A city ordinance which forbids colored persons to occupy houses
in blocks where the greater number of houses are occupied by white
persons in practical effect prevents the sale of lots in such
blocks to colored persons, and is unconstitutional. A white owner
who has made an otherwise valid and enforceable contract to convey
such a lot to a colored person for the erection of a house upon it
for occupancy by the vendee is deprived, in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment, of an essential element of his property --
the right to dispose of it to a constitutionally qualified
purchaser -- and may attack the prohibition under the Fourteenth
Amendment in a suit for specific performance of the contract
against the vendee.
A city ordinance forbidding colored persons from occupying
houses as residences, or places of abode or public assembly, on
blocks where the majority of the houses are occupied by white
persons for those purposes, and in like manner forbidding white
persons when the conditions as to occupancy are reversed, and which
bases the interdiction upon color. and nothing more, passes the
legitimate bounds of police power, and invades the civil right to
acquire, enjoy and use
Page 245 U. S. 61
property, which is guaranteed in equal measure to all citizens,
white or colored, by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Such a prohibition cannot be sustained upon the grounds that,
through race segregation, it serves to diminish miscegenation and
promotes the public peace by averting race hostility and conflict,
or that it prevents deterioration in value of property owned and
occupied by white people; nor does the fact that, upon its face, it
applies impartially to both races relieve it from the vice of
discrimination or obviate the objection that it deprives of
property without due process of law.
Plessy v. Ferguson,
163 U. S. 537, and
Berea College Case, 211 U. S. 45,
distinguished.
165 Kentucky, 559, reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 245 U. S. 69
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the court.
Buchanan, plaintiff in error, brought an action in the Chancery
Branch of Jefferson Circuit Court of Kentucky for the specific
performance of a contract for the sale of certain real estate
situated in the City of Louisville at the corner of 37th Street and
Pflanz Avenue. The offer in writing to purchase the property
contained a proviso:
"It is understood that I am purchasing the above property for
the purpose of having erected thereon a house which I propose to
make my residence, and it is a distinct
Page 245 U. S. 70
part of this agreement that I shall not be required to accept a
deed to the above property or to pay for said property unless I
have the right under the laws of the State of Kentucky and the City
of Louisville to occupy said property as a residence."
This offer was accepted by the plaintiff.
To the action for specific performance, the defendant, by way of
answer, set up the condition above set forth, that he is a colored
person, and that, on the block of which the lot in controversy is a
part, there are ten residences, eight of which at the time of the
making of the contract were occupied by white people, and only two
(those nearest the lot in question) were occupied by colored
people, and that, under and by virtue of the ordinance of the City
of Louisville, approved May 11, 1914, he would not be allowed to
occupy the lot as a place of residence.
In reply to this answer, the plaintiff set up, among other
things, that the ordinance was in conflict with the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and hence no
defense to the action for specific performance of the contract.
In the court of original jurisdiction in Kentucky, and in the
Court of Appeals of that State, the case was made to turn upon the
constitutional validity of the ordinance. The Court of Appeals of
Kentucky, 165 Kentucky 559, held the ordinance valid and, of
itself, a complete defense to the action.
The title of the ordinance is:
"An ordinance to prevent conflict and ill feeling between the
white and colored races in the City of Louisville, and to preserve
the public peace and promote the general welfare by making
reasonable provisions requiring, as far as practicable, the use of
separate blocks for residences, places of abode and places of
assembly by white and colored people respectively."
By the first section of the ordinance, it is made unlawful for
any colored person to move into and occupy as a
Page 245 U. S. 71
residence, place of abode, or to establish and maintain as a
place of public assembly, any house upon any block upon which a
greater number of houses are occupied as residences, places of
abode, or places of public assembly by white people than are
occupied as residences, places of abode, or places of public
assembly by colored people.
Section 2 provides that it shall be unlawful for any white
person to move into and occupy as a residence, place of abode, or
to establish and maintain as a place of public assembly any house
upon any block upon which a greater number of houses are occupied
as residences, places of abode or places of public assembly by
colored people than are occupied as residences, places of abode or
places of public assembly by white people.
