PLESSY
v. FERGUSON.
ERROR TO
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA.
MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN dissenting. MR. JUSTICE BREWER did not hear the argument or participate
in the decision of this case.
MR. JUSTICE
BROWN, stating the case then delivering the opinion of the court.
The statute
of Louisiana, acts of 1890, No. 111, requiring railway companies carrying
passengers In their coaches in that State, to provide equal, but separate,
accommodations for the white and colored races, by providing two or
more passenger coaches for each passenger train, or by dividing the
passenger coaches by a partition so as to secure separate :accommodations:
and providing that no person shall be permitted to occupy seats is coaches
other than the ones assigned to them, on account of the race they belong
to; and requiring the officers of the passenger trains to assign each
passenger to the coach or compartment assigned for the race to which
he or she belongs; and imposing fines or imprison-meat upon passengers
insisting on going into a coach or compartment other than the one set
aside for the race to which be or she belongs; and conferring upon officers
of the trains power to refuse to carry on the train passengers refusing
to occupy the coach or compartment assigned to them, and exempting the
railway company from liability for such refusal, are not in conflict
with the provisions either of the Thirteenth Amendment or of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
THIS was
a petition for writs of prohibition and certiorari, originally filed in
the Supreme Court of the State by Plessy, the plaintiff in error, against
the Hon. John H. Ferguson, judge of the criminal District Court for the
parish of Orleans, and setting forth in substance the following facts:
That petitioner
was a citizen of the United States and a resident of the State of Louisiana,
of mixed descent, in the proportion of seven eighths Caucasian and one
eighth African blood; that the mixture of colored blood was not discernible
in him, and that he was entitled to every recognition, right, privilege
and immunity secured to the citizens of the United States of the white
race by its Constitution and laws; that on June 7, 1892, he engaged and
paid for a first class passage on the East Louisiana Railway from New
Orleans to Covington, in the same State, and thereupon entered a passenger
train, and took possession of a vacant seat in a coach where passengers
of the white race were accommodated; that such railroad company was incorporated
by the laws of Louisiana as a common carrier, and was not authorized to
distinguish between citizens according to their race. But, notwithstanding
this, petitioner was required by the conductor, under penalty of ejection
from said train and imprisonment, to vacate said coach and occupy another
seat in a coach assigned by said company for persons not of the white
race, and for no other reason than that petitioner was of the colored
race; that upon petitioner's refusal to comply with such order, he was,
with the aid of a police officer, forcibly ejected from said coach and
hurried off to and imprisoned in the parish jail of New Orleans, and there
held to answer a charge made by such officer to the effect that he was
guilty of having criminally violated an act of the General Assembly of
the State, approved July 10, 1890, in such case made and provided.
That petitioner
was subsequently brought before the recorder of the city for preliminary
examination and committed for trial to the criminal District Court for
the parish of Orleans, where an information was filed against him in the
matter above set forth, for a violation of the above act, which act the
petitioner affirmed to be null and void, because in conflict with the
Constitution of the United States; that petitioner interposed a plea to
such information, based upon the unconstitutionality of the act of the
General Assembly, to which the district attorney, on behalf of the State,
filed a demurrer; that, upon issue being joined upon such demurrer and
plea, the court sustained the demurrer, overruled the plea, and ordered
petitioner to plead over to the facts set forth in the information, and
that, unless the judge of the said court be enjoined by a writ of prohibition
from further proceeding in such case, the court will proceed to fine and
sentence petitioner to imprisonment, and thus deprive him of his constitutional
rights set forth in his said plea, notwithstanding the unconstitutionality
of the act under which he was being prosecuted; that no appeal lay from
such sentence, and petitioner was without relief or remedy except by writs
of prohibition and certiorari. Copies of the information and other proceedings
in the criminal District Court were annexed to the petition as an exhibit.
Upon the
filing of this petition, an order was issued upon the respondent to show
cause why a writ of prohibition should not issue and be made perpetual,
and a further order that the record of the proceedings had in the criminal
cause be certified and transmitted to the Supreme Court.
To this order
the respondent made answer, transmitting a certified copy of the proceedings,
asserting the constitutionality of the law, and averring that, instead
of pleading or admitting that he belonged to the colored race, the said
Plessy declined and refused, either by pleading or otherwise, to admit
that he was in any sense or in any proportion a colored man.
The case
coming on for a hearing before the Supreme Court, that court was of opinion
that the law under which the prosecution was had was constitutional, and
denied the relief prayed for by the petitioner. Ex parte Plessy, 45 La.
