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Lochner v. New York

Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905), was a landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court holding that a New York State statute that prescribed maximum working hours for bakers violated the bakers' right to freedom of contract under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.[1] The decision has been effectively overturned.[2][3][4]

Lochner v. New York
Argued February 24, 1905
Decided April 17, 1905
Full case nameJoseph Lochner, Plaintiff in Error v. People of the State of New York
Citations198 U.S. 45 (more)
25 S. Ct. 539; 49 L. Ed. 937; 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1153
Case history
PriorDefendant convicted, Oneida County Court, New York, February 12, 1902; affirmed, 76 N.Y.S. 396 (N.Y. App. Div. 1902); affirmed, 69 N.E. 373 (N.Y. 1904)
Holding
New York State's regulation of the working hours of bakers was not a justifiable restriction on the right of freedom of contract under the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of liberty.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Melville Fuller
Associate Justices
John M. Harlan · David J. Brewer
Henry B. Brown · Edward D. White
Rufus W. Peckham · Joseph McKenna
Oliver W. Holmes Jr. · William R. Day
Case opinions
MajorityPeckham, joined by Fuller, Brewer, Brown, McKenna
DissentHarlan, joined by White, Day
DissentHolmes
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amend. XIV; 1897 N.Y. Laws art. 8, ch. 415, § 110
Abrogated by
West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish (1937)

The underlying case began in 1899 when Joseph Lochner, a German immigrant who owned a bakery in Utica, New York, was charged with violating New York's Bakeshop Act of 1895. The Bakeshop Act had made it a crime for New York bakeries to employ bakers for more than 10 hours per day or 60 hours per week. He was convicted and ultimately appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. A five-justice majority of the Supreme Court held that the law violated the Due Process Clause, stating that the law constituted an "unreasonable, unnecessary and arbitrary interference with the right and liberty of the individual to contract". Four dissenting justices rejected that view, and the dissent of Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., in particular, became one of the most famous opinions in U.S. history.[5]

Lochner is one of the most controversial decisions in the Supreme Court's history and gave the name to what is known as the Lochner era. During that time, the Supreme Court issued several decisions invalidating federal and state statutes that sought to regulate working conditions during the Progressive Era and the Great Depression. The period ended with West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish (1937), in which the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of minimum wage legislation enacted by Washington State.[6]

Background edit

New York's Bakeshop Act of 1895 made it a crime for bakeries to employ workers for more than 10 hours per day or 60 hours per week. In 1899, New York authorities indicted Joseph Lochner on a charge of violating the Bakeshop Act by permitting an employee to work more than 60 hours in one week. Lochner was a German immigrant who owned a bakery in Utica, New York. Unlike other bakeries, which used two separate shifts for evening and morning work, Lochner's bakery employed only a single crew of bakers. His bakers would arrive in the evening and prepare the bread dough, sleep for several hours in an on-site dormitory, then wake up in the early morning and bake the loaves of bread. Lochner counted his bakers' time spent sleeping in the dormitory as working hours and paid them accordingly.[7]

Lochner's lawyer argued at his trial that the right to contract freely to be one of the rights encompassed by substantive due process. Lochner's case was argued by Henry Weismann, who had been one of the foremost advocates of the Bakeshop Act when he was Secretary of the Journeymen Bakers' Union. In his brief, Weismann decried the idea that "the treasured freedom of the individual... should be swept away under the guise of the police power of the State." He denied New York's argument that the Bakeshop Act was a necessary health measure by claiming that the "average bakery of the present day is well ventilated, comfortable both summer and winter, and always sweet smelling." Weismann's brief contained an appendix providing statistics showing that bakers' mortality rates were comparable to that of white-collar professionals.

Weismann's arguments were unsuccessful. The trial court found Lochner guilty and fined him $50 (equivalent to $1,759 in 2022). Lochner appealed to the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, which affirmed his conviction, then appealed to the New York Court of Appeals, which also affirmed it. He then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Supreme Court decision edit

On April 17, 1905, the Supreme Court issued a 5–4 decision in favor of Lochner that struck down the New York Bakeshop Act's limits on bakers' working hours as unconstitutional.

Opinion of the Court edit

 
Justice Rufus Peckham, the author of the majority opinion in Lochner

Five justices formed the majority and joined an opinion written by Justice Rufus Peckham.

The Court began with the question of whether the Fourteenth Amendment's protections applied to freedom of contract.[8] Citing its 1897 decision Allgeyer v. Louisiana, in which it had struck down a Louisiana law that banned buying shipping insurance from companies in other states on grounds that it violated the freedom to make contracts to carry out a trade or profession, the Court held that freedom of contract was a basic right covered by the protections for "life, liberty, and property" in the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause.[8]

The general right to make a contract in relation to his business is part of the liberty of the individual protected by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. Under that provision, no State can deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. The right to purchase or to sell labor is part of the liberty protected by this amendment unless there are circumstances which exclude the right.