Section 4 provides that nothing in the ordinance shall affect
the location of residences, places of abode or places of assembly
made previous to its approval; that nothing contained therein shall
be construed so as to prevent the occupancy of residences, places
of abode or places of assembly by white or colored servants or
employees of occupants of such residences, places of abode or
places of public assembly on the block on which they are so
employed, and that nothing therein contained shall be construed to
prevent any person who, at the date of the passage of the
ordinance, shall have acquired or possessed the right to occupy any
building as a residence, place of abode or place of assembly from
exercising such a right; that nothing contained in the ordinance
shall prevent the owner of any building who, when the ordinance
became effective, leased, rented, or occupied it as a residence,
place of abode or place of public assembly for colored persons from
continuing to rent, lease or occupy such residence, place of abode
or place of assembly for such persons if the owner shall so desire,
but if such house should, after the passage of the ordinance, be at
any time leased, rented or occupied as a residence, place
Page 245 U. S. 72
of abode, or place of assembly for white persons, it shall not
thereafter be used for colored persons if such occupation would
then be a violation of section one of the ordinance; that nothing
contained in the ordinance shall prevent the owner of any building,
who when the ordinance became effective leased, rented or occupied
it as a residence, place of abode, or place of assembly for white
persons from continuing to rent, lease or occupy such residence,
place of abode or place of assembly for such purpose if the owner
shall so desire, but if such house should, after the passage of the
ordinance, be at any time leased, rented or occupied as a
residence, place of abode or place of assembly for colored persons,
then it shall not thereafter be used for white persons, if such
occupation would then be a violation of section two thereof.
The ordinance contains other sections, and a violation of its
provisions is made an offense.
The assignments of error in this court attack the ordinance upon
the ground that it violates the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States, in that it abridges the
privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States to
acquire and enjoy property, takes property without due process of
law, and denies equal protection of the laws.
The objection is made that this writ of error should be
dismissed because the alleged denial of constitutional rights
involves only the rights of colored persons, and the plaintiff in
error is a white person. This court has frequently held that, while
an unconstitutional act is no law, attacks upon the validity of
laws can only be entertained when made by those whose rights are
directly affected by the law or ordinance in question. Only such
persons, it has been settled, can be heard to attack the
constitutionality of the law or ordinance. But this case does not
run counter to that principle.
The property here involved was sold by the plaintiff
Page 245 U. S. 73
in error, a white man, on the terms stated, to a colored man;
the action for specific performance was entertained in the court
below, and, in both courts, the plaintiff's right to have the
contract enforced was denied solely because of the effect of the
ordinance making it illegal for a colored person to occupy the lot
sold. But for the ordinance, the state courts would have enforced
the contract, and the defendant would have been compelled to pay
the purchase price and take a conveyance of the premises. The right
of the plaintiff in error to sell his property was directly
involved and necessarily impaired, because it was held, in effect,
that he could not sell the lot to a person of color who was willing
and ready to acquire the property and had obligated himself to take
it. This case does not come within the class wherein this court has
held that, where one seeks to avoid the enforcement of a law or
ordinance, he must present a grievance of his own, and not rest the
attack upon the alleged violation of another's rights. In this
case, the property rights of the plaintiff in error are directly
and necessarily involved.
See Truax v. Raich, 239 U. S.
33,
239 U. S.
38.
We pass, then, to a consideration of the case upon its merits.
This ordinance prevents the occupancy of a lot in the City of
Louisville by a person of color in a block where the greater number
of residences are occupied by white persons; where such a majority
exists, colored persons are excluded. This interdiction is based
wholly upon color -- simply that and nothing more. In effect,
premises situated, as are those in question, in the so-called white
block are effectively debarred from sale to persons of color
because, if sold, they cannot be occupied by the purchaser, nor by
him sold to another of the same color.
This drastic measure is sought to be justified under the
authority of the State in the exercise of the police power. It is
said such legislation tends to promote the public peace by
preventing racial conflicts; that it tends to maintain
Page 245 U. S. 74
racial purity; that it prevents the deterioration of property
owned and occupied by white people, which deterioration, it is
contended, is sure to follow the occupancy of adjacent premises by
persons of color.
