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Jacobson-v.-Massachusetts - 197-U.S.-11-1905

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Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S.

11
(1905)

Justia Opinion Summary and Annotations

Syllabus Case

U.S. Supreme Court


Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905)

Jacobson v. Massachusetts

No. 70

Argued December 6, 1904

Decided February 20, 1905

197 U.S. 11

ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT

OF THE STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS

Syllabus

The United States does not derive any of its substantive powers from the Preamble of the
Constitution. It cannot exert any power to secure the declared objects of the Constitution unless,
apart from the Preamble, such power be found in, or can properly be implied from, some express
delegation in the instrument
delegation in the instrument.

While the spirit of the Constitution is to be respected not less than its letter, the spirit is to be
collected chiefly from its words.

While the exclusion of evidence in the state court in a case involving the constitutionality of a state
statute may not strictly present a Federal question, this court may consider the rejection of such
evidence upon the ground of incompetency or immateriality under the statute as showing its scope
and meaning in the opinion of the state court.

The police power of a State embraces such reasonable regulations relating to matters completely
within its territory, and not affecting the people of other States, established directly by legislative
enactment, as will protect the public health and safety.

While a local regulation, even if based on the acknowledged police power of a State, must always
yield in case of conflict with the exercise by the General Government of any power it possesses
under the Constitution, the mode or manner of exercising its police power is wholly within the
discretion of the State so long as the Constitution of the United States is not contravened, or any
right granted or secured thereby is not infringed, or not exercised in such an arbitrary and
oppressive manner as to justify the interference of the courts to prevent wrong and oppression.

The liberty secured by the Constitution of the United States does not import an absolute right in
each person to be at all times, and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint, nor is it an
element in such liberty that one person, or a minority of persons residing in any community and
enjoying the benefits of its local government, should have power to dominate the majority when
supported in their action by the authority of the State.

It is within the police power of a State to enact a compulsory vaccination law, and it is for the
legislature, and not for the courts, to determine

Page 197 U. S. 12

in the first instance whether vaccination is or is not the best mode for the prevention of smallpox
and the protection of the public health.

There being obvious reasons for such exception, the fact that children, under certain
circumstances, are excepted from the operation of the law does not deny the equal protection of the
laws to adults if the statute is applicable equally to all adults in like condition.

The highest court of Massachusetts not having held that the compulsory vaccination law of that
State establishes the absolute rule that an adult must be vaccinated even if he is not a fit subject at
the time or that vaccination would seriously injure his health or cause his death, this court holds
that, as to an adult residing in the community, and a fit subject of vaccination, the statute is not
invalid as in derogation of any of the rights of such person under the Fourteenth Amendment.
g y g p

This case involves the validity, under the Constitution of the United States, of certain provisions in
the statutes of Massachusetts relating to vaccination.

The Revised Laws of that Commonwealth, c. 75, § 137, provide that

"the board of health of a city or town if, in its opinion, it is necessary for the public health or safety
shall require and enforce the vaccination and revaccination of all the inhabitants thereof and shall
provide them with the means of free vaccination. Whoever, being over twenty-one years of age and
not under guardianship, refuses or neglects to comply with such requirement shall forfeit five
dollars."

An exception is made in favor of "children who present a certificate, signed by a registered


physician that they are unfit subjects for vaccination." § 139.

Proceeding under the above statutes, the Board of Health of the city of Cambridge, Massachusetts,
on the twenty-seventh day of February, 1902, adopted the following regulation:

"Whereas, smallpox has been prevalent to some extent in the city of Cambridge and still continues
to increase; and whereas it is necessary for the speedy extermination of the disease that all persons
not protected by vaccination should be vaccinated, and whereas, in the opinion of the board, the
public health and safety require the vaccination or revaccination of all the inhabitants of
Cambridge; be it ordered, that

Page 197 U. S. 13

all the inhabitants of the city who have not been successfully vaccinated since March 1, 1897, be
vaccinated or revaccinated."

Subsequently, the Board adopted an additional regulation empowering a named physician to


enforce the vaccination of persons as directed by the Board at its special meeting of February 27.

The above regulations being in force, the plaintiff in error, Jacobson, was proceeded against by a
criminal complaint in one of the inferior courts of Massachusetts. The complaint charged that, on
the seventeenth day of July, 1902, the Board of Health of Cambridge, being of the opinion that it
was necessary for the public health and safety, required the vaccination and revaccination of all the
inhabitants thereof who had not been successfully vaccinated since the first day of March, 1897,
and provided them with the means of free vaccination, and that the defendant, being over twenty-
one years of age and not under guardianship, refused and neglected to comply with such
requirement.

The defendant, having been arraigned, pleaded not guilty. The government put in evidence the
above regulations adopted by the Board of Health, and made proof tending to show that its
h i i f d th d f d t th t b f i t b i t d h ld i th lt
chairman informed the defendant that, by refusing to be vaccinated, he would incur the penalty
provided by the statute, and would be prosecuted therefor; that he offered to vaccinate the
defendant without expense to him, and that the offer was declined, and defendant refused to be
vaccinated.