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 53 (citation omitted).[9]

The Court explained that by "circumstances which exclude the right", it meant when states passed laws under the "police power"—the inherent authority of U.S. state governments to pass laws governing "health, safety, and morals".[8] The Court said that because the Due Process Clause protected freedom of contract, state laws could only interfere with it if they were valid exercises of the police power.[8] To guarantee this freedom, the Court said that American courts had to scrutinize state laws regulating economic freedom, such as New York's bakery law, to ensure they served valid police-power purposes.[10]

Applying these legal principles to the facts of the case, the Court first determined that bakers' jobs were not dangerous enough to need special government protection.[10] The Court distinguished New York's law for bakers from a Utah law for miners the Court had upheld against a Due Process challenge in its 1898 decision Holden v. Hardy, saying that, unlike mining, baking was not an unusually dangerous activity.[11] The Court also determined that the Bakeshop Act had no relation to public health. Reasoning that the New York Legislature could not rationally have enacted the law for health reasons, the Court concluded that the Act was really a "labor law" that could not be justified under the police power.[12][13]

Clean and wholesome bread does not depend upon whether the baker works but ten hours per day or only sixty hours a week. ... The [Bakeshop] act is not, within any fair meaning of the term, a health law, but is an illegal interference with the rights of individuals, both employers and employees, to make contracts regarding labor upon such terms as they may think best, or which they may agree upon with the other parties to such contracts.

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 57, 61.[14]

The Court concluded that New York had failed to prove that the Bakeshop Act's maximum-hours provision had any close connection to public health. It said that if it were to conclude otherwise, states would have unlimited power over citizens' lives.[15]

It is also urged ... that it is to the interest of the State that its population should be strong and robust, and therefore any legislation which may be said to tend to make people healthy must be valid as health laws, enacted under the police power. ... Scarcely any law but might find shelter under such assumptions, and conduct, properly so called, as well as contract, would come under the restrictive sway of the legislature. Not only the hours of employees, but the hours of employers, could be regulated, and doctors, lawyers, scientists, all professional men, as well as athletes and artisans, could be forbidden to fatigue their brains and bodies by prolonged hours of exercise, lest the fighting strength of the State be impaired.

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 60–61.[16]

Lastly, the Court said that state laws ostensibly enacted for police-power purposes were often really intended to redistribute wealth or help a certain group at the expense of others.[10]

It is impossible for us to shut our eyes to the fact that many laws of this character, while passed under what is claimed to be the police power for the purpose of protecting the public health or welfare, are, in reality, passed for other motives.

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 64.[17]

Having determined that Bakeshop Act had no relation to public health and that the baking profession was not unusually dangerous, the Court concluded that "the limit of the police power has been reached and passed in this case", and it struck down the act as a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause.[18]

Dissents edit

Harlan edit

 
Justice John Marshall Harlan, who authored the first dissent in Lochner.

Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote a dissenting opinion that was joined by Justices Edward Douglass White and William R. Day.

Harlan contended that the liberty to contract is subject to regulation imposed by a state acting within the scope of its police powers. He offered the following rule for determining whether such statutes are unconstitutional:

The power of the courts to review legislative action in respect of a matter affecting the general welfare exists only "when that which the legislature has done comes within the rule that, if a statute purporting to have been enacted to protect the public health, the public morals or the public safety, has no real or substantial relation to those objects, or is, beyond all question, a plain, palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law."

Harlan asserted that the burden of proof should rest with the party seeking to have such a statute deemed unconstitutional.

Harlan argued that the Court gave insufficient weight to the state's argument that the law was a valid health measure addressing a legitimate state interest. He contended that it was "plain that this statute was enacted to protect the physical well-being of those who work in bakery and confectionery establishments." Responding to the majority's assertion that the profession of a baker was not an unhealthy one, he quoted at length from academic studies describing the respiratory ailments and other risks that bakers faced. He argued that the Supreme Court should have deferred to the New York Legislature's judgment that long working hours threatened the health of bakery employees: "If the end which the legislature seeks to accomplish be one to which its power extends, and if the means employed to that end, although not the wisest or best, are yet not plainly and palpably unauthorized by law, then the court cannot interfere."

Holmes edit

 
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who wrote the second dissent in Lochner.

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. also dissented from the Court's decision, and his three-paragraph dissent has become one of the most famous in U.S. Supreme Court history.[19] Holmes began by accusing the majority of deciding Lochner's case by following laissez-faire economics rather than legal principles.[19]

This case is decided upon an economic theory which a large part of the country does not entertain. If it were a question whether I agreed with that theory, I should desire to study it further and long before making up my mind. But I do not conceive that to be my duty, because I strongly believe that my agreement or disagreement has nothing to do with the right of a majority to embody their opinions in law. ... [A] Constitution is not intended to embody a particular economic theory, whether of paternalism and the organic relation of the citizen to the state or of laissez faire. It is made for people of fundamentally differing views ....

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 75–76 (Holmes, J., dissenting).

Holmes pointed out that there were many American laws restricting citizens' freedom of contract that had never been found unconstitutional. As "ancient examples", Holmes pointed to usury laws, which set maximum interest rates for loans of money, and Sunday laws, which outlawed certain economic activities on Sundays to promote Christian observance of the Sabbath.[19] Holmes analogized the majority's interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the writings of Herbert Spencer, the 19th-century British sociologist who coined the term "survival of the fittest" and whose ideas later became associated with social Darwinism.

The liberty of the citizen to do as he likes so long as he does not interfere with the liberty of others to do the same, which has been a shibboleth for some well known writers, is interfered with by school laws, by the Post Office, by every state or municipal institution which takes his money for purposes thought desirable, whether he likes it or not. The Fourteenth Amendment does not enact Mr. Herbert Spencer's Social Statics.

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 75 (Holmes, J., dissenting).

