fbpx
Wikipedia

Minor v. Happersett

Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.) 162 (1875),[1] is a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that citizenship does not confer a right to vote, and therefore state laws barring women from voting are constitutionally valid. The Supreme Court upheld state court decisions in Missouri, which had refused to register a woman as a lawful voter because that state's laws allowed only men to vote.

Minor v. Happersett
Argued February 9, 1875
Decided March 29, 1875
Full case nameVirginia Minor v. Reese Happersett
Citations88 U.S. 162 (more)
21 Wall. 162; 22 L. Ed. 627
Case history
PriorAppeal from the Supreme Court of Missouri; 53 Mo. 58 (1873)
Holding
The Fourteenth Amendment does not guarantee women the right to vote.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Morrison Waite
Associate Justices
Nathan Clifford · Noah H. Swayne
Samuel F. Miller · David Davis
Stephen J. Field · William Strong
Joseph P. Bradley · Ward Hunt
Case opinion
MajorityWaite, joined by unanimous
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amend. XIV
Superseded by
U.S. Const. amend. XIX (in part)

The Minor v. Happersett ruling was based on an interpretation of the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Supreme Court readily accepted that Minor was a citizen of the United States, but it held that the constitutionally protected privileges of citizenship did not include the right to vote.

The opinion concluded with the statement that "...the Constitution of the United States does not confer the right of suffrage upon anyone". This was clarified in Ex parte Yarbrough 110 U.S. 651 (1884) stating that "the Constitution adopts as the qualification for voters of members of Congress that which prevails in the State where the voting is to be done; therefore... the right is not definitely conferred on any person or class of persons by the Constitution alone, because you have to look to the law of the State for the description of the class. But the court did not intend to say that when the class or the person is thus ascertained, his right to vote for a member of Congress was not fundamentally based upon the Constitution".[2]

The Nineteenth Amendment, which became a part of the Constitution in 1920, superseded Minor v. Happersett with respect to women's suffrage.[3] Minor v. Happersett continued to be cited in support of restrictive election laws of other types until the 1960s, when the Supreme Court started interpreting the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause to prohibit discrimination among citizenry in voting rights.[4]

Background edit

Virginia Minor, a leader of the women's suffrage movement in Missouri,[5] attempted to register to vote on October 15, 1872, in St. Louis County, Missouri, but was refused on the grounds that she was a woman.[6] With the assistance of her husband, Francis Minor (a lawyer), she brought an action in state courts against Reese Happersett, the registrar who had rejected her application to register to vote, alleging that the provisions of the Missouri state constitution which allowed only men to vote were in violation of the United States Constitution, and specifically the Fourteenth Amendment.[7] The key to the Minors' argument was that citizenship entailed voting rights—an assertion with enough rhetoric on both sides to make it an open question.[8]

 
Virginia Minor, whose attempts to register as a voter gave rise to the Minor v. Happersett case

The Missouri Supreme Court ruled in favor of the registrar and against Minor. The state court observed that the "almost universal practice of all of the States ... from the adoption of the Constitution to the present time" was to restrict voting rights to men only;[9] and, additionally, that the clear intent of the Fourteenth Amendment was to give the rights of citizenship to the former slaves, and not to force other changes in state laws. The court noted, in particular, that the second section of the Fourteenth Amendment (penalizing states which denied the right to vote to any of its citizens) referred specifically to male citizens, and concluded that "this clearly recognizes the right, and seems to anticipate the exercise of the right, on the part of the States to restrict the right of suffrage to the male inhabitants."[10]

Minor appealed the Missouri ruling to the United States Supreme Court, presenting the same arguments before the Supreme Court as had been unsuccessfully put forth before the state court, and additionally proposing that women's suffrage was consistent with the original intent of the framers of the Constitution.[11] The Supreme Court observed that the sole point at issue was whether the Constitution entitled women to vote despite state laws limiting this right to men only.[12] The State of Missouri did not send counsel to defend its decision before the Supreme Court, choosing instead to justify its decision in a three-sentence demurrer.[5]