The prosecution having introduced no other evidence, the defendant made numerous offers of
proof. But the trial court ruled that each and all of the facts offered to be proved by the defendant
were immaterial, and excluded all proof of them.

The defendant, standing upon his offers of proof and introducing no evidence, asked numerous
instructions to the jury, among which were the following:

That section 137 of chapter 75 of the Revised Laws of Massachusetts was in derogation of the rights
secured to the defendant by the Preamble to the Constitution of the United

Page 197 U. S. 14

States, and tended to subvert and defeat the purposes of the Constitution as declared in its
Preamble;

That the section referred to was in derogation of the rights secured to the defendant by the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and especially of the clauses of
that amendment providing that no State shall make or enforce any law abridging the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the United States, nor 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; and

That said section was opposed to the spirit of the Constitution.

Each of the defendant's prayers for instructions was rejected, and he duly excepted. The defendant
requested the court, but the court refused, to instruct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty. And
the court instructed the jury, in substance, that, if they believed the evidence introduced by the
Commonwealth and were satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty of the
offense charged in the complaint, they would be warranted in finding a verdict of guilty. A verdict
of guilty was thereupon returned.

The case was then continued for the opinion of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts. That
court overruled all the defendant's exceptions, sustained the action of the trial court, and
thereafter, pursuant to the verdict of the jury, he was sentenced by the court to pay a fine of five
dollars. And the court ordered that he stand committed until the fine was paid.

Page 197 U. S. 22

MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
We pass without extended discussion the suggestion that the particular section of the statute of
Massachusetts now in question (§ 137, c. 75) is in derogation of rights secured by the Preamble of
the Constitution of the United States. Although that Preamble indicates the general purposes for
which the people ordained and established the Constitution, it has never been regarded as the
source of any substantive power conferred on the Government of the United States or on any of its
Departments. Such powers embrace only those expressly granted in the body of the Constitution
and such as may be implied from those so granted. Although, therefore, one of the declared objects
of the Constitution was to secure the blessings of liberty to all under the sovereign jurisdiction and
authority of the United States, no power can be exerted to that end by the United States unless,
apart from the Preamble, it be found in some express delegation of power or in some power to be
properly implied therefrom. 1 Story's Const. § 462.

We also pass without discussion the suggestion that the above section of the statute is opposed to
the spirit of the Constitution. Undoubtedly, as observed by Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for the
court in Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122, 17 U. S. 202,

"the spirit of an instrument, especially of a constitution, is to be respected not less than its letter,
yet the spirit is to be collected chiefly from its words."

We have no need in this case to go beyond the plain, obvious meaning of the words in those
provisions of the Constitution which, it is contended, must control our decision.

What, according to the judgment of the state court, is the

Page 197 U. S. 23

scope and effect of the statute? What results were intended to be accomplished by it? These
questions must be answered.

The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts said in the present case:

"Let us consider the offer of evidence which was made by the defendant Jacobson. The ninth of the
propositions which he offered to prove, as to what vaccination consists of, is nothing more than a
fact of common knowledge, upon which the statute is founded, and proof of it was unnecessary and
immaterial. The thirteenth and fourteenth involved matters depending upon his personal opinion,
which could not be taken as correct, or given effect, merely because he made it a ground of refusal
to comply with the requirement. Moreover, his views could not affect the validity of the statute, nor
entitle him to be excepted from its provisions. Commonwealth v. Connelly, 163 Massachusetts 539;
Commonwealth v. Has, 122 Massachusetts 40; Reynolds v. United States, 98 U. S. 145; Regina v.
Downes, 13 Cox C.C. 111. The other eleven propositions all relate to alleged injurious or dangerous
effects of vaccination. The defendant 'offered to prove and show by competent evidence' these so-
called facts. Each of them, in its nature, is such that it cannot be stated as a truth, otherwise than as
a matter of opinion. The only 'competent evidence' that could be presented to the court to prove
these propositions was the testimony of experts, giving their opinions. It would not have been
competent to introduce the medical history of individual cases. Assuming that medical experts
could have been found who would have testified in support of these propositions, and that it had
become the duty of the judge, in accordance with the law as stated in Commonwealth v. Anthes, 5
Gray 185, to instruct the jury as to whether or not the statute is constitutional, he would have been
obliged to consider the evidence in connection with facts of common knowledge, which the court
will always regard in passing upon the constitutionality of a statute. He would have considered this
testimony of experts in connection with the facts, that for nearly a century, most of the members of
the medical profession

Page 197 U. S. 24

have regarded vaccination, repeated after intervals, as a preventive of smallpox; that, while they
have recognized the possibility of injury to an individual from carelessness in the performance of it,
or even, in a conceivable case, without carelessness, they generally have considered the risk of such
an injury too small to be seriously weighed as against the benefits coming from the discreet and
proper use of the preventive, and that not only the medical profession and the people generally
have for a long time entertained these opinions, but legislatures and courts have acted upon them
with general unanimity. If the defendant had been permitted to introduce such expert testimony as
he had in support of these several propositions, it could not have changed the result. It would not
have justified the court in holding that the legislature had transcended its power in enacting this
statute on their judgment of what the welfare of the people demands."

