Everything about In Re Debs totally explained
In re Debs,
158 U.S. 564 (
1895), was a
United States Supreme Court decision handed down concerning
Eugene V. Debs and
labor unions. Debs, president of the
American Railroad Union, was involved in the
Pullman Strike earlier in 1894 and challenged the federal
injunction ordering the strikers back to work where they'd face being fired. The injunction had been issued because of the violent nature of the strike. However, Debs refused to end the strike and was subsequently cited for
contempt of court; he appealed the decision to the courts.
The main question being debated was whether the
federal government had a right to issue the injunction, which dealt with both
interstate and intrastate commerce and shipping on
rail cars. With an opinion written by
Justice David Josiah Brewer, the court ruled in a unanimous decision in favor of the U.S. government. Joined by
Chief Justice Melville Fuller and
Associate Justices Stephen Johnson Field,
John Marshall Harlan,
Horace Gray,
Henry Billings Brown,
George Shiras, Jr.,
Howell Edmunds Jackson, and
Edward Douglass White, the court ruled that the government had a right to regulate interstate commerce and ensure the operations of the Postal Service, along with a responsibility to "ensure the general welfare of the public."
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