The accompanying question, upon which our opinion is required, we rеspectfully answer as follows:
The Fourteenth Article of the Amendments of the Constitution of the United States contains this provision: “Ho State shall make or enforce any lаw which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of lаw, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” This language has received judicial interpretation by the Supreme Court of the United States, whose decisions upon questions arising under the federal Consti- ’ tution are binding upon us. Said Mr. Justice Harlan, in Powell v. Pennsylvania,
Mr. Justice Field, in Barbier v. Connolly,
The business of keeping a hotel or restaurant, to which the proрosed legislation relates, is a necessary and proper kind of business that is entitled to the protection of the laws. It may be conducted legally or illegally, by a person of any nationality.
The proposed law, without reference to the way in which it is conducted, puts a restraint upon it which might be expected very seriously to interfere with the successful management of it, whenever it is carried on by a person of a particular nationality,
The only question that can be regarded as doubtful by anybody is that which arises on the supposition that the Legislature may be “ of the opinion that public order, decеncy and morality require that girls and young women be excluded from Chinese restaurants and hotels.” This brings us to the consideration of the police power. There is no doubt of the right and duty of the Legislature to enact laws for the promotion of public order, decency and morality. But when such legislation interferes with the exercise of persоnal rights, it must be directed to the prevention of real evils, in the interest of morality. This proposed legislation does not assume to forbid anything that is necessarily evil in itself, or tо deal directly with any offense against order, decency or morality. There are good hotels and bad hotels, good restaurants and bad restaurants, kept by men of thе Caucasian race ; and there are others of both kinds kept by men of other races. This legislation does not refer to the character or condition of the hotel or restaurant that a young woman may not enter, but refers only to the nationality of the person who conducts it. The enactment of such legislation is not a proper exercise of the police power. It has no direct relation to the evil to be remedied. It forbids the entry of a young woman into the hotel or restaurant of a Chinese proprietor, even if it is a model of orderly and moral management, and it permits the entry of
In reference to classifications made in an attempted exercise of the police power, Mr. Justice Brewer said, in Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway v. Ellis,
The fact that a man is white, or black, or yellow is not a just and constitutional ground for making certain conduct a crime in him, when it is treated as permissible and innocent in a person of a different color.
We answer the question in the negative.
Mabcus P. Knowlton.
James M. Mobton.
John W. Hammond.
William Caleb Lobing.
Henby K. Bbaley.
Henby N. Sheldon.
Abthub Pbentice Rugg.
