Page 2-C £• t —Sutherland— (Continued from Page 1-C) vice or idleness, . those, he wrote, are nature’s failures. “If they are not sufficiently complete to live, they die, and it is best that they should die.” In 1897 the New York legisla ture passed a law limiting the weekly hours of work in baker ies to sixty, not a very drastic limitation in today’s terms, a ten-hour day, Saturdays in cluded! In 1905, by a five-to four vote, the Supreme Court of the 'United States in the noted Lochner case found this law un constitutional under the Four teenth Amendment; it deprived employer and employee of their right to purchase or sell labor as they pleased; the law thus deprived them of their liberty without due process of law. Jus tice Peckham wrote for the ma jority “It is unfortunately true that labor, even in any department, may possibly carry with it the seeds of unhealthiness. But are we all, on that account, at the mercy of legislative majorities?” Justices Harlan,. White, Day, and Holmes dissented. Holmes wrote: “This case is decided upon an economic theory which a large part of the country does not entertain. . . . State laws may regulate life in many ways which we as legislators might think as injudicious, or if you like as tyrannical, as this, and which, equally with this inter ference with the liberty to con tract. Sunday laws and usury laws are ancient examples. A more modem one is the prohi SAVE by OCTOBER j EARN from OCTOBER n tO BONUS DAYS OF FULLY INSURED SAVINGS Orange Savings & Loan^ c Association -S’ « * ... " ~ CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA “Serving Since 1911 as the Center of Profitable Savings" Open Daily » to Fridays Til 6 P.M. bition of lotteries. The liberty of the citizen ... is interfered with by school laws, by the Postoffice, by every State or municipal institution which takes his money for purposes thought desirable whether he likes it or not. The 14th Amend ment does not enact Mr. Her bert Spencer’s Social Statics.” Hours-of-work laws existed in New York before and after Lochner. Holmes' words were ironic; his mention of “Social Statics" was not made to de scribe the then system of Ameri can constitutional limitations, but to emphasize the opposite. I suppose Spencer's book would have been even more of a liter ary and philosophical museum piece than it now is, but for Holmes’ mention-of it; and that most men w'ho mention it would never have heard of it but for Holmes’ citation. I suspect that a good many of the people who quote Holmes’ opinion have never read Spencer’s essay, but into some of our popular intellectual beliefs has grown the idea that there was a time when the Su preme Court accepted Spencer’s dogma and built a wall effective ly blocking the road to social and economic well-being; this we have sometimes believed and said. The extent of error and truth in this estimate I propose briefly to examine. Our national traditions a cen tury ago were not those of ma terial egalitarianism. The land of opportunity had been a place where an energetic, acquisitive and sometimes ruthless man could go out and get himself a fortune. As late as a century ago, most of the continent was thinly peopled, and to many men bred in old traditions it seemed as though the west ought to be there for the taking by the strong and venturesome. That was the way the country had been settled. When Massachusetts in 17 8 8 granted to Oliver Phelps and Na thaniel Gorham two million acres of wild lands in Western New York and they started doing a land-office business selling town lots, Phelps and Gorham were not thinking of government as a pervasive system of help for small folk in their affairs of daily life; as supervisor of the number of strawberries sold in a can of preserves; as the regu lator of the retail price of a bottle of milk, or as an agency to decide how long a work-day could be in a bakeshop. Gov ernment, if you could cajole it, would give you a grant of mil lions of acres, or a monopoly to run all the new-fangled steam boats in a State, or a charter to operate a bank and to make money for signing the bank's notes for circulation. Then Gov ernment having thus granted a charter, was to stand aside and let a man run things to suit himself,—unless of course the In dians, or the British on the north ern border, or the Dons in the Spanish south and west, made trouble beyond the abilities of the neighbors to settle things with their rifles. In that case the enterpriser might ask the government for troops! The immense land deals by which speculators had opened up the western parts of New York, Virginia and Georgia were over by the end of the Civil War; Lord Fairfax of Virginia and General Gunn of Georgia, men of large ideas and much progres siveness, they were dead but their souls went marching on. The railroads were financed and built by the spiritual descend ants of Edward Livingston and Robert Fulton, New York steam boat