Commonwealth v. Jacobson, 183 Massachusetts 242.

While the mere rejection of defendant's offers of proof does not strictly present a federal question,
we may properly regard the exclusion of evidence upon the ground of its incompetency or
immateriality under the statute as showing what, in the opinion of the state court, is the scope and
meaning of the statute. Taking the above observations of the state court as indicating the scope of
the statute -- and such is our duty, Leffingwell v. Warren, 2 Black 599, 67 U. S. 603, Morley v.
Lake Shore Railway Co., 146 U. S. 162, 146 U. S. 167, Tullis v. L. E. & W. R.R. Co., 175 U. S. 348, W.
W. Cargill Co. v. Minnesota, 180 U. S. 452, 180 U. S. 466 -- we assume for the purposes of the
present inquiry that its provisions require, at least as a general rule, that adults not under
guardianship and remaining within the limits of the city of Cambridge must submit to the
regulation adopted by the Board of Health. Is the statute, so construed, therefore, inconsistent with
the liberty which the Constitution of the United States secures to every person against deprivation
by the State?

The authority of the State to enact this statute is to be

Page 197 U. S. 25
referred to what is commonly called the police power -- a power which the State did not surrender
when becoming a member of the Union under the Constitution. Although this court has refrained
from any attempt to define the limits of that power, yet it has distinctly recognized the authority of
a State to enact quarantine laws and "health laws of every description;" indeed, all laws that relate
to matters completely within its territory and which do not, by their necessary operation, affect the
people of other States. According to settled principles, the police power of a State must be held to
embrace, at least, such reasonable regulations established directly by legislative enactment as will
protect the public health and the public safety. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 22 U. S. 203;
Railroad Company v. Husen, 95 U. S. 465, 95 U. S. 470; Beer Company v. Massachusetts, 97 U. S.
25; New Orleans Gas Co. v. Louisiana Light Co., 115 U. S. 650, 115 U. S. 661; Lawton v. Steele, 152
U. S. 133. It is equally true that the State may invest local bodies called into existence for purposes
of local administration with authority in some appropriate way to safeguard the public health and
the public safety. The mode or manner in which those results are to be accomplished is within the
discretion of the State, subject, of course, so far as Federal power is concerned, only to the
condition that no rule prescribed by a State, nor any regulation adopted by a local governmental
agency acting under the sanction of state legislation, shall contravene the Constitution of the
United States or infringe any right granted or secured by that instrument. A local enactment or
regulation, even if based on the acknowledged police powers of a State, must always yield in case of
conflict with the exercise by the General Government of any power it possesses under the
Constitution, or with any right which that instrument gives or secures. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat.
1, 22 U. S. 210; Sinnot v. Davenport, 22 How. 227, 63 U. S. 243; Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. Co.
v. Haber, 169 U. S. 613, 169 U. S. 626.

We come, then, to inquire whether any right given or secured by the Constitution is invaded by the
statute as interpreted

Page 197 U. S. 26

by the state court. The defendant insists that his liberty is invaded when the State subjects him to
fine or imprisonment for neglecting or refusing to submit to vaccination; that a compulsory
vaccination law is unreasonable, arbitrary and oppressive, and, therefore, hostile to the inherent
right of every freeman to care for his own body and health in such way as to him seems best, and
that the execution of such a law against one who objects to vaccination, no matter for what reason,
is nothing short of an assault upon his person. But the liberty secured by the Constitution of the
United States to every person within its jurisdiction does not import an absolute right in each
person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint. There are manifold
restraints to which every person is necessarily subject for the common good. On any other basis,
organized society could not exist with safety to its members. Society based on the rule that each one
is a law unto himself would soon be confronted with disorder and anarchy. Real liberty for all could
not exist under the operation of a principle which recognizes the right of each individual person to
h h h fh h dl f h h b
use his own, whether in respect of his person or his property, regardless of the injury that may be
done to others. This court has more than once recognized it as a fundamental principle that

"persons and property are subjected to all kinds of restraints and burdens, in order to secure the
general comfort, health, and prosperity of the State, of the perfect right of the legislature to do
which no question ever was, or upon acknowledged general principles ever can be, made so far as
natural persons are concerned."