Holmes wrote that, in his view, a duly enacted state law could only be unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause's guarantee of liberty if it could rationally be said to "infringe fundamental principles" in the American tradition, and he maintained that the Bakeshop Act clearly did not do so.

Every opinion tends to become a law. I think that the word liberty in the Fourteenth Amendment is perverted when it is held to prevent the natural outcome of a dominant opinion, unless it can be said that a rational and fair man necessarily would admit that the statute proposed would infringe fundamental principles as they have been understood by the traditions of our people and our law. It does not need research to show that no such sweeping condemnation can be passed upon the statute before us.

— Lochner, 198 U.S. at 76 (Holmes, J., dissenting).

Significance and legacy edit

The case is famous because there is virtually universal agreement among judges and scholars that it was incorrectly decided. More important, it is the case in which Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote the most influential dissenting opinion in the Court's history.

—Retired Justice John Paul Stevens, writing in 2011.[20]

The Supreme Court's due process jurisprudence over the next three decades was inconsistent, but it took a narrow view of states' police powers in several major labor cases after Lochner. For example, in Coppage v. Kansas (1915), the Court struck down statutes forbidding "yellow-dog contracts." Similarly, in Adkins v. Children's Hospital (1923), the Supreme Court held that minimum wage laws violated the due process clause, but Chief Justice William Howard Taft strongly dissented and suggested that the Court instead should have overruled Lochner. The doctrine of substantive due process was coupled with a narrow interpretation of congressional power under the commerce clause. Justices James McReynolds, George Sutherland, Willis Van Devanter, and Pierce Butler emerged during the 1920s and the 1930s as the foremost defenders of traditional limitations on government power on the Supreme Court and so were collectively dubbed by supporters of the New Deal the "Four Horsemen of Reaction." All four of them believed in laissez-faire economics.

In 1934, the Supreme Court decided in Nebbia v. New York that there is no constitutional fundamental right to freedom of contract. In 1937, the Supreme Court decided West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, which expressly overruled Adkins and implicitly signaled the end of the Lochner era by repudiating the idea that freedom of contract should be unrestricted.

Although the Supreme Court did not explicitly overrule Lochner,[21] it agreed to give more deference to the decisions of state legislatures. The Supreme Court sounded the death knell for economic substantive due process several years later in Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma (1955) by unanimously declaring, "The day is gone when this Court uses the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to strike down state laws, regulatory of business and industrial conditions, because they may be unwise, improvident, or out of harmony with a particular school of thought."

Modern substantive due process edit

Since the end of the Lochner era, the Supreme Court has applied a lower standard of review to confront restrictions on economic liberty. A higher standard is used in reviewing legislation infringing on personal liberties. A line of cases dating back to the 1923 opinion by Justice McReynolds in Meyer v. Nebraska, which cited Lochner as establishing limits on the police power, has established a privacy right under substantive due process. More recently, in Roe v. Wade (1973), the Supreme Court held that women have a privacy right to determine whether or not to have an abortion. In Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), the Supreme Court reaffirmed that right but no longer used the term "privacy" to describe it. The abortion right was later overruled in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization (2022).

Scholarly reaction edit

The Supreme Court's decision in Lochner v. New York has been criticized by legal scholars. The law professor Bernard Siegan described it as "one of the most condemned cases in United States history."[22] According to the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning thinktank, law professors often use Lochner, along with Plessy v. Ferguson and Korematsu v. United States, as examples of "how judges should not behave."[23]

Lochner is sometimes used as shorthand for extreme right-wing constitutional theory.[24] However, it has come under harsh criticism from conservative and libertarian jurists as well because Lochner embraced substantive due process, a doctrine that was arguably at odds with the original understanding of the Constitution. For example, the conservative legal scholar Robert Bork called the decision an "abomination" and the "quintessence of judicial usurpation of power."[25][26] Similarly, former Attorney General Edwin Meese said that the Supreme Court "ignored the limitations of the Constitution and blatantly usurped legislative authority."[27] Siegan, a self-described libertarian, described it as "a symbol of judicial dereliction and abuse."[22]

Scholars have noted that when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted in 1868, 27 of the 37 state constitutions had adopted references to Locke's labor theory of property, which typically said: "All men are by nature free and independent, and have certain inalienable rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring and possessing and protecting property: and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness." As such clauses were "deeply rooted in American history and tradition," they likely informed the original meaning of the scope and nature of the fundamental rights protected by the Fourteenth Amendment in the eyes of Lochner-era justices.[28]

However, the decision also has attracted libertarian defenders: the Cato Institute and the scholars Richard Epstein and Randy Barnett, who argue that it correctly protected economic liberty.[29][30]

