The act of the Legislature of Texas of April 5, 1889, which
provides that
any person in this state having a valid
bona fide claim
for personal services rendered or labor done, or for damages, or
for overcharges on freight, or claims for stock killed or injured
by the train of any railway
Page 165 U. S. 151
company, provided that such claim for stock killed or injured
shall be presented to the agent of the company nearest to the point
where such stock was killed or injured, against any railway
corporation operating a railroad in this state, and the amount of
such claim does not exceed $50, may present the same, verified by
his affidavit, for payment to such corporation by filing it with
any station agent of such corporation in any county where suit may
be instituted for the same, and if at the expiration of thirty days
after such presentation, such claim has not been paid or satisfied,
he may immediately institute suit thereon in the proper court, and
if he shall finally establish his claim, and obtain judgment for
the full amount thereof, as presented for payment to such
corporation in such court, or any court to which the suit may have
been appealed, he shall be entitled to recover the amount of such
claim and all costs of suit, and in addition thereto all reasonable
attorney's fees, provided he has an attorney employed in his case,
not to exceed $10, to be assessed and awarded by the court or jury
trying the issue,
operates to deprive the railroad companies of property without
due process of law and denies to them the equal protection of the
law in that it singles them out of all citizens and corporations
and requires them to pay in certain cases attorney's fees to the
parties successfully suing them, while it gives to them no like or
corresponding benefit.
The mere fact of classification is not sufficient to relieve a
statute from the reach of the equality clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and in all cases it must appear not merely that a
classification has been made, but also that it is based upon some
reasonable ground -- something which bears a just and proper
relation to the attempted classification, and is not a mere
arbitrary selection. Tested by these principles, the statute in
controversy cannot be sustained.
On April 5, 1889, the Legislature of the Texas passed this
act:
"SECTION 1.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of
Texas that after the time when this act shall take effect, any
person in this state having a valid
bona fide claim for
personal services rendered or labor done, or for damages, or for
overcharges on freight, or claims for stock killed or injured by
the train of any railway company, provided that such claims for
stock killed or injured shall be presented to the agent of the
company nearest to the point where such stock was killed or
injured, against any railway corporation operating a railroad in
this state, and the amount of such claim does not exceed $50, may
present the same, verified by his affidavit, for payment to such
corporation by filing
Page 165 U. S. 152
it with any station agent of such corporation in any county
where the suit may be instituted for the same, and if, at the
expiration of thirty days after such presentation, such claim has
not been paid or satisfied, he may immediately institute suit
thereon in the proper court, and if he shall finally establish his
claim and obtain judgment for the full amount thereof, as presented
for payment to such corporation in such court, or any court to
which the suit may have been appealed, he shall be entitled to
recover the amount of such claim and all costs of suit, and in
addition thereto all reasonable attorney's fees, provided he has an
attorney employed in his case, not to exceed $10, to be assessed
and awarded by the court or jury trying the issue."
On October 8, 1890, defendant in error commenced this action
before a justice of the peace to recover $50 for the colt killed by
the railway company. The complaint alleged presentation and
nonpayment, as required by the act, and demanded $10 attorney fee.
The company answered, admitting everything except the claim for the
attorney's fee. The case passed, after judgment in favor of the
plaintiff for the amount claimed and an attorney's fee of $10,
through the district court and the court of civil appeals to the
supreme court of the state, by which, on May 10, 1894, the judgment
against the company was affirmed. 87 Tex. 19. To reverse such
judgment, the company sued out this writ of error.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The single question in this case is the constitutionality of the
act allowing attorney fees. The contention is that it operates to
deprive the railroad companies of property without
Page 165 U. S. 153
due process of law and denies to them the equal protection of
the law in that it singles them out of all citizens and
corporations and requires them to pay in certain cases attorney
fees to the parties successfully suing them, while it gives to them
no like or corresponding benefit. Only against railroad companies
is such exaction made, and only in certain cases.
We have not been favored with any argument or brief from the
defendant in error. Doubtless he believed, and justly, that nothing
could be added to the arguments so fully and strongly made in
support of the constitutionality of this law in the respective
opinions of the two highest courts of the state.