monopolists of two genera tions before. Arrangers of oil combines, “coal barons,” steel magnates, mining kings, they showed a fine swagger, and along with it a sense of mission that sometimes reflected the pietism of the day. God would not have given them so much if they had not deserved it! At the turn of the 19th-20th century were torn two ways, between the rising self-consciousness of increasing ly urgent and numerous groups, —the farmers whose voices had been heard in the Grange move ment of the 1870’s and 1880 s; la boring men, now heard respect fully by political people; and. on the other hand the proprietors, the combiners, the shrewd 2nd acquisitive, who sought a means of delaying the change. But the many had the votes; and they passed an increasing list of regu latory statutes in States and Na tion, painful to the shocked and slightly bewildered great pro prietors, who for a time, with sporadic success, took to the federal courts to resist the al teration in prospect. Some ac count of this unequal combat is worth recalling. The history of governmental control of the economy is an old ooe. In New York the Duke’s Laws of 1665-1675 interfered in many ways with freedom of contract (of which no one at that time had even yet heard). Price fixing during the Amer ican Revolution came to nothing because of inability of the gov ernment of the United States to enforce its will on uncooperative States. In 1655 the New York Legislature set up a Railroad Commission, to start regulating what was clearly going to be a central element in the economy. The story of constitutional in tervention in all this only begins after the Fourteenth Amend ment took effect in 1868. A, Louisiana legislature in 1869 de creed that all slaughterirtg in New Orleans should be done at the establishment of the Crescent City Live Stock Land ing and Slaughter-House Com pany; any butcher in town could do his slaughtering there by pay ing a fee, and submitting his animals to inspection. In mod ern aspect this was not an out rageous arrangement. New Or leans is a warm city; refrigera tion was not efficient in 1866; public inspection of the pro cessing of highly perishable food is now a commonplace. But of fended butchers went all the way to the Supreme Court to try to invalidate the statute under the Fourteenth Amendment. They almost made it. By a five-to four vote the Supreme Court re jected the application of pro testing butchers. Today one would expect this same result by a unanimous Court. The Slaughter House opinion was more notable than the result: the majority so vehemently re jected the disgruntled butchers' contention that running their in dependent slaughterhouses was one of the “privileges and im munities of citizens of the Unit ed States,” guaranteed against BICYCLES | We sell and repair bicycles. If yours needs repair I or you want to buy one, call j .. Carrboro Tire I Appliance Center I 136 E. Main SC.. Carrboro Pboao 942-2500 I Free Pickup A Delivery Free Parking la Rear THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY State abridgement by the Four teenth Amendment that the “privileges and immunities clause” has never been any use since that time. The due-process and equal protection clauses then got even shorter shrift. But about 1870 an agricultural depression struck the country. Untrammellied free enterprise loses its attraction to men who think their sorrows ore the fault of the powerful and the wicked, and who sense in their own po litics! power the means of bring ing back better days. A few years before, farmers had be gun to form local associations called Granges; the “Grangers” had gained much momentum. By 1874 there were over 26,000 Granges, mostly in the Mid West and South. Each village had its Grange Hall. Farmers drove to town on Saturday night in dem ocrat-wagons, enjoyed the pleas ing, varied surprises of a "cov ered-dish supper” provided by their several wives; they weot through the ritual of fraternal brotherhood, and afterward talk ed awhile of the inequities of the elevator companies that stor ed grain in Chicago; the rail roads, whose Presidents wore diamond stickpins in the luxury of their private cars; and the rich bankers who made loans to honest farmers in hopeful times and refused to extend them farm ers’ notes in the years of the locust. The Township Granges had representative bodies called State Granges. State Granges had a National Grange. By constitu tion the Grange was non-political, but conversations in the Grange Halls could produce a certain unanimity of view. Talk went ’round of the Granger Movement, —and most of America was still rural. In 1871 the Illinois legis lature passed a statute fixing the fees that grain elevators could charge for storing farm ers’ produce. Other States were doing the like. There has since been much dispute as to how much influence the Grange had in this legislation, but the Grange got credit and blame for it, and in 