the contention of the attorney general,
the Court of Appeals held that the minimum wage must be based on
both elements.
Speaking through its chief judge, that court said:
"We find no material difference between the Act of Congress and
this act of the New York State Legislature. The act of Congress, it
is said, was to protect women from conditions resulting from wages
which were inadequate to maintain decent standards of living."
The opinion then quotes from the brief of the attorney
general:
"The purpose of the statute in the
Adkins case was to
guarantee a wage based solely upon the necessities of the workers.
The statute did not provide for the wages to have any relationship
to earning power; was applicable to all vocations, and not to the
character of the work. . . . As contrasted with this statute, the
New York Minimum Wage Law provides a definite standard for wages
paid. It provides that the worker is to be paid at least the value
of the services rendered."
The opinion continues:
"This is a difference in phraseology, and not in principle. The
New York act, as above stated, prohibits an oppressive and
unreasonable wage, which means
both less than the fair and
reasonable value of the services rendered
and
Page 298 U. S. 608
less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living
necessary for health. The act of Congress had one standard, the
living wage; this state act has added another, reasonable value.
The minimum wage must include both. What was vague before has not
been made any clearer. One of the elements, therefore, in fixing
the fair wage is the very matter which was the basis of the
congressional act. Forcing the payment of wages at a reasonable
value does not make inapplicable the principle and ruling of the
Adkins case. The distinctions between this case and the
Adkins case are difference in details, methods, and time;
the exercise of legislative power to fix wages in any employment is
the same."
The petitioner does not suggest, and reasonably it cannot be
thought, that, so far as concerns repugnancy to the due process
clause, there is any difference between the minimum wage law for
the District of Columbia and the clause of the New York act, "less
than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for
health." Petitioner does not claim that element was validated by
including with it the other ingredient, "less than the fair and
reasonable value of the services rendered."
His brief repeats the state court's declaration:
"'The act of Congress had one standard -- the living wage; this
State act has added another -- reasonable value.
The minimum
wage must include both. What was vague before has not been
made any clearer.
One of the elements, therefore, in fixing the
fair wage is the very matter which was the basis of the
congressional act.'"
Then he says:
"The italicized lines carry the Court's misconception of the
statute. It is a basic misconception. From it flows the erroneous
conclusion of the Court of Appeals that there exists no material
difference between the two statutes. . . . Those two factors
do
not enter into the determination of the minimum '
fair
wage' as in the statute defined, nor as determined in this
case. The only basis for
Page 298 U. S. 609
evaluating and arriving at the 'fair minimum wage' is the fair
value of the services rendered."
There is no blinking the fact that the state court construed the
prescribed standard to include cost of living, or that petitioner
here refuses to accept that construction. Petitioner's contention
that the Court of Appeals misconstrued the Act cannot be
entertained. This Court is without power to put a different
construction upon the state enactment from that adopted by the
highest court of the State. We are not at liberty to consider
petitioner's argument based on the construction repudiated by that
court. The meaning of the statute, as fixed by its decision, must
be accepted here as if the meaning had been specifically expressed
in the enactment.
Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias v.
Meyer, 265 U. S. 30,
265 U. S. 32.
Exclusive authority to enact carries with it final authority to say
what the measure means.
Jones v. Prairie Oil & Gas
Co., 273 U. S. 195,
273 U. S. 200. The
standard of "minimum fair wage rates" for women workers to be
prescribed must be considered as if both elements -- value of
service and living wage -- were embodied in the statutory
definition itself.
International Harvester Co. v.
Kentucky, 234 U. S. 216,
234 U. S. 220.
As our construction of an Act of Congress must be deemed by state
courts to be the law of the United States, so this New York Act, as
construed by her court of last resort, must here be taken to
express the intention and purpose of her lawmakers.
Green v. Neal's
Lessee, 6 Pet. 291,
31 U. S.
295-298.
The state court rightly held that the
Adkins case
controls this one, and requires that relator be discharged upon the
ground that the legislation under which he was indicted and
imprisoned is repugnant to the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The general statement in the New York Act of the fields of labor
it includes, taken in connection with the work not covered,
indicates legislative intention to reach
Page 298 U. S. 610
nearly all private employers of women. The Act does not extend
to men. It does extend to boys and girls under the age of 21 years,
but there is here involved no question as to its validity in
respect of wages to be prescribed for them. Relator's petition for
the writ shows that the charge against him is that, as manager of a
laundry, he "disobeyed a mandatory order prescribing certain
minimum wages for certain adult women employees of the said
laundry." The rights of no other class of workers are here
involved.
Upon the face of the Act, the question arises whether the state
may impose upon the employers state-made minimum wage rates for all
competent experienced women workers whom they may have in their
service. That question involves another one. It is whether the
State has power similarly to subject to state-made wages all adult
women employed in trade, industry, or business other than house and
farm work. These were the questions decided in the
Adkins
case. So far, at least, as concerns the validity of the enactment
under consideration, the restraint imposed by the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment upon legislative power of the
State is the same as that imposed by the corresponding provision of
the Fifth Amendment upon the legislative power of the United
States.
This Court's opinion shows (pp.
261 U. S.
545-546): the right to make contracts about one's
affairs is a part of the liberty protected by the due process
clause. Within this liberty are provisions of contracts between
employer and employee fixing the wages to be paid. In making
contracts of employment, generally speaking, the parties have equal
right to obtain from each other the best terms they can by private
bargaining. Legislative abridgement of that freedom can only be
justified by the existence of exceptional circumstances. Freedom of
contract is the
Page 298 U. S. 611
general rule, and restraint the exception. This Court has found
not repugnant to the due process clause statutes fixing rates and
charges to be exacted by businesses impressed with a public
interest, relating to contracts for the performance of public work,
prescribing the character, methods, and time of payment of wages,
fixing hours of labor. Physical differences between men and women
must be recognized in proper cases, and legislation fixing hours or
conditions of work may properly take them into account, but (p.
