The Act of September 1, 1916, c. 432, 39 Stat. 675, prohibits
transportation in interstate commerce of goods made at a factory in
which, within thirty days prior to their removal therefrom,
children under the age of 14 years have been employed or permitted
to work, or children between the ages of 14 and 16 years have been
employed or permitted to work more than eight hours in any day, or
more than six days in any week, or after the hour of 7 P.M. or
before the hour of 6 A.M.
Held, unconstitutional as
exceeding the commerce power of Congress and invading the powers
reserved to the States.
The power to regulate interstate commerce is the power to
prescribe the rule by which the commerce is to be governed; in
other words, to control the means by which it is carried on.
The court has never sustained a right to exclude save in cases
where the character of the particular things excluded was such as
to bring them peculiarly within the governmental authority of the
State or Nation and render their exclusion, in effect, but a
regulation of interstate transportation, necessary to prevent the
accomplishment through that means of the evils inherent in
them.
The manufacture of goods is not commerce, nor do the facts that
they are intended for, and are afterwards shipped in, interstate
commerce make their production a part of that commerce subject to
the control of Congress.
The power to regulate interstate commerce was not intended as a
means of enabling Congress to equalize the economic conditions in
the States for the prevention of unfair competition among them by
forbidding the interstate transportation of goods made under
conditions which Congress deems productive of unfairness.
It was not intended as an authority to Congress to control the
States in the exercise of their police power over local trade and
manufacture, always existing and expressly reserved to them by the
Tenth Amendment.
Affirmed.
Page 247 U. S. 252
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 247 U. S. 268
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the court.
A bill was filed in the United States District Court for the
Western District of North Carolina by a father in his own behalf
and as next friend of his two minor sons, one under the age of
fourteen years and the other between the ages of fourteen and
sixteen years, employees in a cotton mill at Charlotte, North
Carolina, to enjoin the enforcement of the act of Congress intended
to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor. Act
of Sept. 1, 1916, c. 432, 39 Stat. 675.
The District Court held the act unconstitutional and entered a
decree enjoining its enforcement. This appeal brings the case here.
The first section of the act is in the margin.
*
Page 247 U. S. 269
Other sections of the act contain provisions for its enforcement
and prescribe penalties for its violation.
The attack upon the act rests upon three propositions: first: it
is not a regulation of interstate and foreign commerce; second: it
contravenes the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution; third: it
conflicts with the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.
The controlling question for decision is: is it within the
authority of Congress in regulating commerce among the States to
prohibit the transportation in interstate commerce of manufactured
goods, the product of a factory in which, within thirty days prior
to their removal therefrom, children under the age of fourteen have
been employed or permitted to work, or children between the ages of
fourteen and sixteen years have been employed or permitted to work
more than eight hours in any day, or more than six days in any
week, or after the hour of seven o'clock P.M. or before the hour of
6 o'clock A.M.?
The power essential to the passage of this act, the Government
contends, is found in the commerce clause of the Constitution,
which authorizes Congress to regulate commerce with foreign nations
and among the States.
In
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking
for this court and defining the extent and nature of the commerce
power, said, "It is the power to regulate; that is, to prescribe
the rule by which commerce is to be governed." In other words, the
power is one to control the means by which commerce is carried on,
which is
Page 247 U. S. 270
directly the contrary of the assumed right to forbid commerce
from moving, and thus destroy it as to particular commodities. But
it is insisted that adjudged cases in this court establish the
doctrine that the power to regulate given to Congress incidentally
includes the authority to prohibit the movement of ordinary
commodities, and therefore that the subject is not open for
discussion. The cases demonstrate the contrary. They rest upon the
character of the particular subjects dealt with, and the fact that
the scope of governmental authority, state or national, possessed
over them is such that the authority to prohibit is as to them but
the exertion of the power to regulate.
The first of these cases is
Champion v. Ames,
188 U. S. 321, the
so-called
Lottery Case, in which it was held that Congress
might pass a law having the effect to keep the channels of commerce
free from use in the transportation of tickets used in the
promotion of lottery schemes. In
Hipolite Egg Co. v. United
States, 220 U. S. 45, this
court sustained the power of Congress to pass the Pure Food and
Drug Act, which prohibited the introduction into the States by
means of interstate commerce of impure foods and drugs. In
Hoke
v. United States, 227 U. S. 308,
this court sustained the constitutionality of the so-called "White
Slave Traffic Act," whereby the transportation of a woman in
interstate commerce for the purpose of prostitution was forbidden.
