As held by the court of appeals of Kentucky, a railroad company
has the right, in that state, to establish rules and regulations
which require white and colored passengers, even though they be
interstate, to occupy separate apartments upon the train provided
there is no discrimination in the accommodations.
In this case,
held that an interstate colored passenger
was not compelled to occupy a separate apartment on a train in
Kentucky from that occupied by white passengers under a state
statute, but under rules and regulations of the railroad
company.
Whether interstate passengers of different races must have
different apartments or share the same apartment is a question of
interstate commerce to be determined by Congress alone,
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Mississippi,
133 U. S. 587, and
the inaction of Congress in that regard is equivalent to the
declaration that carriers can by reasonable regulations separate
colored and white passengers.
Regulations which are induced by the general sentiment of the
community for whom they are made and upon whom they operate cannot
be said to be unreasonable.
125 Ky. 299 affirmed.
The facts, which involve constitutional rights of colored
passengers on interstate trains in Kentucky, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 218 U. S. 72
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error is a colored man. He bought a first-class
ticket from defendant in error, a corporation engaged in operating
a line of railroad from the City of Louisville, State of Kentucky,
and the City of Cincinnati, State of Ohio, to the City of
Washington, District of Columbia. The ticket entitled him to ride
from Washington to Lexington, Kentucky.
The train which he took at Washington did not run through to
Lexington, and he changed to another train at Ashland, Kentucky,
going into a car which, it is alleged, under the rules and
regulations of defendant in error, was set apart exclusively for
white persons. From this car he was required to remove to a car set
apart exclusively for the transportation of colored persons.
He removed under protest, and only after a police officer had
been summoned by defendant in error. Subsequently he brought this
action in the Circuit Court of Fayette County, Kentucky. The case
was tried to a jury, which rendered a verdict against him. A motion
for a new trial was overruled. He appealed to the Court of Appeals
of the state, and the action and judgment of the trial court were
affirmed.
The assignments of error in this Court depend upon the
contention that plaintiff in error was an interstate passenger, and
was entitled to a first-class passage from Washington to Lexington,
and that therefore the act of defendant in error in causing him to
be removed from the car at Ashland was a violation of his rights
and subjected the railroad company to damages.
The Court of Appeals of the state made the case turn on a narrow
ground; to-wit, the right which, it was decided, a railroad company
had
"to establish such rules and regulations as will require white
and colored passengers,
Page 218 U. S. 73
although they may be interstate, to occupy separate compartments
upon the train."
The court, however, said that there could be no discrimination
in the accommodations.
The court found the facts of the removal of plaintiff, and the
character of the car to which he was required to remove, as
follows:
"This Lexington train is made up of four coaches, the first, and
the one nearest the engine, being a combined baggage, mail, and
express car; the second is a passenger coach, divided by board
partitions into three compartments; one of these compartments,
located in the end of the car, is set apart for colored passengers;
the middle compartment is for the use of colored passengers who
smoke, and the end compartment is for the accommodation of white
persons who smoke; the third car is a passenger coach intended for
the use of white ladies and gentlemen; the fourth car is a sleeping
car that runs through from Washington to Lexington. Appellant, when
he attempted to get on the Lexington train, was told by the
brakeman to go in the colored apartment. This he declined to do,
and walked in and took a seat in the third coach, set apart for the
exclusive use of white passengers. In a few moments, the conductor
came in and asked the appellant, in obedience to a rule of the
company, to go forward in the apartment set apart for colored
passengers, but he refused to do so, stating that he had bought a
through first-class ticket from Washington to Lexington, and was an
interstate passenger who knew his rights, and that the separate
coach law of Kentucky did not apply to him, and declared his
intention of retaining the seat he occupied. Thereupon the
conductor summoned a policeman, who also requested appellant to go
in the other car, and, upon his refusal, he was informed that he
would be compelled to leave the car in which he was seated.
Appellant, yet insisting upon his right to remain in the
Page 218 U. S. 74
car in which he was, followed the policeman into the colored
passenger coach."
The court further said:
"There is really no material issue of fact involved in the case.
No force or violence, or rude or oppressive conduct, was employed
by the agents of appellee in removing appellant from the car in
which he was seated to the car set apart for colored persons. And
except that the car into which he was removed is divided by
partitions into three compartments, it was substantially equal in
quality, convenience, and accommodation to the car in which he
first seated himself, and the compartment into which appellant was
directed to go was clean and ample for his accommodation, and
equipped with the same convenience as the other passenger coach on
the train from which he was ejected."
In this, the court came to the same conclusion as the jury.
Plaintiff in error insists that this conclusion put out of view his
rights as an interstate commerce passenger. Both courts ignored
such rights, he contends, the trial court in refusing instructions
that were requested and in its ruling on the trial, and the Court
of Appeals in affirming the judgment which was based upon the
verdict.
