delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an action against the appellant, Harry Julian, for violation of a city ordinance. He was assessed a fine of $5 by the police magistrate, and, on appeal, the circuit court sustained the judgment. The validity of an ordinance being directly involved, the trial court so certified, and stated that the public interest required a direct appeal to this court.
Appellant operated a community grocery store in Mt. Vernon, and kept for sale groceries, bread, milk, vegetables, tobacco, cigarettes, cigars and other articles usually kept for sale in a community grocery store. He kept his place of business open on Sundays and, particularly, on Sunday, August 8, 1937.
The complaint charged the appellant with a violation of an ordinance which provides as follows:
“Section 477. Sunday business and labor. It shall be unlawful for any person to keep open or permit to be kept open his place of business on Sunday within this city; provided, that this section shall not be applicable in cases of necessity or charity, nor to hotels, restaurants, eating places, drug stores, tobacco stores, confectionery stores, news dealers, ice dealers, shoe shining parlors, garages, gasoline filling stations, telephone exchanges, telegraph offices and moving picture theatres.”
This case is submitted to us without such briefs as the question involved requires. The appellant has cited but four cases while the city has filed no brief and we are thus left to our own investigation for a decision of the constitutional questions involved. Even a slight examination of the point at issue discloses dozens of cases in this and other jurisdictions which bear on the question. In our own jurisdiction we find conflicting statements which require reconciliation or modification, while in other States the same situation appears to exist. A short statement of the basic rules becomes necessary.
City councils exercise only delegated and limited powers. (City of Marengo v. Rowland,
In 1896 this court decided the case of Eden v. People,
In 1913, at its February term, this court decided two companion cases, the one dependent on the other. (City of Springfield v. Richter,
The City of Clinton and the City of Springfield cases were decided without any references at all to, and apparently with no consideration of, the earlier case of Eden v. People, supra, and there is an undoubted conflict between them. It may be said that the Bden case is distinguishable because there the legislature singled out one occupation, — i. e., that of running a barber shop, — which was prohibited without prohibiting others. This distinction, however, is not a valid one because if exceptions are to be permitted without any direct relation to the general welfare, then such exceptions might be multiplied until but one occupation remained. It is apparent that if a general Sunday closing ordinance is to be valid under the rules laid down in the Bden case, the exceptions to its operation must bear some reasonable relation to the public health, safety, morals or general welfare, and this relationship must be such as to bear the scrutiny of the courts on a review to determine its reasonableness. City of Lake View v. Tate, supra.
A reference to various annotations will disclose that decisions on this troublesome question have been nearly as varied as the ordinances under consideration and it is possible to find language of courts and decisions sustaining almost any view one may care to take of the subject. Certain language of the United States Supreme Court tends to sustain the conclusion which we have arrived at, (Gulf, Colorado and Sante Fe Railway Co. v. Ellis,
We have always held that an act which has no tendency to affect or endanger the public in connection with health, safety, morals, or general welfare and which is entirely innocent in character, is not within the police power. (Schiller Piano Co. v. Illinois Northern Utilities Co.
Upon full consideration, we are of opinion that we should adhere to the salutary principles laid down in Eden v. People, supra, and the cases therein cited, and that in so far as the cases of the City of Springfield v. Richter, supra, and City of Clinton v. Wilson, supra, are in conflict with this result, they will and must be overruled. It is our opinion that the ordinance in question is arbitrary and discriminatory and not a proper exercise of the police power, and is, therefore, void.
The judgment of the circuit court of Jefferson county is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