The supreme court of the state considered this statute as a
whole, and held it valid, and as such it is presented to us for
consideration. Considered as such, it is simply a statute imposing
a penalty upon railroad corporations for a failure to pay certain
debts. No individuals are thus punished, and no other corporations.
The act singles out a certain class of debtors, and punishes them
when, for like delinquencies, it punishes no others. They are not
treated as other debtors, or equally with other debtors. They
cannot appeal to the courts, as other litigants, under like
conditions and with like protection. If litigation terminates
adversely to them, they are mulcted in the attorney's fees of the
successful plaintiff; if it terminates in their favor, they recover
no attorney's fees. It is no sufficient answer to say that they are
punished only when adjudged to be in the wrong. They do not enter
the courts upon equal terms. They must pay attorney's fees if
wrong. They do not recover any if right; while their adversaries
recover if right, and pay nothing if wrong. In the suits,
therefore, to which they are parties, they are discriminated
against, and are not treated as others. They do not stand equal
before the law. They do not receive its equal protection. All this
is obvious from a mere inspection of the statute.
It is true, the amount of the attorney's fee which may be
charged is small, but, if the state has the power to thus mulct
them in a small amount, it has equal power to do so in a larger
sum. The matter of amount does not determine the question
Page 165 U. S. 154
of right, and the party who has a legal right may insist upon it
if only a shilling be involved. As well said by Mr. Justice Bradley
in
Boyd v. United States, 116 U.
S. 616,
116 U. S.
635:
"Illegitimate and unconstitutional practices get their first
footing in that way -- namely, by silent approaches and slight
deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can only be obviated
by adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the
security of person and property should be liberally construed. A
close and literal construction deprives them of half their
efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it
consisted more in sound than in substance. It is the duty of courts
to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizens and
against any stealthy encroachments thereon. Their motto should be
obsta principiis."
While good faith and a knowledge of existing conditions on the
part of a legislature are to be presumed, yet to carry that
presumption to the extent of always holding that there must be some
undisclosed and unknown reason for subjecting certain individuals
or corporations to hostile and discriminating legislation is to
make the protecting clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment a mere rope
of sand, in no manner restraining state action.
It is well settled that corporations are persons within the
provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the
United States.
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific
Railroad, 118 U. S. 394;
Pembina Mining Co. v. Pennsylvania, 125 U.
S. 181,
125 U. S. 189;
Missouri Pacific Railway v. Mackey, 127 U.
S. 205;
Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway v.
Herrick, 127 U. S. 210;
Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway v. Beckwith,
129 U. S. 26;
Charlotte & Columbia Railroad v. Gibbes, 142 U.
S. 386;
Covington & Lexington Turnpike Company
v. Sandford, 164 U. S. 578. The
rights and securities guarantied to persons by that instrument
cannot be disregarded in respect to these artificial entities
called "corporations" any more than they can be in respect to the
individuals who are the equitable owners of the property belonging
to such corporations. A state has no more power to deny to
corporations the equal protection of the law than it has to
individual citizens.
Page 165 U. S. 155
But it is said that it is not within the scope of the Fourteenth
Amendment to withhold from states the power of classification, and
that if the law deals alike with all of a certain class, it is not
obnoxious to the charge of a denial of equal protection. While as a
general proposition this is undeniably true,
Hayes v.
Missouri, 120 U. S. 68;
Railroad Company v. Mackey, 127 U.
S. 205;
Walston v. Nevin, 128 U.
S. 578;
Bell's Gap Railroad v. Pennsylvania,
134 U. S. 232;
Express Co. v. Seibert, 142 U. S. 339;
Giozza v. Tiernan, 148 U. S. 657;
Columbia Southern Railway v. Wright, 151 U.