261 U. S.
553)
"we cannot accept the doctrine that women of mature age,
sui
juris, require or may be subjected to restrictions upon their
liberty of contract which could not lawfully be imposed in the case
of men under similar circumstances. To do so would be to ignore all
the implications to be drawn from the present day trend of
legislation, as well as that of common thought and usage, by which
woman is accorded emancipation from the old doctrine that she must
be given special protection or be subjected to special restraint in
her contractual and civil relationships. . . . Enough has been said
to show that the authority to fix hours of labor cannot be
exercised except in respect of those occupations where work of long
continued duration is detrimental to health. This Court has been
careful, in every case where the question has been raised, to place
its decision upon this limited authority of the Legislature to
regulate hours of labor and to disclaim any purpose to uphold the
legislation as fixing wages, thus recognizing an essential
difference between the two. It seems plain that these decisions
afford no real support for any form of law establishing minimum
wages."
The decision and the reasoning upon which it rests clearly show
that the State is without power, by any form of legislation, to
prohibit, change, or nullify contracts between employers and adult
women workers as to the amount of wages to be paid.
Page 298 U. S. 612
Then, the opinion emphasizes objections specifically applicable
to the requirement that the minimum wages to be prescribed under
the District Act shall be adequate "to supply the necessary cost of
living to any such women workers to maintain them in good health
and to protect their morals." Some of them were: the price fixed by
the board need have no relation to earning powers, hours or place
or character of work; it is based wholly on opinion of the board as
to what amount will be necessary to comply with the standard; it
applies to every occupation without regard to the kind of work; the
standard is so vague as to be impossible of practical application;
the Act takes account of the necessities of only the employee; to
the extent that the sum fixed exceeds fair value of service
rendered, it amounts to a compulsory exaction for the support of a
partially indigent person for whose condition there rests upon the
employer no peculiar responsibility; the statute exacts from the
employer an arbitrary payment for a purpose and upon a basis having
no causal connection with his business or the contract or the work
the employee engages to do; the declared basis is not the value of
the service rendered, but the extraneous circumstance that the
employee needs to get a prescribed sum of money to insure her
subsistence, health, and morals. The court said (p.
261 U. S.
558):
"The ethical right of every worker, man or woman, to have a
living wage may be conceded. The fallacy of the proposed method of
attaining it is that it assumes that every employer is bound at all
events to furnish it. The moral requirement, implicit in every
contract of employment --
viz., that the amount to be paid
and the service to be rendered shall bear to each other some
relation of just equivalence -- is completely ignored. The
necessities of the employee are alone considered, and these arise
outside of the employment, and are as great in one occupation as in
another. "
Page 298 U. S. 613
Illustrating particular constitutional difficulties encountered
by the enactment then before us, the opinion proceeds (p.
261 U. S.
559):
"Should a statute undertake to vest in a commission power to
determine the quantity of food necessary for individual support,
and require the shopkeeper, if he sell to the individual at all, to
furnish that quantity at not more than a fixed maximum, it would
undoubtedly fall before the constitutional test. The fallacy of any
argument in support of the validity of such a statute would be
quickly exposed. The argument in support of that now being
considered is equally fallacious, though the weakness of it may not
be so plain. A statute requiring an employer to pay in money, to
pay at prescribed and regular intervals, to pay the value of the
services rendered, even to pay with fair relation to the extent of
the benefit obtained from the service, would be understandable. But
a statute which prescribes payment without regard to any of these
things, and solely with relation to circumstances apart from the
contract of employment, the business affected by it, and the work
done under it, is so clearly the product of a naked, arbitrary
exercise of power that it cannot be allowed to stand under the
Constitution of the United States."
Petitioner does not attempt to support the Act as construed by
the state court. His claim is that it is to be tested here as if it
did not include the cost of living, and as if value of service was
the sole standard. Plainly, that position is untenable. If the
State has power to single out for regulation the amount of wages to
be paid women, the value of their services would be a material
consideration. But that fact has no relevancy upon the question
whether the State has any such power. And utterly without
significance upon the question of power is the suggestion that the
State of New York prescribed standard includes value of service
with cost of living, whereas the District of Columbia standard was
based upon the latter
Page 298 U. S. 614
alone. As shown above, the dominant issue in the
Adkins
case was whether Congress had power to establish minimum wages for
adult women workers in the District of Columbia. The opinion
directly answers in the negative. The ruling that defects in the
prescribed standard stamped that Act as arbitrary and invalid was
an additional ground of subordinate consequence.
The dissenting opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Taft (in which Mr.
Justice Sanford concurred) assumes (p.
261 U. S. 564)
"that the conclusion in this [
Adkins] case rests on the
distinction between a minimum of wages and a maximum of hours."
That is the only point he discussed; he did not refer to the
validity of the standard prescribed by the Act. The dissenting
opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes begins (p.
261 U. S.
567):
"The question in this case is the broad one, whether Congress
can establish minimum rates of wages for women in the District of
Columbia with due provision for special circumstances, or whether
we must say that Congress had no power to meddle with the matter at
all."
And, after assuming that women would not be employed at the
wages fixed unless they were earned or unless the employer could
pay them, the opinion says (p.
261 U. S.
570): "But the ground on which the law is held to fail
is fundamental, and therefore it is unnecessary to consider matters
of detail." If the decision of the court turned upon the question
of the validity of the particular standard, that question could not
have been ignored by the justices who were in favor of upholding
the act. Clearly they understood, and rightly, that, by the opinion
of the court, it was held that Congress was without power to deal
with the subject at all.
To distinguish this from the
Adkins case, petitioner
refers to changes in conditions that have come since that decision,
cites great increase during recent years in the number of women
wage earners, and invokes the first section of the act, called
"Factual background."
Page 298 U. S. 615
The Act is not to meet an emergency; it discloses a permanent
policy; the increasing number of women workers suggests that, more
and more, they are getting and holding jobs that otherwise would
belong to men. The "factual background" must be read in the light
of the circumstances attending its enactment. The New York
legislature passed two minimum wage measures, and contemporaneously
submitted them to the Governor. One was approved; it is the Act now
before us. The other was vetoed, and did not become law. They
contained the same definitions of oppressive wage and fair wage,
and, in general, provided the same machinery and procedure
culminating in fixing minimum wages by directory orders. The one
vetoed was for an emergency; it extended to men as well as to women
employees; it did not provide for the enforcement of wages by
mandatory orders.