The case was argued on February 9, 1875 and decided March 29, 1875.[1]

Opinion of the Court edit

 
Chief Justice Morrison Waite, who wrote the Minor v. Happersett opinion for a unanimous Supreme Court

The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the Missouri voting legislation, saying that voting was not an inherent right of citizenship, that the Constitution neither granted nor forbade voting rights for women, and that allowing only male citizens to vote was not an infringement of Minor's rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.[13]

The opinion (written by Chief Justice Morrison Waite) first asked whether Minor was a citizen of the United States, and answered that she was, citing both the Fourteenth Amendment and earlier common law. Exploring the common-law origins of citizenship, the court observed that "new citizens may be born or they may be created by naturalization" and that the Constitution "does not, in words, say who shall be natural-born citizens." Under the common law, according to the court, "it was never doubted that all children born in a country of parents who were its citizens became themselves, upon their birth, citizens also. These were natives, or natural-born citizens, as distinguished from aliens or foreigners."[14] The court observed that some authorities "include as citizens children born within the jurisdiction without reference to the citizenship of their parents"—but since Minor was born in the United States and her parents were U.S. citizens, she was unquestionably a citizen herself, even under the narrowest possible definition, and the court thus noted that the subject did not need to be explored in any greater depth.[15]

The court then asked whether the right to vote was one of the "privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States" at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment's adoption in 1868. Citing a variety of historical sources, it found that it was not.[16] The court reasoned that the Constitution of the United States did not explicitly give citizens an affirmative right to vote and that, throughout the history of the nation from the adoption of the Constitution, a wide variety of persons—including women—were recognized as citizens but denied the right to vote. For example, at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, none of the original Thirteen Colonies gave all citizens the right to vote, all attaching restrictions based on factors such as sex, race, age, and ownership of land. The opinion continues that "it cannot for a moment be doubted that if it had been intended to make all citizens of the United States voters, the framers of the Constitution would not have left it to implication. So important a change in the condition of citizenship as it actually existed, if intended, would have been expressly declared."[17]

Subsequent history edit

The Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1920, prohibited sex-based denial or abridgment of any United States citizen's right to vote—thus effectively overruling the key holding in Minor v. Happersett. In some later voting rights cases, however, Minor was cited in opposition to the claim that the federal Constitution conferred a general right to vote, and in support of restrictive election laws involving poll taxes,[18] literacy tests,[19] and the role of political parties in special elections.[20]

In the 1960s, the Supreme Court started to view voting as a fundamental right covered by the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.[4] In his dissenting opinion in Reynolds v. Sims (1964) involving reapportionment in the Alabama state legislature, Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan II included Minor in a list of past decisions about voting and apportionment which were no longer being followed.[21] However, the majority opinion in Reynolds v. Sims does not mention or cite Minor v. Happersett, and instead cites Ex parte Yarbrough in concluding that the federal constitution does protect the right of qualified citizens to vote in federal and state elections.[22]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Ashmore, Anne (December 26, 2018). "Dates of Supreme Court Decisions and Arguments: United States Reports, Volumes 2–107 (1791–1882)" (PDF). Library, Supreme Court of the United States. p. 119. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  2. ^ Ex parte Yarbrough, 110 U.S. 651, 664 (1884)
  3. ^ Ray and Richards (2007), p. 376. "The Minor decision, which acknowledged women's status as citizens but denied that citizenship entailed voting rights, dealt a blow to women's political participation that would only be overturned after forty-five years of additional agitation, culminating in the Nineteenth Amendment."
  4. ^ a b Briffault, Richard (2002). "The Contested Right to Vote". Michigan Law Review. 100: 1521–1522. doi:10.2307/1290453. JSTOR 1290453.
  5. ^ a b Basch (1992), p. 59.
  6. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 53 Mo. 58, 62 (1873).
  7. ^ Basch (1992), p. 55.
  8. ^ Ray and Richards (2007), p. 378.
  9. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 53 Mo. at 63.
  10. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 53 Mo. at 65.
  11. ^ Ray and Richards, p. 384.
  12. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. 162, 165 (1875).
  13. ^ Greene, Mary A. (1894). "Results of the Woman–Suffrage Movement". Forum. New York: American Periodicals Series III: 417.
  14. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. at 167.
  15. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. at 168. "For the purposes of this case it is not necessary to solve these doubts. It is sufficient for everything we have now to consider that all children born of citizen parents within the jurisdiction are themselves citizens."
  16. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. at 175. "The fourteenth amendment had already provided that no State should make or enforce any law which should abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States. If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, &c.? Nothing is more evident than that the greater must include the less, and if all were already protected why go through with the form of amending the Constitution to protect a part?"
  17. ^ Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. at 173.
  18. ^ Breedlove v. Suttles, 302 U.S. 277 (1937).
  19. ^ Lassiter v. Northampton County Board of Elections, 360 U.S. 45 (1959).
  20. ^ Rodríguez v. Popular Democratic Party, 457 U.S. 1 (1982).
  21. ^ Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 612 (1964) (Harlan, J., dissenting).
  22. ^ Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 554 (1964)