1877 the Supreme Court came to pass on the constitutional val idity of the Illinois elevator reg ulation, and on legislatively fix ed rates for railroads, passed by the legislatures of Wisconsin, lowa and Minnesota. This liti gation was, by and large, the Slaughter-House Case over again, with due process of law more emphasized. The Supreme Court upheld all the statutes: its opinions, coiiectiveiy caiied the Granger Cases, could be read to hold, broadly, that legislative judgment would never be second guessed by Courts when that judgment concerned the rates to be charged by railroad*, and ele vators. Clearly this line of reasoning was bound to come to a stop somewhere. A railroad or a stor age company has ventured its property in a given business. A railroad is valuable only for rail roading; nobody has use for a grain elevator except for stor ing grain. The Fifth Amendment of 1791 forbade the United States to take private property for pub lic use without just compensa tion; the Fourteenth Amendment of 1868 forbade a State to deprive any person of “property without due process of law”. The Fifth at least expressed a moral judg ment and hinted a meaning tor the Fourteenth; the Fourteenth somehow suggested that there ought to be limits to what a State cast do to a man's proper ty; and if a State forbade a man to make a profit from the only use that his property was good for, the State took his property away and gave it to the users. This was an argument hard to answer: the Supreme Court found it unanswerable in 1890, and found invalid a Minnesota statute which purported to make a State railroad rate, fixed by an ad ministrative commission, im mune from judicial scrutiny pass ing on its fairness. That all or most State and federal economic regulation was therefore held invalid would be a gross misestimate. Some was so held; and the instances of invalidity shocked the contrary minded observers more than the adjudications of validity pleased them. The Cultom Act, or Inter state Commerce Act, of 1887, which was ascribed rightly or wrongly to Granger pressures, was a federal statute intended to surmount a Supreme Court judgment of the year before, which had held invalid State rate regulation of that state's segment of a several-State rail road journey. Still in effect to day, in greatly expanded form, the Interstate Commerce Act regulates, unchallenged, most of the nation's carriage of passen gers and goods. The Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890 was ap plied, a little timidly at first to a society taught that competition was successful. There was a lit tle surprise in the idea that com petition so effective that it oblig ed the competitor to surrender, to join what he could not heat, was not only a civil wrong but a serious crime. The Sugar Trust Case of 1895 held that pur chase by a holding trust of con trolling shares of competing corporations was not a violation of tile Anti-Trust Act. When the Supreme Court nine yean later changed its mind about com bines of controlling corporate stock, and held in the Northern Securities Case in an acquisition of stock controlling two rail roads that after all such an ar rangement did come within the Anti-Trust Act, Holmes, now an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, wrote a dissent. "Great cases, he wrote, like hard cases make bad law. For great casej are called great not by reason of their real importance in shaping the law of the future but because of some accident of immediate overwhelming interest which appeals to the feelings and distorts the judgment ... (The) mere fact of an indirect effect upon commerce . , . would not justify such a law , . . Commerce depends upon population, but Congress could not, on that ground, under take to regulate marriage and divorce.” One supposes, as I gather Holmes supposed, that when the draftsmen of the Commerce Clause gave to the central gov ernment competence to “regu late Commerce . . . among the several States”, they must have in mind that then existed some sort of Commerce other than that “among the several States,” not entrusted to the federal gov ernment, some segment of the national economy remaining en trenched with the State powers. But this idea of economic States- Rights, immune from federal in trusion, has, on the whole, been declining since the Civil War. It has been asserted politically by those to whom national con trol is unwelcome; but from time to time there has been a demand for sweeping national change, and Theodore Roose velt's "trust-busting” was a re sponse to such a sentiment. Theo dore Roosevelt was not uncon scious of politics; he was a use ful, timely President, but he was not entirely detached in his views; indeed it is not the busi ness of a political leader tc be detached. Tradition, that dubious but attractive authority, had it that Roosevelt, hearing of Holme’s dissent in the Northern Securities Case, said that