Railroad Co. v. Husen, 95 U. S. 465, 95 U. S. 471; Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. Co. v. Haber, 169
U. S. 613, 169 U. S. 628, 169 U. S. 629; Thorpe v. Rutland & Burlington R.R., 27 Vermont 140, 148.
In Crowley v. Christensen, 137 U. S. 86, 137 U. S. 89, we said:

"The possession and enjoyment of all rights are subject to such reasonable conditions as may be
deemed by the governing authority of the country essential to the safety, health, peace, good order
and morals of the community. Even liberty

Page 197 U. S. 27

itself, the greatest of all rights, is not unrestricted license to act according to one's own will. It is
only freedom from restraint under conditions essential to the equal enjoyment of the same right by
others. It is then liberty regulated by law."

In the constitution of Massachusetts adopted in 1780, it was laid down as a fundamental principle
of the social compact that the whole people covenants with each citizen, and each citizen with the
whole people, that all shall be governed by certain laws for "the common good," and that
government is instituted

"for the common good, for the protection, safety, prosperity and happiness of the people, and not
for the profit, honor or private interests of anyone man, family or class of men."

The good and welfare of the Commonwealth, of which the legislature is primarily the judge, is the
basis on which the police power rests in Massachusetts. Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cush. 53, 84.

Applying these principles to the present case, it is to be observed that the legislature of
Massachusetts required the inhabitants of a city or town to be vaccinated only when, in the opinion
of the Board of Health, that was necessary for the public health or the public safety. The authority
to determine for all what ought to be done in such an emergency must have been lodged
somewhere or in some body, and surely it was appropriate for the legislature to refer that question,
in the first instance, to a Board of Health, composed of persons residing in the locality affected and
appointed, presumably, because of their fitness to determine such questions. To invest such a body
with authority over such matters was not an unusual nor an unreasonable or arbitrary requirement.
Upon the principle of self-defense, of paramount necessity, a community has the right to protect
itself against an epidemic of disease which threatens the safety of its members. It is to be observed
that, when the regulation in question was adopted, smallpox, according to the recitals in the
regulation adopted by the Board of Health, was prevalent to some extent in the city of Cambridge,
and the disease was increasing. If such was

Page 197 U. S. 28

the situation -- and nothing is asserted or appears in the record to the contrary -- if we are to attach
any value whatever to the knowledge which, it is safe to affirm, is common to all civilized peoples
touching smallpox and the methods most usually employed to eradicate that disease, it cannot be
adjudged that the present regulation of the Board of Health was not necessary in order to protect
the public health and secure the public safety. Smallpox being prevalent and increasing at
Cambridge, the court would usurp the functions of another branch of government if it adjudged, as
matter of law, that the mode adopted under the sanction of the State, to protect the people at large
was arbitrary and not justified by the necessities of the case. We say necessities of the case because
it might be that an acknowledged power of a local community to protect itself against an epidemic
threatening the safety of all, might be exercised in particular circumstances and in reference to
particular persons in such an arbitrary, unreasonable manner, or might go so far beyond what was
reasonably required for the safety of the public, as to authorize or compel the courts to interfere for
the protection of such persons. Wisconsin &c. R.R. Co. v. Jacobson, 179 U. S. 27, 179 U. S. 301; 1
Dillon Mun. Corp., 4th ed.,§§ 319 to 325, and authorities in notes; Freund's Police Power, § 63 et
seq. In Railroad Company v. Husen, 95 U. S. 465, 95 U. S. 471-473, this court recognized the right
of a State to pass sanitary laws, laws for the protection of life, liberty, heath or property within its
limits, laws to prevent persons and animals suffering under contagious or infectious diseases, or
convicts, from coming within its borders. But as the laws there involved went beyond the necessity
of the case and under the guise of exerting a police power invaded the domain of Federal authority,
and violated rights secured by the Constitution, this court deemed it to be its duty to hold such laws
invalid. If the mode adopted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for the protection of its local
communities against smallpox proved to be distressing, inconvenient or objectionable to some -- if
nothing more could be reasonably

Page 197 U. S. 29

affirmed of the statute in question -- the answer is that it was the duty of the constituted authorities
primarily to keep in view the welfare, comfort and safety of the many, and not permit the interests
of the many to be subordinated to the wishes or convenience of the few. There is, of course, a
sphere within which the individual may assert the supremacy of his own will and rightfully dispute
the authority of any human government, especially of any free government existing under a written
constitution, to interfere with the exercise of that will. But it is equally true that, in every well
ordered society charged with the duty of conserving the safety of its members the rights of the
individual in respect of his liberty may at times, under the pressure of great dangers, be subjected
to such restraint, to be enforced by reasonable regulations, as the safety of the general public may
demand An American citizen arriving at an American port on a vessel in which during the voyage
demand. An American citizen, arriving at an American port on a vessel in which, during the voyage,
there had been cases of yellow fever or Asiatic cholera, although apparently free from disease
himself, may yet, in some circumstances, be held in quarantine against his will on board of such
vessel or in a quarantine station until it be ascertained by inspection, conducted with due diligence,
that the danger of the spread of the disease among the community at large has disappeared. The
liberty secured by the Fourteenth Amendment, this court has said, consists, in part, in the right of a
person "to live and work where he will," Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U. S. 578, and yet he may be
compelled, by force if need be, against his will and without regard to his personal wishes or his
pecuniary interests, or even his religious or political convictions, to take his place in the ranks of
the army of his country and risk the chance of being shot down in its defense. It is not, therefore,
true that the power of the public to guard itself against imminent danger depends in every case
involving the control of one's body upon his willingness to submit to reasonable regulations
established by the constituted authorities, under the

Page 197 U. S. 30

sanction of the State, for the purpose of protecting the public collectively against such danger.

