U.S. Supreme Court
LOVING v. VIRGINIA, 388 U.S. 1 (1967)
388 U.S. 1
LOVING ET UX. v. VIRGINIA.
APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF
VIRGINIA.
No. 395.
Argued April 10, 1967.
Decided June 12, 1967.
Virginia's statutory scheme to prevent
marriages between persons solely on the basis of
racial classifications held to violate the Equal
Protection and Due Process Clauses of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Pp. 4-12.
206 Va. 924, 147 S. E. 2d 78, reversed.
Bernard S. Cohen and Philip J. Hirschkop
argued the cause and filed a brief for
appellants. Mr. Hirschkop argued pro hac vice,
by special leave of Court.
R. D. McIlwaine III, Assistant Attorney
General of Virginia, argued the cause for
appellee. With him on the brief were Robert Y.
Button, Attorney General, and Kenneth C. Patty,
Assistant Attorney General.
William M. Marutani, by special leave of
Court, argued the cause for the Japanese
American Citizens League, as amicus curiae,
urging reversal.
Briefs of amici curiae, urging reversal, were
filed by William M. Lewers and William B. Ball
for the National Catholic Conference for
Interracial Justice et al.;
[388
U.S. 1, 2] by Robert L. Carter and
Andrew D. Weinberger for the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, and by Jack Greenberg, James M. Nabrit
III and Michael Meltsner for the N. A. A. C. P.
Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc.
T. W. Bruton, Attorney General, and Ralph
Moody, Deputy Attorney General, filed a brief
for the State of North Carolina, as amicus
curiae, urging affirmance.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN delivered the
opinion of the Court.
This case presents a constitutional question
never addressed by this Court: whether a
statutory scheme adopted by the State of
Virginia to prevent marriages between persons
solely on the basis of racial classifications
violates the Equal Protection and Due Process
Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
1 For reasons which
seem to us to reflect the central meaning of
those constitutional commands, we conclude that
these statutes cannot stand consistently with
the Fourteenth Amendment.
In June 1958, two residents of Virginia,
Mildred Jeter, a Negro woman, and Richard
Loving, a white man, were married in the
District of Columbia pursuant to its laws.
Shortly after their marriage, the Lovings
returned to Virginia and established their
marital abode in Caroline County. At the October
Term, 1958, of the Circuit Court
[388
U.S. 1, 3] of Caroline County, a
grand jury issued an indictment charging the
Lovings with violating Virginia's ban on
interracial marriages. On January 6, 1959, the
Lovings pleaded guilty to the charge and were
sentenced to one year in jail; however, the
trial judge suspended the sentence for a period
of 25 years on the condition that the Lovings
leave the State and not return to Virginia
together for 25 years. He stated in an opinion
that:
"Almighty God created the races white,
black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed
them on separate continents. And but for the
interference with his arrangement there
would be no cause for such marriages. The
fact that he separated the races shows that
he did not intend for the races to mix."
After their convictions, the Lovings took up
residence in the District of Columbia. On
November 6, 1963, they filed a motion in the
state trial court to vacate the judgment and set
aside the sentence on the ground that the
statutes which they had violated were repugnant
to the Fourteenth Amendment. The motion not
having been decided by October 28, 1964, the
Lovings instituted a class action in the United
States District Court for the Eastern District
of Virginia requesting that a three-judge court
be convened to declare the Virginia
antimiscegenation statutes unconstitutional and
to enjoin state officials from enforcing their
convictions. On January 22, 1965, the state
trial judge denied the motion to vacate the
sentences, and the Lovings perfected an appeal
to the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia. On
February 11, 1965, the three-judge District
Court continued the case to allow the Lovings to
present their constitutional claims to the
highest state court.
The Supreme Court of Appeals upheld the
constitutionality of the antimiscegenation
statutes and, after
[388
U.S. 1, 4] modifying the sentence,
affirmed the convictions.
2 The Lovings
appealed this decision, and we noted probable
jurisdiction on December 12, 1966,
385 U.S. 986 .
The two statutes under which appellants were
convicted and sentenced are part of a
comprehensive statutory scheme aimed at
prohibiting and punishing interracial marriages.