Barnett has argued that the decision was basically correct in its presumption in favor of liberty of contract and that the decision was wrong only by perpetuating the misinterpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment that had been established in the Slaughter-House Cases. According to Barnett, the liberty of contract is properly found in the Privileges or Immunities Clause, not in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.[31] David Bernstein, in Rehabilitating Lochner: Defending Individual Rights Against Progressive Reform, has argued that Lochner was well grounded in Supreme Court precedent and that its emphasis on limits to the states' police powers informed the Supreme Court's early civil liberties and civil rights cases.[32]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905).   This article incorporates public domain material from this U.S government document.
  2. ^ Bernstein, David. Only One Place of Redress: African Americans, Labor Regulations, and the Courts from Reconstruction to the New Deal, p. 100 (Duke University Press, 2001): "The Court also directly overturned Lochner by adding that it is no 'longer open to question that it is within the legislative power to fix maximum hours.'"
  3. ^ Dorf, Michael and Morrison, Trevor. Constitutional Law, p. 18 (Oxford University Press, 2010).
  4. ^ Patrick, John. The Supreme Court of the United States: A Student Companion, p. 362 (Oxford University Press, 2006).
  5. ^ White, G. Edward (January 1, 1997). "Revisiting Substantive Due Process and Holmes's Lochner Dissent". Brooklyn Law Review. 63 (1): 87.
  6. ^ Philips, Michael J. (2001). The Lochner Court, Myth and Reality: Substantive Due Process from the 1890s to the 1930s. Greenwood. p. 10. ISBN 0-275-96930-4.
  7. ^ Epstein (2014), p. 339.
  8. ^ a b c d Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 666.
  9. ^ Quoted in part in Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 666.
  10. ^ a b c Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 667.
  11. ^ Tribe (2000), § 8-3, p. 1347.
  12. ^ Nowak & Rotunda (2012), § 15.3(a).
  13. ^ Epstein (2014), pp. 338–39.
  14. ^ Quoted in part in Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, pp. 667–68.
  15. ^ Sunstein (1987), p. 877.
  16. ^ Quoted in part in Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 667.
  17. ^ Quoted in Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 667.
  18. ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 668, quoting Lochner, 198 U.S. at 58.
  19. ^ a b c Chemerinsky (2019), § 8.2.2, p. 668.
  20. ^ Stevens, John Paul (2011). Five Chiefs: A Supreme Court Memoir. Little, Brown and Company. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-316-19980-3..
  21. ^ Quimbee (July 8, 2016). "SCOTUS shifts from workers protections starting with Lochner v. New York". American Bar Association for Students. American Bar Association. Retrieved July 2, 2017.
  22. ^ a b Siegan, Bernard H. (1980). Economic Liberties and the Constitution. Univ of Chicago Pr. p. 23. ISBN 978-0226756639., cited in Stone, Geoffrey R; et al. (2009). Constitutional Law (6th ed.). Aspen Publishers. p. 744. ISBN 978-0735577190.
  23. ^ Millhiser, Ian. Rand Paul praises horrendous Supreme Court decision, would let employers ruthlessly exploit workers. ThinkProgress, 2013-03-07.
  24. ^ Ian Millhiser described as "Worse Than Lochner" constitutional interpretation that would hold unconstitutional all affirmative action policies as well as Social Security, Medicare, and Pell Grants.Millhiser, Ian (June 2011). "Worse Than Lochner". Yale Law & Policy Review. 29.
  25. ^ Bork, Robert H. (1989). The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law. Free Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-0029037614.
  26. ^ Bork, Robert H. (2003). (PDF). Ave Maria Law Review. 1: 19, 21. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 15, 2013. Retrieved May 28, 2013.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on April 29, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2012.
  28. ^ Calabresi, Steven G.; Agudo, Sarah (2008). "Individual Rights Under State Constitutions When the Fourteenth Amendment Was Ratified in 1868: What Rights Are Deeply Rooted in American History and Tradition?". Tex. L. Rev. 87 (7): 88.
  29. ^ "Exposing Global-Warming Alarmism's Grasp". Cato Institute. May–June 2011.
  30. ^ Epstein, Richard A. (2003). "The 'Necessary' History of Property and Liberty". Chapman Law Review. 6. SSRN 396600.
  31. ^ Barnett, Randy E. (May 12, 2005). "Foreword: What's So Wicked About Lochner?". NYU Journal of Law & Liberty. 1 (1): 1–9. SSRN 721507.
  32. ^ Bernstein, David E. (2011). Rehabilitating Lochner: Defending Individual Rights Against Progressive Reform. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226043531.

Works cited edit

  • Bernstein, David E. (2005). "Lochner v. New York: A Centennial Retrospective". Washington University Law Quarterly. 85 (5): 1469–1528. SSRN 918404.
  • Bernstein, David E. (2012). Rehabilitating Lochner: Defending Individual Rights against Progressive Reform. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-04353-1.
  • Chemerinsky, Erwin (2019). Constitutional Law: Principles and Policies (6th ed.). New York: Wolters Kluwer. ISBN 978-1-4548-9574-9.
  • Epstein, Richard A. (2014). The Classical Liberal Constitution: The Uncertain Quest for Limited Government. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-72489-1.
  • Hall, Kermit; et al. (1992). The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195058356.
  • Kens, Paul (1998). Lochner v. New York: Economic Regulation on Trial. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0155068674.
  • Nowak, John E.; Rotunda, Ronald D. (2012). Treatise on Constitutional Law: Substance and Procedure (5th ed.). Eagan, MN: West Thomson/Reuters. OCLC 798148265.
  • Sunstein, Cass R. (1987). "Lochner's Legacy". Columbia Law Review. 87 (5): 873–919. doi:10.2307/1122721. JSTOR 1122721.
  • Tribe, Laurence H. (2000). American Constitutional Law (3rd ed.). New York: Foundation Press. ISBN 978-1-56662-714-6.
  • Tushnet, Mark (2008). I Dissent: Great Opposing Opinions in Landmark Supreme Court Cases. Boston: Beacon Press. pp. 81–92. ISBN 978-0-8070-0036-6.
  • Warren, Charles (1924), The Supreme Court in United States History, (3 volumes), Boston: Little, Brown and Co., LCCN 25006510