It is said, however, that the statute, as interpreted by the state court, although making an exception
in favor of children certified by a registered physician to be unfit subjects for vaccination, makes no
exception in the case of adults in like condition. But this cannot be deemed a denial of the equal
protection of the laws to adults, for the statute is applicable equally to all in like condition, and
there are obviously reasons why regulations may be appropriate for adults which could not be
safely applied to persons of tender years.

Looking at the propositions embodied in the defendant's rejected offers of proof, it is clear that they
are more formidable by their number than by their inherent value. Those offers, in the main, seem
to have had no purpose except to state the general theory of those of the medical profession who
attach little or no value to vaccination as a means of preventing the spread of smallpox, or who
think that vaccination causes other diseases of the body. What everybody knows, the court must
know, and therefore the state court judicially knew, as this court knows, that an opposite theory
accords with the common belief and is maintained by high medical authority. We must assume
that, when the statute in question was passed, the legislature of Massachusetts was not unaware of
these opposing theories, and was compelled, of necessity, to choose between them. It was not
compelled to commit a matter involving the public health and safety to the final decision of a court
or jury. It is no part of the function of a court or a jury to determine which one of two modes was
likely to be the most effective for the protection of the public against disease. That was for the
legislative department to determine in the light of all the information it had or could obtain. It
could not properly abdicate its function to guard the public health and safety. The state legislature
proceeded upon the theory which recognized vaccination as at least an effective, if not the best,
known way in which to meet and suppress the
Page 197 U. S. 31

evils of a smallpox epidemic that imperiled an entire population. Upon what sound principles as to
the relations existing between the different departments of government can the court review this
action of the legislature? If there is any such power in the judiciary to review legislative action in
respect of a matter affecting the general welfare, it can only be when that which the legislature has
done comes within the rule that,

"if a statute purporting to have been enacted to protect the public health, the public morals, or the
public safety has no real or substantial relation to those objects, or is, beyond all question, a plain,
palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law, it is the duty of the courts to so
adjudge, and thereby give effect to the Constitution."

Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623, 123 U. S. 661; Minnesota v. Barber, 136 U. S. 313, 136 U. S. 320;
Atkin v. Kansas, 191 U. S. 207, 191 U. S. 223.

Whatever may be thought of the expediency of this statute, it cannot be affirmed to be, beyond
question, in palpable conflict with the Constitution. Nor, in view of the methods employed to stamp
out the disease of smallpox, can anyone confidently assert that the means prescribed by the State to
that end has no real or substantial relation to the protection of the public health and the public
safety. Such an assertion would not be consistent with the experience of this and other countries
whose authorities have dealt with the disease of smallpox. * And the principle of vaccination as a
means to

Page 197 U. S. 32

prevent the spread of smallpox has been enforced in many States by statutes making the
vaccination of children a condition of their right to enter or remain in public schools. Blue v. Beach,
155 Indiana 121; Morris v. City of Columbus, 102

Page 197 U. S. 33

Georgia 792; State v. Hay, 126 N.Car. 999; Abeel v. Clark, 84 California 226; Bissell v. Davidson,
65 Connecticut 18; Hazen v. Strong, 2 Vermont 427; Duffield v. Williamsport School District, 162
Pa.St. 476.

Page 197 U. S. 34

The latest case upon the subject of which we are aware is Viemeister v. White, President &c.,
decided very recently by the Court of Appeals of New York, and the opinion in which has not yet
appeared in the regular reports. That case involved the validity of a statute excluding from the
public schools all children who had not been vaccinated. One contention was that the statute and
the regulation adopted in exercise of its provisions was inconsistent with the rights, privileges and
lib ti f th iti Th t ti l d th t i th thi
liberties of the citizen. The contention was overruled, the court saying, among other things:

"Smallpox is known of all to be a dangerous and contagious disease. If vaccination strongly tends to
prevent the transmission or spread of this disease, it logically follows that children may be refused
admission to the public schools until they have been vaccinated. The appellant claims that
vaccination does not tend to prevent smallpox, but tends to bring about other diseases, and that it
does much harm, with no good."

