Judge Boyd Has
Declared Child Labor Act Unconstitutional
Washington, May 2—Officials of the department of justice
were without information of the decision of Federal Judge Boyd of Greensboro,
N.C., today declaring the child labor section of the war revenue law
unconstitutional, and could not say what the next step in the case would be. It
was stated, however, that the decision would not effect operation of the law
unless upheld by the Supreme court. As the case was bought by a government
against a cotton mill, the government having no direct part in the proceedings,
it was said that the question of an appeal would have to be decided locally at
Greensboro.
This is the second time Judge Boyd has declared the child
labor law unconstitutional.
The previous case was brought to test the Federal statute,
which denied the channel’s of interstate commerce to goods made in factories
where child labor was employed. Despite the rallying of well known
constitutional lawyers to the defense of the statute, it was held invalid by
Judge Boyd. After the supreme court upheld him, Congress wrote a provision into
the recent act, placing a privilege tax of 10 per cent on products of factories
[words omitted in story] …years of
age to any extent, or the employment for lover than 8 hours a day of children
from 14 to 16 years of age.
In making permanent an injunction granted temporarily stay
of execution of this law in the Charlotte, N.C., case here today, Judge Boyd
said that the Federal law tries to accomplish regulation of employment by
indirection under the taxing privilege in this instance as the previous law
attempted it under the interstate commerce powers. Both attempts he holds to be
invasion of the state rights.
The case was not argued at any considerable length and Judge
Boyd’s opinion will be brief. He will reduce it to writing right away, and the
case will be taken by appeal or writ of error to the Circuit Court of Appeals
or the Supreme Court of the United States and heard at an early date. The law
is contained in Title 12 of the Revenue act of 1918.
It was expected that the argument of the case would take
considerable time, but when the matter came up this morning, Judge Boyd early
indicated that he was of the opinion that the law is unconstitutional, and this
made unnecessary any extended argument. The case was brought by Eugene Johnson,
by his father, as next friend, against the Atherton Cotton Mills of Charlotte.
The plaintiff was represented by ex-Judge W.P. Bynum of this city, Julius
Parker of New York and Manley, Hendren and Womble of Winston-Salem. W.N. Wilson
of Charlotte appeared for the defendants, and District Attorney Hammer
represented the government. It will be recalled that Judge Boyd held the
Keating Child Labor Law unconstitutional, and was later sustained by the
Supreme Court of the United States.
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From The Roanoke Rapids Herald, May 2, 1919
Child Labor Tax Law
Miss Emma T. Ward, representing the child labor division of
the internal revenue department, Washington, has arrived to put in operation
the tax collecting and inspection machinery for North Carolina. The federal law
being a tax of 10 per cent on the products of all manufacturing concerns that
employ children under 14 years old for more than eight hours a day. The
machinery is understood to be modeled after the organization that was formed
for administering the federal child labor law that was declared
unconstitutional and brings to the state, it is said, a system of federal
inspection such as was proposed for the state labor department bill that the
recent legislature rejected.
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