1. The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 provides for fixing
minimum wages and maximum hours for employees engaged in the
production of goods for interstate commerce, with increased
compensation for overtime, and forbids, under pain of fine and
imprisonment: (1) violation by an employer of such wage and hour
provisions; (2) shipment by him in interstate commerce of any goods
in the production of which any employee was employed in violation
of such provisions, and (3) failure of the employer to keep such
records of his employees and of their wages and hours, as shall be
prescribed by administrative regulation or order.
Held
within the commerce power and consistent with the Fifth and Tenth
Amendments. P.
312 U. S.
111.
2. While manufacture is not of itself interstate commerce, the
shipment of manufactured goods interstate is such commerce, and the
prohibition of such shipment by Congress is a regulation of
interstate commerce. P.
312 U. S.
113.
3. Congress, following its own conception of public policy
concerning the restrictions which may appropriately be imposed on
interstate commerce, is free to exclude from it articles whose use
in the State for which they are destined it may conceive to be
injurious to the public health, morals or welfare, even though the
State has not sought to regulate their use. P.
312 U. S.
114.
4. Such regulation is not a forbidden invasion of state power
merely because either its motive or its consequence is to restrict
the use of articles of commerce within the States of destination,
and is valid unless prohibited by other Constitutional provisions.
P.
312 U. S.
114.
5. The motive and purpose of the present regulation are plainly
to make effective the Congressional conception of public policy
that interstate commerce should not be made the instrument of
competition in the distribution of goods produced under substandard
labor conditions, which competition is injurious to the commerce
and to the States from and to which it flows. P.
312 U.S. 115.
6. The motive and purpose of a regulation of interstate commerce
are matters for the legislative judgment upon the exercise of which
the Constitution places no restriction, and over which the courts
are given no control. P.
312 U.S.
115.
Page 312 U. S. 101
7. In prohibiting interstate shipment of goods produced under
the forbidden substandard labor conditions, the Act is within the
authority of Congress, if no Constitutional provision forbids. P.
312 U.S. 115.
8.
Hammer v. Dagenhart, 247 U.
S. 251, overruled;
Carter v. Carter Coal Co.,
298 U. S. 238,
declared to have been limited. Pp.
312 U.S. 115,
312 U. S.
123.
9. The "production for interstate commerce" intended by the Act
includes, at least, production of goods, which, at the time of
production, the employer, according to the normal course of his
business, intends or expects to move in interstate commerce
although, through the exigencies of the business, all of the goods
may not thereafter actually enter interstate commerce. P.
312 U. S.
117.
10. The power of Congress over interstate commerce extends to
those intrastate activities which so affect interstate commerce or
the exercise of the power of Congress over it as to make their
regulation an appropriate means to the attainment of a legitimate
end -- the exercise of the granted power of Congress to regulate
interstate commerce. P.
312 U. S.
118.
11. Congress, having by the present Act adopted the policy of
excluding from interstate commerce all goods produced for that
commerce which do not conform to the specified labor standards, it
may choose the means reasonably adapted to the attainment of the
permitted end, even though they involve control of intrastate
activities. P.
312 U. S.
121.
12. Independently of the prohibition of shipment or
transportation of the proscribed goods, the provision of the Act
for the suppression of their production for interstate commerce is
within the commerce power. P.
312 U. S.
122.
13. The Tenth Amendment is not a limitation upon the authority
of the National Government to resort to all means for the exercise
of a granted power which are appropriate and plainly adapted to the
permitted end. P.
312 U. S.
123.
14. The requirements of the Act as to the keeping of records are
valid as incidental to the wage and hour requirements. P.
312 U. S.
124.
15. The wage and hour provisions of the Act do not violate the
due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. P.
312 U. S.
125.
16. In its criminal aspect, the Act is sufficiently definite to
meet constitutional demands. P.
312 U. S.
125.
32 F. Supp.
734, reversed.
APPEAL, under the Criminal Appeals Act, from a judgment quashing
an indictment.
Page 312 U. S. 108
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The two principal questions raised by the record in this case
are, first, whether Congress has constitutional power to prohibit
the shipment in interstate commerce of lumber manufactured by
employees whose wages are less than a prescribed minimum or whose
weekly hours of labor at that wage are greater than a prescribed
maximum, and, second, whether it has power to prohibit the
employment of workmen in the production of goods "for interstate
commerce" at other than prescribed wages and hours. A subsidiary
question is whether, in connection with such prohibitions, Congress
can require the employer subject to them to keep records showing
the hours worked each day and week by each of his employees
including those engaged "in the production and manufacture of
goods, to-wit, lumber, for
interstate commerce.'"