S. 470;
Marchant v. Pennsylvania Railroad,
153 U. S. 380;
St. Louis & San Francisco Railway v. Mathews,
165 U. S. 1, yet it
is equally true that such classification cannot be made
arbitrarily. The state may not say that all white men shall be
subjected to the payment of the attorney's fees of parties
successfully suing them, and all black men not. It may not say that
all men beyond a certain age shall be alone thus subjected, or all
men possessed of a certain wealth. These are distinctions which do
not furnish any proper basis for the attempted classification. That
must always rest upon some difference which bears a reasonable and
just relation to the act in respect to which the classification is
proposed, and can never be made arbitrarily, and without any such
basis.
As well said by Black J., in
State v. Loomis, 115 Mo.
307, 314, in which a statute making it a misdemeanor for any
corporation engaged in manufacturing or mining to issue in payment
of the wages of its employees any order, check, etc., payable
otherwise than in lawful money of the United States, unless
negotiable and redeemable at its face value in cash or in goods and
supplies at the option of the holder at the store or other place of
business of the corporation, was held class legislation and
void:
"Classification for legislative purposes must have some
reasonable basis upon which to stand. It must be evident that
differences which would serve for a classification for some
purposes furnish no reason whatever for a classification for
legislative purposes. The differences which will support class
legislation must be such as, in the nature of things, furnish a
reasonable basis for separate laws and
Page 165 U. S. 156
regulations. Thus, the legislature may fix the age at which
persons shall be deemed competent to contract for themselves, but
no one will claim that competency to contract can be made to depend
upon stature or color of the hair. Such a classification for such a
purpose would be arbitrary, and a piece of legislative despotism,
and therefore not the law of the land."
In
Vanzant v. Waddel, 2 Yerger 260, 270, Catron, J.
(afterwards Mr. Justice Catron of this Court), speaking for the
Supreme Court of Tennessee, declared:
"Every partial or private law which directly proposes to destroy
or affect individual rights or does the same thing by affording
remedies leading to similar consequences is unconstitutional and
void. Were this otherwise, odious individuals and corporate bodies
would be governed by one rule, and the mass of the community, who
made the law, by another."
In
Dibrell v. Morris' Heirs, Supreme Court of
Tennessee, 15 S.W. 87, 95, Baxter, Special Judge, reviewing at some
length cases of classification, closes the review with these
words:
"We conclude upon a review of the cases referred to above that
whether a statute be public or private, general or special, in
form, if it attempts to create distinctions and classifications
between the citizens of this state, the basis of such
classification must be natural, and not arbitrary."
In
Bell's Gap Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 134 U.
S. 232, the question was presented as to the power of
the state to classify for purposes of taxation, and while it was
conceded that a large discretion in these respects was vested in
the various legislatures, the fact of a limit to such discretion
was recognized, the court, by Mr. Justice Bradley, saying, on page
134 U. S.
237:
"All such regulations, and those of like character, so long as
they proceed within reasonable limits and general usage, are within
the discretion of the state legislature or the people of the state
in framing their Constitution. But clear and hostile
discriminations against particular persons and classes, especially
such as are of an unusual character, unknown to the practice of our
governments, might be obnoxious to the constitutional
prohibition."
It is, of course, proper that every debtor should pay his
Page 165 U. S. 157
debts, and there might be no impropriety in giving to every
successful suitor attorney's fees. Such a provision would bear a
reasonable relation to the delinquency of the debtor, and would
certainly create no inequality of right or protection. But before a
distinction can be made between debtors, and one be punished for a
failure to pay his debts while another is permitted to become in
like manner delinquent without any punishment, there must be some
difference in the obligation to pay, some reason why the duty of
payment is more imperative in the one instance than in the
other.
If it be said that this penalty is cast only upon corporations,
that to them special privileges are granted, and therefore upon
them special burdens may be imposed, it is a sufficient answer to
say that the penalty is not imposed upon all corporations. The
burden does not go with the privilege. Only railroad of all
corporations are selected to bear this penalty. The rule of
equality is ignored.
