The Switch in Time That Saved Nine | West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish
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- Опубликовано: 14 мар 2024
- In episode 78 of Supreme Court Briefs, a housekeeper sues the hotel she works at after it doesn't pay her a minimum wage.
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West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish was a big freaking deal because it effectively ended the Lochner Era, a period in which the Court, more often than not, struck down economic regulations and restrictions on businesses in the name of protecting contracts. President Roosevelt was certainly happy about the decision. In fact, 15 months later he’d sign the Fair Labor Standards Act.
It was, you could say, The Switch in Time That Saved Nine
Hey guess what? I wrote a book about the Supreme Court: amzn.to/3PopztY
Which Supreme Court case should I cover for this series next?
Can you look at the overturning of Roe v wade?
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States, and Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins are all good choices for the next video in my opinion!
Island Trees School District v. Pico should be covered as I think it is more relevant than before in our landscape
Here's my suggestion: 💦✌🧑🎨
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Would be lovely cause as an Australian that is very interested in that case, in particular 😉 awesome videos as always 😀
Tbh this is one of my favorite series on this channel. Learning about SCOTUS cases has taught me a lot about constitutional law and I find it fascinating. Thank you Mr. Beat!
I've learned a lot making them as well. :) Thanks for the kind comment!
Yeah, I really wish there was an equivalent for other countries like Canada.
Same
for those who don't know, the phrase "the switch in time that saved nine" is a clever play on "a stitch in time saves nine", an idiom saying that preventive maintenance is more efficient than fixing things after they become an issue. I was the (probably) rare kid who learned about this case and thus heard the pun first, and was terribly confused.
Nah I also heard of the case before the idiom.
I love Supreme Court Briefs!
Woah thank you!
Same bruh
Thank you Mr. Beat
Me too. Please keep it up Mr. Beat, we love your videos!
Well, this was truly something. The establishment of the minimum wage.
Something we often take for granted!
@@iammrbeat and it was increased by .05 the following year, and within 12 years it tripled. Sometimes you have to look past just the passage of a law and look at why he was able to get it passed, and then take a look at the effect it has down the line. There's a bit missing here - your information is accurate, but a deeper dive into context (e.g. the public actually became a bit trepidatious when FDR started talking about adding 5-6 judges onto the court in his speeches. Also, his attempts to purge members of congress that worked so well after his first term, failed after his 2nd) would be a good thing. (Forget about the fact that there had been decades of bloody, murderous labor vs capital/employer conflict that led up to the NLRB, FLSA, and The Wagner Act, which after WWII the business class took great pains in dismantling as much as they possibly could).
Additionally, the thing I never hear from anyone anymore re: FDR, and his magnum opus, which exists in plain sight, but no one sees any longer, is the very fact that HE. SAVED. CAPITALISM!!! HE..SAVED....HIS....OWN....CLASS!!! from completely losing an economic system that advantaged them (the ruling class), which if judged by the allocation, organization, and distribution of goods, resources, and services, was nothing less than a total catastrophic failure by the time he became President in 1933. The Communists (our own Communists) inside the US were armed and ready for overthrow. FDR brought their missive to the wealth barons of the day to get them to agree to a 63% business tax rate at the top of the revenue scale. That was what FDR came into then.
I wonder, at times, if saving our market economy was ultimately a good thing, but it doesn't exist anymore without him and his improvisations (make no mistake, that's what they were) that comprised what became the New Deal. So, a bit of a more sincere treatment is justified, I believe, when you educate folks about the mendacious, horny paraplegic.
Unfortunately we still have a minimum wage in the United States.
@@jeffslote9671 amen
@@jeffslote9671 do you just want people to be poor?
Ah, the switch that resulted in the Four Horsemen in dissent on a regular basis after this. The Three Musketeers would've been certainly pleased.
Three beat Four :)
I’m imagining McReynolds giving Roberts the same cold shoulder he gave Brandeis and Cardozo.
Also, how long after this until Cardozo died? He had a pretty short career in the Court.
@@DiamondKingStudios I think Cardozo died in July 1938 at the age of 68. He was on the court just over six years from March 1932- 1938.
So in other words, this was a supreme court case that mattered not necessarily because of the plaintiff and defendant, but to protect the integrity of the supreme court?
Both, but more so the latter. We learn about this case in APUSH primarily, for example, because it shows how the Supreme Court is indeed often shifting with the political winds.
@@iammrbeatI never heard this case brought up in my APUSH class but studied it in my spare time.