It is significant that their "factual backgrounds" are much
alike. They are indicated in the margin. [
Footnote 2] These
Page 298 U. S. 616
legislative declarations, in form of findings or recitals of
fact, serve well to illustrate why any measure that deprives
employers and adult women of freedom to agree upon wages, leaving
employers and men employees free so to do, is necessarily
arbitrary. Much, if not all that in them is said in justification
of the regulations that the Act imposes in respect of women's wages
applies with equal force in support of the same regulation of men's
wages. While men are left free to fix their wages by agreement with
employers, it would be fanciful to suppose that the regulation of
women's wages would be useful to prevent or lessen the evils listed
in the first section of the act. Men in need of work are as likely
as women to accept the low wages offered by unscrupulous employers.
Men in greater number than women support themselves and dependents
and, because of need, will work for whatever wages they can get,
and that without regard to the value of the service and even though
the pay is less than minima prescribed in accordance with this Act.
It is plain that, under circumstances such as those portrayed
Page 298 U. S. 617
in the "factual background," prescribing of minimum wages for
women alone would unreasonably restrain them in competition with
men and tend arbitrarily to deprive them of employment and a fair
chance to find work.
This Court, on the authority of the
Adkins case and
with the acquiescence of all the justices who dissented from the
decision, [
Footnote 3] held
repugnant to the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
statutes of Arizona and Arkansas, [
Footnote 4] respectively, fixing minimum wages for women.
Murphy v. Sardell, 269 U.S. 530;
Donham v. West-Nelson
Mfg. Co., 273 U.S. 657. We have adhered to the principle there
applied, and cited it as a guide in other cases.
Meyer v.
Nebraska, 262 U. S. 390,
262 U. S. 399;
Wolff Packing Co. v. Industrial Court, 262 U.
S. 522,
262 U. S. 534;
Ribnik v. McBride, 277 U. S. 350,
277 U. S. 356.
See Near v. Minnesota, 283 U. S. 697,
283 U. S.
707-708. States having similar enactments have construed
it to prevent the fixing of wages for adult women.
Topeka
Laundry Co. v. Court of Industrial
Page 298 U. S. 618
Relations, 119 Kan. 12, 237 P. 1041;
Stevenson v.
St. Clair, 161 Minn. 444, 201 N.W. 629.
See Folding
Furniture Works v. Industrial Commission, 300 F. 991;
People v. Successors of Laurnaga & Co., 32 P.R.
766.
The New York court's decision conforms to ours in the
Adkins case, and the later rulings that we have made on
the authority of that case. That decision was deliberately made
upon careful consideration of the oral arguments and briefs of the
respective parties and also of briefs submitted on behalf of states
and others as
amici curiae. In the Arizona case, the
attorney general sought to distinguish the District of Columbia Act
from the legislation then before us, and insisted that the latter
was a valid exertion of the police power of the State. Counsel for
the California commission submitted a brief
amicus curiae
in which he elaborately argued that our decision in the
Adkins case was erroneous, and ought to be overruled. In
the Arkansas case, the state officers, appellants there, by
painstaking and thorough brief presented arguments in favor of the
same contention. But this Court, after thoughtful attention to all
that was suggested against that decision, adhered to it as sound.
And in each case, being clearly of opinion that no discussion was
required to show that, having regard to the principles applied in
the
Adkins case, the state legislation fixing wages for
women was repugnant to the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, we so held and, upon the authority of that case,
affirmed per curiam the decree enjoining its enforcement. It is
equally plain that the judgment in the case now before us must also
be
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Briefs
amici curiae in support of the application were
filed by the City of New York and the State of Illinois. Briefs on
the merits supporting the New York Act were filed by the State of
Ohio and by the States of Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, and Rhode Island. Briefs for affirmance were
filed by the New York State Hotel Association, National Woman's
Party, National Association of Women Lawyers,
et al.
[
Footnote 2]
Omitting the words in brackets, the following is the factual
background in the first section of the Act before us. Adding the
words in brackets and omitting these in italics, there is indicated
the background in the bill that was not approved.
"The employment of [men and] women and minors in trade and
industry in the State of New York at wages unreasonably low and not
fairly commensurate with the value of the services rendered is a
matter of grave and vital public concern. Many [men and] women and
minors employed for gain in the state of New York are not as a
class upon a level of equality in bargaining with their employers
in regard to minimum fair wage standards, and 'freedom of contract'
as applied to their relations with their employers is illusory.
Since a very large percentage of such workers are obliged from
their week to week wages to support themselves and others who are
dependent upon them in whole or in part, they are, by reason of
their necessitous circumstances, forced to accept whatever wages
are offered them. Judged by any reasonable standard, wages are in
many cases fixed by chance and caprice and the wages accepted are
often found to bear no relation to the fair value of the service
rendered.
Women and minors employed for gain are peculiarly
subject to the overreaching of inefficient, harsh, or ignorant
employers and under unregulated competition where no adequate
machinery exists for the effective regulation and maintenance of
minimum fair wage standards, [and] the standards such as exist
tend to be set by the least conscionable employers. In the absence
of any effective minimum fair wage rates for women and minors, the
constant lowering of wages by unscrupulous employers constitutes a
serious form of unfair competition against other employers, reduces
the purchasing power of
the workers [a large proportion of
the population of the state], and threatens the stability of
industry. The evils of oppressive, unreasonable, and unfair wages
as they affect women and minors employed in the State of New
York are such as to render imperative the exercise of the
police power of the state for the protection of industry and of the
[men and] women and minors employed therein and of the public
interest of the community at large in their health and wellbeing
and in the prevention of the deterioration of the race.
In the
considered judgment of the legislature, this article is
constitutional."