External links edit

lochner, york, lochner, redirects, here, other, uses, lochner, disambiguation, 1905, landmark, decision, supreme, court, holding, that, york, state, statute, that, prescribed, maximum, working, hours, bakers, violated, bakers, right, freedom, contract, under, . Lochner redirects here For other uses see Lochner disambiguation Lochner v New York 198 U S 45 1905 was a landmark decision of the U S Supreme Court holding that a New York State statute that prescribed maximum working hours for bakers violated the bakers right to freedom of contract under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U S Constitution 1 The decision has been effectively overturned 2 3 4 Lochner v New YorkSupreme Court of the United StatesArgued February 24 1905Decided April 17 1905Full case nameJoseph Lochner Plaintiff in Error v People of the State of New YorkCitations198 U S 45 more 25 S Ct 539 49 L Ed 937 1905 U S LEXIS 1153Case historyPriorDefendant convicted Oneida County Court New York February 12 1902 affirmed 76 N Y S 396 N Y App Div 1902 affirmed 69 N E 373 N Y 1904 HoldingNew York State s regulation of the working hours of bakers was not a justifiable restriction on the right of freedom of contract under the Fourteenth Amendment s guarantee of liberty Court membershipChief Justice Melville Fuller Associate Justices John M Harlan David J BrewerHenry B Brown Edward D WhiteRufus W Peckham Joseph McKennaOliver W Holmes Jr William R DayCase opinionsMajorityPeckham joined by Fuller Brewer Brown McKennaDissentHarlan joined by White DayDissentHolmesLaws appliedU S Const amend XIV 1897 N Y Laws art 8 ch 415 110Abrogated byWest Coast Hotel Co v Parrish 1937 The underlying case began in 1899 when Joseph Lochner a German immigrant who owned a bakery in Utica New York was charged with violating New York s Bakeshop Act of 1895 The Bakeshop Act had made it a crime for New York bakeries to employ bakers for more than 10 hours per day or 60 hours per week He was convicted and ultimately appealed to the U S Supreme Court A five justice majority of the Supreme Court held that the law violated the Due Process Clause stating that the law constituted an unreasonable unnecessary and arbitrary interference with the right and liberty of the individual to contract Four dissenting justices rejected that view and the dissent of Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr in particular became one of the most famous opinions in U S history 5 Lochner is one of the most controversial decisions in the Supreme Court s history and gave the name to what is known as the Lochner era During that time the Supreme Court issued several decisions invalidating federal and state statutes that sought to regulate working conditions during the Progressive Era and the Great Depression The period ended with West Coast Hotel Co v Parrish 1937 in which the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of minimum wage legislation enacted by Washington State 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Supreme Court decision 2 1 Opinion of the Court 2 2 Dissents 2 2 1 Harlan 2 2 2 Holmes 3 Significance and legacy 3 1 Modern substantive due process 3 2 Scholarly reaction 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Works cited 6 External linksBackground editNew York s Bakeshop Act of 1895 made it a crime for bakeries to employ workers for more than 10 hours per day or 60 hours per week In 1899 New York authorities indicted Joseph Lochner on a charge of violating the Bakeshop Act by permitting an employee to work more than 60 hours in one week Lochner was a German immigrant who owned a bakery in Utica New York Unlike other bakeries which used two separate shifts for evening and morning work Lochner s bakery employed only a single crew of bakers His bakers would arrive in the evening and prepare the bread dough sleep for several hours in an on site dormitory then wake up in the early morning and bake the loaves of bread Lochner counted his bakers time spent sleeping in the dormitory as working hours and paid them accordingly 7 Lochner s lawyer argued at his trial that the right to contract freely to be one of the rights encompassed by substantive due process Lochner s case was argued by Henry Weismann who had been one of the foremost advocates of the Bakeshop Act when he was Secretary of the Journeymen Bakers Union In his brief Weismann decried the idea that the treasured freedom of the individual should be swept away under the guise of the police power of the State He denied New York s argument that the Bakeshop Act was a necessary health measure by claiming that the average bakery of the present day is well ventilated comfortable both summer and winter and always sweet smelling Weismann s brief contained an appendix providing statistics showing that bakers mortality rates were comparable to that of white collar professionals Weismann s arguments were unsuccessful The trial court found Lochner guilty and fined him 50 equivalent to 1 759 in 2022 Lochner appealed to the New York Supreme Court Appellate Division which affirmed his conviction then appealed to the New York Court of Appeals which also affirmed it He then appealed to the U S Supreme Court Supreme Court decision editOn April 17 1905 the Supreme Court issued a 5 4 decision in favor of Lochner that struck down the New York Bakeshop Act s limits on bakers working hours as unconstitutional Opinion of the Court edit nbsp Justice Rufus Peckham the author of the majority opinion in LochnerFive justices formed the majority and joined an opinion written by Justice Rufus Peckham The Court began with the question of whether the Fourteenth Amendment s protections applied to freedom of contract 8 Citing its 1897 decision Allgeyer v Louisiana in which it had struck down a Louisiana law that banned buying shipping insurance from companies in other states on grounds that it violated the freedom to make contracts to carry out a trade or profession the Court held that freedom of contract was a basic right covered by the protections for life liberty and property in the Fourteenth Amendment s Due Process Clause 8 The general right to make a contract in relation to his business is part of the liberty of the individual protected by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution Under that provision no State can deprive any person of life liberty or property without due process of law The right to purchase or to sell labor is part of the liberty protected by this amendment unless there are circumstances which exclude the right Lochner 198 U S at 53 citation omitted 9 The Court explained that by circumstances which exclude the right it meant when states passed laws under the police power the