In that case, we said, having reference to the authority of
Congress, under the regulatory power, to protect the channels of
interstate commerce:
"If the facility of interstate transportation can be taken away
from the demoralization of lotteries, the debasement of obscene
literature, the contagion of diseased cattle or persons, the
impurity of food and drugs, the like facility can be taken away
from the systematic enticement to and the enslavement in
prostitution and debauchery of women, and, more insistently, of
girls. "
Page 247 U. S. 271
In
Caminetti v. United States, 242 U.
S. 470, we held that Congress might prohibit the
transportation of women in interstate commerce for the purposes of
debauchery and kindred purposes. In
Clark Distilling Co. v.
Western Maryland Ry. Co., 242 U. S. 311, the
power of Congress over the transportation of intoxicating liquors
was sustained. In the course of the opinion, it was said:
"The power conferred is to regulate, and the very terms of the
grant would seem to repel the contention that only prohibition of
movement in interstate commerce was embraced. And the cogency of
this is manifest, since, if the doctrine were applied to those
manifold and important subjects of interstate commerce as to which
Congress from the beginning has regulated, not prohibited, the
existence of government under the Constitution would be no longer
possible."
And, concluding the discussion which sustained the authority of
the Government to prohibit the transportation of liquor in
interstate commerce, the court said:
". . . the exceptional nature of the subject here regulated is
the basis upon which the exceptional power exerted must rest, and
affords no ground for any fear that such power may be
constitutionally extended to things which it may not, consistently
with the guarantees of the Constitution, embrace."
In each of these instances, the use of interstate transportation
was necessary to the accomplishment of harmful results. In other
words, although the power over interstate transportation was to
regulate, that could only be accomplished by prohibiting the use of
the facilities of interstate commerce to effect the evil
intended.
This element is wanting in the present case. The thing intended
to be accomplished by this statute is the denial of the facilities
of interstate commerce to those manufacturers in the States who
employ children within the prohibited ages. The act, in its effect,
does not regulate
Page 247 U. S. 272
transportation among the States, but aims to standardize the
ages at which children may be employed in mining and manufacturing
within the States. The goods shipped are, of themselves, harmless.
The act permits them to be freely shipped after thirty days from
the time of their removal from the factory. When offered for
shipment, and before transportation begins, the labor of their
production is over, and the mere fact that they were intended for
interstate commerce transportation does not make their production
subject to federal control under the commerce power.
Commerce
"consists of intercourse and traffic, and includes the
transportation of persons land property, as well as the purchase,
sale and exchange of commodities."
The making of goods and the mining of coal are not commerce, nor
does the fact that these things are to be afterwards shipped or
used in interstate commerce make their production a part thereof.
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R.R. Co. v. Yurkonis,
238 U. S. 439.
Over interstate transportation or its incidents, the regulatory
power of Congress is ample, but the production of articles intended
for interstate commerce is a matter of local regulation.
"When the commerce begins is determined not by the character of
the commodity, nor by the intention of the owner to transfer it to
another state for sale, nor by his preparation of it for
transportation, but by its actual delivery to a common carrier for
transportation, or the actual commencement of its transfer to
another state."
(Mr. Justice Jackson in
In re Green, 52 Fed.Rep. 113.)
This principle has been recognized often in this court.
Coe v.
Errol, 116 U. S. 517;
Bacon v. Illinois, 227 U. S. 504, and
cases cited. If it were otherwise, all manufacture intended for
interstate shipment would be brought under federal control to the
practical exclusion of the authority of the States, a result
certainly not contemplated by the
Page 247 U. S. 273
framers of the Constitution when they vested in Congress the
authority to regulate commerce among the States.
Kidd v.
Pearson, 128 U. S. 1,
128 U. S. 21.
It is further contended that the authority of Congress may be
exerted to control interstate commerce in the shipment of
child-made goods because of the effect of the circulation of such
goods in other States where the evil of this class of labor has
been recognized by local legislation, and the right to thus employ
child labor has been more rigorously restrained than in the State
of production. In other words, that the unfair competition thus
engendered may be controlled by closing the channels of interstate
commerce to manufacturers in those States where the local laws do
not meet what Congress deems to be the more just standard of other
States.
There is no power vested in Congress to require the States to
exercise their police power so as to prevent possible unfair
competition. Many causes may cooperate to give one State, by reason
of local laws or conditions, an economic advantage over others. The
Commerce Clause was not intended to give to Congress a general
authority to equalize such conditions. In some of the States, laws
have been passed fixing minimum wages for women, in others, the
local law regulates the hours of labor of women in various
employments. Business done in such States may be at an economic
disadvantage when compared with States which have no such
regulations; surely, this fact does not give Congress the power to
deny transportation in interstate commerce to those who carry on
business where the hours of labor and the rate of compensation for
women have not been fixed by a standard in use in other States and
approved by Congress.
