Wall v. Oyster

Mr. Chief Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

A statute enacted in 1864, and afterwards carried into the Revised Statutes of the District, provided for the maintenance of separate free schools for white and “colored” children, affording like facilities and advantages to each. D. C. Rev. Stat. secs. 281, 282, 306, 310, 314. No definition is given of the word “colored,” used in the act.

*54We think it unnecessary to enter upon a discussion of the power of Congress, which exercises all the functions of a state legislature in the District of Columbia, to provide for the separation of white and colored children in the public schools. That question has been effectually settled by the Supreme Court of the United States. Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U. S. 537-551, 41 L. ed. 256-261, 16 Sup. Ct. Eep. 1138. .

There is nothing in the objection to the statute that it does not expressly provide that notice and hearing shall be given to persons seeking admission to the schools before they can be refused enrolment in one or the other. Paulson v. Portland, 149 U. S. 30-38, 37 L. ed. 637, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 750; Allman v. District of Columbia, 3 App. D. C. 8-25.

The statute does not prohibit notice or hearing, and it appears that both were given in this. case.

Congress having failed to define the meaning of the word “colored,” the duty was necessarily devolved, in the first instance, at least, upon the board of education to determine what children are white and what are colored whenever that question shall arise in a particular case. The powers conferred upon the board in respect of the management and control of the schools are general, and contemplate the exercise of a broad discretion. United States ex rel. Nalle v. Hoover, 31 App. D. C. 311, 320. As was said in that case: “The extraordinary writ of mandamus will not be granted to correct mere errors of judgment committed by the' board so long as it acts within the authority conferred by statute.”

The statute in this case conferred no authority upon the board to exclude a white child from a white school, or a colored child from a colored school. Either act would be in excess of its jurisdiction. It is plain that the board did not intend to act arbitrarily or unjustly in excluding petitioner from the white school. Upon substantially undisputed facts, it determined the question as one of law simply. If mistaken in its construction of the law, its action was without authority and is subject to judicial review. American School v. McAnnulty, 187 U. S. 94-109, 47 L. ed. 90-96, 23 Sup. Ct. Rep. 33; *55Roberts v. Valentine, 13 App. D. C. 38-46, s. c. 176 U. S. 221-230, 44 L. ed. 443-446, 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 376.

Tbe learned tidal justice reviewed the action of the board, but, concurring in their interpretation of the law, dismissed the petition. His conclusion is thus clearly stated:

“That the common use of the word throughout the United States is in nowise significant of mere complexion is quite definitely established by considering the universal habit of the people in their unalterable failure to apply it to the Indian, who is red, the Mongolian, who is yellow, or to the Malay, who is brown; its application to one of these unfair complexions is not any time to be heard; to those of negro blood alone it is ever found to be suited; and then, not depending for the propriety of its application upon a shade of particular blackness, but rather upon an admixture of a particular racial blood, — the negro. Whether complexions appear distinctly black or approaching toward the fair by gradations of shading is all one; if there be physical touches, whether of shade, hair, or physiognomy telling of negro blood, such a one is held by the people to be “colored” despite his color or want of color. In confirmation of the accuracy of this conception, one need appeal to no mentor beyond the honesty of his own observations day by day.
“While there is therefore no good argument nor any other kind of a good consideration which opposes the conclusion that, no matter what the complexion, admixture of negro blood makes one ‘colored’ if it manifests itself in racial traits which identify its presence to the eye of the observer, there remains to be considered whether, if negro blood be present, mere fairness alone, of even great degree, must of necessity enact the subject ‘white.’ That gradations in shading toward black, or gradations in shading toward fairness, are of very insignificant concern in determining whether one be colored, has already been observed. The sense of sight is but one avenue for the conveyance of information upon the subject of racial identity to the mind of the investigator. Actual color seems to the public mind to be important only as one of the several evi*56dences which, if sufficiently pronounced, serve to identify the subject as of the negro race; and this consideration, that is to say, the consideration of racial status, seems to my mind to measure an ultimate conception to which the mind of the people has arrived. It is this, — putting away for the moment particular instances which might present more refined complications, — persons of whatever complexion, who bear negro blood in whatever degree, and who abide in the racial status of the negro, are ‘colored’ in the common estimation of the people.
“The child at bar has acquired no racial status personal to itself; its status, of necessity, is that of its father; his, and that of his paternal ancestors, has, as is .conceded, been always that of the negro; he himself has thus been commonly known and identified, his business to the extent proven, proprietor of a negro pool room, conforming.”