[
Footnote 3]
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS took no part in the consideration of the
Adkins case. He noted dissent without more in the Arizona
case and Arkansas case.
[
Footnote 4]
The Arizona Act declared:
"No person . . . shall employ any female in any store, office,
shop, restaurant, dining room, hotel, rooming house, laundry or
manufacturing establishment at a weekly wage of less than Sixteen
Dollars ($16.00) per week; a lesser amount being hereby declared
inadequate to supply the necessary cost of living to any such
female, to maintain her health, and to provide her with the common
necessaries of life."
Laws of Arizona, 1923, c. 3, § 1.
The Arkansas act declared:
"It shall be unlawful for any employer . . . to pay any female
worker in any establishment or occupation less than the wage
specified in this section, to-wit, except as hereinafter provided:
all female workers who have had six months' practicable experience
in any line of industry or labor shall be paid not less than one
dollar and twenty-five cents per day. The minimum wage for
inexperienced female workers who have not had six months'
experience in any line of industry or labor shall be paid not less
than one dollar per day."
§ 7108, Crawford & Moses Digest.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES, dissenting.
I am unable to concur in the opinion in this case. In view of
the difference between the statutes involved, I
Page 298 U. S. 619
cannot agree that the case should be regarded as controlled by
Adkins v. Children's Hospital, 261 U.
S. 525. And I can find nothing in the Federal
Constitution which denies to the state the power to protect women
from being exploited by overreaching employers through the refusal
of a fair wage as defined in the New York statute and ascertained
in a reasonable manner by competent authority.
First. Relator, in his petition for habeas corpus,
raises no question as to the fairness of the minimum wage he was
required to pay. He does not challenge the regularity of the
proceedings by which the amount of that wage was determined. We
must assume that none of the safeguards of the statute was ignored,
and that its provisions for careful and deliberate procedure were
followed in all respects. It is important at the outset to note the
requirements of that procedure, as they at once dispose of any
question of arbitrary procedural action.
The statute states its objectives. It defines an "oppressive and
unreasonable wage" as one which
"is both less than the fair and reasonable value of the services
rendered and less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of
living necessary for health."
It defines a "fair wage" as one "fairly and reasonably
commensurate with the value of the service or class of service
rendered." It relates to an industry, trade or business, other than
domestic service or labor on a farm. The industrial commissioner is
authorized to investigate and ascertain the wages of women and
minors. If he is of the opinion that any substantial number of
women or minors are receiving "oppressive and unreasonable" wages,
he must appoint a wage board to make report. That board is to be
composed of not more than three representatives of employers, an
equal number of representatives of employees, and not more than
three disinterested persons representing the public. The wage board
is fully equipped with
Page 298 U. S. 620
authority to conduct a comprehensive investigation. It may
differentiate and classify employments in any occupation according
to the nature of the service rendered. It may recommend minimum
fair wage rates varying with localities. It may recommend a
suitable scale of rates for learners and apprentices which may be
less than those recommended for experienced women or minor workers.
The wage board may take into account all relevant circumstances
affecting the value of the service or class of service. It may be
guided by such considerations as would guide a court in a suit for
the reasonable value of services rendered. It may consider the
wages paid in the state for work of like or comparable character by
employers who voluntarily maintain minimum fair wage standards.
The commissioner may approve or disapprove the report of the
wage board. If the commissioner disapproves, he may resubmit the
matter to the same or a new board. In case the report is approved,
the commissioner is to make a "directory order" which defines
minimum "fair wage rates" and is to include appropriate
administrative regulations. The latter may embrace regulations
governing learners, apprentices, piece rates, or their relation to
time rates, overtime or part-time rates, bonuses or special pay for
special or extra work, deductions for board, lodging, and other
items or services supplied by the employer, and other special
conditions. Special licenses, authorizing employment at lower
rates, may be issued to a woman or minor whose earning capacity is
impaired by age or physical or mental deficiency or injury.
If the commissioner has reason to believe that an employer is
not observing the provisions of the "directory order," he may, upon
notice, summon the employer to show cause why his name should not
be published as having failed to comply with the order. And, after
hearing and in case of a finding of nonobservance, the
commissioner
Page 298 U. S. 621
may cause the name of the employer to be published. After a
"directory minimum fair wage order" has been in effect for nine
months, if it appears that there has been persistent nonobservance,
notice may be given of the intention to make the order mandatory
and of a public hearing at which all persons in favor of, or
opposed to, such a mandatory order may be heard. And it is after
such hearing that the commissioner may make the previous directory
order or any part of it mandatory and publish it accordingly.
It is disobedience to such a mandatory order which is punished
by fine or by imprisonment. It is the violation of such an order,
made after the inquiries, report, the tentative order, and the
hearings which the statute enjoins, that is the basis of the
prosecution in the case at bar.
Second. In reaching its conclusion, the state court
construed the opinion in the
Adkins case and deemed that
ruling applicable here. That, however, is a construction of the
decision of this Court. That construction is not binding upon
us.
When the opinion of the state court is examined in order to
ascertain what construction was placed upon the statute, we find
little more than a recital of its provisions. The state court
says:
"The New York act, as above stated, prohibits an oppressive and
unreasonable wage, which means both less than the fair and
reasonable value of the services rendered and less than sufficient
to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health."
This is a repetition of the words of the statute in subdivision
7 of § 551 defining an "oppressive and unreasonable wage." The
court adds:
"The act of Congress [in the
Adkins case] had one
standard, the living wage; this state act has added another,
reasonable value. The minimum wage must include both. What was
vague before has not been made any clearer. One of the
elements,
Page 298 U. S. 622
therefore, in fixing the fair wage is the very matter which was
the basis of the congressional act."
But the court expressly recognizes that a wage is not denounced
by the New York act as "oppressive and unreasonable" unless it is
less than the fair and reasonable value of the services rendered.
