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Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black on Corporations and Personhood


Justice Hugo Black, one of the most influential Supreme Court Justices of the 20th Century had this to say about the constutional foundation underlying the theory that corporations should be treated as persons pursuant to the constitution.  It's long, but worth it.

 

 

I do not believe the word 'person' in the Fourteenth Amendment includes corporations. 'The doctrine of stare decisis, however appropriate and even necessary at times, has only a limited application in the field of constitutional law.'  This Court has many times changed its interpretations of the Constitution when the conclusion was reached that an improper construction had been adopted.  Only recently the case of West Coast Hotel Company v. Parrish, expressly overruled a previous interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment which had long blocked state minimum wage legislation. When a statute is declared by this Court to be unconstitutional, the decision until reversed stands as a barrier against the adoption of similar legislation. A constitutional interpretation that is wrong should not stand. I believe this Court should now overrule previous decisions which interpreted the Fourteenth Amendment to include corporations.


Neither the history nor the language of the Fourteenth Amendment justifies the belief that corporations are included within its protection. The historical purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment was clearly set forth when first considered by this Court in the Slaughter House Cases, decided April, 1873-less than five years after the proclamation of its adoption. Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the Court, said:

'Among the first acts of legislation adopted by several of the States in the legislative bodies which claimed to be in their normal relaions with the Federal government, were laws which imposed upon the colored race onerous disabilities and burdens, and curtailed their rights in the pursuit of life, liberty, and property to such an extent that their freedom was of little value, while they had lost the protection which they had received from their former owners from motives both of interest and humanity. ...


'These circumstances, whatever of falsehood or misconception may have been mingled with their presentation, forced ... the conviction that something more was necessary in the way of constitutional protection to the unfortunate race who had suffered so much. (Congressional leaders) accordingly passed through Congress the proposition for the fourteenth amendment, and ... declined to treat as restored to their full participation in the government of the Union the States which had been in insurrection, until they ratified that article by a formal vote of their legislative bodies.'



Certainly, when the Fourteenth Amendment was submitted for approval, the people were not told that the states of the South were to be denied their normal relationship with the Federal Government unless they ratified an amendment granting new and revolutionary rights to corporations. This Court, when the Slaughter House Cases were decided in 1873, had apparnetly discovered no such purpose. The records of the time can be searched in vain for evidence that this amendment was adopted for the benefit of corporations. It is true that in 1882, twelve years after its adoption, and ten years after the Slaughter House Cases, supra, an argument was made in this Court that a journal of the joint Congressional Committee which framed the amendment, secret and undisclosed up to that date, indicated the committee's desire to protect corporations by the use of the word 'person.' 11 Four years later, in 1886, this Court in the case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad, decided for the first time that the word 'person' in the amendment did in some instances include corporations. A secret purpose on the part of the members of the committee, even if such be the fact, however, would not be sufficient to justify any such construction. The history of the amendment proves that the people were told that its purpose was to protect weak and helpless human beings and were not told that it was intended to remove corporations in any fashion from the control of state governments. The Fourteenth Amendment followed the freedom of a race from slavery. Jusice Swayne said in the Slaughter Houses Cases, supra, that: 'By 'any person' was meant all persons within the jurisdiction of the State. No distinction is intimated on account of race or color.' Corporations have neither race nor color. He knew the amendment was intended to protect the life, liberty, and property of human beings.

The language of the amendment itself does not support the theory that it was passed for the benefit of corporations.

The first clause of section 1 of the amendment reads: '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 wherein they reside.' Certainly a corporation cannot be naturalized and 'persons' here is not broad enough to include 'corporations.'

The first clause of the second sentence of section 1 reads: 'No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.' While efforts have been made to persuade this Court to allow corporations to claim the protection of his clause, these efforts have not been successful.


The next clause of the second sentence reads: 'Nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.' It has not been decided that this clause prohibits a state from depriving a corporation of 'life.' This Court has expressly held that 'the liberty guaranteed by the 14th Amendment against deprivation without due process of law is the liberty of natural, not artificial persons.'  Thus, the words 'life' and 'liberty' do not apply to corporations, and of course they could not have been so intended to apply. However, the decisions of this Court which the majority follow hold that corporations are included in this clause in so far as the word 'property' is concerned. In other words, this clause is construed to mean as follows:

'Nor shall any State deprive any human being of life, liberty or property without due process of law; nor shall any State deprive any corporation of property without due process of law.'