It may be said that certain corporations are chartered for
charitable, educational, or religious purposes, and abundant reason
for not visiting them with a penalty for the nonpayment of debts is
found in the fact that their chartered privileges are not given for
pecuniary profit. But the penalty is not imposed upon all business
corporations, all chartered for the purpose of private gain. The
banking corporations, the manufacturing corporations, and others
like them are exempt. Further, the penalty is imposed not upon all
corporations charged with the
quasi-public duty of
transportation, but only upon those charged with a particular form
of that duty. So the classification is not based on any idea of
special privileges by way of incorporation, nor of special
privileges given thereby for purposes of private gain, nor even of
such privileges granted for the discharge of one general class of
public duties.
But if the classification is not based upon the idea of special
privileges, can it be sustained upon the basis of the business in
which the corporations to be punished are engaged? That such
corporations may be classified for some purposes is unquestioned.
The business in which they are
Page 165 U. S. 158
engaged is of a peculiarly dangerous nature, and the
legislature, in the exercise of its police powers, may justly
require many things to be done by them in order to secure life and
property. Fencing of railroad tracks, use of safety couplers, and a
multitude of other things easily suggest themselves. And any
classification for the imposition of such special duties -- duties
arising out of the peculiar business in which they are engaged --
is a just classification, and not one within the prohibition of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Thus, it is frequently required that they
fence their tracks, and as a penalty for a failure to fence, double
damages in case of loss are inflicted.
Missouri Pacific Railway
v. Humes, 115 U. S. 512. But
this and all kindred cases proceed upon the theory of a special
duty resting upon railroad corporations by reason of the business
in which they are engaged -- a duty not resting upon others; a duty
which can be enforced by the legislature in any proper manner, and
whether it enforces it by penalties in the way of fines coming to
the state or by double damages to a party injured is immaterial. It
is all done in the exercise of the police power of the state and
with a view to enforce just and reasonable police regulations.
While this action is for stock killed, the recovery of
attorneys' fees cannot be sustained upon the theory just suggested.
There is no fence law in Texas. The legislature of the state has
not deemed it necessary for the protection of life or property to
require railroads to fence their tracks, and, as no duty is
imposed, there can be no penalty for nonperformance. Indeed, the
statute does not proceed upon any such theory; it is broader in its
scope. Its object is to compel the payment of the several classes
of debts named, and was so regarded by the supreme court of the
state.
But a mere statute to compel the payment of indebtedness does
not come within the scope of police regulations. The hazardous
business of railroading carries with it no special necessity for
the prompt payment of debts. That is a duty resting upon all
debtors, and while, in certain cases, there may be a peculiar
obligation which may be enforced by penalties, yet nothing of that
kind springs from the mere work of
Page 165 U. S. 159
railroad transportation. Statutes have been sustained giving
special protection to the claims of laborers and mechanics, but no
such idea underlies this legislation. If does not aim to protect
the laborer or the mechanic alone, for its benefits are conferred
upon every individual in the state, rich or poor, high or low, who
has a claim of the character described. It is not a statute for the
protection of particular classes of individuals supposed to need
protection, but for the punishment of certain corporations on
account of their delinquency.
Neither can it be sustained as a proper means of enforcing the
payment of small debts and preventing any unnecessary litigation in
respect to them, because it does not impose the penalty in all
cases where the amount in controversy is within the limit named in
the statute. Indeed, the statute arbitrarily singles out one class
of debtors, and punishes it for a failure to perform certain duties
-- duties which are equally obligatory upon all debtors; a
punishment not visited by reason of the failure to comply with any
proper police regulations, or for the protection of the laboring
classes, or to prevent litigation about trifling matters, or in
consequence of any special corporate privileges bestowed by the
state. Unless the legislature may arbitrarily select one
corporation or one class of corporations, one individual or one
class of individuals, and visit a penalty upon them which is not
imposed upon others guilty of like delinquency, this statute cannot
be sustained.
But arbitrary selection can never be justified by calling it
classification. The equal protection demanded by the Fourteenth
Amendment forbids this. No language is more worthy of frequent and
thoughtful consideration than these words of Mr. Justice Matthews,
speaking for this Court, in
Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
118 U. S. 356,
118 U. S.
369:
"When we consider the nature and the theory of our institutions
of government, the principles upon which they are supposed to rest,
and review the history of their development, we are constrained to
conclude that they do not mean to leave room for the play and
action of purely personal and arbitrary power."