We need not set out the instructions nor the rulings. The
complaint of the action of the court rests upon the contention
that, as against an interstate passenger, the regulation of the
company in providing different cars for the white and colored races
is void. There is a statute of Kentucky which requires railroad
companies to furnish separate coaches for white and colored
passengers, but the Court of Appeals of the state put the statute
out of consideration, declaring that it had no application to
interstate trains, and defendant in error does not rest its defense
upon that statute, but upon its rules and regulations. Plaintiff in
error makes some effort to keep the statute in the case, and says
that the trial court, by its ruling upon
Page 218 U. S. 75
testimony and by its instructions, confined "the jury only to
the lesser motive" of defendant's "wrongful act." In other words,
as we understand plaintiff in error, confined the jury to the
consideration of the regulations of the railroad company, and
withdrew from its consideration the effect of the statute under
which, it is said, the conductor declared he acted. But by this we
understand plaintiff in error to illustrate that his rights as an
interstate passenger were denied. We are therefore brought back to
the question what his rights as such passenger were.
The elements of that question have been considered and passed on
in a number of cases. And we must keep in mind that we are not
dealing with the law of a state attempting a regulation of
interstate commerce beyond its power to make. We are dealing with
the act of a private person, to-wit, the railroad company, and the
distinction between state and interstate commerce we think is
unimportant.
In
Hall v. DeCuir, 95 U. S. 485, the
Court passed on an act of the State of Louisiana which required
those engaged in the transportation of passengers among the states
to give all passengers traveling within that state, upon vessels
employed in such 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 vessel who
excluded colored passengers on account of their color from the
cabin set apart for whites during the passage. It was held that the
act was a regulation of interstate commerce, and was void. The
Court said, by Chief Justice Waite, after stating that the power of
regulating interstate commerce was exclusively in Congress, "This
power of regulation may be exercised without legislation as well as
with it." And that,
"by refraining from action, Congress in effect adopts as its own
regulations those which the common
Page 218 U. S. 76
law or the civil law, where that prevails, has provided for the
government of such business."
The Court further said, quoting from
Welton v.
Missouri, 91 U. S. 282,
that "inaction [by Congress] . . . is equivalent to a declaration
that interstate commerce shall remain free and untrammeled." And
added:
"Applying that principle to the circumstances of this case,
congressional inaction left Beason [the shipowner] at liberty to
adopt such reasonable rules and regulations for the disposition of
passengers upon his boat while pursuing her voyage within Louisiana
or without as seemed to him most for the interest of all
concerned."
This language is pertinent to the case at bar, and demonstrates
that the contention of the plaintiff in error is untenable. In
other words, demonstrates that the interstate commerce clause of
the Constitution does not constrain the action of carriers, but, on
the contrary, leaves them to adopt rules and regulations for the
government of their business, free from any interference except by
Congress. Such rules and regulations, of course, must be
reasonable, but whether they be such cannot depend upon a
passenger's being state or interstate. This also is manifest from
the cited case. There, as we have seen, an interstate colored
passenger was excluded from the privileges of the cabin set apart
for white persons by a regulation of the carrier, and where the
colored passenger's right to be was attempted to be provided by a
state statute. The statute was declared invalid because it
attempted to force a carrier to do the very thing which plaintiff
in error complains was not done in the case at bar -- to-wit,
permit him to ride in the place set apart for white passengers. In
other words, the statute was struck down because it interfered with
the regulations of the carrier as to interstate passengers. This
Court commented on the case subsequently in
Louisville &c.
Railway Company v. Mississippi, 133 U.
S. 587,
133 U. S. 590,
and said:
"Obviously, whether interstate passengers of one race should, in
any portion
Page 218 U. S. 77
of their journey, be compelled to share their cabin
accommodations with passengers of another race was a question of
interstate commerce, and to be determined by Congress alone."
We have seen that it was decided in
Hall v. DeCuir that
the inaction of Congress was equivalent to the declaration that a
carrier could, by regulations, separate colored and white
interstate passengers.
In
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163
U. S. 540, a statute of Louisiana which required
railroad companies to provide separate accommodations for the white
and colored races was considered. The statute was attacked on the
ground that it violated the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments of
the Constitution of the United States. The opinion of the Court,
which was by Mr. Justice Brown, reviewed prior cases and not only
sustained the law but justified as reasonable the distinction
between the races on account of which the statute was passed and
enforced. It is true the power of a legislature to recognize a
racial distinction was the subject considered, but if the test of
reasonableness in legislation be, as it was declared to be, "the
established usages, customs, and traditions of the people," and the
"promotion of their comfort and the preservation of the public
peace and good order," this must also be the test of the
reasonableness of the regulations of a carrier, made for like
purpose and to secure like results. Regulations which are induced
by the general sentiment of the community for whom they are made
and upon whom they operate cannot be said to be unreasonable.
See also Chesapeake & O. Ry. Company v. Kentucky,
179 U. S. 388.
The extent of the difference based upon the distinction between
the white and colored races which may be observed in legislation or
in the regulations of carriers has been discussed so much that we
are relieved from further enlargement upon it. We may refer to Mr.
Justice Clifford's concurring opinion in
Hall v. DeCuir
for a review
Page 218 U. S. 78
of the cases. They are also cited in
Plessy v. Ferguson
at page
163 U. S. 550.
We think the judgment should be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissents from the opinion and judgment.