inherent authority of U S state governments to pass laws governing health safety and morals 8 The Court said that because the Due Process Clause protected freedom of contract state laws could only interfere with it if they were valid exercises of the police power 8 To guarantee this freedom the Court said that American courts had to scrutinize state laws regulating economic freedom such as New York s bakery law to ensure they served valid police power purposes 10 Applying these legal principles to the facts of the case the Court first determined that bakers jobs were not dangerous enough to need special government protection 10 The Court distinguished New York s law for bakers from a Utah law for miners the Court had upheld against a Due Process challenge in its 1898 decision Holden v Hardy saying that unlike mining baking was not an unusually dangerous activity 11 The Court also determined that the Bakeshop Act had no relation to public health Reasoning that the New York Legislature could not rationally have enacted the law for health reasons the Court concluded that the Act was really a labor law that could not be justified under the police power 12 13 Clean and wholesome bread does not depend upon whether the baker works but ten hours per day or only sixty hours a week The Bakeshop act is not within any fair meaning of the term a health law but is an illegal interference with the rights of individuals both employers and employees to make contracts regarding labor upon such terms as they may think best or which they may agree upon with the other parties to such contracts Lochner 198 U S at 57 61 14 The Court concluded that New York had failed to prove that the Bakeshop Act s maximum hours provision had any close connection to public health It said that if it were to conclude otherwise states would have unlimited power over citizens lives 15 It is also urged that it is to the interest of the State that its population should be strong and robust and therefore any legislation which may be said to tend to make people healthy must be valid as health laws enacted under the police power Scarcely any law but might find shelter under such assumptions and conduct properly so called as well as contract would come under the restrictive sway of the legislature Not only the hours of employees but the hours of employers could be regulated and doctors lawyers scientists all professional men as well as athletes and artisans could be forbidden to fatigue their brains and bodies by prolonged hours of exercise lest the fighting strength of the State be impaired Lochner 198 U S at 60 61 16 Lastly the Court said that state laws ostensibly enacted for police power purposes were often really intended to redistribute wealth or help a certain group at the expense of others 10 It is impossible for us to shut our eyes to the fact that many laws of this character while passed under what is claimed to be the police power for the purpose of protecting the public health or welfare are in reality passed for other motives Lochner 198 U S at 64 17 Having determined that Bakeshop Act had no relation to public health and that the baking profession was not unusually dangerous the Court concluded that the limit of the police power has been reached and passed in this case and it struck down the act as a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment s Due Process Clause 18 Dissents edit Harlan edit nbsp Justice John Marshall Harlan who authored the first dissent in Lochner Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote a dissenting opinion that was joined by Justices Edward Douglass White and William R Day Harlan contended that the liberty to contract is subject to regulation imposed by a state acting within the scope of its police powers He offered the following rule for determining whether such statutes are unconstitutional The power of the courts to review legislative action in respect of a matter affecting the general welfare exists only when that which the legislature has done comes within the rule that if a statute purporting to have been enacted to protect the public health the public morals or the public safety has no real or substantial relation to those objects or is beyond all question a plain palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law Harlan asserted that the burden of proof should rest with the party seeking to have such a statute deemed unconstitutional Harlan argued that the Court gave insufficient weight to the state s argument that the law was a valid health measure addressing a legitimate state interest He contended that it was plain that this statute was enacted to protect the physical well being of those who work in bakery and confectionery establishments Responding to the majority s assertion that the profession of a baker was not an unhealthy one he quoted at length from academic studies describing the respiratory ailments and other risks that bakers faced He argued that the Supreme Court should have deferred to the New York Legislature s judgment that long working hours threatened the health of bakery employees If the end which the legislature seeks to accomplish be one to which its power extends and if the means employed to that end although not the wisest or best are yet not plainly and palpably unauthorized by law then the court cannot interfere Holmes edit nbsp Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr who wrote the second dissent in Lochner Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr also dissented from the Court s decision and his three paragraph dissent has become one of the most famous in U S Supreme Court history 19 Holmes began by accusing the majority of deciding Lochner s case by following laissez faire economics rather than legal principles 19 This case is decided upon an economic theory which a large part of the country does not entertain If it were a question whether I agreed with that theory I should desire to study it further and long before making up my mind But I do not conceive that to be my duty because I strongly believe that my agreement or disagreement has nothing to do with the right of a majority to embody their opinions in law A Constitution is not intended to embody a particular economic theory whether of paternalism and the organic relation of the citizen to the state or of laissez faire It is made for people of fundamentally differing views Lochner 198 U S at 75 76 Holmes J dissenting Holmes pointed out that there were many American laws restricting citizens freedom of contract that had never been found unconstitutional As ancient examples Holmes pointed to usury laws which set maximum interest rates for loans of money and Sunday laws which outlawed certain