Cully v. Baltimore & O. R. Co.

6 F. Cas. 946, 1 Hughes 536
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 946 (Cully v. Baltimore & O. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cully v. Baltimore & O. R. Co., 6 F. Cas. 946, 1 Hughes 536 (D. Md. 1876).

Opinion

GILES, District Judge.

The case of Cully v. Baltimore & O. R. Co. is one of considerable importance, and the interest taken in it by a large class of our fellow-citizens induced me to do what I very seldom do—postpone the decision from yesterday until such time as I could carefully review the authorities bearing upon the subject. This I had an opportunity of doing last. night, and I will now announce the conclusion at which I have arrived:

Allusion has been made by the learned district attorney to two previous decisions of this tribunal. I will remark that a case similar to the one now being tried was never at any previous time before this court. The cases to which the learned district attorney alluded, were those of Thompson v. Baltimore City Pass. R. Co. [Case No. 13,941], and Field v. Baltimore City Pass. R. Co. [Id. 4,763], in both of which cases recovery was had. In the Case of Thompson it was an action brought by a citizen of Virginia against the City Passenger Railroad Company for ejecting him from one of its street cars, upon the ground that he was a colored party, and had no right to ride inside of the car. I held in that case that since the colored race was made citizens of the United States by the first section of the fourteenth amendment, any discrimination of that kind made by any public conveyance against them, gave them a right of action for such damages as they may have suffered. That case was brought in this court, and its juris[947]*947diction sustained, because while the plaintiff was a citizen of Virginia, the company was a company incorporated by the state of Maryland. and I should so hold again. The case of Field v. Baltimore City Pass. B. Co. was a similar case. It was the case of a colored person, a citizen of New Jersey, who had been denied the right to ride in the City Passenger Bailway cars. He brought his aciion against the passenger railroad company and recovered. I held the jurisdiction to be perfectly clear, that no carrier of passengers, no public conveyance, after the colored people were made citizens of the United States, ■could deny them the privilege which other passengers received. Those are the only two cases of that character that have ever come before me.

There were two cases with regard to the fifteenth amendment, or right of suffrage. The case of U. S. v. Mason [Case No. 15,734), from Kent county, and U. S. v. Schumenant [Id. 16,236], in Anne Arundel county. I held in those cases that while the right of suffrage had not been granted by the fifteenth amendment, yet there had been granted a right not to be discriminated against, and the learned pleader of this court, with his usual caution, had embraced in these indictments the fact that they were rejected because they were colored people, and on account of their race, color, and previous condition of servitude, and I held, therefore, that while the congress could not give the right of suffrage they could protect it I held, although the section looked to* hostile legislation by the states, yet that under the last clause of the section, which gave them the right to enforce it by appropriate legislation, while they could not act criminally upon the state, they could punish those persons who denied to them the right to be protected against discrimination, the article in the constitution of the United States guaranteeing protection to the citizens in that regard. In that view I think I am sustained by the late decisions on that point. I merely allude to this, as my friend, the learned district attorney, alluded to the decisions of this tribunal in former cases. The question presented in the present case is a very different one. you will now observe the reason why I inquired of the district attorney, before the argument proceeded, upon what article of the constitution of the United States he founded the right to ride in cars engaged in the local travel of the state. You will observe the point of that question and its pertinency. Now what does it say? “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state where they reside.” That makes them citizens. They are all citizens entitled to every right, which a white citizen has in the states, and entitled to all rights which citizens of the United States possess in each. “No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.” Now the supreme court has held — -and these decisions have all been since I decided the cases to which I have referred — in the case of U. S. v. Reese [92 U. S. 214), and the Slaughterhouse Cases [16 Wall. (83 U. S.) 36; 10 Wall. (77 U. S.) 273; 111 U. S. 746, 4 Sup. Ct. 652], that this article of the constitution only protected such rights as belonged to a citizen of the United States. We all know the history of the Slaughterhouse Cases. There the legislature had undertaken to provide an abattoir, covering all the city, and saying no hogs, and no cattle, etc., should be slaughtered in any other place than within this in-elosure, and that every butcher should carry his animals there to be slaughtered. The parties, who were butchers in New Orleans, thought this was an infringement, and that they were protected. They thought, as no doubt the pleader in this case thought, that all rights of a citizen were protected under this article of the constitution, and suits were brought to test the validity of this act.

The supreme court (and that was a case that came up under this very section) held there that the first clause of the fourteenth article was primarily intended to confer citizenship on all persons born- or naturalized in the United States, and to declare them citizens of the United States, and citizens of the state wherein they resided, and it recognized the distinction between citizens of a state and citizens of the United States. The second clause, and the one we are dealing with here, protects from the hostile legislation of the states the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States as distinguished from the privileges and immunities of citizens of the states, and they go on therefore to declare in that decision that the law of Louisiana in regard to the Slaughterhouse Case was no violation of the fourteenth amendment, and the party there had no protection under it; that for all privileges and immunities guaranteed to a citizen by the laws of his state, he must look to the state and her tribunals for protection and for redress, but for immunities and privileges which belong to him as a citizen of the United States, as such, this article protected him. and he could seek his recovery in the courts of the United States. And the court in its opinion (and it is a very able opinion) say, “It may be asked what, if any, are the rights of citizens of the United States as such?” The court enumerated a great many. The right to travel to the national capital on business of the government, the right to proceed to a port of the United States for foreign travel, and many others of a similar character, are rights which belonged to a citizen of the United States, from the organization of the government, and from its inception, independent of any special legislation, and it is only such rights that this article intended to protect. I need not go through with all the cases. It is carried out [948]*948in the cases of U. S. v. Reese [supra], and U. S. v. Cruikshank [92 U. S. 542

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 946, 1 Hughes 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cully-v-baltimore-o-r-co-mdd-1876.