The grant of power to Congress over the subject of interstate
commerce was to enable it to regulate such commerce, and not to
give it authority to control the
Page 247 U. S. 274
States in their exercise of the police power over local trade
and manufacture.
The grant of authority over a purely federal matter was not
intended to destroy the local power always existing and carefully
reserved to the States in the Tenth Amendment to the
Constitution.
Police regulations relating to the internal trade and affairs of
the States have been uniformly recognized as within such control.
"This," said this court in
United States v.
Dewitt, 9 Wall. 41,
76
U. S. 45,
"has been so frequently declared by this court, results so
obviously from the terms of the Constitution, and has been so fully
explained and supported on former occasions that we think it
unnecessary to enter again upon the discussion."
See Keller v. United States, 213 U.
S. 138,
213 U. S. 144,
213 U. S. 145,
213 U. S. 146.
Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., p. 11.
In the judgment which established the broad power of Congress
over interstate commerce, Chief Justice Marshall said (9 Wheat.
22 U. S.
203):
"They [inspection laws] act upon the subject before it becomes
an article of foreign commerce, or of commerce among the states,
and prepare it for that purpose. They form a portion of that
immense mass of legislation which embraces everything within the
territory of a state not surrendered to the general government, all
which can be most advantageously exercised by the states
themselves. Inspection laws, quarantine laws, health laws of every
description, as well as laws for regulating the internal commerce
of a state and those which respect turnpike roads, ferries,
&c., are component parts of this mass."
And in
Dartmouth College v.
Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518,
17 U. S. 629,
the same great judge said:
"That the framers of the constitution did not intend to restrain
the states in the regulation of their civil institutions, adopted
for internal government, and that
Page 247 U. S. 275
the instrument they have given us is not to be so construed may
be admitted."
That there should be limitations upon the right to employ
children in mines and factories in the interest of their own and
the public welfare, all will admit. That such employment is
generally deemed to require regulation is shown by the fact that
the brief of counsel states that every State in the Union has a law
upon the subject, limiting the right to thus employ children. In
North Carolina, the State wherein is located the factory in which
the employment was had in the present case, no child under twelve
years of age is permitted to work.
It may be desirable that such laws be uniform, but our Federal
Government is one of enumerated powers; "this principle," declared
Chief Justice Marshall in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, "is universally
admitted."
A statute must be judged by its natural and reasonable effect.
Collins v. New Hampshire, 171 U. S.
30,
171 U. S. 33,
171 U. S. 34.
The control by Congress over interstate commerce cannot authorize
the exercise of authority not entrusted to it by the Constitution.
Pipe Line Cases, 234 U. S. 548,
234 U. S. 560.
The maintenance of the authority of the States over matters purely
local is as essential to the preservation of our institutions, as
is the conservation of the supremacy of the federal power in all
matters entrusted to the Nation by the Federal Constitution.
In interpreting the Constitution, it must never be forgotten
that the Nation is made up of States to which are entrusted the
powers of local government. And to them and to the people the
powers not expressly delegated to the National Government are
reserved.
Lane County v.
Oregon, 7 Wall. 71,
74 U. S. 76. The
power of the States to regulate their purely internal affairs by
such laws as seem wise to the local authority is inherent, and has
never been surrendered to the general government.
Page 247 U. S. 276
New York v.
Miln, 11 Pet. 102,
36 U. S. 139;
Slaughter House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 63;
Kidd v. Pearson, supra. To sustain this statute would not
be, in our judgment, a recognition of the lawful exertion of
congressional authority over interstate commerce, but would
sanction an invasion by the federal power of the control of a
matter purely local in its character, and over which no authority
has been delegated to Congress in conferring the power to regulate
commerce among the States.
We have neither authority nor disposition to question the
motives of Congress in enacting this legislation. The purposes
intended must be attained consistently with constitutional
limitations, and not by an invasion of the powers of the States.
This court has no more important function than that which devolves
upon it the obligation to preserve inviolate the constitutional
limitations upon the exercise of authority, federal and state, to
the end that each may continue to discharge, harmoniously with the
other, the duties entrusted to it by the Constitution.
In our view, the necessary effect of this act is, by means of a
prohibition against the movement in interstate commerce of ordinary
commercial commodities, to regulate the hours of labor of children
in factories and mines within the States, a purely state authority.
Thus, the act in a two-fold sense is repugnant to the Constitution.