The first official action of this nation declared the foundation
of government in these words:
"We hold these truths to be self-evident,
Page 165 U. S. 160
that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
While such declaration of principles may not have the force of
organic law, or be made the basis of judicial decision as to the
limits of right and duty, and while in all cases reference must be
had to the organic law of the nation for such limits, yet the
latter is but the body and the letter of which the former is the
thought and the spirit, and it is always safe to read the letter of
the Constitution in the spirit of the Declaration of Independence.
No duty rests more imperatively upon the courts than the
enforcement of those constitutional provisions intended to secure
that equality of rights which is the foundation of free
government.
Questions of this character have been frequently presented to
the courts, and it is well to notice a few of the decisions. In
Alabama, a statute provided that a railroad corporation, or any
complainant against it, taking an appeal from a judgment of a
justice of the peace in a suit for damages to livestock, and
failing to sustain such appeal, should be liable for a reasonable
attorney's fee incurred by reason thereof. Code Ala. 1715. This
statute was less obnoxious to the charge of discrimination than the
one before us, in that it gave the same right to the corporation as
to its adversary, and it was limited to cases in which an appeal
was taken from a judgment already rendered by a competent judicial
officer; yet the Supreme Court of that state,
South & North
Alabama Railroad v. Morris, 65 Ala.193, held it in conflict
with both the state and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United
States Constitution, saying:
"Justice cannot be sold or denied by the exaction of a pecuniary
consideration for its enjoyment from one, when it is given freely
and openhanded to another, without money and without price. Nor can
it be permitted that litigants shall be debarred from the free
exercise of this constitutional right by the imposition of
arbitrary, unjust, and odious discriminations, perpetrated under
color of establishing peculiar rules for a particular occupation.
Unequal, partial, and discriminatory legislation, which secures
this right to
Page 165 U. S. 161
some favored class or classes, and denies it to others, who are
thus excluded from that equal protection designed to be secured by
the general law of the land, is in clear and manifest opposition to
the letter and spirit of the foregoing constitutional
provisions."
And again:
"The section of the Code under consideration (1715) prescribes a
regulation of a peculiar and discriminative character in reference
to certain appeals from justices of the peace. It is not general in
its provisions, or applicable to all persons, but is confined to
such as own or control railroads only, and it varies from the
general law of the land by requiring the unsuccessful appellant, in
this particular class of cases, to pay an attorney's tax fee not to
exceed twenty dollars. A law which would require all farmers who
raise cotton to pay such a fee in cases where cotton was the
subject matter of litigation, and the owners of this staple were
parties to the suit would be so discriminating in its nature as to
appear manifestly unconstitutional, and one which should confine
the tax alone to physicians or merchants or ministers of the gospel
would be glaring in its obnoxious repugnancy to those cardinal
principles of free government which are found incorporated,
perhaps, in the bill of rights of every state constitution of the
various commonwealths of the American government."
In Mississippi, an act somewhat similar in its nature, Laws
Miss. 1882, p. 110, was adjudged unconstitutional,
Chicago, St.
Louis &c. Railroad v. Moss, 60 Miss. 641, the court
saying, on page 646:
"The right of appeal cannot be fettered and clogged with
reference to the parties litigant or the attitude they occupy as
plaintiff or defendant. All litigants, whether plaintiff or
defendant, should be regarded with equal favor by the law, and
before the tribunals for administering it, and should have the same
right to appeal with others similarly situated. All must have the
equal protection of the law and its instrumentalities. The same
rule must exist for all in the same circumstances."