"It must be conceded that some laymen, both learned and unlearned, and some physicians of great
skill and repute, do not believe that vaccination is a preventive of smallpox. The common belief,
however, is that it has a decided tendency to prevent the spread of this fearful disease and to render
it less dangerous to those who contract it. While not accepted by all, it is accepted by the mass of
the people, as well as by most members of the medical profession. It has been general in our State
and in most civilized nations for generations. It is

Page 197 U. S. 35

generally accepted in theory and generally applied in practice, both by the voluntary action of the
people and in obedience to the command of law. Nearly every State of the Union has statutes to
encourage, or directly or indirectly to require, vaccination, and this is true of most nations of
Europe."

"A common belief, like common knowledge, does not require evidence to establish its existence, but
may be acted upon without proof by the legislature and the courts."

"The fact that the belief is not universal is not controlling, for there is scarcely any belief that is
accepted by everyone. The possibility that the belief may be wrong, and that science may yet show it
to be wrong, is not conclusive, for the legislature has the right to pass laws which, according to the
common belief of the people, are adapted to prevent the spread of contagious diseases. In a free
country, where the government is by the people, through their chosen representatives, practical
legislation admits of no other standard of action; for what the people believe is for the common
welfare must be accepted as tending to promote the common welfare, whether it does, in fact, or
not. Any other basis would conflict with the spirit of the Constitution, and would sanction measures
opposed to a republican form of government. While we do not decide and cannot decide that
vaccination is a preventive of smallpox, we take judicial notice of the fact that this is the common
belief of the people of the State, and, with this fact as a foundation, we hold that the statute in
question is a health law, enacted in a reasonable and proper exercise of the police power."

72 N.E.Rep. 97.

Since, then, vaccination, as a means of protecting a community against smallpox, finds strong
support in the experience of this and other countries, no court, much less a jury, is justified in
disregarding the action of the legislature simply because, in its or their opinion, that particular
method was -- perhaps or possibly -- not the best either for children or adults.

Did the offers of proof made by the defendant present a case which entitled him, while remaining in
Cambridge, to

Page 197 U. S. 36

claim exemption from the operation of the statute and of the regulation adopted by the Board of
Health? We have already said that his rejected offers, in the main, only set forth the theory of those
who had no faith in vaccination as a means of preventing the spread of smallpox, or who thought
that vaccination, without benefiting the public, put in peril the health of the person vaccinated. But
there were some offers which it is contended embodied distinct facts that might properly have been
considered. Let us see how this is.

The defendant offered to prove that vaccination " quite often" caused serious and permanent injury
to the health of the person vaccinated; that the operation "occasionally" resulted in death; that it
was "impossible" to tell "in any particular case" what the results of vaccination would be or whether
it would injure the health or result in death; that "quite often," one's blood is in a certain condition
of impurity when it is not prudent or safe to vaccinate him; that there is no practical test by which
to determine "with any degree of certainty" whether one's blood is in such condition of impurity as
to render vaccination necessarily unsafe or dangerous; that vaccine matter is "quite often" impure
and dangerous to be used, but whether impure or not cannot be ascertained by any known practical
test; that the defendant refused to submit to vaccination for the reason that he had, "when a child,"
been caused great and extreme suffering for a long period by a disease produced by vaccination,
and that he had witnessed a similar result of vaccination not only in the case of his son, but in the
cases of others.

These offers, in effect, invited the court and jury to go over the whole ground gone over by the
legislature when it enacted the statute in question. The legislature assumed that some children, by
reason of their condition at the time, might not be fit subjects of vaccination, and it is suggested --
and we will not say without reason -- that such is the case with some adults. But the defendant did
not offer to prove that, by reason of his then condition, he was, in fact, not a fit subject of
vaccination

Page 197 U. S. 37

at the time he was informed of the requirement of the regulation adopted by the Board of Health. It
is entirely consistent with his offer of proof that, after reaching full age, he had become, so far as
medical skill could discover, and, when informed of the regulation of the Board of Health, was, a fit
subject of vaccination, and that the vaccine matter to be used in his case was such as any medical
practitioner of good standing would regard as proper to be used. The matured opinions of medical
men everywhere, and the experience of mankind, as all must know, negative the suggestion that it
i t ibl i t d t i h th i ti i f W d f d t t df
is not possible in any case to determine whether vaccination is safe. Was defendant exempted from
the operation of the statute simply because of his dread of the same evil results experienced by him
when a child and had observed in the cases of his son and other children? Could he reasonably
claim such an exemption because, "quite often" or "occasionally," injury had resulted from
vaccination, or because it was impossible, in the opinion of some, by any practical test, to
determine with absolute certainty whether a particular person could be safely vaccinated?

It seems to the court that an affirmative answer to these questions would practically strip the
legislative department of its function to care for the public health and the public safety when
endangered by epidemics of disease. Such an answer would mean that compulsory vaccination
could not, in any conceivable case, be legally enforced in a community, even at the command of the
legislature, however widespread the epidemic of smallpox, and however deep and universal was the
belief of the community and of its medical advisers, that a system of general vaccination was vital to
the safety of all.