Guess it’s different here in Catholic school Georgia, or my teacher just had slightly different priorities for what to cover (probably more likely the latter when it comes to the particular school I went to).
Thank you, i cannot find a video about this case thats not super boring.
haha that is my prerogative...to make SCOTUS unboringed
I was half-expecting a Lochner idea leaning result, so learning that this was specifically the case that represented a shift away from that was neat!
An idea that is interesting is that to preserve the insulation of the court from political pressures, Justice Roberts chose to be influenced by those very same politics in a different way (almost certainly for the better, though, I can't imagine politics being any better with 99+ justices in the Supreme Court in a worst case scenario where the precedent runs wild).
Yeah it has been almost predictable how Roberts has gone from being a right-leaning justice to moderate-leaning justice over the past 20 years.
Wickard v filburn would be another interesting new deal case to cover
A case that has intrigued me is the 1995 case of Arizona v Evans. It deals with a quashed warrant and the Exclusionary rule.
Thanks for the suggestion!
Always great to see a landmark case covered concisely. I wonder, if you have not done so in your other vids, if you might cover the dissents as well. At least those which are important and may have been used as persuasive authority in future opinions.
Yeah, I typically only cover dissents if it's a 5-4 decision. The goal is for these to be concise enough to fit into a high school lesson. :)
What’s interesting is that the minimum wage was just $5.50 in todays money in those days yet fewer lived paycheck to paycheck just 10 years later than with $7.25+ minimum wages today.
Yeah because we were fighting a war and going to war is good for the economy.
@@ethanbarnes7163only as long as you win, the war isn’t fought in your country, and your allies can rebuild.
Yooo another Mr. Beat video this gonna be 🔥
Edit: It was :D
I hope so 🔥
I'm not familiar enough with Supreme Court cases to recommend one, but I am always happy to see another episode in this series. This was a nice helping of brain food.
I finished your book on Supreme Court cases last week, I throughly enjoyed it! Thank you!
Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker! PLEASE!
Right on
Court definitely made the right decision here
Yeah...it holds up pretty well
Thanks for posting my favorite series on your channel:) I learned so much about the Supreme Court from here and I like how objective it is 👍
I appreciate the support!
And today the Federal minimim wage is $7.25, which is $0.33 in 1938 dollars.
True facts
It’s still to high. We shouldn’t have one
@@jeffslote9671why
@@jeffslote9671why
@@jeffslote9671
Why do you say that there should not be a minimum wage? Would you prefer no wage at all (i.e. slavery)?
Keep it up Mr Beat! I love these videos!
Well thank you!
I love your videos! I took Con Law in college and it's always been something really interesting to me, so it's been fun going through your videos and relearning cases or learning about new cases. Keep it up.
Thank you so much, Mr. Beat! This has been a long time coming and I am so thrilled to see you tackle this historic case in the Briefs. I can't wait for the next episode!
Thanks :)
Favorite series from Mr. Beat!
Keep these up sir!
Bought your supreme Court case book because I loved this series so much!
I'd be interested in watching a video on West v. Barnes, aka the very first supreme court case
I second this
Is it even interesting?
@@OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions Maybe, but it would be, in my opinion, a very good addition given it is the first ever supreme court case.
1932 was when my great grandmother was born, she sadly passed away two years ago :(
That's also when my grandpa was born!
Twelve, unlike nine, is an even number. I wonder if FDR realized this so he could become the tie-breaker. 🤔
He wanted a maximum of six additional justices, so it could have been 15
@@iammrbeat Interesting, trying to pack the Supreme Court was a pyrrhic effort. He didn't even have to add more seats, he got his way by simply being president for more than twelve years.
My favorite historical series is back 🎉🎉🎉🎉
Supreme Court Briefs is my favorite series on youtube.
im using your videos to help me with some quizbowl/nerd club questions about SCOTUS rulings in school and they've been extremely helpful! i've been a big fan of your channel for a long time, can you consider doing some more cases that were instrumental in setting up the courts power in the early years? thanks for the great content :)
4:44-4:51....Sure glad that's a thing of the past 😂
oh snapp
You should do a video on the sister case to this one NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel. It basically gave us the powerful federal government we have today
I love these!
Glad you dig 'em. :)
Huh, i literally just subed and he just posted interesting, love the content btw.
Well thanks for subscribing!
There are big problems here.
1. The Supreme Court upheld most regulations on business in the Lochner era. At most 20% of cases that made it to the Supreme Court saw the regulation struck down.