economic activities on Sundays to promote Christian observance of the Sabbath 19 Holmes analogized the majority s interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the writings of Herbert Spencer the 19th century British sociologist who coined the term survival of the fittest and whose ideas later became associated with social Darwinism The liberty of the citizen to do as he likes so long as he does not interfere with the liberty of others to do the same which has been a shibboleth for some well known writers is interfered with by school laws by the Post Office by every state or municipal institution which takes his money for purposes thought desirable whether he likes it or not The Fourteenth Amendment does not enact Mr Herbert Spencer s Social Statics Lochner 198 U S at 75 Holmes J dissenting Holmes wrote that in his view a duly enacted state law could only be unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause s guarantee of liberty if it could rationally be said to infringe fundamental principles in the American tradition and he maintained that the Bakeshop Act clearly did not do so Every opinion tends to become a law I think that the word liberty in the Fourteenth Amendment is perverted when it is held to prevent the natural outcome of a dominant opinion unless it can be said that a rational and fair man necessarily would admit that the statute proposed would infringe fundamental principles as they have been understood by the traditions of our people and our law It does not need research to show that no such sweeping condemnation can be passed upon the statute before us Lochner 198 U S at 76 Holmes J dissenting Significance and legacy editMain article Lochner era The case is famous because there is virtually universal agreement among judges and scholars that it was incorrectly decided More important it is the case in which Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote the most influential dissenting opinion in the Court s history Retired Justice John Paul Stevens writing in 2011 20 The Supreme Court s due process jurisprudence over the next three decades was inconsistent but it took a narrow view of states police powers in several major labor cases after Lochner For example in Coppage v Kansas 1915 the Court struck down statutes forbidding yellow dog contracts Similarly in Adkins v Children s Hospital 1923 the Supreme Court held that minimum wage laws violated the due process clause but Chief Justice William Howard Taft strongly dissented and suggested that the Court instead should have overruled Lochner The doctrine of substantive due process was coupled with a narrow interpretation of congressional power under the commerce clause Justices James McReynolds George Sutherland Willis Van Devanter and Pierce Butler emerged during the 1920s and the 1930s as the foremost defenders of traditional limitations on government power on the Supreme Court and so were collectively dubbed by supporters of the New Deal the Four Horsemen of Reaction All four of them believed in laissez faire economics In 1934 the Supreme Court decided in Nebbia v New York that there is no constitutional fundamental right to freedom of contract In 1937 the Supreme Court decided West Coast Hotel Co v Parrish which expressly overruled Adkins and implicitly signaled the end of the Lochner era by repudiating the idea that freedom of contract should be unrestricted Although the Supreme Court did not explicitly overrule Lochner 21 it agreed to give more deference to the decisions of state legislatures The Supreme Court sounded the death knell for economic substantive due process several years later in Williamson v Lee Optical of Oklahoma 1955 by unanimously declaring The day is gone when this Court uses the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to strike down state laws regulatory of business and industrial conditions because they may be unwise improvident or out of harmony with a particular school of thought Modern substantive due process edit Since the end of the Lochner era the Supreme Court has applied a lower standard of review to confront restrictions on economic liberty A higher standard is used in reviewing legislation infringing on personal liberties A line of cases dating back to the 1923 opinion by Justice McReynolds in Meyer v Nebraska which cited Lochner as establishing limits on the police power has established a privacy right under substantive due process More recently in Roe v Wade 1973 the Supreme Court held that women have a privacy right to determine whether or not to have an abortion In Planned Parenthood v Casey 1992 the Supreme Court reaffirmed that right but no longer used the term privacy to describe it The abortion right was later overruled in Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization 2022 Scholarly reaction edit The Supreme Court s decision in Lochner v New York has been criticized by legal scholars The law professor Bernard Siegan described it as one of the most condemned cases in United States history 22 According to the Center for American Progress a left leaning thinktank law professors often use Lochner along with Plessy v Ferguson and Korematsu v United States as examples of how judges should not behave 23 Lochner is sometimes used as shorthand for extreme right wing constitutional theory 24 However it has come under harsh criticism from conservative and libertarian jurists as well because Lochner embraced substantive due process a doctrine that was arguably at odds with the original understanding of the Constitution For example the conservative legal scholar Robert Bork called the decision an abomination and the quintessence of judicial usurpation of power 25 26 Similarly former Attorney General Edwin Meese said that the Supreme Court ignored the limitations of the Constitution and blatantly usurped legislative authority 27 Siegan a self described libertarian described it as a symbol of judicial dereliction and abuse 22 Scholars have noted that when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted in 1868 27 of the 37 state constitutions had adopted references to Locke s labor theory of property which typically said All men are by nature free and independent and have certain inalienable rights among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty acquiring and possessing and protecting property and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness As such clauses were deeply rooted in American history and tradition they likely informed the original meaning of the scope and nature of the fundamental rights protected by the Fourteenth Amendment in the eyes of Lochner era justices 28 However the decision also has attracted libertarian defenders the