The authority of the State to pass laws in the exercise of the
police power, having for their object the promotion of the public
health, safety, and welfare, is very broad, as has been affirmed in
numerous and recent decisions of this court. Furthermore, the
exercise of this power, embracing nearly all legislation of a local
character, is not to be interfered with by the courts where it is
within the scope of legislative authority and the means adopted
reasonably tend to accomplish a lawful purpose. But it is equally
well established that the police power, broad as it is, cannot
justify the passage of a law or ordinance which runs counter to the
limitations of the Federal Constitution; that principle has been so
frequently affirmed in this court that we need not stop to cite the
cases.
The Federal Constitution and laws passed within its authority
are, by the express terms of that instrument, made the supreme law
of the land. The Fourteenth Amendment protects life, liberty, and
property from invasion by the States without due process of law.
Property is more than the mere thing which a person owns. It is
elementary that it includes the right to acquire, use, and dispose
of it. The Constitution protects these essential attributes of
property.
Holden v. Hardy, 169 U.
S. 366,
169 U. S. 391.
Property consists of the free use, enjoyment, and disposal of a
person's acquisitions without control or diminution save by the law
of the land. 1 Blackstone's Commentaries (Cooley's Ed.), 127.
True it is that dominion over property springing from ownership
is not absolute and unqualified. The disposition and use of
property may be controlled in the exercise of the police power in
the interest of the public health, convenience, or welfare. Harmful
occupations may be
Page 245 U. S. 75
controlled and regulated. Legitimate business may also be
regulated in the interest of the public. Certain uses of property
may be confined to portions of the municipality other than the
resident district, such as livery stables, brickyards and the like,
because of the impairment of the health and comfort of the
occupants of neighboring property. Many illustrations might be
given from the decisions of this court, and other courts, of this
principle, but these cases do not touch the one at bar.
The concrete question here is: may the occupancy, and,
necessarily the purchase and sale of property of which occupancy is
an incident, be inhibited by the States, or by one of its
municipalities, solely because of the color of the proposed
occupant of the premises? That one may dispose of his property,
subject only to the control of lawful enactments curtailing that
right in the public interest, must be conceded. The question now
presented makes it pertinent to enquire into the constitutional
right of the white man to sell his property to a colored man,
having in view the legal status of the purchaser and occupant.
Following the Civil War, certain amendments to the Federal
Constitution were adopted which have become an integral part of
that instrument, equally binding upon all the States and fixing
certain fundamental rights which all are bound to respect. The
Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery in the United States and in
all places subject to their jurisdiction, and gave Congress power
to enforce the Amendment by appropriate legislation. The Fourteenth
Amendment made all persons born or naturalized in the United States
citizens of the United States and of the States in which they
reside, and provided that no State shall make or enforce any law
which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the
United States, and that no State shall deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property without due process
Page 245 U. S. 76
of law, nor deny to any person the equal protection of the
laws.
The effect of these Amendments was first dealt with by this
court in
The Slaughter House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36. The reasons for the adoption of
the Amendments were elaborately considered by a court familiar with
the times in which the necessity for the Amendments arose and with
the circumstances which impelled their adoption. In that case, Mr.
Justice Miller, who spoke for the majority, pointed out that the
colored race, having been freed from slavery by the Thirteenth
Amendment, was raised to the dignity of citizenship and equality of
civil rights by the Fourteenth Amendment, and the States were
prohibited from abridging the privileges and immunities of such
citizens, or depriving any person of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law. While a principal purpose of the latter
Amendment was to protect persons of color, the broad language used
was deemed sufficient to protect all persons, white or black,
against discriminatory legislation by the States. This is now the
settled law. In many of the cases since arising, the question of
color has not been involved, and the cases have been decided upon
alleged violations of civil or property rights irrespective of the
race or color of the complainant. In
The Slaughter House
Cases. it was recognized that the chief inducement to the
passage of the Amendment was the desire to extend federal
protection to the recently emancipated race from unfriendly and
discriminating legislation by the States.
In
Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U.
S. 303, this court held that a colored person charged
with an offense was denied due process of law by a statute which
prevented colored men from sitting on the jury which tried him. Mr.
Justice Strong, speaking for the court, again reviewed the history
of the Amendments, and, among other things, in speaking of the
Fourteenth Amendment, said:
Page 245 U. S. 77
"It [the Fourteenth Amendment] was designed to assure to the
colored race the enjoyment of all the civil rights that, under the
law, are enjoyed by white persons, and to give to that race the
protection of the general government in that enjoyment whenever it
should be denied by the States. It not only gave citizenship and
the privileges of citizenship to persons of color, but it denied to
any State the power to withhold from them the equal protection of
the laws, and authorized Congress to enforce its provisions by
appropriate legislation. It ordains that no State shall make or
enforce any laws which shall abridge the privileges or immunities
of citizens of the United States. . . . It ordains that no State
shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law, or deny to any person within its jurisdiction the
equal protection of the laws. What is this but declaring that the
law in the States shall be the same for the black as for the white;
that all persons, whether colored or white, shall stand equal
before the laws of the States, and, in regard to the colored race,
for whose protection the amendment was primarily designed, that no
discrimination shall be made against them by law because of their
color?"
"The Fourteenth Amendment makes no attempt to enumerate the
rights it designed to protect. It speaks in general terms, and
those are as comprehensive as possible. Its language is
prohibitory, but every prohibition implies the existence of rights
and immunities, prominent among which is an immunity from
inequality of legal protection either for life, liberty, or
property. Any State action that denies this immunity to a colored
man is in conflict with the Constitution."
Again, this court, in
Ex parte Virginia, 100 U.
S. 339,
100 U. S. 347,
speaking of the Fourteenth Amendment, said:
"Whoever, by virtue of public position under a State government,
deprives another of property, life, or liberty,
Page 245 U. S. 78
without due process of law, or denies or takes away the equal
protection of the laws, violates the constitutional inhibition,
and, as he acts in the name and for the State and is clothed with
the State's power, his act is that of the State."
In giving legislative aid to these constitutional provisions,
Congress enacted in 1866, c. 31, § 1, 14 Stat. 27 [Rev.Stats., §
1978] that:
"All citizens of the United States shall have the same right in
every State and Territory as is enjoyed by white citizens thereof
to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and
personal property."
And, in 1870, by c. 114, § 16, 16 Stat. 144 [Rev.Stats., § 1977]
that:
"All persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall
have the same right in every State and Territory to make and
enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence, and to the
full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security
of persons and property as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall
be subject to like punishment, pains, penalties, taxes, licenses
and exactions of every kind, and no other."
In the face of these constitutional and statutory provisions,
can a white man be denied, consistently with due process of law,
the right to dispose of his property to a purchaser by prohibiting
the occupation of it for the sole reason that the purchaser is a
person of color intending to occupy the premises as a place of
residence?
The statute of 1866, originally passed under sanction of the
Thirteenth Amendment, 14 Stat. 27, and practically reenacted after
the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, 16 Stat. 144, expressly
provided that all citizens of the United States in any State shall
have the same right to purchase property as is enjoyed by white
citizens. Colored persons are citizens of the United States, and
have the right to purchase property and enjoy and
Page 245 U. S. 79
use the same without laws discriminating against them solely on
account of color.
Hall v. DeCuir, 95 U. S.
485,
95 U. S. 508.
These enactments did not deal with the social rights of men, but
with those fundamental rights in property which it was intended to
secure upon the same terms to citizens of every race and color.
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S. 3,
109 U. S. 22. The
Fourteenth Amendment and these statutes enacted in furtherance of
its purpose operate to qualify and entitle a colored man to acquire
property without state legislation discriminating against him
solely because of color.
The defendant in error insists that
Plessy v. Ferguson,
163 U. S. 537, is
controlling in principle in favor of the judgment of the court
below. In that case, this court held that a provision of a statute
of Louisiana requiring railway companies carrying passengers to
provide in their coaches equal but separate accommodations for the
white and colored races did not run counter to the provisions of
the Fourteenth Amendment. It is to be observed that, in that case,
there was no attempt to deprive persons of color of transportation
in the coaches of the public carrier, and the express requirements
were for equal, though separate, accommodations for the white and
colored races. In
Plessy v. Ferguson, classification of
accommodation was permitted upon the basis of equality for both
races.
In the
Berea College Case, 211 U. S.
45, a state statute was sustained in the courts of
Kentucky which, while permitting the education of white persons and
negroes in different localities by the same incorporated
institution, prohibited their attendance at the same place, and, in
this court, the judgment of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky was
affirmed solely upon the reserved authority of the legislature of
Kentucky to alter, amend, or repeal charters of its own
corporations, and the question here involved was neither discussed
nor decided.
In
Carey v. City of Atlanta, 143 Georgia 192, the
Supreme
Page 245 U. S. 80
Court of Georgia, holding an ordinance similar in principle to
the one herein involved to be invalid, dealt with
Plessy v.
Ferguson and
The Berea College Case in language so
apposite that we quote a portion of it:
"In each instance, the complaining person was afforded the
opportunity to ride, or to attend institutions of learning, or
afforded the thing of whatever nature to which in the particular
case he was entitled. The most that was done was to require him as
a member of a class to conform with reasonable rules in regard to
the separation of the races. In none of them was he denied the
right to use, control, or dispose of his property, as in this case.
Property of a person, whether as a member of a class or as an
individual, cannot be taken without due process of law. In the
recent case of
McCabe v. Atchison &c. Ry. Co.,
235 U. S.
151, where the court had under consideration a statute
which allowed railroad companies to furnish dining cars for white
people and to refuse to furnish dining cars altogether for colored
persons, this language was used in reference to the contentions of
the attorney general:"
"This argument with respect to volume of traffic seems to us to
be without merit. It makes the constitutional right depend upon the
number of persons who may be discriminated against, whereas the
essence of the constitutional right is that it is a personal
one."
"The effect of the ordinance under consideration was not merely
to regulate a business or the like, but was to destroy the right of
the individual to acquire, enjoy, and dispose of his property.
Being of this character, it was void as being opposed to the due
process clause of the constitution."
That there exists a serious and difficult problem arising from a
feeling of race hostility which the law is powerless to control,
and to which it must give a measure of consideration, may be freely
admitted. But its solution
Page 245 U. S. 81
cannot be promoted by depriving citizens of their constitutional
rights and privileges.
As we have seen, this court has held laws valid which separated
the races on the basis of equal accommodations in public
conveyances, and courts of high authority have held enactments
lawful which provide for separation in the public schools of white
and colored pupils where equal privileges are given. But, in view
of the rights secured by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal
Constitution, such legislation must have its limitations, and
cannot be sustained where the exercise of authority exceeds the
restraints of the Constitution. We think these limitations are
exceeded in laws and ordinances of the character now before us.
It is the purpose of such enactments, and, it is frankly avowed,
it will be their ultimate effect, to require by law, at least in
residential districts, the compulsory separation of the races on
account of color. Such action is said to be essential to the
maintenance of the purity of the races, although it is to be noted
in the ordinance under consideration that the employment of colored
servants in white families is permitted, and nearby residences of
colored persons not coming within the blocks, as defined in the
ordinance, are not prohibited.
The case presented does not deal with an attempt to prohibit the
amalgamation of the races. The right which the ordinance annulled
was the civil right of a white man to dispose of his property if he
saw fit to do so to a person of color and of a colored person to
make such disposition to a white person.
It is urged that this proposed segregation will promote the
public peace by preventing race conflicts. Desirable as this is,
and important as is the preservation of the public peace, this aim
cannot be accomplished by laws or ordinances which deny rights
created or protected by the Federal Constitution.
Page 245 U. S. 82
It is said that such acquisitions by colored persons depreciate
property owned in the neighborhood by white persons. But property
may be acquired by undesirable white neighbors or put to
disagreeable though lawful uses with like results.
We think this attempt to prevent the alienation of the property
in question to a person of color was not a legitimate exercise of
the police power of the State, and is in direct violation of the
fundamental law enacted in the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution preventing state interference with property rights
except by due process of law. That being the case, the ordinance
cannot stand.
Booth v; Illinois, 184 U.
S. 425,
184 U. S. 429;
Otis v. Parker, 187 U. S. 606,
187 U. S.
609.
Reaching this conclusion, it follows that the judgment of the
Kentucky Court of Appeals must be reversed, and the cause remanded
to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
Reversed.