142 Ky. 673 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Troy Mullins and Loucreta Mullins are infants be-;ween- the years of six-and twenty. They reside in Common School District No. 28 in Pike county, Kentucky. Appellee Edmond Belcher is the trustee of that school district. He notified appellants that they could not attend said school. Appellants, suing their guardian and next friend, Miles Ratliff, brought this action against appellee Edmond Belcher to enjoin him from interfering or in anywise preventing their at
Section 187 of the Kentucky Constitution is as follows :
“In distributing the school fund no distinction shall be made on account of race or color, and separate schools for white and colored children shall be maintained.”
The question before us is: Who are “colored children” within the meaning of the above section 1
While it may be doubted if appellants’ proportion of negro blood is as small as one-sixteenth, it is not contended that it is less. We shall, therefore, consider the case from this standpoint; that is, th'at their proportion of negro blood is one-sixteenth.
For appellants it is insisted that, in order to .constitute a person a “colored person,” he must not only have an appreciable admixture of negro blood, but must also ■show the racial characteristics of the negro. In this connection-it is insisted that appellants are as fair as members of the white race, and there is nothing in their personal appearance to indicate the presence of negro blood. In our opinion, however, the question does not depend upon personal appearance. The color of the person may be one means of indicating the class to which he belongs, but the question in its final analysis depends upon whether or not the person has, or has not, an appreciable admixture of negro blood.
In the case of Enos Van Camp v. The Board of Education of the Incorporated Village of Logan (decided in 1859), 9 Ohio St., 406, the Supreme Court of Ohio, in discussing the question arising under a statute of that State providing for separate schools for white and colored children, used the following language:
“Our standard philologist, Webster, defines ‘colored people’ -to be ‘black people — Africans or their descend
In the recent case of State v. Treadway, et al., 52 Sou. Rep., 500, the Supreme Court of Louisiana, speaking through Mr. Justice Provostv, said:
“There is a word in the English language which does express the meaning of a person of mixed negro and other blood, which has been coined for the very purpose of ex-, pressing that meaning, and because the word negro was known not to express it, and the need of a word to express it made itself imperatively felt. That word is the
And in the still more recent case of Isabel I. Wall, By, et al. v. James F. Oyster, et al., 38 Wash. Law Rep., 794, the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia held that, under the act of Congress providing for the maintenance of -separate free schools for white and colored children in the District of Columbia, a child possessing from one-eighth to one-sixteenth negro-blood was a “colored child.” After citing the cases above referred to, that court said:
“The most reliable sources of information in this regard are the dictionaries which are universally accepted as the best exponents of the popular meaning of the words -of the language. It is sufficient to say, without quoting from them,that these show that the word 'colored’ as. applied to persons or races is commonly understood to mean persons wholly or in part of negro blood, or having any appreciable admixture thereof. See Webster’s International, the Standard, and the Century Dictionary. ’ ’
As the makers of the Constitution did not undertake to define the words “colored children” as employed in section 187, we conclude that these words were used in their ordinary and general sense, and that they include all children wholly or in part of negro blood, or having any appreciable admixture thereof. It follows that the injunction prayed for was properly refused.
Judgment affirmed.