References edit

  • Basch, Norma (1992). "Reconstructing Female Citizenship: Minor v. Happersett". In Nieman, Donald G. (ed.). The Constitution, Law, and American Life: Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth-Century Experience. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press. pp. 52–66. ISBN 978-0-8203-1403-7.
  • Ray, Angela G.; Richards, Cindy Koenig (2007). (PDF). Quarterly Journal of Speech. 93 (4): 375–402. doi:10.1080/00335630701449340. S2CID 143708176. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 3, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2012.

External links edit

  •   Works related to Minor v. Happersett at Wikisource
  • Text of Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.) 162 (1875) is available from: Findlaw  Justia  Library of Congress  OpenJurist 
  • Brief of Virginia Minor in Casper, Gerhard; Kurland, Philip B. (eds.). Landmark Briefs And Arguments of the Supreme Court of the United States (pdf). Retrieved September 27, 2020.

minor, happersett, wall, 1875, united, states, supreme, court, case, which, court, held, that, citizenship, does, confer, right, vote, therefore, state, laws, barring, women, from, voting, constitutionally, valid, supreme, court, upheld, state, court, decision. Minor v Happersett 88 U S 21 Wall 162 1875 1 is a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that citizenship does not confer a right to vote and therefore state laws barring women from voting are constitutionally valid The Supreme Court upheld state court decisions in Missouri which had refused to register a woman as a lawful voter because that state s laws allowed only men to vote Minor v HappersettSupreme Court of the United StatesArgued February 9 1875Decided March 29 1875Full case nameVirginia Minor v Reese HappersettCitations88 U S 162 more 21 Wall 162 22 L Ed 627Case historyPriorAppeal from the Supreme Court of Missouri 53 Mo 58 1873 HoldingThe Fourteenth Amendment does not guarantee women the right to vote Court membershipChief Justice Morrison Waite Associate Justices Nathan Clifford Noah H SwayneSamuel F Miller David DavisStephen J Field William StrongJoseph P Bradley Ward HuntCase opinionMajorityWaite joined by unanimousLaws appliedU S Const amend XIVSuperseded byU S Const amend XIX in part The Minor v Happersett ruling was based on an interpretation of the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment The Supreme Court readily accepted that Minor was a citizen of the United States but it held that the constitutionally protected privileges of citizenship did not include the right to vote The opinion concluded with the statement that the Constitution of the United States does not confer the right of suffrage upon anyone This was clarified in Ex parte Yarbrough 110 U S 651 1884 stating that the Constitution adopts as the qualification for voters of members of Congress that which prevails in the State where the voting is to be done therefore the right is not definitely conferred on any person or class of persons by the Constitution alone because you have to look to the law of the State for the description of the class But the court did not intend to say that when the class or the person is thus ascertained his right to vote for a member of Congress was not fundamentally based upon the Constitution 2 The Nineteenth Amendment which became a part of the Constitution in 1920 superseded Minor v Happersett with respect to women s suffrage 3 Minor v Happersett continued to be cited in support of restrictive election laws of other types until the 1960s when the Supreme Court started interpreting the Fourteenth Amendment s Equal Protection Clause to prohibit discrimination among citizenry in voting rights 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Opinion of the Court 3 Subsequent history 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground editVirginia Minor a leader of the women s suffrage movement in Missouri 5 attempted to register to vote on October 15 1872 in St Louis County Missouri but was refused on the grounds that she was a woman 6 With the assistance of her husband Francis Minor a lawyer she brought an action in state courts against Reese Happersett the registrar who had rejected her application to register to vote alleging that the provisions of the Missouri state constitution which allowed only men to vote were in violation of the United States