In Michigan, a statute was passed, Laws Michigan 1885, c. 234,
authorizing the taxing of an attorney's fee of twenty-five dollars
in actions against a railroad company for damages for
Page 165 U. S. 162
cattle killed, and the Supreme Court of that state held it
unconstitutional,
Wilder v. Chicago & West Michigan
Railway, 70 Mich. 382, saying, on page 384:
"Corporations have equal rights with natural persons as far as
their privileges in the courts are concerned. They can sue and
defend in all courts the same as natural persons, and the law must
be administered as to them with the same equality and justice which
it bestows upon every suitor, and without which the machinery of
the law becomes the engine of tyranny. This statute proposes to
punish a railroad company for defending a suit brought against it
with a penalty of $25, if it fails to successfully maintain its
defense. The individual sues for the loss of his cow, and if it is
shown that such loss was occasioned by his own neglect, and through
no fault of the company, and he thereby loses his suit, the
railroad company can recover only the ordinary statutory costs of
$10 in the justice's court; but if he succeeds because of the
negligence of the company, the plaintiff is permitted to tax the
$10 and an additional penalty of $25; for it is nothing more or
less than a penalty. Calling it an 'attorney fee' does not change
its real nature or effect. It is a punishment to the company, and a
reward to the plaintiff, and an incentive to litigation on his
part. This inequality and injustice cannot be sustained upon any
principle known to the law. It is repugnant to our form of
government, and out of harmony with the genius of our free
institutions. The legislature cannot give to one party in
litigation such privileges as will arm him with special and
important pecuniary advantages over his antagonist."
Lafferty v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway, 71
Mich. 35.
So, in Arkansas, an act was passed providing that, when stock
was killed by a railroad company the owner might demand an
appraisement, and that, if the appraised value was not paid within
a certain time, and an action was brought, an attorney fee for the
plaintiff might be taxed and collected; but it was held by the
supreme court,
St. Louis &c. Railway v. Williams, 49
Ark. 492, that such legislation could not be sustained. It was
construed to be an act imposing a
Page 165 U. S. 163
penalty for a failure to abide by an award of appraisers, and
contesting its validity in the courts. It is worthy of note that in
the same volume is found a decision by the same court, sustaining a
statute allowing an attorney fee in actions for the recovery of
overcharges by railroads,
Dow v. Beidelman, 49 Ark. 455,
but the statute had prescribed the rates of charge for the carriage
of passengers by railroads, had forbidden an overcharge, and it was
as a penalty for failure to comply with such police regulations
that the allowance of an attorney regulations that the allowance of
an attorney Brown, 14 Wash. 155, in which, it appearing that there
was no statutory obligation on railroad companies to fence their
right of way, a statute allowing attorney fees in actions to
recover damages for stock killed was declared to be
unconstitutional, and
Grand Rapids Chair Co. v. Runnels,
77 Mich. 104, in which an act authorizing an attorney fee to be
taxed in entering judgments for personal services was set
aside.
Besides these cases involving attorney fees are others in which
legislation imposing special burdens on an individual or a class
has been declared beyond the power of the legislature as against
equality of right. In
San Antonio &c. Railway v.
Wilson, 19 S.W. 910, the court of appeals of Texas held that a
statute providing that, in the event of a railroad company's
refusing to pay its indebtedness to an employee within twenty days
after demand, he could recover as damages twenty percent in
addition to the amount due, was class legislation and
unconstitutional. In the course of the opinion, after referring to
those statutes allowing double damages for stock killed, the court
observed:
"But when we consider the relations of railway companies to
their own servants, both as to contracts of employment and payment,
we find a field in which special legislation has no right
ordinarily to enter, and in which railways stand on the same
footing with all other corporations or persons."
In
Atchison & Nebraska Railroad v. Baty, 6 Neb. 37,
there was presented for consideration a statute which gave to the
owner of livestock accidentally killed or destroyed on a railroad
track
Page 165 U. S. 164
double its value, and it was held that the statute was void.
Millett v. People, 117 Ill. 294, in which an act of the
legislature requiring owners and operators of coal mines to weigh
coal in a certain specified manner was held invalid as beyond the
power of the legislature to single out certain individuals, and
impose upon them burdens not imposed upon all.
Frorer v.