Ann. 80. Whereupon petitioner prayed for a writ of error from this court
which was allowed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Louisiana.
COUNSEL:
Mr. A. W. Tourgee and Mr. S. F. Phillips for plaintiff in error. Mr. F.
D. McKenney was on Mr. Phillips's brief.
Mr. James
C. Walker filed a brief for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Alexander
Porter Morse for defendant in error. Mr. M. J. Cunningham, Attorney General
of the State of Louisiana, and Mr. Lional Adams were on his brief.
MR. JUSTICE
BROWN, after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
This case
turns upon the constitutionality of an act of the General Assembly of
the State of Louisiana, passed in 1890, providing for separate railway
carriages for the white and colored races. Acts 1890, No. 111, p. 152.
The first
section of the statute enacts "that all railway companies carrying
passengers in their coaches in this State, shall provide equal but separate
accommodations for the white, and colored races, by providing two or more
passenger coaches for each passenger train, or by dividing the passenger
coaches by a partition so as to secure separate accommodations: Provided,
That this section shall not be construed to apply to street railroads.
No person or persons, shall be admitted to occupy seats in coaches, other
than, the ones, assigned, to them on account of the race they belong to."
By the second
section it was enacted "that the officers of such passenger trains
shall have power and are hereby required to assign each passenger to the
coach or compartment used for the race to which such passenger belongs;
any passenger insisting on going into a coach or compartment to which
by race he does not belong, shall be liable to a fine of twenty-five dollars,
or in lieu thereof to imprisonment for a period of not more than twenty
days in the parish prison, and any officer of any railroad insisting on
assigning a passenger to a coach or compartment other than the one set
aside for the race to which said passenger belongs, shall be liable to
a fine of twenty-five dollars, or in lieu thereof to imprisonment for
a period of not more than twenty days in the parish prison; and should
any passenger refuse to occupy the coach or compartment to which he or
she is assigned by the officer of such railway, said officer shall have
power to refuse to carry such passenger on his train, and for such refusal
neither he nor the railway company which he represents shall be liable
for damages in any of the courts of this State."
The third
section provides penalties for the refusal or neglect of the officers,
directors, conductors and employes of railway companies to comply with
the act, with a proviso that "nothing in this act shall be construed
as applying to nurses attending children of the other race." The
fourth section is immaterial.
The information
filed in the criminal District Court charged in substance that Plessy,
being a passenger between two stations within the State of Louisiana,
was assigned by officers of the company to the coach used for the race
to which he belonged, but he insisted upon going into a coach used by
the race to which he did not belong. Neither in the information nor plea
was his particular race or color averred.
The petition
for the writ of prohibition averred that petitioner was seven eighths
Caucasian and one eighth African blood; that the mixture of colored blood
was not discernible in him, and that he was entitled to every right, privilege
and immunity secured to citizens of the United States of the white race;
and that, upon such theory, he took possession of a vacant seat in a coach
where passengers of the white race were accommodated, and was ordered
by the conductor to vacate said coach and take a seat in another assigned
to persons of the colored race, and having refused to comply with such
demand he was forcibly ejected with the aid of a police officer, and imprisoned
in the parish jail to answer a charge of having violated the above act.
The constitutionality
of this act is attacked upon the ground that it conflicts both with the
Thirteenth Amendment of the Constitution, abolishing slavery, and the
Fourteenth Amendment, which prohibits certain restrictive legislation
on the part of the States.
1. That it
does not conflict with the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery
and involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, is too clear
for argument. Slavery implies involuntary servitude -- a state of bondage;
the ownership of mankind as a chattel, or at least the control of the
labor and services of one man for the benefit of another, and the absence
of a legal right to the disposal of his own person, property and services.
This amendment was said in the Slaughter-house cases, 16 Wall. 36, to
have been intended primarily to abolish slavery, as it had been previously
known in this country, and that it equally forbade Mexican peonage or
the Chinese coolie trade, when they amounted to slavery or involuntary
servitude, and that the use of the word "servitude" was intended
to prohibit the use of all forms of involuntary slavery, of whatever class
or name. It was intimated, however, in that case that this amendment was
regarded by the statesmen of that day as insufficient to protect the colored
race from certain laws which had been enacted in the Southern States,
imposing upon the colored race onerous disabilities and burdens, and curtailing
their rights in the pursuit of life, liberty and property to such an extent
that their freedom was of little value; and that the Fourteenth Amendment
was devised to meet this exigency.