Appellee demurred to an indictment found in the district court
for southern Georgia charging him with violation of §
15(a)(1)(2) and (5) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938; 52
Stat. 1060, 29 U.S.C. § 201,
et seq. The district
court sustained the demurrer and quashed the indictment, and the
case comes here on direct appeal under § 238 of the Judicial
Code as amended, 28
Page 312 U. S. 109
U.S.C. § 345, and § 682, Title 18 U.S.C. 34 Stat.
1246, which authorizes an appeal to this Court when the judgment
sustaining the demurrer "is based upon the invalidity or
construction of the statute upon which the indictment is
founded."
The Fair Labor Standards Act set up a comprehensive legislative
scheme for preventing the shipment in interstate commerce of
certain products and commodities produced in the United States
under labor conditions as respects wages and hours which fail to
conform to standards set up by the Act. Its purpose, as we
judicially know from the declaration of policy in § 2(a) of
the Act, [
Footnote 1] and the
reports of Congressional committees proposing the legislation,
S.Rept. No. 884, 75th Cong. 1st Sess.; H.Rept. No. 1452, 75th Cong.
1st Sess.; H.Rept. No. 2182, 75th Cong.3d Sess., Conference Report,
H.Rept. No. 2738, 75th Cong.3d Sess., is to exclude from interstate
commerce goods produced for the commerce and to prevent their
production for interstate commerce under conditions detrimental to
the maintenance of the minimum standards of living necessary for
health and general wellbeing, and to prevent the use of
interstate
Page 312 U. S. 110
commerce as the means of competition in the distribution of
goods so produced, and as the means of spreading and perpetuating
such substandard labor conditions among the workers of the several
states. The Act also sets up an administrative procedure whereby
those standards may from time to time be modified generally as to
industries subject to the Act or within an industry in accordance
with specified standards, by an administrator acting in
collaboration with "Industry Committees" appointed by him.
Section 15 of the statute prohibits certain specified acts, and
§ 16(a) punishes willful violation of it by a fine of not more
than $10,000, and punishes each conviction after the first by
imprisonment of not more than six months or by the specified fine,
or both. Section 15(1) makes unlawful the shipment in interstate
commerce of any goods "in the production of which any employee was
employed in violation of section 6 or section 7," which provide,
among other things, that, during the first year of operation of the
Act, a minimum wage of 25 cents per hour shall be paid to employees
"engaged in [interstate] commerce or the production of goods for
[interstate] commerce," § 6, and that the maximum hours of
employment for employees "engaged in commerce or the production of
goods for commerce" without increased compensation for overtime,
shall be forty-four hours a week. § 7.
Section 15(a)(2) makes it unlawful to violate the provisions of
§§ 6 and 7, including the minimum wage and maximum hour
requirements just mentioned for employees engaged in production of
goods for commerce. Section 15(a)(5) makes it unlawful for an
employer subject to the Act to violate § 11(c), which requires
him to keep such records of the persons employed by him and of
their wages and hours of employment as the administrator shall
prescribe by regulation or order.
Page 312 U. S. 111
The indictment charges that appellee is engaged, in the State of
Georgia, in the business of acquiring raw materials, which he
manufactures into finished lumber with the intent, when
manufactured, to ship it in interstate commerce to customers
outside the state, and that he does, in fact, so ship a large part
of the lumber so produced. There are numerous counts charging
appellee with the shipment in interstate commerce from Georgia to
points outside the state of lumber in the production of which, for
interstate commerce, appellee has employed workmen at less than the
prescribed minimum wage or more than the prescribed maximum hours
without payment to them of any wage for overtime. Other counts
charge the employment by appellee of workmen in the production of
lumber for interstate commerce at wages at less than 25 cents an
hour or for more than the maximum hours per week without payment to
them of the prescribed overtime wage. Still another count charges
appellee with failure to keep records showing the hours worked each
day a week by each of his employees as required by § 11(c) and
the regulation of the administrator, Title 29, Ch. 5, Code of
Federal Regulations, Part 516, and also that appellee unlawfully
failed to keep such records of employees engaged "in the production
and manufacture of goods, to-wit lumber, for interstate
commerce."
