Bunting v. Oregon

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Bunting v. Oregon
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued April 18, 1916
Reargued January 19, 1917
Decided April 9, 1917
Full case name: Franklin O. Bunting, Plaintiff in Error v. The State of Oregon
Citations: 243 U.S. 426; 37 S. Ct. 435; 61 L. Ed. 830; 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2008
Prior history: 71 Or. 259 (1914)
Holding
No. The court affirmed the decision of the Oregon Supreme Court upholding the state law as constitutional.
Court membership
Chief Justice: Edward Douglass White
Associate Justices: Joseph McKenna, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., William R. Day, Willis Van Devanter, Mahlon Pitney, James Clark McReynolds, Louis Brandeis, John Hessin Clarke
Case opinions
Majority by: McKenna
Joined by: Holmes, Day, Pitney, Clarke
Dissent by: White
Dissent by: Van Devanter
Dissent by: McReynolds
Brandeis took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.

Bunting v. Oregon, 243 U.S. 426 (1917), is a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States upheld a ten-hour work day.

The trials of Bunting v. Oregon, nine years later (in 1917), resulted in acceptance of a ten-hour workday for both men and women, but the state minimum-wage laws weren't changed until twenty years later.

[edit] References

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