The statute also provides in explicit terms that the "fair wage"
which is to be prescribed is one that is "fairly and reasonably
commensurate with the value of the service or class of service
rendered." I find nothing in the opinion of the state court which
can be taken to mean that this definite provision of the statute is
not obligatory upon the authorities fixing a fair wage. Certainly,
the court has not said so, and I think that we must assume that the
standard thus described is set up by the New York act. And there is
no suggestion that the "fair wage" as prescribed in the instant
case was not commensurate with the reasonable value of the service
rendered by the employees.
When the opinion of the state court goes beyond the statement of
the provisions of the act, and says that the setting up of such a
standard does not create a material distinction when compared with
the Act of Congress in the
Adkins case, the state court is
not construing the state statute. It is passing upon the effect of
the difference between the two acts from the standpoint of the
Federal Constitution. It is putting aside an admitted difference as
not controlling. It is holding, as the state court says, that
"[f]orcing the payment of wages at a reasonable value does not make
inapplicable the principle and ruling of the
Adkins
case."
That, it seems to me, is clearly a federal and not a state
question, and I pass to its consideration.
Third. The constitutional validity of a minimum wage
statute like the New York act has not heretofore been passed upon
by this Court. As I have said, the required correspondence of the
prescribed "fair wage" to
Page 298 U. S. 623
the reasonable value of the service which the employee performs
stands out as an essential feature of the statutory plan. The
statute for the District of Columbia which was before us in the
Adkins case did not have that feature. That statute
provided for a minimum wage adequate "to supply the necessary cost
of living to women workers" and "to maintain them in health and to
protect their morals." 40 Stat. 963. The standard thus set up did
not take account of the reasonable value of the service rendered.
As this Court said, it compelled the employer "to pay at least the
sum fixed in any event, because the employee needs it, but requires
no service of equivalent value from the employee." In the cases of
Murphy v. Sardell, 269 U.S. 530, and
Donham v.
West-Nelson Co., 273 U.S. 657, the statutes of Arizona and
Arkansas, respectively, were of a similar character, and both these
cases were decided upon the authority of the
Adkins case.
New York and other States have been careful to adopt a different
and improved standard in order to meet the objection aimed at the
earlier statutes by requiring a fair equivalence of wage and
service.
That the difference is a material one, I think, is shown by the
opinion in the
Adkins case. That opinion contained a broad
discussion of state power, but it singled out as an adequate ground
for the finding of invalidity that the statute gave no regard to
the situation of the employer and to the reasonable value of the
service for which the wage was paid. Upon this point, the Court
said (261 U.S. pp.
261 U. S.
558-559):
"The feature of this statute which perhaps more than any other
puts upon it the stamp of invalidity is that it exacts from the
employer an arbitrary payment for a purpose and upon a basis having
no causal connection with his business, or the contract or the work
the employee engages to do. The declared basis, as already
Page 298 U. S. 624
pointed out, is not the value of the service rendered, but the
extraneous circumstance that the employee needs to get a prescribed
sum of money to insure her subsistence, health, and morals. The
ethical right of every worker, man or woman, to a living wage may
be conceded. One of the declared and important purposes of trade
organizations is to secure it. And with that principle and with
every legitimate effort to realize it in fact no one can quarrel;
but the fallacy of the proposed method of attaining it is that it
assumes that every employer is bound at all events to furnish it.
The moral requirement implicit in every contract of employment --
viz., that the amount to be paid and the service to be
rendered shall bear to each other some relation of just equivalence
-- is completely ignored. . . . A statute requiring an employer to
pay in money, to pay at prescribed and regular intervals, to pay
the value of the services rendered, even to pay with fair relation
to the extent of the benefit obtained from the service, would be
understandable. But a statute which prescribes payment without
regard to any of these things, and solely with relation to
circumstances apart from the contract of employment, the business
affected by it, and the work done under it, is so clearly the
product of a naked, arbitrary exercise of power that it cannot be
allowed to stand under the Constitution of the United States."
As the New York act is free of that feature, so strongly
denounced, the question comes before us in a new aspect. The Court
was closely divided in the
Adkins case, and that decision
followed an equal division of the Court, after reargument, in
Stettler v. O'Hara, 243 U.S. 629, with respect to the
validity of the minimum wage law of Oregon. Such divisions are at
times unavoidable, but they point to the desirability of fresh
consideration when there are material differences in the cases
presented. The fact that, in the
Adkins case, there were
dissenting opinions
Page 298 U. S. 625
maintaining the validity of the federal statute, despite the
nature of the standard it set up, brings out in stronger relief the
ground which was taken most emphatically by the majority in that
case, and that there would have been a majority for the decision in
the absence of that ground must be a matter of conjecture. With
that ground absent, the
Adkins case ceases to be a precise
authority.
We have here a question of constitutional law of grave
importance, applying to the statutes of several states in a matter
of profound public interest. I think that we should deal with that
question upon its merits, without feeling that we are bound by a
decision which, on its facts, is not strictly in point.
Fourth. The validity of the New York act must be
considered in the light of the conditions to which the exercise of
the protective power of the state was addressed.
The statute itself recites these conditions, and the State has
submitted a voluminous factual brief for the purpose of showing
from various official statistics that these recitals have abundant
support. Judge Lehman, in his dissenting opinion in he Court of
Appeals, states that the relator
"does not challenge these findings of fact by the Legislature,
nor does he challenge the statements in the 'factual brief'
submitted by the respondent to sustain and amplify these
findings."
The majority opinion in the Court of Appeals has nothing to the
contrary. Nor is the statement of the conditions which influenced
the legislative action challenged, or challengeable, upon the
record here.
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co.,
220 U. S. 61,
220 U. S. 78-80;
Radice v. New York, 264 U. S. 292,
264 U. S. 294;
Ohio ex rel. Clarke v. Deckebach, 274 U.
S. 392,
274 U. S. 397;
O'Gorman & Young v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,
282 U. S. 251,
282 U. S.
257-258;
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U.
S. 502,
291 U. S. 530;
Borden's Farm Products Co. v. Baldwin, 293 U.
S. 194,
293 U. S.
209.