The demurrer, so far as now relevant to the appeal, challenged
the validity of the Fair Labor Standards Act under the Commerce
Clause and the Fifth and Tenth Amendments. The district court
quashed the indictment in its entirety upon the broad grounds that
the Act, which it interpreted as a regulation of manufacture within
the states, is unconstitutional. It declared that manufacture is
not interstate commerce, and that the regulation by the Fair Labor
Standards Act of wages and hours of employment of those engaged in
the manufacture
Page 312 U. S. 112
of goods which it is intended at the time of production "may or
will be" after production "sold in interstate commerce in part or
in whole" is not within the congressional power to regulate
interstate commerce.
The effect of the court's decision and judgment is thus to deny
the power of Congress to prohibit shipment in interstate commerce
of lumber produced for interstate commerce under the proscribed
substandard labor conditions of wages and hours, its power to
penalize the employer for his failure to conform to the wage and
hour provisions in the case of employees engaged in the production
of lumber which he intends thereafter to ship in interstate
commerce in part or in whole according to the normal course of his
business, and its power to compel him to keep records of hours of
employment as required by the statute and the regulations of the
administrator.
The case comes here on assignments by the Government that the
district court erred insofar as it held that Congress was without
constitutional power to penalize the acts set forth in the
indictment, and appellee seeks to sustain the decision below on the
grounds that the prohibition by Congress of those Acts is
unauthorized by the Commerce Clause and is prohibited by the Fifth
Amendment. The appeal statute limits our jurisdiction on this
appeal to a review of the determination of the district court so
far only as it is based on the validity or construction of the
statute.
United States v. Borden Co., 308 U.
S. 188,
308 U. S.
193-195, and cases cited. Hence, we accept the district
court's interpretation of the indictment and confine our decision
to the validity and construction of the statute.
The prohibition of shipment of the proscribed goods in
interstate commerce. Section 15(a)(1) prohibits, and the indictment
charges, the shipment in interstate commerce, of goods produced for
interstate commerce by employees whose wages and hours of
employment do not
Page 312 U. S. 113
conform to the requirements of the Act. Since this section is
not violated unless the commodity shipped has been produced under
labor conditions prohibited by § 6 and § 7, the only
question arising under the commerce clause with respect to such
shipments is whether Congress has the constitutional power to
prohibit them.
While manufacture is not, of itself, interstate commerce, the
shipment of manufactured goods interstate is such commerce, and the
prohibition of such shipment by Congress is indubitably a
regulation of the commerce. The power to regulate commerce is the
power "to prescribe the rule by which commerce is governed."
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 196. It
extends not only to those regulations which aid, foster and protect
the commerce, but embraces those which prohibit it.
Reid v.
Colorado, 187 U. S. 137;
Lottery Case, 188 U. S. 321;
United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 213 U.
S. 366;
Hoke v. United States, 227 U.
S. 308;
Clark Distilling Co. v. Western Maryland Ry.
Co., 242 U. S. 311;
United States v. Hill, 248 U. S. 420;
McCormick & Co. v. Brown, 286 U.
S. 131. It is conceded that the power of Congress to
prohibit transportation in interstate commerce includes noxious
articles,
Lottery Case, supra; Hipolite Egg Co. v. United
States, 220 U. S. 45;
cf. Hoke v. United States, supra; stolen articles,
Brooks v. United States, 267 U. S. 432;
kidnapped persons,
Gooch v. United States, 297 U.
S. 124, and articles, such as intoxicating liquor or
convict made goods, traffic in which is forbidden or restricted by
the laws of the state of destination.
Kentucky Whip &
Collar Co. v. Illinois Central R. Co., 299 U.
S. 334.
But it is said that the present prohibition falls within the
scope of none of these categories; that, while the prohibition is
nominally a regulation of the commerce, its motive or purpose is
regulation of wages and hours of persons engaged in manufacture,
the control of which has been reserved to the states and upon which
Georgia
Page 312 U. S. 114
and some of the states of destination have placed no
restriction; that the effect of the present statute is not to
exclude the proscribed articles from interstate commerce in aid of
state regulation, as in
Kentucky Whip & Collar Co. v.
Illinois Central R. Co., supra, but instead, under the guise
of a regulation of interstate commerce, it undertakes to regulate
wages and hours within the state contrary to the policy of the
state which has elected to leave them unregulated.