We are not prepared to hold that a minority, residing or remaining in any city or town where
smallpox is prevalent, and enjoying the general protection afforded by an organized local
government, may thus defy the will of its constituted authorities, acting in good faith for all, under
the legislative sanction of the State. If such be the privilege of a minority,

Page 197 U. S. 38

then a like privilege would belong to each individual of the community, and the spectacle would be
presented of the welfare and safety of an entire population being subordinated to the notions of a
single individual who chooses to remain a part of that population. We are unwilling to hold it to be
an element in the liberty secured by the Constitution of the United States that one person, or a
minority of persons, residing in any community and enjoying the benefits of its local government,
should have the power thus to dominate the majority when supported in their action by the
authority of the State. While this court should guard with firmness every right appertaining to life,
liberty or property as secured to the individual by the Supreme Law of the Land, it is of the last
importance that it should not invade the domain of local authority except when it is plainly
necessary to do so in order to enforce that law. The safety and the health of the people of
Massachusetts are, in the first instance, for that Commonwealth to guard and protect. They are
matters that do not ordinarily concern the National Government. So far as they can be reached by
any government, they depend, primarily, upon such action as the State in its wisdom may take, and
we do not perceive that this legislation has invaded any right secured by the Federal Constitution.

Before closing this opinion, we deem it appropriate, in order to prevent misapprehension as to our
views, to observe -- perhaps to repeat a thought already sufficiently expressed, namely -- that the
police power of a State, whether exercised by the legislature or by a local body acting under its
authority, may be exerted in such circumstances or by regulations so arbitrary and oppressive in
particular cases as to justify the interference of the courts to prevent wrong and oppression.
Extreme cases can be readily suggested. Ordinarily such cases are not safe guides in the
administration of the law. It is easy, for instance, to suppose the case of an adult who is embraced
by the mere words of the act, but yet to subject whom to vaccination in a particular condition of his
health

Page 197 U. S. 39

or body, would be cruel and inhuman in the last degree. We are not to be understood as holding
that the statute was intended to be applied to such a case, or, if it as so intended, that the judiciary
would not be competent to interfere and protect the health and life of the individual concerned. "All
laws," this court has said,

"should receive a sensible construction. General terms should be so limited in their application as
not to lead to injustice, oppression or absurd consequence. It will always, therefore, be presumed
that the legislature intended exceptions to its language which would avoid results of that character.
The reason of the law in such cases should prevail over its letter."

United States v. Kirby, 7 Wall. 482; Lau Ow Bew v. United States, 144 U. S. 47, 144 U. S. 58. Until
otherwise informed by the highest court of Massachusetts, we are not inclined to hold that the
statute establishes the absolute rule that an adult must be vaccinated if it be apparent or can be
shown with reasonable certainty that he is not at the time a fit subject of vaccination or that
vaccination, by reason of his then condition, would seriously impair his health or probably cause
his death. No such case is here presented. It is the case of an adult who, for aught that appears, was
himself in perfect health and a fit subject of vaccination, and yet, while remaining in the
community, refused to obey the statute and the regulation adopted in execution of its provisions for
the protection of the public health and the public safety, confessedly endangered by the presence of
a dangerous disease

We now decide only that the statute covers the present case, and that nothing clearly appears that
would justify this court in holding it to be unconstitutional and inoperative in its application to the
plaintiff in error.

The judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

It is so ordered.

MR. JUSTICE BREWER and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM dissent.

"State supported facilities for vaccination began in England in 1808 with the National Vaccine
Establishment. In 1840, vaccination fees were made payable out of the rates. The first compulsory
act was passed in 1853, the guardians of the poor being entrusted with the carrying out of the law;
h bl d f f
in 1854, the public vaccinations under one year of age were 408,825 as against an average of
180,960 for several years before. In 1867, a new Act was passed, rather to remove some technical
difficulties than to enlarge the scope of the former Act, and in 1871, the Act was passed which
compelled the boards of guardians to appoint vaccination officers. The guardians also appoint a
public vaccinator, who must be duly qualified to practice medicine and whose duty it is to vaccinate
(for a fee of one shilling and sixpence) any child resident within his district brought to him for that
purpose, to examine the same a week after, to give a certificate, and to certify to the vaccination
officer the fact of vaccination or of insusceptibility. . . . Vaccination was made compulsory in
Bavaria in 1807, and subsequently in the following countries: Denmark (1810), Sweden (1814),
Wurtemburg, Hesse, and other German states (1818), Prussia (1835), Roumania (1874), Hungary
(1876), and Servia (1881). It is compulsory by cantonal law in ten out of the twenty-two Swiss
cantons; an attempt to pass a federal compulsory law was defeated by a plebiscite in 1881. In the
following countries, there is no compulsory law, but Government facilities and compulsion on
various classes more or less directly under Government control, such as soldiers, state employes,
apprentices, school pupils, etc.: France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Norway, Austria, Turkey. . .
. Vaccination has been compulsory in South Australia since 1872, in Victoria since 1874, and in
Western Australia since 1878. In Tasmania, a compulsory Act was passed in 1882. In New South
Wales, there is no compulsion, but free facilities for vaccination. Compulsion was adopted at
Calcutta in 1880, and since then at eighty other towns of Bengal, at Madras in 1884, and at Bombay
and elsewhere in the presidency a few years earlier. Revaccination was made compulsory in
Denmark in 1871, and in Roumania in 1874; in Holland it was enacted for all school pupils in 1872.
The various laws and administrative orders which had been for many years in force as to
vaccination and revaccination in the several German states were consolidated in an imperial statute
of 1874."