Page 298 U. S. 626
The Legislature finds that the employment of women and minors in
trade and industry in the state of New York at wages unreasonably
low and not fairly commensurate with the value of the services
rendered is a matter of vital public concern; that many women and
minors are not, as a class, upon a level of equality in bargaining
with their employers in regard to minimum fair wage standards, and
that "freedom of contract," as applied to their relations with
employers, is illusory; that, by reason of the necessity of seeking
support for themselves and their dependents, they are forced to
accept whatever wages are offered, and that, judged by any
reasonable standard, wages in many instances are fixed by chance
and caprice, and the wages accepted are often found to bear no
relation to the fair value of the service. The Legislature further
states that women and minors are peculiarly subject "to the
overreaching of inefficient, harsh, or ignorant employers," and
that, in the absence of effective minimum fair wage rates, the
constant lowering of wages by unscrupulous employers constitutes a
serious form of unfair competition against other employers, reduces
the purchasing power of the workers, and threatens the stability of
industry. The Legislature deemed it essential to seek the
correction of these evils by the exercise of the police power
"for the protection of industry and of the women and minors
employed therein and of the public interest of the community at
large in their health and wellbeing and in the prevention of the
deterioration of the race."
§ 550.
In the factual brief, statistics are presented showing the
increasing number of wage-earning women, and that women are in
industry and in other fields of employment because they must
support themselves and their dependents. Data are submitted, from
reports of the Women's Bureau of the United States Department of
Labor, showing such discrepancies and variations in wages paid
for
Page 298 U. S. 627
identical work as to indicate that no relationship exists
between the value of the services rendered and the wages paid. It
also appears that working women are largely unorganized, and that
their bargaining power is relatively weak. The seriousness of the
social problem is presented. Inquiries by the New York State
Department of Labor in cooperation with the Emergency Relief Bureau
of New York City disclosed the large number of women employed in
industry whose wages were insufficient for the support of
themselves and those dependent upon them. For that reason, they had
been accepted for relief, and their wages were being supplemented
by payments from the Emergency Relief Bureau. Thus, the failure of
overreaching employers to pay to women the wages commensurate with
the value of services rendered has imposed a direct and heavy
burden upon the taxpayers. The weight of this burden and the
necessity for taking reasonable measures to reduce it, in the light
of the enormous annual budgetary appropriation for the Department
of Public Welfare of New York City, is strikingly exhibited in the
brief filed by the corporation counsel of the City as an
amicus
curiae.
We are not at liberty to disregard these facts. We must assume
that they exist and examine respondent's argument from that
standpoint. That argument is addressed to the fundamental postulate
of liberty of contract. I think that the argument fails to take
account of established principles and ignores the historic relation
of the state to the protection of women.
Fifth. We have had frequent occasion to consider the
limitations of liberty of contract. While it is highly important to
preserve that liberty from arbitrary and capricious interference,
it is also necessary to prevent its abuse, as otherwise it could be
used to override all public interests, and thus, in the end,
destroy the very freedom of opportunity which it is designed to
safeguard.
Page 298 U. S. 628
We have repeatedly said that liberty of contract is a qualified,
and not an absolute, right.
"There is no absolute freedom to do as one wills or to contract
as one chooses. . . . Liberty implies the absence of arbitrary
restraint, not immunity from reasonable regulations and
prohibitions imposed in the interests of the community."
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. McGuire, 219 U.
S. 549,
219 U. S. 567.
The numerous restraints that have been sustained have often been
recited.
Id., p.
219 U. S. 568;
Nebbia v. New York, supra, pp.
291 U. S.
526-528. Thus, we have upheld the limitation of hours of
employment in mines and smelters (
Holden v. Hardy,
169 U. S. 366);
the requiring of redemption in cash of store orders or other
evidences of indebtedness issued in payment of wages (
Knoxville
Iron Co. v. Harbison, 183 U. S. 13); the
prohibition of contracts for options to sell or buy grain or other
commodities at a future time (
Booth v. Illinois,
184 U. S. 425);
the forbidding of advance payments to seamen (
Patterson v. The
Bark Eudora, 190 U. S. 169);
the prohibition of contracts to pay miners employed at quantity
rates upon the basis of screened coal instead of the weight of the
coal as originally produced in the mine (
McLean v.
Arkansas, 211 U. S. 539);
the regulation of the size and weight of loaves of bread
(
Schmidinger v. Chicago, 226 U. S. 578;
Petersen Baking Co. v. Bryan, 290 U.
S. 570); the regulation of insurance rates (
German
Alliance Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 233 U.
S. 389;
O'Gorman & Young v. Hartford Fire
Insurance Co., supra); the regulation of the size and
character of packages in which goods are sold (
Armour & Co.
v. North Dakota, 240 U. S. 510);
the limitation of hours of employment in manufacturing
establishments with a specified allowance of overtime payment
(
Bunting v. Oregon, 243 U. S. 426);
the regulation of sales of stocks and bonds to prevent fraud
(
Hall v. Geiger-Jones Co., 242 U.
S. 539); the regulation of the price of milk (
Nebbia
v. New York,
Page 298 U. S. 629
supra). The test of validity is not artificial. It is
whether the limitation upon the freedom of contract is arbitrary
and capricious, or one reasonably required in order appropriately
to serve the public interest in the light of the particular
conditions to which the power is addressed.
When there are conditions which specially touch the health and
wellbeing of women, the state may exert its power in a reasonable
manner for their protection, whether or not a similar regulation
is, or could be, applied to men. The distinctive nature and
function of women -- their particular relation to the social
welfare -- has put them in a separate class. This separation and
corresponding distinctions in legislation is one of the outstanding
traditions of legal history. The Fourteenth Amendment found the
states with that protective power, and did not take it away or
remove the reasons for its exercise. Changes have been effected
within the domain of state policy and upon an appraisal of state
interests. We have not yet arrived at a time when we are at liberty
to override the judgment of the State and decide that women are not
the special subject of exploitation because they are women and as
such are not in a relatively defenseless position.
More than forty years after the adoption of the Fourteenth
Amendment, we said that it did not interfere with state power by
creating "a fictitious equality."