People, 141 Ill. 171, where an act which prohibited persons
engaged in mining or manufacturing from keeping a store for
furnishing supplies to their employees was held in conflict with
the Constitution.
Braceville Coal Co. v. People, 147 Ill.
66, where a like ruling was made in respect to a statute requiring
certain specified corporations to pay the wages of their employees
weekly.
Eden v. People, 161 Ill. 296, which set aside a
statute forbidding barbers, and barbers only, to keep open their
shops or work at their trade on Sundays.
Durkee v.
Janesville, 28 Wis. 464, in which an act providing that no
costs should be recovered against the city in an action commenced
to set aside any assessment or tax deed, or to prevent the
collection of taxes in said city, was held to conflict with the
rule of equality in that suitors in all other cases were entitled
to recover their costs; the court saying, on page 471, that:
"It is obvious there can be no certain remedy in the laws where
the legislature may prescribe one rule for one suitor or class of
suitors in the courts, and another for all others under like
circumstances, or may discriminate between parties to the same
suit, giving one most unjust pecuniary advantage over the other.
Parties thus discriminated against would not obtain justice freely,
and without being obliged to purchase it. To the extent of such
discrimination they would be obliged to buy justice, and pay for
it; thus making it a matter of purchase to those who could afford
to pay, contrary to the letter and spirit of this provision."
Janesville v. Carpenter, 77 Wis. 288, in which a
statute authorizing suits for injunction to be maintained in favor
of certain parties under circumstances differing from those which
obtained in respect to all other suits of a similar nature, was
likewise held to be void. as discriminating and class legislation,
in
Page 165 U. S. 165
violation of the spirit of the Constitution, and contrary to
public justice.
In
State v. Goodwill, 33 W.Va. 179, the Supreme Court
of Appeals of West Virginia held unconstitutional a statute which
prohibited persons engaged in mining and manufacturing from issuing
for the payment of labor any order or paper except such as was
specified in the act, and on the same day, in
State v. Fire
Creek Coal & Coke Co., 33 W.Va. 188, the same court also
set aside another statute which prohibited persons and corporations
engaged in mining and manufacturing, and interested in selling
merchandise and supplies, from selling any merchandise or supplies
to their employees at a greater percent of profit than they sell to
others not employed by them. In
Park v. Free Press Co., 72
Mich. 560, it was held that an act limiting the recovery in suits
brought for libel in certain cases to actual damages, as defined in
the act, was not within the scope of constitutional legislation. In
Pearson v. Portland, 69 Me. 278, a statute which provided
that no damages for injury to person or property caused by a defect
in the highway, could be recovered of any city or town by any
person who at the time the damage was done, was a resident of any
country where damage done under similar circumstances was not by
the laws of that country recoverable was held to conflict with the
equality clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States
Constitution.
It must not be understood that, by citing, we endorse all these
decisions. Our purpose is rather to show the extent to which the
courts of the various states have gone in enforcing the
constitutional obligation of equal protection. Other cases of a
similar character may be found in the reports, but a mere
accumulation of authorities is of little value. It is apparent that
the mere fact of classification is not sufficient to relieve a
statute from the reach of the equality clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and that in all cases it must appear not only that a
classification has been made, but also that it is one based upon
some reasonable ground -- some difference which bears a just and
proper relation to the attempted classification --
Page 165 U. S. 166
and is not a mere arbitrary selection. Tested by these
principles, the statute in controversy cannot be sustained. The
judgment of the Supreme Court of Texas is therefore
Reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
not inconsistent with this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, with whom concurred MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER
and MR. JUSTICE WHITE, dissenting.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE WHITE, and myself are unable to
concur in this judgment. The grounds of our dissent may be briefly
stated.
Costs in civil actions at law are the creature of statute. From
early times, there have been statutes making different rules as to
costs according to the nature of the issue, and the amount
involved, and sometimes allowing costs to the prevailing party when
plaintiff, and not when defendant. The whole matter of costs,
including the party to or against whom they may be given, the items
or sums to be allowed, and the right to costs as depending upon the
nature of the suit, upon the amount or value of the thing sued for
or recovered, or upon other circumstances, is and always has been
within the regulation and control of the legislature, exercising
its discretionary power not oppressively to either party, but as
the best interests of the litigants and of the public may appear to
it to demand. Bac.Ab. "Costs,"
passim; Postan v. Stanway,
5 East 261;
Green v.