So. too,
in the Civil Rights cases, 109 U.S. 3, 24, it was said that the act of
a mere individual, the owner of an inn, a public conveyance or place of
amusement, refusing accommodations to colored people, cannot be justly
regarded as imposing any badge of slavery or servitude upon the applicant,
but only as involving an ordinary civil injury, properly cognizable by
the laws of the State, and presumably subject to redress by those laws
until the contrary appears. "It would be running the slavery argument
into the ground," said Mr. Justice Bradley, "to make it apply
to every act of discrimination which a person may see fit to make as to
the guests he will entertain, or as to the people he will take into his
coach or cab or car, or admit to his concert or theatre, or deal with
in other matters of intercourse or business."
A statute
which implies merely a legal distinction between the white and colored
races -- a distinction which is founded in the color of the two races,
and which must always exist so long as white men are distinguished from
the other race by color -- has no tendency to destroy the legal equality
of the two races, or reestablish a state of involuntary servitude. Indeed,
we do not understand that the Thirteenth Amendment is strenuously relied
upon by the plaintiff in error in this connection.
2. By the
Fourteenth Amendment, all persons born or naturalized in the United States,
and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are made citizens of the United
States and of the State wherein they reside; and the States are forbidden
from making or enforcing any law which shall abridge the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the United States, or shall deprive any person
of life, liberty or property without due process of law, or deny to any
person within their jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
The proper
construction of this amendment was first called to the attention of this
court in the Slaughter-house cases, 16 Wall. 36, which involved, however,
not a question of race, but one of exclusive privileges. The case did
not call for any expression of opinion as to the exact rights it was intended
to secure to the colored race, but it was said generally that its main
purpose was to establish the citizenship of the negro; to give definitions
of citizenship of the United States and of the States, and to protect
from the hostile legislation of the States the privileges and immunities
of citizens of the United States, as distinguished from those of citizens
of the States.
The object
of the amendment was undoubtedly to enforce the absolute equality of the
two races before the law, but in the nature of things it could not have
been intended to abolish distinctions based upon color, or to enforce
social, as distinguished from political equality, or a commingling of
the two races upon terms unsatisfactory to either. Laws permitting, and
even requiring, their separation in places where they are liable to be
brought into contact do not necessarily imply the inferiority of either
race to the other, and have been generally, if not universally, recognized
as within the competency of the state legislatures in the exercise of
their police power. The most common instance of this is connected with
the establishment of separate schools for white and colored children,
which has been held to be a valid exercise of the legislative power even
by courts of States where the political rights of the colored race have
been longest and most earnestly enforced.
One of the
earliest of these cases is that of Roberts v. City of Boston, 5 Cush.
198, in which the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts held that the
general school committee of Boston had power to make provision for the
instruction of colored children in separate schools established exclusively
for them, and to prohibit their attendance upon the other schools. "The
great principle," said Chief Justice Shaw, p. 206, "advanced
by the learned and eloquent advocate for the plaintiff," (Mr. Charles
Sumner,) "is, that by the constitution and laws of Massachusetts,
all persons without distinction of age or sex, birth or color, origin
or condition, are equal before the law. . . . But, when this great principle
comes to be applied to the actual and various conditions of persons in
society, it will not warrant the assertion, that men and women are legally
clothed with the same civil and political powers, and that children and
adults are legally to have the same functions and be subject to the same
treatment; but only that the rights of all, as they are settled and regulated
by law, are equally entitled to the paternal consideration and protection
of the law for their maintenance and security." It was held that
the powers of the committee extended to the establishment of separate
schools for children of different ages, sexes and colors, and that they
might also establish special schools for poor and neglected children,
who have become too old to attend the primary school, and yet have not
acquired the rudiments of learning, to enable them to enter the ordinary
schools. Similar laws have been enacted by Congress under its general
power of legislation over the District of Columbia, Rev. Stat. D.C. §§
281, 282, 283, 310, 319, as well as by the legislatures of many of the
States, and have been generally, if not uniformly, sustained by the courts.
State v. McCann, 21 Ohio St. 198; Lehew v. Brummell, 15 S.W. Rep. 765;
Ward v. Flood, 48 California, 36; Bertonneau v. School Directors, 3 Woods,
177; People v. Gallagher, 93 N.Y. 438; Cory v. Carter, 48 Indiana, 327;
Dawson v. Lee, 83 Kentucky, 49.