The power of Congress over interstate commerce "is complete in
itself, may be exercised to its utmost extent, and acknowledges no
limitations other than are prescribed in the Constitution."
Gibbons v. Ogden, supra, 22 U. S. 196.
That power can neither be enlarged nor diminished by the exercise
or nonexercise of state power.
Kentucky Whip & Collar Co.
v. Illinois Central R. Co., supra. Congress, following its own
conception of public policy concerning the restrictions which may
appropriately be imposed on interstate commerce, is free to exclude
from the commerce articles whose use in the states for which they
are destined it may conceive to be injurious to the public health,
morals or welfare, even though the state has not sought to regulate
their use.
Reid v. Colorado, supra; Lottery Case, supra;
Hipolite Egg Co. v. United States, supra; Hoke v. United States,
supra.
Such regulation is not a forbidden invasion of state power
merely because either its motive or its consequence is to restrict
the use of articles of commerce within the states of destination,
and is not prohibited unless by other Constitutional provisions. It
is no objection to the assertion of the power to regulate
interstate commerce that its exercise is attended by the same
incidents which attend the exercise of the police power of the
states.
Seven Cases v. United States, 239 U.
S. 510,
239 U. S. 614;
Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co.,
251 U. S. 146,
251 U. S. 156;
United States v. Carolene
Products Co., 304 U.S.
Page 312 U. S. 115
144,
304 U. S. 147;
United States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.,
311 U. S. 377.
The motive and purpose of the present regulation are plainly to
make effective the Congressional conception of public policy that
interstate commerce should not be made the instrument of
competition in the distribution of goods produced under substandard
labor conditions, which competition is injurious to the commerce
and to the states from and to which the commerce flows. The motive
and purpose of a regulation of interstate commerce are matters for
the legislative judgment upon the exercise of which the
Constitution places no restriction, and over which the courts are
given no control.
McCray v. United States, 195 U. S.
27;
Sonzinsky v. United States, 300 U.
S. 506,
300 U. S. 513,
and cases cited. "The judicial cannot prescribe to the legislative
department of the government limitations upon the exercise of its
acknowledged power."
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533. Whatever their motive and
purpose, regulations of commerce which do not infringe some
constitutional prohibition are within the plenary power conferred
on Congress by the Commerce Clause. Subject only to that
limitation, presently to be considered, we conclude that the
prohibition of the shipment interstate of goods produced under the
forbidden substandard labor conditions is within the constitutional
authority of Congress.
In the more than a century which has elapsed since the decision
of
Gibbons v. Ogden, these principles of constitutional
interpretation have been so long and repeatedly recognized by this
Court as applicable to the Commerce Clause that there would be
little occasion for repeating them now were it not for the decision
of this Court twenty-two years ago in
Hammer v. Dagenhart,
247 U. S. 251. In
that case, it was held by a bare majority of the Court, over the
powerful and now classic dissent of Mr. Justice Holmes setting
forth the fundamental issues involved,
Page 312 U. S. 116
that Congress was without power to exclude the products of child
labor from interstate commerce. The reasoning and conclusion of the
Court's opinion there cannot be reconciled with the conclusion
which we have reached, that the power of Congress under the
Commerce Clause is plenary to exclude any article from interstate
commerce subject only to the specific prohibitions of the
Constitution.
Hammer v. Dagenhart has not been followed. The
distinction on which the decision was rested, that Congressional
power to prohibit interstate commerce is limited to articles which
in themselves have some harmful or deleterious property -- a
distinction which was novel when made and unsupported by any
provision of the Constitution -- has long since been abandoned.
Brooks v. United States, supra; Kentucky Whip & Collar Co.
v. Illinois Central R. Co., supra; Electric Bond & Share Co. v.
Securities & Exchange Comm'n, 303 U.
S. 419;
Mulford v. Smith, 307 U. S.
38. The thesis of the opinion -- that the motive of the
prohibition or its effect to control in some measure the use or
production within the states of the article thus excluded from the
commerce can operate to deprive the regulation of its
constitutional authority -- has long since ceased to have force.
Reid v. Colorado, supra; Lottery Case, supra; Hipolite Egg Co.
v. United States, supra; Seven Cases v. United States, supra,
239 U. S. 514;
Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co.,
supra, 251 U. S. 156;
United States v. Carolene Products Co., supra,
304 U. S. 147.
And finally, we have declared
"The authority of the federal government over interstate
commerce does not differ in extent or character from that retained
by the states over intrastate commerce."