The Lovings were convicted of violating 20-58 of
the Virginia Code:
"Leaving State to evade law. Ÿ If any white
person and colored person shall go out of
this State, for the purpose of being
married, and with the intention of
returning, and be married out of it, and
afterwards return to and reside in it,
cohabiting as man and wife, they shall be
punished as provided in 20-59, and the
marriage shall be governed by the same law
as if it had been solemnized in this State.
The fact of their cohabitation here as man
and wife shall be evidence of their
marriage."
Section 20-59, which defines the penalty for
miscegenation, provides:
"Punishment for marriage. Ÿ If any white
person intermarry with a colored person, or
any colored person intermarry with a white
person, he shall be guilty of a felony and
shall be punished by confinement in the
penitentiary for not less than one nor more
than five years."
Other central provisions in the Virginia
statutory scheme are 20-57, which automatically
voids all marriages between "a white person and
a colored person" without any judicial
proceeding, 3 and
20-54 and 1-14 which,
[388
U.S. 1, 5] respectively, define
"white persons" and "colored persons and
Indians" for purposes of the statutory
prohibitions. 4 The
Lovings have never disputed in the course of
this litigation that Mrs. Loving is a "colored
person" or that Mr. Loving is a "white person"
within the meanings given those terms by the
Virginia statutes.
[388
U.S. 1, 6]
Virginia is now one of 16 States which
prohibit and punish marriages on the basis of
racial classifications.
5 Penalties for miscegenation arose as an
incident to slavery and have been common in
Virginia since the colonial period.
6 The present
statutory scheme dates from the adoption of the
Racial Integrity Act of 1924, passed during the
period of extreme nativism which followed the
end of the First World War. The central features
of this Act, and current Virginia law, are the
absolute prohibition of a "white person"
marrying other than another "white person,"
7 a prohibition
against issuing marriage licenses until the
issuing official is satisfied that
[388
U.S. 1, 7] the applicants'
statements as to their race are correct,
8 certificates of
"racial composition" to be kept by both local
and state registrars, 9
and the carrying forward of earlier
prohibitions against racial intermarriage.
10
I.
In upholding the constitutionality of
these provisions in the decision below, the
Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia referred to
its 1955 decision in Naim v. Naim, 197 Va. 80,
87 S. E. 2d 749, as stating the reasons
supporting the validity of these laws. In Naim,
the state court concluded that the State's
legitimate purposes were "to preserve the racial
integrity of its citizens," and to prevent "the
corruption of blood," "a mongrel breed of
citizens," and "the obliteration of racial
pride," obviously an endorsement of the doctrine
of White Supremacy. Id., at 90, 87 S. E. 2d, at
756. The court also reasoned that marriage has
traditionally been subject to state regulation
without federal intervention, and, consequently,
the regulation of marriage should be left to
exclusive state control by the Tenth Amendment.
While the state court is no doubt correct in
asserting that marriage is a social relation
subject to the State's police power, Maynard v.
Hill,
125 U.S. 190 (1888), the State does not
contend in its argument before this Court that
its powers to regulate marriage are unlimited
notwithstanding the commands of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Nor could it do so in light of Meyer
v. Nebraska,
262 U.S. 390 (1923), and Skinner v.
Oklahoma,
316 U.S. 535 (1942). Instead, the State
argues that the meaning of the Equal Protection
Clause, as illuminated by the statements of the
Framers, is only that state penal laws
containing an interracial element
[388
U.S. 1, 8] as part of the
definition of the offense must apply equally to
whites and Negroes in the sense that members of
each race are punished to the same degree. Thus,
the State contends that, because its
miscegenation statutes punish equally both the
white and the Negro participants in an
interracial marriage, these statutes, despite
their reliance on racial classifications, do not
constitute an invidious discrimination based
upon race. The second argument advanced by the
State assumes the validity of its equal
application theory. The argument is that, if the
Equal Protection Clause does not outlaw
miscegenation statutes because of their reliance
on racial classifications, the question of
constitutionality would thus become whether
there was any rational basis for a State to
treat interracial marriages differently from
other marriages. On this question, the State
argues, the scientific evidence is substantially
in doubt and, consequently, this Court should
defer to the wisdom of the state legislature in
adopting its policy of discouraging interracial
marriages.