Cato Institute and the scholars Richard Epstein and Randy Barnett who argue that it correctly protected economic liberty 29 30 Barnett has argued that the decision was basically correct in its presumption in favor of liberty of contract and that the decision was wrong only by perpetuating the misinterpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment that had been established in the Slaughter House Cases According to Barnett the liberty of contract is properly found in the Privileges or Immunities Clause not in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment 31 David Bernstein in Rehabilitating Lochner Defending Individual Rights Against Progressive Reform has argued that Lochner was well grounded in Supreme Court precedent and that its emphasis on limits to the states police powers informed the Supreme Court s early civil liberties and civil rights cases 32 See also edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Lochner v New York Anticanon List of United States Supreme Court cases volume 198 Slaughterhouse Cases 83 U S 36 1873 Munn v Illinois 94 U S 113 1876 Mugler v Kansas 123 U S 623 1887 Allgeyer v Louisiana 165 U S 578 1897 Adkins v Children s Hospital 261 U S 525 1923 case about the minimum wageReferences editCitations edit Lochner v New York 198 U S 45 1905 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from this U S government document Bernstein David Only One Place of Redress African Americans Labor Regulations and the Courts from Reconstruction to the New Deal p 100 Duke University Press 2001 The Court also directly overturned Lochner by adding that it is no longer open to question that it is within the legislative power to fix maximum hours Dorf Michael and Morrison Trevor Constitutional Law p 18 Oxford University Press 2010 Patrick John The Supreme Court of the United States A Student Companion p 362 Oxford University Press 2006 White G Edward January 1 1997 Revisiting Substantive Due Process and Holmes s Lochner Dissent Brooklyn Law Review 63 1 87 Philips Michael J 2001 The Lochner Court Myth and Reality Substantive Due Process from the 1890s to the 1930s Greenwood p 10 ISBN 0 275 96930 4 Epstein 2014 p 339 a b c d Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 666 Quoted in part in Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 666 a b c Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 667 Tribe 2000 8 3 p 1347 Nowak amp Rotunda 2012 15 3 a Epstein 2014 pp 338 39 Quoted in part in Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 pp 667 68 Sunstein 1987 p 877 Quoted in part in Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 667 Quoted in Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 667 Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 668 quoting Lochner 198 U S at 58 a b c Chemerinsky 2019 8 2 2 p 668 Stevens John Paul 2011 Five Chiefs A Supreme Court Memoir Little Brown and Company p 25 ISBN 978 0 316 19980 3 Quimbee July 8 2016 SCOTUS shifts from workers protections starting with Lochner v New York American Bar Association for Students American Bar Association Retrieved July 2 2017 a b Siegan Bernard H 1980 Economic Liberties and the Constitution Univ of Chicago Pr p 23 ISBN 978 0226756639 cited in Stone Geoffrey R et al 2009 Constitutional Law 6th ed Aspen Publishers p 744 ISBN 978 0735577190 Millhiser Ian Rand Paul praises horrendous Supreme Court decision would let employers ruthlessly exploit workers ThinkProgress 2013 03 07 Ian Millhiser described as Worse Than Lochner constitutional interpretation that would hold unconstitutional all affirmative action policies as well as Social Security Medicare and Pell Grants Millhiser Ian June 2011 Worse Than Lochner Yale Law amp Policy Review 29 Bork Robert H 1989 The Tempting of America The Political Seduction of the Law Free Press p 44 ISBN 978 0029037614 Bork Robert H 2003 The Judge s Role in Law and Culture PDF Ave Maria Law Review 1 19 21 Archived from the original PDF on June 15 2013 Retrieved May 28 2013 Community Rights Counsel Taking Back Community Rights Archived from the original on April 29 2012 Retrieved July 3 2012 Calabresi Steven G Agudo Sarah 2008 Individual Rights Under State Constitutions When the Fourteenth Amendment Was Ratified in 1868 What Rights Are Deeply Rooted in American History and Tradition Tex L Rev 87 7 88 Exposing Global Warming Alarmism s Grasp Cato Institute May June 2011 Epstein Richard A 2003 The Necessary History of Property and Liberty Chapman Law Review 6 SSRN 396600 Barnett Randy E May 12 2005 Foreword What s So Wicked About Lochner NYU Journal of Law amp Liberty 1 1 1 9 SSRN 721507 Bernstein David E 2011 Rehabilitating Lochner Defending Individual Rights Against Progressive Reform University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226043531 Works cited edit Bernstein David E 2005 Lochner v New York A Centennial Retrospective Washington University Law Quarterly 85 5 1469 1528 SSRN 918404 Bernstein David E 2012 Rehabilitating Lochner Defending Individual Rights against Progressive Reform Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 04353 1 Chemerinsky Erwin 2019 Constitutional Law Principles and Policies 6th ed New York Wolters Kluwer ISBN 978 1 4548 9574 9 Epstein Richard A 2014 The Classical Liberal Constitution The Uncertain Quest for Limited Government Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72489 1 Hall Kermit et al 1992 The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0195058356 Kens Paul 1998 Lochner v New York Economic Regulation on Trial Lawrence University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0155068674 Nowak John E Rotunda Ronald D 2012 Treatise on Constitutional Law Substance and Procedure 5th ed Eagan MN West Thomson Reuters OCLC 798148265 Sunstein Cass R 1987 Lochner s Legacy Columbia Law Review 87 5 873 919 doi 10 2307 1122721 JSTOR 1122721 Tribe Laurence H 2000 American Constitutional Law 3rd ed New York Foundation Press ISBN 978 1 56662 714 6 Tushnet Mark 2008 I Dissent Great Opposing Opinions in Landmark Supreme Court Cases Boston Beacon Press pp 81 92 ISBN 978 0 8070 0036 6 Warren Charles 1924 The Supreme Court in United States History 3 volumes Boston Little Brown and Co LCCN 25006510External links editText of Lochner v New York 198 U S 45 1905 is available from Cornell CourtListener Findlaw Google Scholar Justia Library of Congress Oyez oral argument audio Summary of Lochner v New York Supreme Court Landmark Case Lochner v New York from C SPAN s Landmark Cases Historic Supreme Court Decisions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lochner v New York amp oldid 1175160833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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