United States v. Rock Royal Cooperative, 307 U.
S. 533,
307 U. S.
569.
The conclusion is inescapable that
Hammer v. Dagenhart
was a departure from the principles which have prevailed in the
interpretation of the Commerce Clause both
Page 312 U. S. 117
before and since the decision, and that such vitality, as a
precedent, as it then had, has long since been exhausted. It should
be, and now is, overruled.
Validity of the wage and hour requirements. Section
15(a)(2) and §§ 6 and 7 require employers to conform to
the wage and hour provisions with respect to all employees engaged
in the production of goods for interstate commerce. As appellee's
employees are not alleged to be "engaged in interstate commerce,"
the validity of the prohibition turns on the question whether the
employment, under other than the prescribed labor standards, of
employees engaged in the production of goods for interstate
commerce is so related to the commerce, and so affects it, as to be
within the reach of the power of Congress to regulate it.
To answer this question, we must at the outset determine whether
the particular acts charged in the counts which are laid under
§ 15(a)(2) as they were construed below constitute "production
for commerce" within the meaning of the statute. As the Government
seeks to apply the statute in the indictment, and as the court
below construed the phrase "produced for interstate commerce," it
embraces at least the case where an employer engaged, as is
appellee, in the manufacture and shipment of goods in filling
orders of extrastate customers, manufactures his product with the
intent or expectation that, according to the normal course of his
business, all or some part of it will be selected for shipment to
those customers.
Without attempting to define the precise limits of the phrase,
we think the acts alleged in the indictment are within the sweep of
the statute. The obvious purpose of the Act was not only to prevent
the interstate transportation of the proscribed product, but to
stop the initial step toward transportation, production with the
purpose of so transporting it. Congress was not unaware that
Page 312 U. S. 118
most manufacturing businesses shipping their product in
interstate commerce make it in their shops without reference to its
ultimate destination, and then, after manufacture, select some of
it for shipment interstate and some intrastate, according to the
daily demands of their business, and that it would be practically
impossible, without disrupting manufacturing businesses, to
restrict the prohibited kind of production to the particular pieces
of lumber, cloth, furniture or the like which later move in
interstate, rather than intrastate, commerce.
Cf. United States
v. New York Central R. Co., 272 U. S. 457,
272 U. S.
464.
The recognized need of drafting a workable statute and the well
known circumstances in which it was to be applied are persuasive of
the conclusion, which the legislative history supports, S.Rept. No.
884, 75th Cong. 1st Sess., pp. 7 and 8; H.Rept. No. 2738, 75th
Cong.3d Sess., p. 17, that the "production for commerce" intended
includes at least production of goods which, at the time of
production, the employer, according to the normal course of his
business, intends or expects to move in interstate commerce
although, through the exigencies of the business, all of the goods
may not thereafter actually enter interstate commerce. [
Footnote 2]
There remains the question whether such restriction on the
production of goods for commerce is a permissible exercise of the
commerce power. The power of Congress over interstate commerce is
not confined to the regulation of commerce among the states. It
extends to those activities intrastate which so affect interstate
commerce or the exercise of the power of Congress over it as to
make regulation of them appropriate means to the attainment of a
legitimate end, the exercise of the granted power of Congress to
regulate interstate commerce.
See McCulloch
Page 312 U. S. 119
v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 421.
Cf. United States v. Ferger, 250 U.
S. 199.
While this Court has many times found state regulation of
interstate commerce, when uniformity of its regulation is of
national concern, to be incompatible with the Commerce Clause even
though Congress has not legislated on the subject, the Court has
never implied such restraint on state control over matters
intrastate not deemed to be regulations of interstate commerce or
its instrumentalities even though they affect the commerce.
Minnesota Rate Cases, 230 U. S. 352,
230 U. S. 398
et seq., and case cited;
230 U. S. 410
et seq., and cases cited. In the absence of Congressional
legislation on the subject, state laws which are not regulations of
the commerce itself or its instrumentalities are not forbidden,
even though they affect interstate commerce.
Kidd v.
Pearson, 128 U. S. 1;
Bacon v. Illinois, 227 U. S. 504;
Heisler v. Thomas Colliery Co., 260 U.
S. 245;
Oliver Iron Co. v. Lord, 262 U.
S. 172.
But it does not follow that Congress may not, by appropriate
legislation, regulate intrastate activities where they have a
substantial effect on interstate commerce.