Quong Wing v.
Kirkendall, 223 U. S. 59,
223 U. S. 63. We
called attention to the ample precedents in regulatory provisions
for a classification on the basis of sex. We said:
"It has been recognized with regard to hours of work. . . . It
is recognized in the respective rights of husband and wife in land
during life, in the inheritance after the death of the spouse.
Often it is expressed in the time fixed for coming of age. . . .
The particular points at which that difference shall be emphasized
by legislation are
Page 298 U. S. 630
largely in the power of the state."
Id. Not long before the decision in the
Quong
Wing case, the question had received elaborate consideration
in
Muller v. Oregon, 208 U. S. 412,
where a regulation of the working hours of women was sustained. We
thought that the disadvantage at which woman was placed in the
struggle for subsistence was obvious, and we emphasized the point
that she "becomes an object of public interest and care in order to
preserve the strength and vigor of the race." We added that,
"though limitations upon personal and contractual rights may be
removed by legislation," woman will still be in a situation "where
some legislation to protect her seems necessary to secure a real
equality of right." She therefore still may be
"properly placed in a class by herself, and legislation designed
for her protection may be sustained, even when like legislation is
not necessary for men, and could not be sustained."
Muller v. Oregon, supra, pp.
208 U. S.
421-422. This ruling has been followed in
Riley v.
Massachusetts, 232 U. S. 671,
Miller v. Wilson, 236 U. S. 373, and
Bosley v. McLaughlin, 236 U. S. 385,
with respect to hours of work, and in
Radice v. New York,
supra, in relation to night work.
If liberty of contract were viewed from the standpoint of
absolute right, there would be as much to be said against a
regulation of the hours of labor of women as against the fixing of
a minimum wage. Restriction upon hours is a restriction upon the
making of contracts and upon earning power. But the right being a
qualified one, we must apply in each case the test of
reasonableness in the circumstances disclosed. Here, the special
conditions calling for the protection of women, and for the
protection of society itself, are abundantly shown. The legislation
is not less in the interest of the community as a whole than in the
interest of the women employees who are paid less than the value of
their services. That lack must be made goods out of the public
Page 298 U. S. 631
purse. Granted that the burden of the support of women who do
not receive a living wage cannot be transferred to employers who
pay the equivalent of the service they obtain, there is no reason
why the burden caused by the failure to pay that equivalent should
not be placed upon those who create it. The fact that the State
cannot secure the benefit to society of a living wage for women
employees by any enactment which bears unreasonably upon employers
does not preclude the State from seeking its objective by means
entirely fair both to employers and the women employed.
In the statute before us, no unreasonableness appears. The end
is legitimate and the means appropriate. I think that the Act
should be upheld.
I am authorized to state that MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS, MR. JUSTICE
STONE, and MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO join in this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
While I agree with all that the CHIEF JUSTICE has said, I would
not make the differences between the present statute and that
involved in the
Adkins case the sole basis of decision. I
attach little importance to the fact that the earlier statute was
aimed only at a starvation wage, and that the present one does not
prohibit such a wage unless it is also less than the reasonable
value of the service. Since neither statute compels employment at
any wage, I do not assume that employer in one case, more than in
the other, would pay the minimum wage if the service were worth
less.
The vague and general pronouncement of the Fourteenth Amendment
against deprivation of liberty without due process of law is a
limitation of legislative power, not a formula for its exercise. It
does not purport to say in what particular manner that power shall
be exerted.
Page 298 U. S. 632
It makes no finespun distinctions between methods which the
legislature may and which it may not choose to solve a pressing
problem of government. It is plain too, that, unless the language
of the amendment and the decisions of this Court are to be ignored,
the liberty which the amendment protects is not freedom from
restraint of all law or of any law which reasonable men may think
an appropriate means for dealing with any of those matters of
public concern with which it is the business of government to deal.
There is grim irony in speaking of the freedom of contract of those
who, because of their economic necessities, give their service for
less than is needful to keep body and soul together. But if this is
freedom of contract, no one has ever denied that it is freedom
which may be restrained, notwithstanding the Fourteenth Amendment,
by a statute passed in the public interest.
In many cases, this Court has sustained the power of
legislatures to prohibit or restrict the terms of a contract,
including the price term, in order to accomplish what the
legislative body may reasonably consider a public purpose. They
include cases, which have neither been overruled nor discredited,
in which the sole basis of regulation was the fact that
circumstances, beyond the control of the parties, had so seriously
curtailed the regulative power of competition as to place buyers or
sellers at a disadvantage in the bargaining struggle, such that a
legislature might reasonably have contemplated serious consequences
to the community as a whole, and have sought to avoid them by
regulation of the terms of the contract.
Munn v. Illinois,
94 U. S. 113;
Brass v. Stoeser, 153 U. S. 391;
German Alliance Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 233 U.
S. 389,
233 U. S. 409;
Terminal Taxicab Co. v. Kutz, 241 U.
S. 252;
Block v. Hirsh, 256 U.
S. 135;
Marcus Brown Holding Co. v. Feldman,
256 U. S. 170;
Levy Leasing Co. v. Siegel, 258 U.
S. 242;
Nebbia v.
New
Page 298 U. S. 633
York, 291 U. S. 502.
See also Frisbie v. United States, 157 U.
S. 160;
Knoxville Iron Co. v. Harbison,
183 U. S. 13;
McLean v. Arkansas, 211 U. S. 539;
Mutual Loan Co. v. Martell, 222 U.
S. 225.
No one doubts that the presence in the community of a large
number of those compelled by economic necessity to accept a wage
less than is needful for subsistence is a matter of grave public
concern, the more so when, as has been demonstrated here, it tends
to produce ill health, immorality, and deterioration of the race.
The fact that, at one time or another, Congress and the
legislatures of seventeen States, and the legislative bodies of
twenty-one foreign countries, including Great Britain and its four
commonwealths, have found that wage regulation is an appropriate
corrective for serious social and economic maladjustments growing
out of inequality in bargaining power precludes, for me, any
assumption that it is a remedy beyond the bounds of reason. It is
difficult to imagine any grounds, other than our own personal
economic predilections, for saying that the contract of employment
is any the less an appropriate subject of legislation than are
scores of others in dealing with which this Court has held that
legislatures may curtail individual freedom in the public
interest.