It not only transcends the authority delegated to Congress over
commerce, but also exerts a power as to a purely local matter to
which the federal authority does not extend. The far-reaching
result of upholding the act cannot be more plainly indicated than
by pointing out that, if Congress can thus regulate matters
entrusted to local authority by prohibition of the movement of
commodities in interstate commerce, all freedom of commerce will be
at an end, and the power of the States over local matters may be
eliminated, and, thus, our system of government be practically
destroyed.
Page 247 U. S. 277
For these reasons, we hold that this law exceeds the
constitutional authority of Congress. It follows that the decree of
the District Court must be
Affirmed.
*
"That no producer, manufacturer, or dealer shall ship or deliver
for shipment in interstate or foreign commerce any article or
commodity the product of any mine or quarry, situated in the United
States, in which within thirty days prior to the time of the
removal of such product therefrom children under the age of sixteen
years have been employed or permitted to work, or any article or
commodity the product of any mill, cannery, workshop, factory, or
manufacturing establishment, situated in the United States, in
which within thirty days prior to the removal of such product
therefrom children under the age of fourteen years have been
employed or permitted to work, or children between the ages of
fourteen years and sixteen years have been employed or permitted to
work more than eight hours in any day, or more than six days in any
week, or after the hour of seven o'clock postmeridian, or before
the hour of six o'clock antemeridian."
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, dissenting.
The single question in this case is whether Congress has power
to prohibit the shipment in interstate or foreign commerce of any
product of a cotton mill situated in the United States in which,
within thirty days before the removal of the product, children
under fourteen have been employed or children between fourteen and
sixteen have been employed more than eight hours in a day, or more
than six days in any week, or between seven in the evening and six
in the morning. The objection urged against the power is that the
States have exclusive control over their methods of production, and
that Congress cannot meddle with them, and, taking the proposition
in the sense of direct intermeddling, I agree to it, and suppose
that no one denies it. But if an act is within the powers
specifically conferred upon Congress, it seems to me that it is not
made any less constitutional because of the indirect effects that
it may have, however obvious it may be that it will have those
effects, and that we are not at liberty upon such grounds to hold
it void.
The first step in my argument is to make plain what no one is
likely to dispute -- that the statute in question is within the
power expressly given to Congress if considered only as to its
immediate effects, and that, if invalid, it is so only upon some
collateral ground. The statute confines itself to prohibiting the
carriage of certain goods in interstate or foreign commerce.
Congress is given power to regulate such commerce in unqualified
terms. It would not be argued today that the power to regulate does
not include the power to prohibit. Regulation means the prohibition
of something, and when interstate
Page 247 U. S. 278
commerce is the matter to be regulated, I cannot doubt that the
regulation may prohibit any part of such commerce that Congress
sees fit to forbid. At all events, it is established by the
Lottery Case and others that have followed it that a law
is not beyond the regulative power of Congress merely because it
prohibits certain transportation out and out.
Champion v.
Ames, 188 U. S. 321,
188 U. S. 355,
188 U. S. 359,
et seq. So I repeat that this statute, in its immediate
operation, is clearly within the Congress' constitutional
power.
The question, then, is narrowed to whether the exercise of its
otherwise constitutional power by Congress can be pronounced
unconstitutional because of its possible reaction upon the conduct
of the States in a matter upon which I have admitted that they are
free from direct control. I should have thought that that matter
had been disposed of so fully as to leave no room for doubt. I
should have thought that the most conspicuous decisions of this
Court had made it clear that the power to regulate commerce and
other constitutional powers could not be cut down or qualified by
the fact that it might interfere with the carrying out of the
domestic policy of any State.
The manufacture of oleomargarine is as much a matter of state
regulation as the manufacture of cotton cloth. Congress levied a
tax upon the compound when colored so as to resemble butter that
was so great as obviously to prohibit the manufacture and sale. In
a very elaborate discussion, the present Chief Justice excluded any
inquiry into the purpose of an act which, apart from that purpose,
was within the power of Congress.
McCray v. United States,
195 U. S. 27. As to
foreign commerce
see Weber v. Freed, 239 U.
S. 325,
239 U. S. 329;
Brolan v. United States, 236 U. S. 216,
236 U. S. 217;
Buttfield v. Stranahan, 192 U. S. 470.
Fifty years ago, a tax on state banks the obvious purpose and
actual effect of which was to drive them, or at least
Page 247 U. S. 279
their circulation, out of existence was sustained although the
result was one that Congress had no constitutional power to
require. The Court made short work of the argument as to the
purpose of the act. "The judicial cannot prescribe to the
legislative department of the government limitations upon the
exercise of its acknowledged powers."