See Santa Cruz Fruit
Packing Co. v. National Labor Relations Board, 303 U.
S. 453,
303 U. S. 466.
A recent example is the National Labor Relations Act for the
regulation of employer and employee relations in industries in
which strikes, induced by unfair labor practices named in the Act,
tend to disturb or obstruct interstate commerce.
See National
Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.,
301 U. S. 1,
301 U. S. 38,
301 U. S. 40;
National Labor Relations Board v. Fainblatt, 306 U.
S. 601,
306 U. S. 604,
and cases cited. But, long before the adoption of the National
Labor Relations Act, this Court had many times held that the power
of Congress to regulate interstate commerce extends to the
regulation through legislative action of activities intrastate
Page 312 U. S. 120
which have a substantial effect on the commerce or the exercise
of the Congressional power over it. [
Footnote 3]
In such legislation, Congress has sometimes left it to the
courts to determine whether the intrastate activities have the
prohibited effect on the commerce, as in the Sherman Act. It has
sometimes left it to an administrative board or agency to determine
whether the activities sought to be regulated or prohibited have
such effect, as in the case of the Interstate Commerce Act and the
National Labor Relations Act, or whether they come within the
statutory definition of the prohibited Act, as in the Federal Trade
Commission Act. And sometimes Congress itself has said that a
particular activity affects the commerce, as it did in the present
Act, the Safety Appliance Act, and the Railway Labor Act. In
passing on the validity of legislation of the class last mentioned,
the only function of courts is to determine whether the particular
activity regulated or prohibited is within the reach
Page 312 U. S. 121
of the federal power.
See United States v. Ferger, supra;
Virginian Ry. Co. v. Federation, 300 U.
S. 515,
300 U. S.
553.
Congress having by the present Act adopted the policy of
excluding from interstate commerce all goods produced for the
commerce which do not conform to the specified labor standards, it
may choose the means reasonably adapted to the attainment of the
permitted end even though they involve control of intrastate
activities. Such legislation has often been sustained with respect
to powers other than the commerce power granted to the national
government when the means chosen, although not themselves within
the granted power, were nevertheless deemed appropriate aids to the
accomplishment of some purpose within an admitted power of the
national government.
See Jacob Ruppert, Inc. v. Caffey,
251 U. S. 264;
Everard's Breweries v. Day, 265 U.
S. 545,
265 U. S. 560;
Westfall v. United States, 274 U.
S. 256,
274 U. S. 259. As
to state power under the Fourteenth Amendment,
compare Otis v.
Parker, 187 U. S. 606,
187 U. S. 609;
St. John v. New York, 201 U. S. 633;
Purity Extract & Tonic Co. v. Lynch, 226 U.
S. 192,
226 U. S.
201-202. A familiar like exercise of power is the
regulation of intrastate transactions which are so commingled with
or related to interstate commerce that all must be regulated if the
interstate commerce is to be effectively controlled.
Shreveport
Case, 234 U. S. 342;
Railroad Commission of Wisconsin v. Chicago, B. & Q. R.
Co., 257 U. S. 563;
United States v. New York Central R. Co., supra,
272 U. S. 464;
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S. 1;
Mulford v. Smith, supra. Similarly, Congress may require
inspection and preventive treatment of all cattle in a disease
infected area in order to prevent shipment in interstate commerce
of some of the cattle without the treatment.
Thornton v. United
States, 271 U. S. 414. It
may prohibit the removal, at destination, of labels required by the
Pure Food & Drugs Act to be affixed to articles
Page 312 U. S. 122
transported in interstate commerce.
McDermott v.
Wisconsin, 228 U. S. 115. And
we have recently held that Congress, in the exercise of its power
to require inspection and grading of tobacco shipped in interstate
commerce, may compel such inspection and grading of all tobacco
sold at local auction rooms from which a substantial part, but not
all, of the tobacco sold is shipped in interstate commerce.
Currin v. Wallace, supra, 306 U. S. 11,
and see, to the like effect, United States v. Rock Royal
Co-op., supra, 307 U. S. 568,
note 37.
We think also that § 15(a)(2), now under consideration, is
sustainable independently of § 15(a)(1), which prohibits
shipment or transportation of the proscribed goods. As we have
said, the evils aimed at by the Act are the spread of substandard
labor conditions through the use of the facilities of interstate
commerce for competition by the goods so produced with those
produced under the prescribed or better labor conditions, and the
consequent dislocation of the commerce itself caused by the
impairment or destruction of local businesses by competition made
effective through interstate commerce. The Act is thus directed at
the suppression of a method or kind of competition in interstate
commerce which it has, in effect, condemned as "unfair," as the
Clayton Act has condemned other "unfair methods of competition"
made effective through interstate commerce.