Because we reject the notion that the mere
"equal application" of a statute containing
racial classifications is enough to remove the
classifications from the Fourteenth Amendment's
proscription of all invidious racial
discriminations, we do not accept the State's
contention that these statutes should be upheld
if there is any possible basis for concluding
that they serve a rational purpose. The mere
fact of equal application does not mean that our
analysis of these statutes should follow the
approach we have taken in cases involving no
racial discrimination where the Equal Protection
Clause has been arrayed against a statute
discriminating between the kinds of advertising
which may be displayed on trucks in New York
City, Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. New York,
336 U.S. 106 (1949), or an exemption in
Ohio's ad valorem tax for merchandise owned by a
nonresident in a storage warehouse, Allied
Stores of Ohio,
[388 U.S. 1, 9] Inc. v.
Bowers,
358 U.S. 522 (1959). In these cases,
involving distinctions not drawn according to
race, the Court has merely asked whether there
is any rational foundation for the
discriminations, and has deferred to the wisdom
of the state legislatures. In the case at bar,
however, we deal with statutes containing racial
classifications, and the fact of equal
application does not immunize the statute from
the very heavy burden of justification which the
Fourteenth Amendment has traditionally required
of state statutes drawn according to race.
The State argues that statements in the
Thirty-ninth Congress about the time of the
passage of the Fourteenth Amendment indicate
that the Framers did not intend the Amendment to
make unconstitutional state miscegenation laws.
Many of the statements alluded to by the State
concern the debates over the Freedmen's Bureau
Bill, which President Johnson vetoed, and the
Civil Rights Act of 1866, 14 Stat. 27, enacted
over his veto. While these statements have some
relevance to the intention of Congress in
submitting the Fourteenth Amendment, it must be
understood that they pertained to the passage of
specific statutes and not to the broader,
organic purpose of a constitutional amendment.
As for the various statements directly
concerning the Fourteenth Amendment, we have
said in connection with a related problem, that
although these historical sources "cast some
light" they are not sufficient to resolve the
problem; "[a]t best, they are inconclusive. The
most avid proponents of the post-War Amendments
undoubtedly intended them to remove all legal
distinctions among `all persons born or
naturalized in the United States.' Their
opponents, just as certainly, were antagonistic
to both the letter and the spirit of the
Amendments and wished them to have the most
limited effect." Brown v. Board of Education,
347 U.S. 483, 489 (1954). See also Strauder
[388 U.S. 1, 10] v. West Virginia,
100 U.S. 303, 310 (1880). We have rejected
the proposition that the debates in the
Thirty-ninth Congress or in the state
legislatures which ratified the Fourteenth
Amendment supported the theory advanced by the
State, that the requirement of equal protection
of the laws is satisfied by penal laws defining
offenses based on racial classifications so long
as white and Negro participants in the offense
were similarly punished. McLaughlin v. Florida,
379 U.S. 184 (1964).
The State finds support for its "equal
application" theory in the decision of the Court
in Pace v. Alabama,
106 U.S. 583 (1883). In that case, the Court
upheld a conviction under an Alabama statute
forbidding adultery or fornication between a
white person and a Negro which imposed a greater
penalty than that of a statute proscribing
similar conduct by members of the same race. The
Court reasoned that the statute could not be
said to discriminate against Negroes because the
punishment for each participant in the offense
was the same. However, as recently as the 1964
Term, in rejecting the reasoning of that case,
we stated "Pace represents a limited view of the
Equal Protection Clause which has not withstood
analysis in the subsequent decisions of this
Court." McLaughlin v. Florida, supra, at 188. As
we there demonstrated, the Equal Protection
Clause requires the consideration of whether the
classifications drawn by any statute constitute
an arbitrary and invidious discrimination. The
clear and central purpose of the Fourteenth
Amendment was to eliminate all official state
sources of invidious racial discrimination in
the States. Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
71 (1873); Strauder v. West Virginia,
100 U.S. 303, 307 -308 (1880); Ex parte
Virginia,
100 U.S. 339, 344 -345 (1880); Shelley v.
Kraemer,
334 U.S. 1 (1948); Burton v. Wilmington
Parking Authority,
365 U.S. 715 (1961).
[388 U.S. 1, 11]
There can be no question but that Virginia's
miscegenation statutes rest solely upon
distinctions drawn according to race. The
statutes proscribe generally accepted conduct if
engaged in by members of different races. Over
the years, this Court has consistently
repudiated "[d]istinctions between citizens
solely because of their ancestry" as being
"odious to a free people whose institutions are
founded upon the doctrine of equality."
Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U.S. 81, 100 (1943). At the very least,
the Equal Protection Clause demands that racial
classifications, especially suspect in criminal
statutes, be subjected to the "most rigid
scrutiny," Korematsu v. United States,
323 U.S. 214, 216 (1944), and, if they are
ever to be upheld, they must be shown to be
necessary to the accomplishment of some
permissible state objective, independent of the
racial discrimination which it was the object of
the Fourteenth Amendment to eliminate. Indeed,
two members of this Court have already stated
that they "cannot conceive of a valid
legislative purpose . . . which makes the color
of a person's skin the test of whether his
conduct is a criminal offense." McLaughlin v.
Florida, supra, at 198 (STEWART, J., joined by
DOUGLAS, J., concurring).
There is patently no legitimate overriding
purpose independent of invidious racial
discrimination which justifies this
classification. The fact that Virginia prohibits
only interracial marriages involving white
persons demonstrates that the racial
classifications must stand on their own
justification, as measures designed to maintain
White Supremacy. 11
We have consistently denied
[388 U.S. 1, 12] the
constitutionality of measures which restrict the
rights of citizens on account of race. There can
be no doubt that restricting the freedom to
marry solely because of racial classifications
violates the central meaning of the Equal
Protection Clause.
II.
These statutes also deprive the Lovings
of liberty without due process of law in
violation of the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. The freedom to marry has
long been recognized as one of the vital
personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit
of happiness by free men.
Marriage is one of the "basic civil rights of
man," fundamental to our very existence and
survival. Skinner v. Oklahoma,
316 U.S. 535, 541 (1942). See also Maynard
v. Hill,
125 U.S. 190 (1888). To deny this
fundamental freedom on so unsupportable a basis
as the racial classifications embodied in these
statutes, classifications so directly subversive
of the principle of equality at the heart of the
Fourteenth Amendment, is surely to deprive all
the State's citizens of liberty without due
process of law. The Fourteenth Amendment
requires that the freedom of choice to marry not
be restricted by invidious racial
discriminations. Under our Constitution, the
freedom to marry, or not marry, a person of
another race resides with the individual and
cannot be infringed by the State.
These convictions must be reversed.
Footnotes
[ Footnote 1 ]
Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides:
"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. No State shall make or enforce any
law 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 law; nor deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws."
[ Footnote 2 ]
206 Va. 924, 147 S. E. 2d 78 (1966).
[ Footnote 3 ]
Section 20-57 of the Virginia Code provides:
"Marriages void without decree. Ÿ All
marriages between a white person and a
colored person shall be absolutely void
without any decree of divorce or other legal
process." Va. Code Ann. 20-57 (1960 Repl.
Vol.).
[ Footnote 4 ]
Section 20-54 of the Virginia Code provides:
"Intermarriage prohibited; meaning of term
`white persons.' Ÿ It shall hereafter be
unlawful for any white person in this State
to marry any save a white person, or a
person with no other admixture of blood than
white and American Indian. For the purpose
of this chapter, the term `white person'
shall apply only to such person as has no
trace whatever of any blood other than
Caucasian; but persons who have
one-sixteenth or less of the blood of the
American Indian and have no other
non-Caucasic blood shall be deemed to be
white persons. All laws heretofore passed
and now in effect regarding the
intermarriage of white and colored persons
shall apply to marriages prohibited by this
chapter." Va. Code Ann. 20-54 (1960 Repl.
Vol.).
The exception for persons with less than
one-sixteenth "of the blood of the American
Indian" is apparently accounted for, in the
words of a tract issued by the Registrar of the
State Bureau of Vital Statistics, by "the desire
of all to recognize as an integral and honored
part of the white race the descendants of John
Rolfe and Pocahontas . . . ." Plecker, The New
Family and Race Improvement, 17 Va. Health
Bull., Extra No. 12, at 25-26 (New Family Series
No. 5, 1925), cited in Wadlington, The Loving
Case: Virginia's Anti-Miscegenation Statute in
Historical Perspective, 52 Va. L. Rev. 1189,
1202, n. 93 (1966).