2. Owen Roberts already changed his views in a 1934 case called Nebbia v. New York. He had been ready to overturn Adkins in a 1935 case called Tipaldo, but the challenger to a similar law didn't ask for the Court to overturn Adkins. In West Coast Hotel the challenger requested it, and so it was done.
What do you mean asking for an overturn?
These videos are some of your best! Short, concise, unbiased, and digestible
Morrison v. Olson would be a good one to cover in the future!
Yay, another Supreme Court Briefs.
Love the series! 🎉
Wow, I’m from the Wenatchee area and had no idea how influential that hotel is!
Good video. Glad you're going into the Lochner era pre New Deal cases because some of them are fascinating. Some suggestions for future SCOUS briefs are Pierce v Society of Sisters which is right to send children to private school. Could partner it with Meyer v Nebraska which is about a right to learn in foreign languages. Other cases that may be of interest from that era involve Kansas economic regulation and some Kansas history. So Coppage v Kansas which was a case about a ban on yellow dog contracts, Wolff Packing Co v Court of Industrial Relations struck down compulsory bargaining laws. Dorchy v Kansas was a companion to Wolff.
Thanks for the kind words and suggestions!
Meyer v. Nebraska is more about parental rights to rear children as one desires vs. how the state wants to educate its residents.
Yes, it began with Nebraska making English solely official at all levels of government and how that affected the teaching of other languages outside government-run school facilities, but the justices explained that the state really just took away the choice of a parent to educate their child as they wished.
However, it's a pretty interesting case as it was one of the first times the 14th Amendment was ever used to safeguard civil liberties.
Kudos on pronouncing Wenatchee correctly! When I was in the army, I had mentioned this case to a platoon mate. Long story short, the gist was that I was proud to be from a town that had influenced law in this way. I still remember his reply. "Oh, I'm from Pennsylvania." Hmm, well point taken. :)
What great timing, my college class will be going over this case on Monday!
Heck yeah! That works out. :)
I think that McCleskey vs Kemp is an interesting case to look at
so glad you're close to a million subs, only 37k away!!!!
$5.50 an hour would be a terrible minimum wage now, but it was a huge upgrade over nothing.
that was in now money tho.
Awesome video.
It also had to do with the fact that the original legislation in FDR's first 100 days was written quickly, haphazardly. Well meaning but poorly written. It was done at a break neck pace to tackle the Great Depression.
It took a couple of years to make it's way to the SCOTUS where it was overturned.
Congress then created legislation to replace it which was more carefully written to stand up to SCOTUS scrutiny with the SCOTUS decisions taken into account.
A couple more years it made its way back... The new legislation wasn't enough to change the minds of the Four Horseman but it did sway Justice Roberts and Chief Justice Hughes.
And remember this court in twice overturned the convictions of the Scottsboro Boys (Powell v. Alabama and Norris v. Alabama). In Brown v. Mississippi they unanimously overturned murder convictions where the dirt-poor black defendants had ther confessions tortured out of them. And in Near v. Minnesota they ruled against prior restraint by the government.
Very good points. Thanks for adding this much-needed context and nuance.
Great video.
Very nice one. I'd still like to see Conn. vs. Teal though.
NEW MR. BEAT
Washington State, unlike most states, as far as I'm aware, ties it's minimum wage with the rate of inflation, so that it rises with inflation, rather than remaining static for decades by politicians, so businesses can plan accordingly around it. In other words, the value of the Federal Minimum Wage over time gets dragged down by inflation and the fact that it takes an Act of Congress to raise the Federal Minimum Wage means that it seems to be like many aspects of the US Congress, deadlocked (Democrats want to increase it, Republicans want it to stay the same)*
*: this is probably oversimplified, but based on a video I've seen about the Federal Minimum Wage by Vox, that's what I've heard, I don't want to pretend to be an economic expert
Dang, your knowledge on American law is impressive
However, if one goes off economics, not politics, the minimum wage is a detriment.
@@tomhalla426 based on what economics? Basically every country in the world has a minimum wage.
Most set one with the central government, others have state/provincial/canton governments establish their own. The few countries that don't have an official government min wage have highly regulated/pro labor rights economies with overwhelmingly unionized workforces that collectively negotiate min wages for specific industries. For example, Norway has no minimum wage but the construction unions have created an industry wide minimum wage around 215 NOK or $20 USD, same with restaurant unions that set theirs at 190 NOK or $18 USD.