See Van Camp &
Sons Co. v. American Can Co., 278 U.
S. 245;
Federal Trade Comm'n v. Keppel &
Bro., 291 U. S. 304.
The Sherman Act and the National Labor Relations Act are
familiar examples of the exertion of the commerce power to prohibit
or control activities wholly intrastate because of their effect on
interstate commerce.
See, as to the Sherman Act,
Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U.
S. 197;
Swift & Co. v. United States,
196 U. S. 375;
United States v. Patten, 226 U. S. 525;
United Mine Workers v. Coronado Coal Co., 259 U.
S. 344;
Local
Page 312 U. S. 123
No. 167 v. United States, 291 U.
S. 293;
Stevens Co. v. Foster & Kleiser
Co., 311 U. S. 255. As
to the National Labor Relations Act,
see National Labor
Relations Board v. Fainblatt, supra, and cases cited.
The means adopted by § 15(a)(2) for the protection of
interstate commerce by the suppression of the production of the
condemned goods for interstate commerce is so related to the
commerce, and so affects it, as to be within the reach of the
commerce power.
See Currin v. Wallace, supra, 306 U. S. 11.
Congress, to attain its objective in the suppression of nationwide
competition in interstate commerce by goods produced under
substandard labor conditions, has made no distinction as to the
volume or amount of shipments in the commerce or of production for
commerce by any particular shipper or producer. It recognized that,
in present day industry, competition by a small part may affect the
whole, and that the total effect of the competition of many small
producers may be great.
See H.Rept. No. 2182, 75th Cong.
1st Sess., p. 7. The legislation, aimed at a whole, embraces all
its parts.
Cf. National Labor Relations Board v. Fainblatt,
supra, 306 U. S.
606.
So far as
Carter v. Carter Coal Co., 298 U.
S. 238, is inconsistent with this conclusion, its
doctrine is limited in principle by the decisions under the Sherman
Act and the National Labor Relations Act, which we have cited and
which we follow.
See also Sunshine Anthracite Coal Co. v.
Adkins, 310 U. S. 381;
Currin v. Wallace, supra; Mulford v. Smith, supra; United
States v. Rock Royal Co-op., supra; Clover Fork Coal Co. v.
National Labor Relations Board, 97 F.2d 331;
National
Labor Relations Board v. Crowe Coal Co., 104 F.2d 633;
National Labor Relations Board v. Good Coal Co., 110 F.2d
501.
Our conclusion is unaffected by the Tenth Amendment. which
provides:
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the
Page 312 U. S. 124
States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the
people."
The amendment states but a truism that all is retained which has
not been surrendered. There is nothing in the history of its
adoption to suggest that it was more than declaratory of the
relationship between the national and state governments as it had
been established by the Constitution before the amendment, or that
its purpose was other than to allay fears that the new national
government might seek to exercise powers not granted, and that the
states might not be able to exercise fully their reserved powers.
See e.g., II Elliot's Debates, 123, 131; III
id.
450, 464, 600; IV
id. 140, 149; I Annals of Congress, 432,
761, 767-768; Story, Commentaries on the Constitution, §§
1907-1908.
From the beginning and for many years, the amendment has been
construed as not depriving the national government of authority to
resort to all means for the exercise of a granted power which are
appropriate and plainly adapted to the permitted end.
Martin v. Hunter's
Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304,
14 U. S. 324,
14 U. S. 325;
McCulloch v. Maryland, supra, 17 U. S. 405,
17 U. S. 406;
Gordon v. United States, 117 U.S.Appx 697, 705;
Lottery Case, supra; Northern Securities Co. v. United States,
supra, 193 U. S.
344-345;
Everard's Breweries v. Day, supra,
265 U. S. 558;
United States v. Sprague, 282 U.
S. 716,
282 U. S. 733;
see United States v. The Brigantine William, 28 Fed.Cas.
No. 16,700, p. 622. Whatever doubts may have arisen of the
soundness of that conclusion, they have been put at rest by the
decisions under the Sherman Act and the National Labor Relations
Act which we have cited.
See also Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, 297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S.