24 Encyclopaedia Britannica (1894), Vaccination.

"In 1857, the British Parliament received answers from 552 physicians to questions which were
asked them in reference to the utility of vaccination, and only two of these spoke against it. Nothing
proves this utility more clearly than the statistics obtained. Especially instructive are those which
Flinzer compiled respecting the epidemic in Chemitz which prevailed in 1870-71. At this time in the
town, there were 64,255 inhabitants, of whom 53,891, or 83.87 percent., were vaccinated, 5,712, or
8.89 percent. were unvaccinated, and 4,652, or 7.24 percent., had had the smallpox before. Of
those vaccinated, 953, or 1.77 percent., became affected with smallpox, and of the uninocculated,
2,643, or 46.3 percent., had the disease. In the vaccinated, the mortality from the disease was O.73
percent., and in the unprotected it was 9.16 percent. In general, the danger of infection is six times
as great, and the mortality 68 times as great, in the unvaccinated as in the vaccinated. Statistics
derived from the civil population are in general not so instructive as those derived from armies,
where vaccination is usually more carefully performed and where statistics can be more accurately
collected. During the Franco-German war (1870-71) there was in France a widespread epidemic of
smallpox, but the German army lost during the campaign only 450 cases, or 58 men to the
p y g p g y
100,000; in the French army, however, where vaccination was not carefully carried out, the
number of deaths from smallpox was 23,400."

8 Johnson's Universal Cyclopaedia (1897), Vaccination.

"The degree of protection afforded by vaccination thus became a question of great interest. Its
extreme value was easily demonstrated by statistical researches. In England, in the last half of the
eighteenth century, out of every 1,000 deaths, 96 occurred from smallpox; in the first half of the
present century, out of every 1,000 deaths, but 35 were caused by that disease. The amount of
mortality in a country by smallpox seems to bear a fixed relation to the extent to which vaccination
is carried out. In all England and Wales, for some years previous to 1853, the proportional
mortality by smallpox was 21.9 to 1,000 deaths from causes; in London, it was but 16 to 1,000; in
Ireland, where vaccination was much less general, it was 49 to 1,000, while in Connaught it was 60
to 1,000. On the other hand, in a number of European countries where vaccination was more or
less compulsory, the proportionate number of deaths from smallpox about the same time varied
from 2 per 1,000 of causes in Bohemia, Lombardy, Venice, and Sweden, to 8.33 per 1,000 in
Saxony. Although in many instances persons who had been vaccinated were attacked with smallpox
in a more or less modified form, it was noticed that the persons so attacked had been commonly
vaccinated many years previously."

16 American Cyclopedia, Vaccination (1883).

"'Dr. Buchanan, the medical officer of the London Government Board, reported [1881] as the result
of statistics that the smallpox death rate among adult persons vaccinated was 90 to a million,
whereas, among those unvaccinated, it was 3,350 to a million; whereas among vaccinated children
under 5 years of age, 42 per million; whereas among unvaccinated children of the same age it was
5,950 per million.' Hardway's Essentials of Vaccination (1881). The same author reports that
among other conclusions reached by the Academie de Medicine of France, was one that, 'without
vaccination, hygienic measures (isolation, disinfection, etc.) are of themselves insufficient for
preservation from smallpox.'"

Ib.

"The Belgian Academy of Medicine appointed a committee to make an exhaustive examination of


the whole subject, and among the conclusions reported by them were:"

"1. Without vaccination, hygienic measures and means, whether public or private, are powerless in
preserving mankind from smallpox. . . . 3. Vaccination is always an inoffensive operation when
practiced with proper care on healthy subjects. . . . 4. It is highly desirable, in the interests of the
health and lives of our countrymen, that vaccination should be rendered compulsory."

Edwards' Vaccination (1882).


The English Royal Commission, appointed with Lord Herschell, the Lord Chancellor of England, at
its head, to inquire, among other things, as to the effect of vaccination in reducing the prevalence
of, and mortality from, smallpox, reported, after several years of investigation:

"We think that it diminishes the liability to be attacked by the disease; that it modifies the character
of the disease and renders it less fatal, of a milder and less severe type; that the protection it affords
against attacks of the disease is greatest during the years immediately succeeding the operation of
vaccination."

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