Laws forbidding
the intermarriage of the two races may be said in a technical sense to
interfere with the freedom of contract, and yet have been universally
recognized as within the police power of the State. State v.
Gilbson,
36 Indiana, 389.
The distinction
between laws interfering with the political equality of the negro and
those requiring the separation of the two races in schools, theatres and
railway carriages has been frequently drawn by this court. Thus in Strauder
v. West Virginia, 100 U.S. 303, it was held that a law of West Virginia
limiting to white male persons, 21 years of age and citizens of the State,
the right to sit upon juries, was a discrimination which implied a legal
inferiority in civil society, which lessened the security of the right
of the colored race, and was a step toward reducing them to a condition
of servility. Indeed, the right of a colored man that, in the selection
of jurors to pass upon his life, liberty and property, there shall be
no exclusion of his race, and no discrimination against them because of
color, has been asserted in a number of cases. Virginia v. Rives, 100
U.S. 313; Neal v. Delaware, 103 U.S. 370; Bush v. Kentucky, 107 U.S. 110;
Gibson v. Mississippi, 162 U.S. 565. So, where the laws of a particular
locality or the charter of a particular railway corporation has provided
that no person shall be excluded from the cars on account of color, we
have held that this meant that persons of color should travel in the same
car as white ones, and that the enactment was not satisfied by the company's
providing cars assigned exclusively to people of color, though they were
as good as those which they assigned exclusively to white persons. Railroad
Company v. Brown, 17 Wall. 445.
Upon the
other hand, where a statute of Louisiana required those engaged in the
transportation of passengers among the States to give to all persons travelling
within that State, upon vessels employed in that business, equal rights
and privileges in all parts of the vessel, without distinction on account
of race or color, and subjected to an action for damages the owner of
such a vessel, who excluded colored passengers on account of their color
from the cabin set aside by him for the use of whites, it was held to
be so far as it applied to interstate commerce, unconstitutional and void.
Hall v. De Cuir, 95 U.S. 485. The court in this case, however, expressly
disclaimed that it had anything whatever to do with the statute as a regulation
of internal commerce, or affecting anything else than commerce among the
States.
In the Civil
Rights case, 109 U.S. 3, it was held that an act of Congress, entitling
all persons within the jurisdiction of the United States to the full and
equal enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges
of inns, public conveyances, on land or water, theatres and other places
of public amusement, and made applicable to citizens of every race and
color, regardless of any previous condition of servitude, was unconstitutional
and void, upon the ground that the Fourteenth Amendment was prohibitory
upon the States only, and the legislation authorized to be adopted by
Congress for enforcing it was not direct legislation on matters respecting
which the States were prohibited from making or enforcing certain laws,
or doing certain acts, but was corrective legislation, such as might be
necessary or proper for counteracting and redressing the effect of such
laws or acts. In delivering the opinion of the court Mr. Justice Bradley
observed that the Fourteenth Amendment "does not invest Congress
with power to legislate upon subjects that are within the domain of state
legislation; but to provide modes of relief against state legislation,
or state action, of the kind referred to. It does not authorize Congress
to create a code of municipal law for the regulation of private rights;
but to provide modes of redress against the operation of state laws, and
the action of state officers, executive or judicial, when these are subversive
of the fundamental rights specified in the amendment. Positive rights
and privileges are undoubtedly secured by the Fourteenth Amendment; but
they are secured by way of prohibition against state laws and state proceedings
affecting those rights and privileges, and by power given to Congress
to legislate for the purpose of carrying such prohibition into effect;
and such legislation must necessarily be predicated upon such supposed
state laws or state proceedings, and be directed to the correction of
their operation and effect."
Much nearer,
and, indeed, almost directly in point, is the case of the Louisville,
New Orleans &c. Railway v. Mississippi, 133 U.S. 587, wherein the
railway company was indicted for a violation of a statute of Mississippi,
enacting that all railroads carrying passengers should provide equal,
but separate, accommodations for the white and colored races, by providing
two or more passenger cars for each passenger train, or by dividing the
passenger cars by a partition, so as. to secure separate accommodations.
The case was presented in a different aspect from the one under consideration,
inasmuch as it was an indictment against the railway company for failing
to provide the separate accommodations, but the question considered was
the constitutionality of the law. In that case, the Supreme Court of Mississippi,
66 Mississippi, 662, had held that the statute applied solely to commerce
within the State, and, that being the construction of the state statute
by its highest court, was accepted as conclusive. "If it be a matter,"
said the court, p. 591, "respecting commerce wholly within a State,
and not interfering with commerce. between the States, then, obviously,
there is no violation of the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution.