he, Roosevelt, could carve out of a banana a judge with more back bone than Holmes. Perhaps the President, for the irritated mo ment, overlooked the tact that Holmes had no political inter ests to serve, had no political failures to fear, and had faced fire equivalent to a number of multiples of San Juan Hill. The tide of federal regula tion continued to roll in, while judicial Canutes, by occasional judgments of unconstitutionality, did little but only a little, to for bid the flow. In 1906 the Con gress passed the Food and Drug Act, now the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Under this statute the government has prescribed “standards of identity,” descrip tive formulas to the end that the housewife may buy, not only wholesome merchandise at a low price, but also merchandise whose contents she precisely un derstands. And if one can grow somewhat peevish at times con sidering the detail of intervention of government in what we buy and what we eat one can con sider that perhaps we have been spared worse. Remember that 200 years ago that indrfatigable country gentleman Mathew Bramble wrote concerning Lon don to his friend. Dr. Lewis, first telling of wholesome life at Brambleton-hall and then going on “Now, mark the contrast at Local and Long Distance HOISEHOLI MOVERS ® Moving •42-1958 night 288-1488 WHY CALL LONG DISTANCE? Just can 942-1950. « I Your friendly Moving men at Durham Transfer and Storage will answer your calls, in Cliapel Hil! and Dor ham on direct Haea. No charge (or such cello. Durban Transfer & Storage *le the only modern FnrnUare Storage Warehoom la Chapel ML Vo oorValy tatvlte yon to oomo if aad laopoct On - Agoato tar National Vm Uaoo - London—l am pent up in frowsy lodgings, where there is not room enough to swing a cat; ... by five o'clock I start-tout of bed in consequence of the dreadful alarm made by the country carts, and the* noisy rustics bellowing, ‘green peas’ under my window. If I would drink water, I must quaff the maukish contents of an open aquaduct,—this is the agree able potation, extolled by the Londoners as the finest water in the universe. As to the in toxicating potion, sold for wine, it is a vile, unpalatable, and pernicious sophistication balder dashed with cidr, corn spirit, and the juice of sloes . . . The bread I eat in London, is a deleterious paste, mixed up with chalk color, alum, and bone adies; insipid to the taste, and destructive to the constitu tion . . - The same monstrous depravity appears in their veal, which is leeched by repeated bleedings, and other villainous arts till there is not a drop of of juice left in the body, and the poor animal is paralytic before he dies; so void of all taste, nourishment, and savour, that a man might dine as com-. fortably on a white fricassee of kid-skin gloves;—” I think of this and am reconciled to the Food and Drug Act. In 1787 the draftsmen of the Constitution had seen to it, they thought, that the many in one State would not utilize the new federal government to get the needed revenue from the rich who might be concentrated in a state with fewer votes. To this end the draftsmen provided in the first Article of the Constitu tion that “direct” taxes must rest on the several States ac cording to the population of each —not according to the wealth of the taxpayers. “direct Taxes should be appor tioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective numbers, . . In 1895 the Supreme Court held a federal income tax invalid be cause not apportioned among the States according to population. The capability of deriving in come from property is somewhat difficult to distinguish from the ownership of the property itself; and were it not for then current popular emotions, for the social policies, which the next year made Bryan’s Cross of Gold Speech so popular; were it not for a wide spread impulse to ward economic levelling, the Su preme Court would have occa sioned less surprise and indignant reaction by holding the federal income tax unconstitutional and by observing’in its unanimous opinion that the clause of the Constitution in question was “manifestly designed ... to pre vent an attack upon accumulated property by mere force of num bers.” Eighteen years is not such a long period; in eighteen years the income tax case was reversed by the Sixteenth Amend ment. 1913 brought a number of popular laws, but of the sev eral pieces of “social legisla tion” of those years, perhaps that which in the long run has had and will have the greatest effect on American life was the 16th Amendment. With all the battling to and fro that had gone on over the details of the federal income tax, in the main, decade by dec ade. it has increased; it has tended more and more to econo mic levelling, tended to prevent the accumulation of the great fortunes characteristic of indus trially successful operators at the turn of the century. This effect has been supplemented by state income