If it is a subject upon which there is power to legislate at
all, the Fourteenth Amendment makes no distinction between the
methods by which legislatures may deal with it, any more than it
proscribes the regulation of one term of a bargain more than
another if it is properly the subject of regulation. No one has yet
attempted to say upon what basis of history, principles of
government, law, or logic, it is within due process to regulate the
hours and conditions of labor of women,
see Muller v.
Oregon, 208 U. S. 412;
Riley v. Massachusetts, 232 U. S. 671,
232 U. S. 679;
Hawley v. Walker, 232 U.S. 718;
Miller v. Wilson,
236 U. S. 373;
Bosley v.
McLaughlin, 236 U.S.
Page 298 U. S. 634
385, and of men,
Bunting v. Oregon, 243 U.
S. 426, and the time and manner of payment of the wage,
McLean v. Arkansas, supra; Knoxville Iron Co. v. Harbison,
supra; Patterson v. Bark Eudora, 190 U.
S. 169;
compare New York Central R. Co. v.
White, 243 U. S. 188;
Arizona Employers' Liability Cases, 250 U.
S. 400, but that regulation of the amount of the wage
passes beyond the constitutional limitation; or to say upon what
theory the amount of a wage is any the less the subject of
regulation in the public interest than that of insurance premiums,
German Alliance Insurance Co. v. Lewis, supra, or of the
commissions of insurance brokers,
O'Gorman & Young, Inc. v.
Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 282 U. S. 251, or
of the charges of grain elevators,
Munn v. Illinois, supra;
Brass v. Stoeser, supra, or of the price which the farmer
receives for his milk, or which the wage earner pays for it,
Nebbia v. New York, supra.
These considerations were developed at length in
Tyson v.
Banton, 273 U. S. 418,
273 U. S. 447,
et seq., and in
Ribnik v. McBride, 277 U.
S. 350,
277 U. S. 359,
et seq., and need not be further elaborated now. It is
true that the Court rejected them there, but it later accepted and
applied them as the basis of decision in
O'Gorman & Young,
Inc. v. Harford Fire Ins. Co., supra; Nebbia v. New York, supra;
Hegeman Farms Corp. v. Baldwin, 293 U.
S. 163;
Borden's Farm Products Co. v. Ten Eyck,
297 U. S. 251.
Both precedent, and, what is more important, reason require their
acceptance now.
See Burnet v. Coronado Oil & Gas Co.,
285 U. S. 393,
285 U. S. 405.
In upholding minimum state price regulation in the milk industry in
Nebbia v. New York, supra, the Court declared, p.
291 U. S.
537:
"So far as the requirement of due process is concerned, and in
the absence of other constitutional restriction, a state is free to
adopt whatever economic policy may reasonably be deemed to promote
public welfare, and to enforce that policy by legislation adapted
to its purpose.
Page 298 U. S. 635
The courts are without authority either to declare such policy,
or, when it is declared by the legislature, to override it. If the
laws passed are seen to have a reasonable relation to a proper
legislative purpose, and are neither arbitrary nor discriminatory,
the requirements of due process are satisfied, and judicial
determination to that effect renders a court
functus
officio."
That declaration and decision should control the present case.
They are irreconcilable with the decision and most that was said in
the
Adkins case. They have left the Court free of its
restriction as a precedent, and free to declare that the choice of
the particular form of regulation by which grave economic
maladjustments are to be remedied is for legislatures, and not the
courts.
In the years which have intervened since the
Adkins
case, we have had opportunity to learn that a wage is not always
the resultant of free bargaining between employers and employees;
that it may be one forced upon employees by their economic
necessities and upon employers by the most ruthless of their
competitors. We have had opportunity to perceive more clearly that
a wage insufficient to support the worker does not visit its
consequences upon him alone; that it may affect profoundly the
entire economic structure of society and, in any case, that it
casts on every taxpayer, and on government itself, the burden of
solving the problems of poverty, subsistence, health, and morals of
large numbers in the community. Because of their nature and extent,
these are public problems. A generation ago, they were for the
individual to solve; today they are the burden of the nation. I can
perceive no more objection, on constitutional grounds, to their
solution by requiring an industry to bear the subsistence cost of
the labor which it employs, than to the imposition upon it of the
cost of its industrial accidents.
See New York Central R. Co.
v. White, supra; Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington,
243 U. S. 219.
Page 298 U. S. 636
It is not for the courts to resolve doubts whether the remedy by
wage regulation is as efficacious as many believe, or is better
than some other, or is better even than the blind operation of
uncontrolled economic forces. The legislature must be free to
choose unless government is to be rendered impotent. The Fourteenth
Amendment has no more embedded in the Constitution our preference
for some particular set of economic beliefs than it has adopted, in
the name of liberty, the system of theology which we may happen to
approve.
I know of no rule or practice by which the arguments advanced in
support of an application for certiorari restrict our choice
between conflicting precedents in deciding a question of
constitutional law which the petition, if granted, requires us to
answer. Here, the question which the petition specifically presents
is whether the New York statute contravenes the Fourteenth
Amendment. In addition, the petition assigns as a reason for
granting it that "the construction and application of the
Constitution of the United States and a prior decision" of this
Court "are necessarily involved," and, again, that
"the circumstances prevailing under which the New York law was
enacted call for a reconsideration of the
Adkins case in
the light of the New York act and conditions aimed to be remedied
thereby."
Unless we are now to construe and apply the Fourteenth Amendment
without regard to our decisions since the
Adkins case, we
could not rightly avoid its reconsideration even if it were not
asked. We should follow our decision in the
Nebbia case
and leave the selection and the method of the solution of the
problems to which the statute is addressed where it seems to me the
Constitution has left them, to the legislative branch of the
government. The judgment should be reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO join in this
opinion.