Liter, 8 Cranch 229,
12 U. S. 242;
Kneass v. Schuylkill Bank, 4 Wash. C.C. 106;
Lowe v.
Kansas, 163 U. S. 81.
The statute of the State of Texas now in question, does but
enact that any person having a valid
bona fide claim, not
exceeding fifty dollars, against a railroad corporation, for
personal services or damages, or for overcharges on freight, or for
destruction or injury of stock by its trains, and presenting the
claim, verified by his affidavit, to the corporation, and, if it is
not paid within thirty days, suing thereon in the proper court, and
finally obtaining judgment for the full amount thereof in that
court, or in any court to which the suit may be appealed, shall be
entitled to recover, in addition to other
Page 165 U. S. 167
costs, a reasonable attorney's fee (if he has employed an
attorney) not exceeding ten dollars, to be assessed and awarded by
the court or jury trying the issue. Texas Gen.Laws Tex. 1889, p.
131, c. 107; Sayles' Supp., p. 768, art. 4266
a. In other
words, if an honest claim, of not more than fifty dollars, and
coming within one of those classes of small claims which most
commonly arise between individuals and railroad corporations, is
not promptly paid when presented under oath, and the claimant is
thereby compelled to resort to a suit, the corporation, if
ultimately cast in the suit, must pay to the successful plaintiff a
very moderate attorney's fee, as part of the costs of the
litigation.
The legislature of a state must be presumed to have acted from
lawful motives unless the contrary appears upon the face of the
statute. If, for instance, the Legislature of Texas was satisfied
from observation and experience that railroad corporations within
the state were accustomed, beyond other corporations or persons, to
unconscionably resist the payment of such petty claims, with the
object of exhausting the patience and the means of the claimants,
by prolonged litigation and perhaps repeated appeals, railroad
corporations alone might well be required, when ultimately defeated
in a suit upon such a claim, to pay a moderate attorney's fee as a
just, though often inadequate, contribution to the expenses to
which they had put the plaintiff in establishing a rightful demand.
Whether such a state of things as above supposed did in fact exist,
and whether, for that or other reasons, sound policy required the
allowance of such a fee to either party, or to the plaintiff only,
were questions to be determined by the legislature, when dealing
with the subject of costs, except insofar as it saw fit to commit
the matter to the decision of the courts.
The constitutionality of statutes allowing plaintiffs only to
recover an attorney's fee as part of the judgment in particular
classes of actions selected by the legislature appears to have been
upheld by the courts of most of the states in which it has been
challenged.
Kansas Pacific Railway v. Mower, 16 Kan. 573,
582;
Same v. Yanz, 16 Kans. 583;
Peoria
&c.
Page 165 U. S. 168
Railway v. Duggan, 109 Ill. 537;
Vogel v.
Pekoc, 157 Ill. 339;
Dow v. Beidelman, 49 Ark. 455;
Perkins v. St. Louis &c. Railway, 103 Mo. 52;
Burlington &c. Railway v. Dey, 82 Ia. 312, 340;
Wortman v. Kleinschmidt, 12 Mont. 316;
Gulf, Colorado
& Santa Fe Railroad v. Ellis, 87 Tex.19;
Cameron v.
Chicago &c. Railway, 63 Minn. 384.
It is to be regretted that so important a precedent as this case
may afford for interference by the national judiciary with the
legislation of the several states on little questions of costs
should be established upon argument
ex parte in behalf of
the railroad corporation, without any argument for the original
plaintiff. But it is hardly surprising that the owner of a claim
for fifty dollars only, having been compelled to follow up, through
all the courts of the state, the contest over this ten dollar fee,
should at last have become discouraged and unwilling to undergo the
expense of employing counsel to maintain his rights before this
Court.