taxation, and by the steeply progressive rates of inheritance taxation, which dis courage (he handing on of great estates. The United States, like England, does things a little at a time; we have not confiscated private property, or at any rate not very much. But the net ef fect of federal and state income and inheritance taxation has cer tainly been to cut down the peaks of accumulation by the most successful and to furnish the federal and State governments more to distribute in one form or another. . The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 gave to the Federal Reserve Board wide supervision over the nation’s banking system. Char acteristic of governmental dom ination of our economy is suoh procedure by somewhat indirset means. Thus the Federal Re serve Board, by contracting and expanding the rediscount of bank paper, exercises a large measure of control over available credit, and so over inflationary and de flationary tendencies in the coun try. In 1914 the Federal Trade Commission Act gave to the Trade Commission, subject to re view by the United States Courts, the wide mission to prohibit “un fair methods of competition” in interstate commerce; in 1938 the Congress extended this prohibi tion to cover “unfair or decep tive acts or practices” regard less of their competitive qqality. Federal Labor legislation had hard going for a while in the Supreme Court. In 1908 that Court held outside the com merce power an Act of Com merce forbidding an interstate carrier to discharge employees if they ((joined a Union. In 1918 that Court held unconstitutional a statute prohibiting the sale in interstate commerce of the pro ducts of child labor. In 1922 the Supreme Court held unconstitu tional an effort to accomplish the same end by a taxation of the produce of child labor. In 1923 the Court held unconstitu tional a statute imposing mini mum wages for women in the District of Columbia. In the two years 1935-1936 the Supreme Court held invalid eight New- Deal measures of various sorts. But this procession all came to an end in 1937 with National La bor Relations JBoard v. Jones- Laughlin Steel Company, which upheld a wide system of federal support for union activities. This was fortified in 1941 when the Supreme Court in United States v. Darby Lumber Co. specific ally overruled the Child Labor Case of 1918 and upheld federal legislation concerning hours, wages and conditions of employ ment in the manufacturing pro cess. State price-fixing ceased to be proscribed by the Four teenth Amendment in 1934 when the Supreme Court decided Neb bia v. New York. The war of 1941-45 completed this century of economic evolution. The Am erican people, restless, more and more impatient with what they have considered the unfair op eration of their economic struc ture, have proceeded step by step to subject it to their con trol by political means. If this had not come about gradually, we should have bfsn startled by it. If it had all jieen sponsored by one party, opposed FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLYt <3i ik© r** STOCININOS • THE SEASON’S .NEWEST COLOURS! • ALL SIZESI . REGULAR STOCK! • ALL LENOTHSI • NOTHING CHANGED BUT THE PRICEI Style: Reg. 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Little by little we have revolu tionized our material system of life, so avoiding the discomfort of intellectual confrontation, so going oil our way only half aware of the progress, like peo ple reading last month’s maga zine on an airplane journey. The frightening dimensions of this metamorphosis in our ma terial life become apparent so soon as they have our critical attention. The historian, the an thropologist and even the pro fessor of constitutional law can learn much by rereading the novels of Sarah Orne Jewett, or bound volumes of Saint Nicholas and the Youth’s Companion, such as those already a little outdated and dog-eared, which I found on the shelves of my family library when I reached the age of child ish exploration for books. And this is a useful discipline, be cause if life has changed so much in other things, has it changed in less material mat ters, changed with equal pro fundity, and with equal inatten tion? Are we in the midst of pro found social change, haying ra ther more to do with people and rather less to do with thtags. if indeed one can make that dis tinction. Are such changes so profound and so pervasive that we, to some extent, fail to no tice them as I suppose marine creatures are unconscious of the gulf stream’s current, and be cause they are unaware of the profundity universality of social change around us because it is so encompassingly obvious, do we sometimes fall into per sonal and constitutional error because we take no account of the change? Perhaps these Lec tures do well to turn to some consideration of our need for education in the obvious. Read the Weekly Classifieds. ] ''fticfectj‘freeman v customized clothes ~ DURHAM «.