The last clause of this second sentence of section 1 reads: 'Nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal prtoection of the laws.' As used here, 'person' has been construed to include corporations.  Both Congress and the people were familiar with the meaning of the word 'corporation' at the time the Fourteenth Amendment was submitted and adopted. The judicial inclusion of the word 'corporation' in the Fourteenth Amendment has had a revolutionary effect on our form of government. The states did not adopt the amendment with knowledge of its sweeping meaning under its present construction. No section of the amendment gave notice to the people that, if adopted, it would subject every state law and municipal ordinance, affecting corporations, (and all administrative actions under them) to censorship of the United States courts. No word in all this amendment gave any hint that its adoption would deprive the states of their long-recognized power to regulate corporations.

The second section of the amendment informed the people that representatives would be apportioned among the several states 'according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed.' No citizen could gather the impression here that while the word 'persons' in the second section applied to human beings, the word 'persons' in the first section in some instances applied to corporations. Section 3 of the amendment said that 'no person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress,' (who 'engaged in insurrection'). There was no intimation here that the word 'person' in the first section in some instances included corporations.

This amendment sought to prevent discrimination by the states against classes or races. We are aware of this from words spoken in this Court within five years after its adoption, when the people and the courts were personally familiar with the historical background of the amendment. 'We doubt very much whether any action of a State not directed by way of discrimination against the negroes as a class, or on account of their race, will ever be held to come within the purview of this provision.'  Yet, of the cases in this Court in which the Fourteenth Amendment was applied during the first fifty years after its adoption, less than one-half of 1 per cent. invoked it in protection of the negro race, and more than 50 per cent. asked that its benefits be extended to corporations.


If the people of this nation wish to deprive the states of their sovereign rights to determine what is a fair and just tax upon corporations doing a purely local business within their own state boundaries, there is a way provided by the Constitution to accomplish this purpose. That way does not lie along the course of judicial amendment to that fundamental charter. An amendment having that purpose could be submitted by Congress as provided by the Constitution. I do not believe that the Fourteenth Amendment had that purpose, nor that the people believed it had that purpose, nor that it should be construed as having that purpose.

 

 


24 Comments

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At point in the early 1900's it was 108 cases brought before the Supreme Court for corporations as personhood and something like a dozen cases brought on behalf of African Americans.

The 14th amendment is a perfect example of concentrated wealth and elite oligarchy power undermining a political institution... the judicial branch. Using wealth to subvert the amendment away from its intent.

That subversion was essentially complete with campaign dollars as free speech allowing corporations and elite wealth to completely buy off Congress as we are seeing today with Wall Street and the Health care Obama "no reform".

And the greatest injustice of all... the Supreme Court's heinous violation of the constitution installing the corrupt junta regime of Bush. We will look back generations from now that the installation of the unelected junta as the day the Republic died. It has been massively down hill from there.

Thanks for bringing the 14th amendment issue to light.


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what really frosts me and exposes our STAR chamber block on the court as the authoritarian/establishment fetishists that they are is that Justice Black's reading is based on the plain text of the constitution.

robert's is currently signaling a willingness to overturn coporate campaign contributions to political candidates as a restriction on corporate free speech rights.

they don't have these rights, nor should they.

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I'm happy to see a discussion of this issue on TPM.

Strange and very sad that corporations seem to have held civil rights for longer than women have.

Does the disparity imply that the Supreme Court feels that women are somehow less deserving of personhood than are white men, but that they are also less than slaves and lastly the corporations?

What a disgusting history.

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Thank you for this post. It would be difficult to overstate the damage caused by this intentional distortion of the Fourteenth Ammendment. I believe the concept of corporate "personhood" is the single most corrosive and corruptive influence on our representative form of government. Unfortunately, in less than a month the Supreme Court is likely to expand the ability of corporations to influence the electoral and legislative processes with their money.

One interesting twist on this issue: if the corporation is a person and the corporation is owned by its shareholders, does that violate the prohibition against slavery?

Here are a couple of links for anyone interested.
The first deals with the issue of corporate personhood - www.reclaimdemocracy.org

And this one is focused on publically funded elections - www.youstreet.org

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never mind the corrosive effects of giving constitutional rights to "persons" who are, in fact, psychopaths.

i highly recommend the movie The Corporation which lays out the case that if corporations were truly people they would be dysfunctional psychopaths incapable of empathy, selfish in the extreme and self destructive.

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I really hope your post gets the attention it deserves. Thom Hartmann has written extensively on this. You might want to take a look at Corporate Personhood Challenged over at Project Censored. http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/13-corporate-personhood-challenged/

Here's one of the money paragraphs in this well researched document.

t was back in 1886 that a Supreme Court decision (Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company) ostensibly led to corporate personhood and free speech rights, thereby guaranteeing protections under the 1st and 14th amendments. However, according to Thom Hartmann, the relatively mundane court case never actually granted these personhood rights to corporations. In fact, Chief Justice Morrison Waite wrote, “We avoided meeting the Constitutional question in the decision.” Yet, when writing up the case summary -that has no legal status-the Court reporter, a former railroad president named J.C. Bancroft Davis, declared: “The defendant Corporations are persons within the intent of the clause in section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which forbids a state to deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” But the Court had made no such legal determination. It was the clerk’s opinion and misrepresentation of the case in the headnote upon which current claims of corporate personhood and free speech entitlements now rests.
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That's the case that Scalia put his hand on and stated: "This case establishes the precedent for corporate personhood"(paraphrase).
I've long believed that either he did not read the case and lied by suggesting he had, or he did read the case and lied by misrepresenting it.

rec'd and thanks for bringing it up again at a pertinent point in time.

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It was a game-changer all right.
The other biggie was "Money is Speech."


Arrrrrrggggggghhhhhhhh!

p.s. I started typing some almost-fictional ones; but they were all crude, even if true...

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Another interesting (and infuriating) twist is where does the money come from. The corporation is owned by shareholders, so who is contributing to our candidates and legislators? Foreign nationals? Foreign governments?

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Thanks, "no exit", for posting this very interesting passage from Justice Black.

I have posted on several threads here at TPM that I beleive the only path to getting the health care reform most progressives want will be to eliminate corporate money from the political process.

We must work to repeal these notions that corporations are persons, and that money equals speech.

I'll check out the links posted by TJ (thanks).

-- ARG

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Well done! This is one of my greatest irritations with our current lopsided "system"!

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It makes sense to recognize constitutional rights of corporations in cases in which doing so protects the constitutional rights of the shareholders of the corporation. Rather than having the shareholders individually or collectively challenge unconstitutional deprivations of property, the fiction that a corporation is a "person" allows the corporation to represent the shareholders.

But can a corporation assert the 1st Amendment rights of its shareholders?

In the commercial context, that would be workable. Commercial speech can be regulated more than political speech without violating the 1st Amendment, but there is still a constitutional right of commercial speech and it is appropriate to let the corporation represent the economic rights of its shareholders when an unconstitutional restriction on commercial speech would adversely affect the corporation and its shareholders.

But should a corporation be able to assert 1st Amendment rights to political speech? I think it should depend on the purpose for which the corporation was formed.

The 1st Amendment guarantees not only a right of free speech but a right to "peaceable assemble," which has been interpreted as a right to freely associate for political or other purposes. So if a group of people have a political goal, and they assemble and form a corporation for the purpose of carrying out that goal, one would think that the corporation would have a right of free speech in order to carry out the right of the people to assemble and associate and express their views. So, for example, if a corporation is formed for the purpose of supporting a particular candidate for office, and it collects contributions for that purpose, and spends money for that purpose, one can see how that activity might be protected by the 1st Amendment.

But a commercial corporation organized for profit has shareholders with different political views and should not be able to use the collective economic power of all of the shareholders to support the political views of the management.

And this kind of distinction is actually made in the statute that is now before the Supreme Court in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, because section 203 of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (P.L. 107–155), 2 U.S.C. 441b(c), distinguishes between electioneering by political organizations and by business organizations or funds earned or contributed by business operations.

As far as I have read, that distinction, and the constitutionality or validity of that distinction, is not at issue in the Citizens United Case.

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"It makes sense to recognize constitutional rights of corporations in cases in which doing so protects the constitutional rights of the shareholders of the corporation."

I disagree. Let the shareholders sue if they think government regulation is infringing on their constitutional rights. We have shareholder derivative suits all the time.

We can reinvogorate the taking clause if necessary, but, there is no sound reason for granting first amendment rights.

if people want to form corporations under a right to peacably assemble, that's fine, but i would argue that particular forum is subject to reasonable manner of restriction. Insurance companies have not been formed for the purposes of political speech and thus have no use for it. to further refine it, we could forbid the formation of corporations with mixed political advocacy and business goals.

as for the citizens case, there was a late minute delay in the court's decision and CJ Roberts has asked that additional briefs be submitted on the issue of whether or not the court should over rule prior precedent that upheld limits on corporate campaign contributions to candidates.


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I believe your first sentence is a fallacy. Constitutional rights are reserved for human beings, We the People. Corporations and other associations may have privileges granted by We the People. But they should not have inherent rights, regarless of the purpose for which they are formed.

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It is an awful thing to consider that the 14th amendment has been distorted in this way. Instead of addressing issues of inequality for minorities it has had the opposite effect of enslaving the entire country.