I'd imagine if minimum wages were so detrimental to the economy that virtually every country on the planet wouldn't allow them to exist regardless of the mechanism they are achieved.
@@drago2689 Going off the Austrian school. Socialism is a common vice. The actual “minimum wage” is not being hired in the first place.
@@tomhalla426 so every country in the world is socialist because they have a minimum wage?
Anything of use that Austrian school of thought provided has already been incorporated into modern economies and exhausted. Ever since Hayek's contributions on price as information, Austrian thought has been completely irrelevant to contributing towards contemporary economic best practices.
In other words the Austrian school of thought is by no means a credible framework to critique modern practices given how dated many of their concepts are now. In fact I believe Hayek himself argued for a minimum income.
The minor little problem for liberals is that Lochner was based on the same rationale as Roe v Wade, Substantive Due Process. A rather selective view of when that principle is valid.
Didn't one of the justices bring this up?
@@iammrbeat It may have been in the majority opinion in Dobbs. I only read that once, and it sorta merges with commentary on the case.
Hi Mr. Beat. In a future episode could you please possibly cover Milliken v. Bradley? Thank you!
I'd like to learn more about domestic politics in the USA during WWII. If further videos on this are out of the question, can anyone give me some pointers?
Roosevelt, hearing about the case: [crumples up proposal to add more justices to the Court] “Guess nine’s all right for now.” [tosses wad of paper into the fireplace] “They were getting pretty close. I gotta come up with a real swell nominee for when the next one croaks…
*How about that Douglas guy?* He’s only, what, 37 or so right now, but I think he’ll do well.”
Reminds me of an Avengers post-credit scene. 🤭
Hey Mr beat you should do a compare video between El Paso TX and Juarez Mexico
Hi, Mr. Beat! In a future episode of Supreme Court Briefs, you should definitely cover Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Nintendo Co., Ltd. This case involves Universal Pictures alleged that Nintendo's hit 1981 arcade classic Donkey Kong was a trademark infringement of King Kong, which the plot and characters of which Universal claim their own. Please do a video on this Supreme Court case!
Hey Mr. Beat, you should cover Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization in the next episode
Thanks for the suggestion!
i ove this
tbh, that court packing threat should amount to judge intimidation. it's illegal to threaten a judge/justice/juror/witness in a trial/case, but presidents and congressmen threatening to add more justices in order to influence the court isn't a violation of this law?
No, Congress has total power to add or remove Justices at will. Besides, it was worded in such a way that it shouldn't have been seen as a threat, but nobody was stupid enough to not see it that way.
FDR asked Congress to add a Justice for every already existing Justice that was over 70 up to I think 15 total Justices (so, 6 extra).
Remember, there are checks and balances between branches. This is one of them. Although, you could take up this argument with the Constitution which leaves the Supreme Court and the entire judicial branch and how it looks like to Congress! The only mentioned Justice is the Chief Justice and their only job is to substitute the president of the Senate whenever impeaching a president happens, that's it.
@@OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions but that the idea that someone should condition such a bill based on a ruling is where the threat comes in.
it was obvious that FDR was only asking to add justices so he could force his way through the courts (who had been striking down the New Deal piece by piece until then). if he truly thought it was just a good idea, why didn't he say so before they struck down his legislation (or even before being sworn in or elected)?
An idea for a future Supreme Court Brief: The US vs Paramount Pictures
That's a good one to learn about!
Not now babe. Mr Beat has dropped a supreme court briefs video
:)
I’ve grown to appreciate Supreme Court briefs
Well I appreciate YOU :)
@@iammrbeat aw thank you Mr Beat! You just made my day! You are the best RUclips geography teacher I could ever ask for!
I waited for Cohen v. California, it's amazing that harlan, a solemn and aristocratic conservative justice, said that "To many, the immediate consequence of this freedom may often appear to be only verbal tumult, discord, and even offensive utterance. These are, however, within established limits, in truth necessary side effects of the broader enduring values which the process of open debate permits us to achieve. That the air may at times seem filled with verbal cacophony is, in this sense not a sign of weakness but of strength.", "…while the particular four-letter word being litigated here is perhaps more distasteful than most others of its genre, it is nevertheless often true that one man's vulgarity is another's lyric."
Did you know that in the famous painting of John Quincy Adams there’s a drawing of George Washington
Mr. Beat, I have some suggestions for Supreme Court cases you should cover in future videos.
FCC v. Prometheus Radio Project
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.