. . . No question arises under this section, as to the power of the State
to separate in different compartments interstate passengers, or affect,
in any manner, the privileges and rights of such passengers. All that
we can consider is, whether the State has the power to require that railroad
trains within her limits shall have separate accommodations for the two
races; that affecting only commerce within the State is no invasion of
the power given to Congress by the commerce clause."
A like course
of reasoning applies to the case under consideration, since the Supreme
Court of Louisiana in the case of the State ex rel. Abbott v. Hicks, Judge,
et al., 44 La. Ann. 770, held that the statute in question did not apply
to interstate passengers, but was confined in its application to passengers
travelling exclusively within the borders of the State. The case was decided
largely upon the authority of Railway Co. v. State, 66 Mississippi, 662,
and affirmed by this court in 133 U.S. 587. In the present case no question
of interference with interstate commerce can possibly arise, since the
East Louisiana Railway appears to have been purely a local line, with
both its termini within the State of Louisiana. Similar statutes for the
separation of the two races upon public conveyances were held to be constitutional
in West Chester &c. Railroad v. Miles, 55 Penn. St. 209; Day v. Owen,
5 Michigan, 520; Chicago &c. Railway v. Williams, 55 Illinois, 185;
Chesapeake &c. Railroad v. Wells, 85 Tennessee, 613; Memphis &c.
Railroad v. Benson, 85 Tennessee, 627; The Sue, 22 Fed. Rep. 843; Logwood
v. Memphis &c. Railroad, 23 Fed. Rep. 318; McGuinn v. Forbes, 37 Fed.
Rep. 639; People v. King, 18 N.E. Rep. 245; Houck v. South Pac. Railway,
38 Fed. Rep. 226; Heard v. Georgia Railroad Co., 3 Int. Com. Com'n, 111;
S.C., 1 Ibid. 428.
While we
think the enforced separation of the races, as applied to the internal
commerce of the State, neither abridges the privileges or immunities of
the colored man, deprives him of his property without due process of law,
nor denies him the equal protection of the laws, within the meaning of
the Fourteenth Amendment, we are not prepared to say that the conductor,
in assigning passengers to the coaches according to their race, does not
act at his peril, or that the provision of the second section of the act,
that denies to the passenger compensation in damages for a refusal to
receive him into the coach in which he properly belongs, is a valid exercise
of the legislative power. Indeed, we understand it to be conceded by the
State's attorney, that such part of the act as exempts from liability
the railway company and its officers is unconstitutional. The power to
assign to a particular coach obviously implies the power to determine
to which race the passenger belongs, as well as the power to determine
who, under the laws of the particular State, is to be deemed a white,
and who a colored person. This question, though indicated in the brief
of the plaintiff in error, does not properly arise upon the record in
this case, since the only issue made is as to the unconstitutionality
of the act, so far as it requires the railway to provide separate accommodations,
and the conductor to assign passengers according to their race.
It is claimed
by the plaintiff in error that, in any mixed community, the reputation
of belonging to the dominant race, in this instance the white race, is
property, in the same sense that a right of action, or of inheritance,
is property. Conceding this to be so, for the purposes of this case, we
are unable to see how this statute deprives him of, or in any way affects
his right to, such property. If he be a white man and assigned to a colored
coach, he may have his action for damages against the company for being
deprived of his so called property. Upon the other hand, if he be a colored
man and be so assigned, he has been deprived of no property, since he
is not lawfully entitled to the reputation of being a white man.
