Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
Historical Background
In 1890,
the Louisiana
legislature passed a law requiring railroads to separate passengers on the
basis of race. Trains that had two or more passenger cars were required to have
designated seating for different races. If there was only one passenger car in
a train, these cars were to be divided by a curtain or some other form of
partition. A State fine of $25 or up to 20 days in jail was the penalty for
sitting in the wrong compartment.
Circumstances of the Case
Homer
Adolph Plessy was a successful Louisiana
businessman living in Baton Rouge.
Comfortable in the society of both racial groups, Plessy
had had one African-American grandparent. Although he did not consider himself
African American, Louisiana
law defined him as “octaroon”—one-eighth African
American.
Plessy, acting
on behalf of a committee that had been formed to challenge Jim Crow laws,
intentionally broke the law in order to initiate a case. Returning by rail from
New Orleans to Baton Rouge, Plessy
was asked by railroad officials to sit in the segregated area of the train. He
refused. Arrested and charged, Plessy petitioned the
Louisiana Supreme Court for a writ against Ferguson, the trial court judge, to stop the
proceedings against him for criminal violation of the State law. But the
Louisiana State Supreme Court refused. Convicted and fined, Plessy
then appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States.
Arguments
For
Plessy: Segregated facilities violate the Equal
Protection Clause. As a fully participating citizen, Plessy
should not have been denied any rights of citizenship. He should not have been
required to give up any public right or access. The Louisiana law violated the Equal Protection
Clause and was, therefore, unconstitutional.
For
the State of Louisiana: It is the right of each State to make rules
to protect public safety. Segregated facilities reflected the public will in Louisiana. A separate
but equal facility provided the protections required by the 14th Amendment and
satisfied the demands of white citizens as well. If the Civil Rights Cases of
1883 made clear that segregation in private matters is of no concern to
government, why should a State legislature be
prohibited from enacting public segregation statutes?
Decision and Rationale
Justice
Henry B. Brown of Michigan delivered the 7-1
decision of the Court that upheld the Louisiana
law requiring segregation. Brown noted that the law did not violate either the
13th or 14th Amendments. He stated that the 13th Amendment applied only to
slavery, and the 14th amendment was not intended to give African Americans
social equality but only political and civil equality with white people.
Using a
line of reasoning that would echo across the next 60 years of political debate
and Court opinion, Brown wrote that “Legislation is powerless to eradicate
racial instincts or to abolish distinctions based upon physical differences….”
In other words, legislation cannot change public attitudes, “and the attempt to
do so can only result in accentuating the difficulties
of the present situation,” Brown wrote. Reflecting the common bias of the
majority of the country at the time, Brown argued that “If the civil and
political rights of both races be equal, one cannot be inferior to the other
civilly or politically. If one race be inferior to the other socially, the
Constitution of the United
States cannot put them upon the same plane.”
The Court declared the Louisiana
law a reasonable exercise of the State's “police power,” enacted for the
promotion of the public good.
In the
key passage of the opinion, the Court stated that segregation was legal and
constitutional as long as “facilities were equal.” Thus the “separate but equal
doctrine” that would keep America
divided along racial lines for over half a century longer came into being.
Somewhat
ironically, while Brown, a Northerner, justified the segregation of the races,
Justice John Marshall Harlan, a Southerner from Kentucky, made a lone, resounding, and
prophetic dissent. “The Thirteenth Amendment…struck down the institution of
slavery [and]…decreed universal civil freedom,” Harlan declared. “Our
Constitution is color-blind and neither knows nor tolerates classes among
citizens.” Harlan's dissent became the main theme of the unanimous decision of
the Court in Brown
v. Board of Education
in 1954.
No great
national protest followed in the wake of the Plessy
decision. Segregation was an issue shunted off to the corner of our national
life, and would remain so for nearly 60 years.
Source: ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.,
publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Used by
permission.
SUPREME COURT CASES
CASE:
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ORIGIN OF THE CASE:
(Describe what the case is about)
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THE RULING: (What the court
decided)
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LEGAL REASONING:
Majority Opinion:
Minority Opinion:
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SUMMARIZE WHY IT MATTERED:
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DISCUSS HISTORIAL IMPACT:
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