FCC v. Fox Television Stations (2009)
Asking for South Dakota v. Dole
Love this series. One small thing, it was 30 cents per hour
Actually, for a brief time before that it was indeed 25 cents an hour (assuming you're talking about the federal minimum wage law passed)
I watch every Supreme Court briefs and am just relieved I haven’t had to see Clarence Thomas in his undies yet
I would like to see a video on if packing the court through FDR's proposed law would be good or bad?
Great decision, but the federal minimum wage is still too low today. We ought to raise it from $7.25 to $20 an hour.
They couldn't even increase it to 15 last decade, 20 has even less chances of passing in this Congress!
But, something must change!
@@OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions You can thank the Republican party for that. They oppose all change.
Hold up! They denied her the minimum wage, because a federal case had found a *federal* minimum wage to be unconditional, how did that mean a *state* minimum was also unconstitutional?!
That's a dumb decision on their part!
Hey @iammrbeat could you possibly do a video on Justice Sherman Minton. I have hometown bias though as we’re both from New Albany, Indiana,
Yeah so the Federal minimum wage remains extremely low only 7.25 per/hour.
We NEED. Chevron video asap
Hi Mr Beat I’m a big fan and I was wondering if you could recommend some books on US foreign policy? Any amount of reading is fine and I would find a response very valuable 🙏
Start with Stephen Kinzer's "Overthrow." I read it as a kid and it really opened my eyes. Plus, it's accessible.
Thank you so much! @@iammrbeat
Not me pausing the video to go calculate how much $14.50 a week would be worth today just for me to unpause the video and you tell me literally 2 seconds later 🤣
Hi Mr. Beat!
Hi!
I wonder how the Justices thought the people of today would judge them, I am assuming we are overwhelmingly in favor of minimum wage.
Hey mr beat Can Make a Of The President's Brothers and Sisters
Wow. I Have never been this early before.
I SEE YOU. Thank you for being here early.
What case next? How about Robison v. Johnson, 415 U.S. 361 (1974)? It's a case made complex by the Court. 8 to 1 (Dougla dissenting) it held that conscientious objectors were not entitled to any of the benefits of regular draftees, whom the case referred to as "combat veterans" (though fewer than 1 in 10 ever saw combat), and Selective Service regulations required that conscientious objectors be subjected to "conditions as disruptive" of their lives as regular army service.
Hi Mr. Beat! I still strongly dislike Edmonton and Calgary
lol ok
This whole interaction just 💀
Could you make Supreme Court Briefs set of merch briefs?
FDR court packing was one of the closest times a dictatorship could have taken hold
I know you only listen to your patron supports but can you make a video that covers Watchtower v Stratton
McCleskey v. Kemp
Right on
I mentioned this in a comment once before, but I would still love for you to cover Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, inc., 523 U.S. 75 (1998). Long and short of it, it was a unanimous decision that, under Title VII, sexual harassment cases could still be taken to court in the event that the plaintiff and defendant are of the same sex.
Right on, I must have missed this the first time you suggested it!
Licked my fingers on some good food to write this. Do an Oregon v whatcha said(forgot the name through my struggled typing) pleeeeasssse
Why is this age restricted? RUclips get your crap together
Mr Beat i know this if off topic from the video but here it goes.
What is you're opinion using the district method awarding candidates votes in the electoral college Nebraska and Maine are the only states that use it.
I'm a big fan. It's way better than what we have now with the Electoral College. That said, gerrymandering will also have to end.
@@iammrbeat agreed
What do they do with the two votes in each state that represent the Senate seats? Do they go to the winner of the state's popular vote?
Rewarding all of the electoral college votes from the state proportional to a tickets vote share is gerrymandering proof and does much the same thing.
Combine that with a national top2 primary that qualifies candidates for the general election ballot and you've got a decent system.
@@CompuclesYou are correct.
Standard Oil Co. v. US
US v. EC Knight Co.
Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Co.
Northern Securities v. US.
Hammer v. Dagenhart/US v. Darby
Mcclesky v. Kemp
would you ever do a video on dobbs v jackson?
TBH, I'm surprised no other employer has tried to fight it recently given how anti-worker the government is.
Please do Us V authlex (2021 case of the United States Supreme Court)
Thanks for suggesting it!
I think people were ok with only making the modern equivalent of $5.50 whereas we feel like $15 isn't enough because there was simply less stuff to spend money on. Housing prices were probably less exploitative too.
Pls do Lawrence v Texes for the next case
I really need to make this episode considering I did write about it in the book.
Court-packing, where I have I heard that recently? 🤔