Section 1-14 of the Virginia Code provides:
"Colored persons and Indians defined. Ÿ
Every person in whom there is ascertainable
any Negro blood shall be deemed and taken to
be a colored person, and every person not a
colored person having one fourth or more of
American Indian blood shall be deemed an
American Indian; except that members of
Indian tribes existing in this Commonwealth
having one fourth or more of Indian blood
and less than one sixteenth of Negro blood
shall be deemed tribal Indians." Va. Code
Ann. 1-14 (1960 Repl. Vol.).
[ Footnote 5 ]
After the initiation of this litigation,
Maryland repealed its prohibitions against
interracial marriage, Md. Laws 1967, c. 6,
leaving Virginia and 15 other States with
statutes outlawing interracial marriage:
Alabama, Ala. Const., Art. 4, 102, Ala. Code,
Tit. 14, 360 (1958); Arkansas, Ark. Stat. Ann.
55-104 (1947); Delaware, Del. Code Ann., Tit.
13, 101 (1953); Florida, Fla. Const., Art. 16,
24, Fla. Stat. 741.11 (1965); Georgia, Ga. Code
Ann. 53-106 (1961); Kentucky, Ky. Rev. Stat.
Ann. 402.020 (Supp. 1966); Louisiana, La. Rev.
Stat. 14:79 (1950); Mississippi, Miss. Const.,
Art. 14, 263, Miss. Code Ann. 459 (1956);
Missouri, Mo. Rev. Stat. 451.020 (Supp. 1966);
North Carolina, N.C. Const., Art. XIV, 8, N.C.
Gen. Stat. 14-181 (1953); Oklahoma, Okla. Stat.,
Tit. 43, 12 (Supp. 1965); South Carolina, S. C.
Const., Art. 3, 33, S. C. Code Ann. 20-7 (1962);
Tennessee, Tenn. Const., Art. 11, 14, Tenn. Code
Ann. 36-402 (1955); Texas, Tex. Pen. Code, Art.
492 (1952); West Virginia, W. Va. Code Ann. 4697
(1961).
Over the past 15 years, 14 States have
repealed laws outlawing interracial marriages:
Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Indiana,
Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North
Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming.
The first state court to recognize that
miscegenation statutes violate the Equal
Protection Clause was the Supreme Court of
California. Perez v. Sharp, 32 Cal. 2d 711, 198
P.2d 17 (1948).
[ Footnote 6 ]
For a historical discussion of Virginia's
miscegenation statutes, see Wadlington, supra,
n. 4.
[ Footnote 7 ]
Va. Code Ann. 20-54 (1960 Repl. Vol.).
[ Footnote 8 ]
Va. Code Ann. 20-53 (1960 Repl. Vol.).
[ Footnote 9 ]
Va. Code Ann. 20-50 (1960 Repl. Vol.).
[ Footnote 10 ]
Va. Code Ann. 20-54 (1960 Repl. Vol.).
[ Footnote 11 ]
Appellants point out that the State's concern in
these statutes, as expressed in the words of the
1924 Act's title, "An Act to Preserve Racial
Integrity," extends only to the integrity of the
white race. While Virginia prohibits whites from
marrying any nonwhite (subject to the exception
for the descendants of Pocahontas), Negroes,
Orientals, and any other racial class may
intermarry without statutory interference.
Appellants contend that this distinction renders
Virginia's miscegenation statutes arbitrary and
unreasonable even assuming the constitutional
validity of an official purpose to preserve
"racial integrity." We need not reach this
contention because we find the racial
classifications in these statutes repugnant to
the Fourteenth Amendment, even assuming an
even-handed state purpose to protect the
"integrity" of all races.
[388 U.S. 1, 13]
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, concurring.
I have previously expressed the belief that
"it is simply not possible for a state law to be
valid under our Constitution which makes the
criminality of an act depend upon the race of
the actor." McLaughlin v. Florida,
379 U.S. 184, 198 (concurring opinion).
Because I adhere to that belief, I concur in the
judgment of the Court.
[388 U.S. 1, 14] |