Veazie
Bank v. Fenno, 8 Wall. 533. So it well might have
been argued that the corporation tax was intended, under the guise
of a revenue measure, to secure a control not otherwise belonging
to Congress, but the tax was sustained, and the objection, so far
as noticed, was disposed of by citing
McCray v. United
States. Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 U.
S. 107. And to come to cases upon interstate commerce,
notwithstanding
United States v. E. C. Knight Co.,
156 U. S. 1, the
Sherman Act has been made an instrument for the breaking up of
combinations in restraint of trade and monopolies, using the power
to regulate commerce as a foothold, but not proceeding because that
commerce was the end actually in mind. The objection that the
control of the States over production was interfered with was urged
again and again, but always in vain.
Standard Oil Co. v. United
States, 221 U. S. 1,
221 U. S. 68,
221 U. S. 69.
United States v. American Tobacco Co., 221 U. S.
106,
221 U. S. 184.
Hoke v. United States, 227 U. S. 308,
227 U. S. 321,
227 U. S. 322.
See finally and especially Seven Cases of Eckman's Alterative
v. United States, 239 U. S. 510,
239 U. S. 514,
239 U. S. 515.
The Pure Food and Drug Act which was sustained in
Hipolite Egg
Co. v. United States, 220 U. S. 45, with
the intimation that "no trade can be carried on between the States
to which it [the power of Congress to regulate commerce] does not
extend,"
220 U. S. 57,
applies not merely to articles that the changing opinions of the
time condemn as intrinsically harmful, but to others innocent in
themselves, simply on the ground that the order for them was
induced by a preliminary fraud.
Weeks v. United States,
245 U. S. 618. It
does not matter whether the supposed
Page 247 U. S. 280
evil precedes or follows the transportation. It is enough that,
in the opinion of Congress, the transportation encourages the evil.
I may add that, in the cases on the so-called White Slave Act, it
was established that the means adopted by Congress as convenient to
the exercise of its power might have the character of police
regulations.
Hoke v. United States, 227 U.
S. 308,
227 U. S. 323.
Caminetti v. United States, 242 U.
S. 470,
242 U. S. 492.
In
Clark Distilling Co. v. Western Maryland R. Co.,
242 U. S. 311,
242 U. S. 328,
Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100,
135 U. S. 108,
is quoted with seeming approval to the effect that
"a subject matter which has been confided exclusively to
Congress by the Constitution is not within the jurisdiction of the
police power of the State unless placed there by congressional
action. I see no reason for that proposition not applying
here."
The notion that prohibition is any less prohibition when applied
to things now thought evil I do not understand. But if there is any
matter upon which civilized countries have agreed -- far more
unanimously than they have with regard to intoxicants and some
other matters over which this country is now emotionally aroused --
it is the evil of premature and excessive child labor. I should
have thought that, if we were to introduce our own moral
conceptions where in my opinion they do not belong, this was
preeminently a case for upholding the exercise of all its powers by
the United States.
But I had thought that the propriety of the exercise of a power
admitted to exist in some cases was for the consideration of
Congress alone, and that this Court always had disavowed the right
to intrude its judgment upon questions of policy or morals. It is
not for this Court to pronounce when prohibition is necessary to
regulation -- if it ever may be necessary -- to say that it is
permissible as against strong drink, but not as against the product
of ruined lives.
Page 247 U. S. 281
The act does not meddle with anything belonging to the States.
They may regulate their internal affairs and their domestic
commerce as they like. But when they seek to send their products
across the state line, they are no longer within their rights. If
there were no Constitution and no Congress, their power to cross
the line would depend upon their neighbors. Under the Constitution,
such commerce belongs not to the States, but to Congress to
regulate. It may carry out its views of public policy whatever
indirect effect they may have upon the activities of the States.
Instead of being encountered by a prohibitive tariff at her
boundaries, the State encounters the public policy of the United
States, which it is for Congress to express. The public policy of
the United States is shaped with a view to the benefit of the
nation as a whole. If, as has been the case within the memory of
men still living, a State should take a different view of the
propriety of sustaining a lottery from that which generally
prevails, I cannot believe that the fact would require a different
decision from that reached in
Champion v. Ames. Yet, in
that case, it would be said with quite as much force as in this
that Congress was attempting to intermeddle with the State's
domestic affairs. The national welfare, as understood by Congress,
may require a different attitude within its sphere from that of
some self-seeking State. It seems to me entirely constitutional for
Congress to enforce its understanding by all the means at its
command.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE CLARKE
concur in this opinion.