Counsel for the petitioner concede that the word “colored” must be given its common or popular signification, but contend that, in such signification, “negro physical characteristics and negro blood must combine in one to render him colored.” In aid of this contention it is to be remembered that the learned trial justice had found that “there was” to be observed of the child no physical characteristic which afforded ocular’ evidence suggestive of aught save the Caucasian.” He declined, however, to accept this delusive test of race, and based his conclusion that the petitioner is “colored” upon the fact that she has a proportion of negro blood of not more than one eighth and not less than one sixteenth. There has been a.great deal of legislation by the States relating to negroes, mulattoes, and colored persons, in v.ery little of which has there been any attempt to define the sense in which the several terms are to be understood. In some States “colored persons” are declared by the statute to be those having a certain proportion of negro blood in their veins, — in some instances one fourth; in some one eighth; in some one sixteenth; and in others any admixture.. It is unnecessary to review these several statutes or the *57decisions founded on them, as they can shed no light upon the question as here presented.

In the absence of a definition in our own statute, we are compelled to ascertain the popular meaning of the word “colored.” As early as 1820, Mr. Justice Story declared that the word had “acquired as definite a meaning as negro, mulatto, etc.,” though it was not necessary in the case before him to express more definitely what that meaning was United States v. La Coste, 2 Mason, 129-141, Fed. Cas. No. 15,548. The latest decisions in which the meaning of these terms, “negro,” “mulatto,” “octoroon,” “colored,” has been considered, are by the supreme court of the state of Louisiana. Lee v. New Orleans Great Northern R. Co. (1910) 125 La. 236, 51 So. 182; State v. Treadaway (1910) 126 La. 300, 52 So. 500.

The first case arose under the statute providing for the separation of the “white and colored races” in railway trains. The evidence showed that the father of the children was undoubtedly a white man. The mother was of mixed blood, the extent of which was not proved. It was held that the word “colored” in its popular meaning included all persons having an appreciable admixture of negro blood. The supreme court of Ohio came to the same conclusion in 1859. Van Camp v. Board of Education, 9 Ohio St. 406-413.

In the later Louisiana decision, cited above, the case was the prosecution of an octoroon — a person having one eighth or less of negro blood — for concubinage' with one of the white race, under a statute making such relation between a person of “the Caucasian or white race and one of the negro or black race” a felony. The meanings of negro, mulatto, octoroon, and colored person were exhaustively discussed. All agreed that in popular meaning a “colored person” was one who had an appreciable admixture of negro blood, but the majority of the court held that unless black, that is, of predominating negro blood, one was not of the negro or black race in the sense of the statute. The views of the majority were thus expressed by Mit Justice Frovosty: “There is a word in the *58English language which does express the meaning of a person of mixed negro and other blood, which has been coined for the very purpose of expressing 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 word ‘colored.’ The word ‘colored,’ when used to designate the race of a person, is unmistakable, at least, in the United States. It means a person of negro blood, pure or mixed; and the term applies no matter what may be the proportions of the admixture, so long as the negro blood is traceable.”

While this view accords with our own observation of the popular meaning of the word “colored,” we would not rest our conclusion upon such an uncertain foundation.

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.

We are of the opinion that the board of education correctly interpreted the statute, and that the learned justice was right in dismissing the petition.

It has been urged that a cruel hardship will be inflicted upon the petitioner by the conclusion at which we have arrived. It may be, however, that greater evils would result from a different one. Be that as it may, our province is to interpret legislation, not to enact it.

The judgment will be affirmed, with costs. ' Affirmed.