I've long argued on these pages that corporations aren't citizens and until this is changed citizens will remain at risk.

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I love this. I would have thought everyone had forgotten one of the most important justices who ever lived.

We are not that surprised anymore, really. The last twenty years or so anyway.

Take an ex-Klanner, and he becomes a champion of civil rights.

Justice Blackmun just startled the entire country once he began writing his opinions.

Will the four fascists ever change? NO Roberts, Alito, Thomas and TonyS will surprise no one.

Oh and CORPORATIONS ARE NOT PEOPLE, THEY ARE ANTI PEOPLE

THE END

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I have to tell you my funniest Justice Black story. At least I think it is funny--It dates back to Graduate School Days in Cleveland Ohio in the late 60s and early 70s. I was working for an organization called The Greater Cleveland Research Council--a consortium of school districts which joined together to reform curriculum. They were responsive for New Math (So simple, so very simple, that only a child can do it--Tom Lehrer) and for a social science program I worked upon--I could tell some fun stories about that, too.

ANYHOW--our series was published by Allyn and Bacon, and this was the time when publishers were becoming language sensitive--language indicating gender was disappearing--letter carriers instead of postmen, that sort of thing. Language refering to "persons of color" was changing, too. I have to use that euphemism or I'll ruin the punchline to the story I'm taking an intolerably long time to set up.

Cleveland had two newspapers, The Plain Dealer was the morning paper (more liberal) and the Cleveland Press was the evening paper (way more conservative). What ever the Press did the Plain Dealer did the opposite. The Plain Dealer style sheet changed so that African-Americans were no longer to be called Negroes...they were to be called Blacks. The Press, of course, did just the opposite.

Then the good Justice died in 1971. The Cleveland Plain Dealer dutifully reported the passing of Justice Hugo Black. The Cleveland Press dutifully reported the passing of Justice Hugo Negro--for one very short press run only. I expect there are a few of these still around as collectors items.

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hahahahahahahahaha. Ten years earlier than his death, he might have chuckled at that Professor. I actually got to shake hands with Douglas before and after his stroke.

Of course the latter years for Black were hard because he had gone quite mad actually.

Those two men shook up this country like no other members of our judiciary. Hugo carried his tattered copy of the Constitution in his back pocket of course.

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I'd like to shake the hand that shook the hand of Hugo Black.

I shook the hand of Hubie Humphrey when I was in high school He came to speak to us in assembly. The administration was soooooo worried that we might be impolite to him that we got a lecture about being polite to guests whether or not we liked their politics. I should say that the school was overwhelmingly republican in an age when republican meant one liked Ike.

Anyhow. Within ten minutes Hubert Humphrey had all of us in his pocket, and when he finished speaking he got a standing O from all of use, clapping, screaming, shouting. All that was missing was a call to hit the sawdust trail to the river Jordan (actually the Mississippi River ran by the campus) and Believer's Baptism into the Democratic Party. There was a person who knew how to speechify.

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While ethically I agree with you, and in a sane world one would not think that a corporation is a person, stare decisis NOW has created an entire legal framework for the fictive person of the corporation.

States - not the US government - determines the requirements of incorporation. Therefore states (if they would act in concert) could pull the teeth of corporations. On the other hand, federal legislation could roll back the corporate clock (though there would likely be decades of law suits).

Personally, I think corporations should be highly limited, and that they should not be mandated (as they are now) to make a profit before all else.

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I assume stare dicisis refers decisions that have reaffirmed the original decision. Isn't there some principle in law about fruit of a poisoned tree...?

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I believe (and I am NOT a lawyer) that stare decisis refers to legal decisions that have been previously made. It is related (I think) to the use of precedent (findings in earlier cases) to build and extend current cases. Fruit of the poisoned tree - if I understand it - has to do with evidence and not with court decisions.

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You are correct of course Rowan. You ended up in my house without a proper warrant or probable cause and you find my jar of maryjane. the MJ is not admissible. Fruit of the poison tree.

Stare Decisis: To stand by the decision. Simple Latin.

In other words, stick to the old decisions. However, what is an older decision.

Renquist went on record as saying that Roe v. wade should not be over turned because it was the law of the land....

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OK, I think I understand. Stare decisis means that the original decision, which was not actually part of the decision but was part of the clerk's notes, has been used as precedent in deciding cases that followed. Yes?

So using Scalialogic, just because a mistake was made 120 years ago, the Court has applied that precedent enough times that it is now the law of the land? Surely to God there is the "fruit of something" that could be used to argue or invalidate this distortion of the Fourteenth Ammendment.

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