Constitution and specifically the Fourteenth Amendment 7 The key to the Minors argument was that citizenship entailed voting rights an assertion with enough rhetoric on both sides to make it an open question 8 nbsp Virginia Minor whose attempts to register as a voter gave rise to the Minor v Happersett caseThe Missouri Supreme Court ruled in favor of the registrar and against Minor The state court observed that the almost universal practice of all of the States from the adoption of the Constitution to the present time was to restrict voting rights to men only 9 and additionally that the clear intent of the Fourteenth Amendment was to give the rights of citizenship to the former slaves and not to force other changes in state laws The court noted in particular that the second section of the Fourteenth Amendment penalizing states which denied the right to vote to any of its citizens referred specifically to male citizens and concluded that this clearly recognizes the right and seems to anticipate the exercise of the right on the part of the States to restrict the right of suffrage to the male inhabitants 10 Minor appealed the Missouri ruling to the United States Supreme Court presenting the same arguments before the Supreme Court as had been unsuccessfully put forth before the state court and additionally proposing that women s suffrage was consistent with the original intent of the framers of the Constitution 11 The Supreme Court observed that the sole point at issue was whether the Constitution entitled women to vote despite state laws limiting this right to men only 12 The State of Missouri did not send counsel to defend its decision before the Supreme Court choosing instead to justify its decision in a three sentence demurrer 5 The case was argued on February 9 1875 and decided March 29 1875 1 Opinion of the Court edit nbsp Chief Justice Morrison Waite who wrote the Minor v Happersett opinion for a unanimous Supreme CourtThe Supreme Court unanimously upheld the Missouri voting legislation saying that voting was not an inherent right of citizenship that the Constitution neither granted nor forbade voting rights for women and that allowing only male citizens to vote was not an infringement of Minor s rights under the Fourteenth Amendment 13 The opinion written by Chief Justice Morrison Waite first asked whether Minor was a citizen of the United States and answered that she was citing both the Fourteenth Amendment and earlier common law Exploring the common law origins of citizenship the court observed that new citizens may be born or they may be created by naturalization and that the Constitution does not in words say who shall be natural born citizens Under the common law according to the court it was never doubted that all children born in a country of parents who were its citizens became themselves upon their birth citizens also These were natives or natural born citizens as distinguished from aliens or foreigners 14 The court observed that some authorities include as citizens children born within the jurisdiction without reference to the citizenship of their parents but since Minor was born in the United States and her parents were U S citizens she was unquestionably a citizen herself even under the narrowest possible definition and the court thus noted that the subject did not need to be explored in any greater depth 15 The court then asked whether the right to vote was one of the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment s adoption in 1868 Citing a variety of historical sources it found that it was not 16 The court reasoned that the Constitution of the United States did not explicitly give citizens an affirmative right to vote and that throughout the history of the nation from the adoption of the Constitution a wide variety of persons including women were recognized as citizens but denied the right to vote For example at the time of the adoption of the Constitution none of the original Thirteen Colonies gave all citizens the right to vote all attaching restrictions based on factors such as sex race age and ownership of land The opinion continues that it cannot for a moment be doubted that if it had been intended to make all citizens of the United States voters the framers of the Constitution would not have left it to implication So important a change in the condition of citizenship as it actually existed if intended would have