In this connection,
it is also suggested by the the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error
that the same argument that will justify the state legislature in requiring
railways to provide separate accommodations for the two races will also
authorize them to require separate cars to be provided for people whose
hair is of a certain color, or who are aliens, or who belong to certain
nationalities, or to enact laws requiring colored people to walk upon
one side of the street, and white people upon the other, or requiring
white men's houses to be painted white, and colored men's black, or their
vehicles or business signs to be of different colors, upon the theory
that one side of the street is as good as the other, or that a house or
vehicle of one color is as good as one of another color. The reply to
all this is that every exercise of the police power must be reasonable,
and extend only to such laws as are enacted in good faith for the promotion
for the public good, and not for the annoyance or oppression of a particular
class. Thus in Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, it was held by this court
that a municipal ordinance of the city of San Francisco, to regulate the
carrying on the public laundries within the limits of the municipality,
violated the provisions of the Constitution of the United States, if it
conferred upon the municipal authorities arbitrary power, at their own
will, and without regard to discretion, in the legal sense, of the term,
to give or withhold consent as to persons or places, without regard to
the competency of the persons applying, or the propriety of the places
selected for the carrying on the business. It was held to be a covert
attempt on the part of the municipality to make an arbitrary and unjust
discrimination against the Chinese race. While this was the case of a
municipal ordinance, a like principle has been held to apply to acts of
a state legislature passed in the exercise of the police power. Railroad
Company v. Husen, 95 U.S. 465; Louisville & Nashville Railroad v.
Kentucky, 161 U.S. 677, and cases cited on p. 700; Daggett v. Hudson,
43 Ohio St. 548; Capen v. Foster, 12 Pick. 485; State ex rel. Wood v.
Baker, 38 Wisconsin, 71; Monroe v. Collins, 17 Ohio St. 665; Hulseman
v. Rems, 41 Penn. St. 396; Orman v. Riley, 15 California. 48.
So far, then,
as a conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment is concerned, the case reduces
itself to the question whether the statute of Louisiana is a reasonable
regulation, and with respect to this there must necessarily be a large
discretion on the part of the legislature. In determining the question
of reasonableness it is at liberty to act with reference to the established
usages, customs and traditions of the people, and with a view to the promotion
of their comfort, and the preservation of the public peace and good order.
Gauged by this standard, we cannot say that a law which authorizes or
even requires the separation of the two races in public conveyances is
unreasonable, or more obnoxious to the Fourteenth Amendment than the acts
of Congress requiring separate schools for colored children in the District
of Columbia, the constitution ality of which does not seem to have been
questioned, or the corresponding acts of state legislatures.
We consider
the underlying fallacy of the plaintiff's argument to consist in the assumption
that the enforced separation of the two races stamps the colored race
with a badge of inferiority. If this be so, it is not by reason of anything
found in the act, but solely because the colored race chooses to put that
construction upon it. The argument necessarily assumes that if, as has
been more than once the case, and is not unlikely to be so again, the
colored race should become the dominant power in the state legislature,
and should enact a law in precisely similar terms, it would thereby relegate
the white race to an inferior position. We imagine that the white race,
at least, would not acquiesce in this assumption. The argument also assumes
that social prejudices may be overcome by legislation, and that equal
rights cannot be secured to the negro except by an enforced commingling
of the two races. We cannot accept this proposition. If the two races
are to meet upon terms of social equality, it must be the result of natural
affinities, a mutual appreciation of each other's merits and a voluntary
consent of individuals. As was said by the Court of Appeals of New York
in People v. Gallagher, 93 N.Y. 438, 448, "this end can neither be
accomplished nor promoted by laws which conflict with the general sentiment
of the community upon whom they are designed to operate. When the government,
therefore, has secured to each of its citizens equal rights before the
law and equal opportunities for improvement and progress, it has accomplished
the end for which it was organized and performed all of the functions
respecting social advantages with which it is endowed." Legislation
is powerless to eradicate racial instincts or to abolish distinctions
based upon physical differences, and the attempt to do so can only result
in accentuating the difficulties of the present situation. If the civil
and political rights of both races be equal one cannot be inferior to
the other civilly or politically. If one race be inferior to the other
socially, the Constitution of the United States cannot put them upon the
same plane.
It is true
that the question of the proportion of colored blood necessary to constitute
a colored person, as distinguished from a white person, is one upon which
there is a difference of opinion in the different States, some holding
that any visible admixture of black blood stamps the person as belonging
to the colored race, (State v. Chavers, 5 Jones, [N.C.] 1, p. 11); others
that it depends upon the preponderance of blood, (Gray v. State, 4 Ohio,
354; Monroe v. Collins, 17 Ohio St. 665); and still others that the predominance
of white blood must only be in the proportion of three fourths. (People
v. Dean, 14 Michigan, 406; Jones v. Commonwealth, 80 Virginia, 538.) But
these are question to be determined under the laws of each State and are
not properly put in issue in this case. Under the allegations of his petition
it may undoubtedly become a question of importance whether, under the
laws of Louisiana, the petitioner belongs to the white or colored race.
The judgment
of the court below is, therefore,
Affirmed.
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