330-331;
Wright v. Union Central Ins. Co.,
304 U. S. 502,
304 U. S.
516.
Validity of the requirement of records of wages and
hours. § 15(a)(5) and § 11(c). These requirements
are incidental to those for the prescribed wages and
Page 312 U. S. 125
hours, and hence validity of the former turns on validity of the
latter. Since, as we have held, Congress may require production for
interstate commerce to conform to those conditions, it may require
the employer, as a means of enforcing the valid law, to keep a
record showing whether he has, in fact, complied with it. The
requirement for records even of the intrastate transaction is an
appropriate means to the legitimate end.
See Baltimore &
Ohio R. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Comm'n, 221 U.
S. 612;
Interstate Commerce Comm'n v. Goodrich
Transit Co., 224 U. S. 194;
Chicago Board of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U. S.
1,
262 U. S. 42.
Validity of the wage and hour provisions under the Fifth
Amendment. Both provisions are minimum wage requirements
compelling the payment of a minimum standard wage with a prescribed
increased wage for overtime of "not less than one and one-half
times the regular rate" at which the worker is employed. Since our
decision in
West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.
S. 379, it is no longer open to question that the fixing
of a minimum wage is within the legislative power, and that the
bare fact of its exercise is not a denial of due process under the
Fifth more than under the Fourteenth Amendment. Nor is it any
longer open to question that it is within the legislative power to
fix maximum hours.
Holden v. Hardy, 169 U.
S. 366;
Muller v. Oregon, 208 U.
S. 412;
Bunting v. Oregon, 243 U.
S. 426;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Interstate
Commerce Comm'n, supra. Similarly, the statute is not
objectionable because applied alike to both men and women.
Cf.
Bunting v. Oregon, 243 U. S. 426.
The Act is sufficiently definite to meet constitutional demands.
One who employs persons, without conforming to the prescribed wage
and hour conditions, to work on goods which he ships or expects to
ship across state
Page 312 U. S. 126
lines is warned that he may be subject to the criminal penalties
of the Act. No more is required.
Nash v. United States,
229 U. S. 373,
229 U. S.
377.
We have considered, but find it unnecessary to discuss other
contentions.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
"Sec. 2. (a) The Congress hereby finds that the existence, in
industries engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for
commerce, of labor conditions detrimental to the maintenance of the
minimum standard of living necessary for health, efficiency, and
general wellbeing of workers (1) causes commerce and the channels
and instrumentalities of commerce to be used to spread and
perpetuate such labor conditions among the workers of the several
States; (2) burdens commerce and the free flow of goods in
commerce; (3) constitutes an unfair method of competition in
commerce; (4) leads to labor disputes burdening and obstructing
commerce and the free flow of goods in commerce, and (5) interferes
with the orderly and fair marketing of goods in commerce."
Section 3(b) defines "commerce" as
"trade, commerce, transportation, transmission, or communication
among the several States or from any State to any place outside
thereof."
[
Footnote 2]
Cf. Administrator's Opinion, Interpretative Bulletin
No. 5, 1940 Wage and Hour Manual, p. 131
et seq.
[
Footnote 3]
It may prohibit wholly intrastate activities which, if
permitted, would result in restraint of interstate commerce.
Coronado Coal Co. v. United Mine Workers, 268 U.
S. 295,
268 U. S. 310;
Local 167 v. United States, 291 U.
S. 293,
291 U. S. 297.
It may regulate the activities of a local grain exchange shown to
have an injurious effect on interstate commerce.
Chicago Board
of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U. S. 1. It may
regulate intrastate rates of interstate carriers where the effect
of the rates is to burden interstate commerce.
Houston, E.
& W. Texas Ry. Co. v. United States, 234 U.
S. 342;
Railroad Commission of Wisconsin v. Chicago,
B. & Q. R. Co., 257 U. S. 563;
United States v. Louisiana, 290 U. S.
70,
290 U. S. 74;
Florida v. United States, 292 U. S.
1. It may compel the adoption of safety appliances on
rolling stock moving intrastate because of the relation to and
effect of such appliances upon interstate traffic moving over the
same railroad.
Southern Ry. Co. v. United States,
222 U. S. 20. It
may prescribe maximum hours for employees engaged in intrastate
activity connected with the movement of any train, such as train
dispatchers and telegraphers.
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v.
Interstate Commerce Comm'n, 221 U. S. 612,
221 U. S.
619.