been expressly declared 17 Subsequent history editThe Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution ratified in 1920 prohibited sex based denial or abridgment of any United States citizen s right to vote thus effectively overruling the key holding in Minor v Happersett In some later voting rights cases however Minor was cited in opposition to the claim that the federal Constitution conferred a general right to vote and in support of restrictive election laws involving poll taxes 18 literacy tests 19 and the role of political parties in special elections 20 In the 1960s the Supreme Court started to view voting as a fundamental right covered by the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment 4 In his dissenting opinion in Reynolds v Sims 1964 involving reapportionment in the Alabama state legislature Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan II included Minor in a list of past decisions about voting and apportionment which were no longer being followed 21 However the majority opinion in Reynolds v Sims does not mention or cite Minor v Happersett and instead cites Ex parte Yarbrough in concluding that the federal constitution does protect the right of qualified citizens to vote in federal and state elections 22 See also editWomen s suffrage in the United States List of United States Supreme Court cases volume 88Notes edit a b Ashmore Anne December 26 2018 Dates of Supreme Court Decisions and Arguments United States Reports Volumes 2 107 1791 1882 PDF Library Supreme Court of the United States p 119 Retrieved September 27 2020 Ex parte Yarbrough 110 U S 651 664 1884 Ray and Richards 2007 p 376 The Minor decision which acknowledged women s status as citizens but denied that citizenship entailed voting rights dealt a blow to women s political participation that would only be overturned after forty five years of additional agitation culminating in the Nineteenth Amendment a b Briffault Richard 2002 The Contested Right to Vote Michigan Law Review 100 1521 1522 doi 10 2307 1290453 JSTOR 1290453 a b Basch 1992 p 59 Minor v Happersett 53 Mo 58 62 1873 Basch 1992 p 55 Ray and Richards 2007 p 378 Minor v Happersett 53 Mo at 63 Minor v Happersett 53 Mo at 65 Ray and Richards p 384 Minor v Happersett 88 U S 162 165 1875 Greene Mary A 1894 Results of the Woman Suffrage Movement Forum New York American Periodicals Series III 417 Minor v Happersett 88 U S at 167 Minor v Happersett 88 U S at 168 For the purposes of this case it is not necessary to solve these doubts It is sufficient for everything we have now to consider that all children born of citizen parents within the jurisdiction are themselves citizens Minor v Happersett 88 U S at 175 The fourteenth amendment had already provided that no State should make or enforce any law which should abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race amp c Nothing is more evident than that the greater must include the less and if all were already protected why go through with the form of amending the Constitution to protect a part Minor v Happersett 88 U S at 173 Breedlove v Suttles 302 U S 277 1937 Lassiter v Northampton County Board of Elections 360 U S 45 1959 Rodriguez v Popular Democratic Party 457 U S 1 1982 Reynolds v Sims 377 U S 533 612 1964 Harlan J dissenting Reynolds v Sims 377 U S 533 554 1964 References editBasch Norma 1992 Reconstructing Female Citizenship Minor v Happersett In Nieman Donald G ed The Constitution Law and American Life Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth Century Experience Athens GA University of Georgia Press pp 52 66 ISBN 978 0 8203 1403 7 Ray Angela G Richards Cindy Koenig 2007 Inventing Citizens Imagining Gender Justice The Suffrage Rhetoric of Virginia and Francis Minor PDF Quarterly Journal of Speech 93 4 375 402 doi 10 1080 00335630701449340 S2CID 143708176 Archived from the original PDF on December 3 2011 Retrieved February 27 2012 External links edit nbsp Works related to Minor v Happersett at Wikisource Text of Minor v Happersett 88 U S 21 Wall 162 1875 is available from Findlaw Justia Library of Congress OpenJurist Brief of Virginia Minor in Casper Gerhard Kurland Philip B eds Landmark Briefs And Arguments of the Supreme Court of the United States pdf Retrieved September 27 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Minor v Happersett amp oldid 1190620031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.