The Slaughterhouse Cases

The Slaughterhouse Cases
Author: Ronald M. Labbé
Publisher:
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

"The rough-and-tumble world of nineteenth-century New Orleans was a sanitation nightmare, with the city's slaughterhouses dumping animal remains into local backwaters. When Louisiana authorized a monopoly slaughterhouse to bring about sanitation reform, hundreds of independent butchers sued, framing their cases as an infringement of rights protected by the recently passed Fourteenth Amendment. The surviving cases that reached the U.S. Supreme Court pitted the butchers' right to labor against the state's "police power" to regulate public health. The result in 1873 was a controversial 5-4 decision that for the first time addressed the meaning and import of the Fourteenth Amendment. While ruling that Louisiana had legitimately exercised its powers, the Court's majority went much further to declare that the amendment - and its "due process" and "equal protection" clauses - applied exclusively to the plight of former slaves and, thus, were unavailable to any other American."--BOOK JACKET.

United States Reports

United States Reports
Author: United States. Supreme Court
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1436
Release: 2006
Genre: Law reports, digests, etc
ISBN: