39 A.2d 522 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1944
Argued September 25, 1944.
Defendant was convicted summarily of a violation of a rule of the State Council of Defense, adopted under the authority and in furtherance of the Air Raid Precautions Act of April 13, 1942, P.L. 37. He was sentenced to pay a fine. After a hearing de novo, on appeal to the quarter sessions, the court specifically found that defendant was chargeable with violation of the rule in question but concluded that the act is unconstitutional on the ground that in it there is a delegation of the power to legislate as well *124
as to create and define offenses punishable under the act. Upon the discharge of the defendant on this pure question of law the Commonwealth properly appealed to this court. Com. v. Simpson,
The State Council of Defense came into being because of the then "emergency or public need in the nation [and] the State" and was established on the authority of the Act of March 19, 1941, P.L. 6,
A rule of the council provided that during either drill or attack "All persons [with exceptions not applicable] *125 shall, upon receipt of an air raid alarm, immediately seek shelter and remain therein until the all clear signal is given." During the night of July 22, 1942, an air raid alarm was given in the borough where defendant lived; he was notified of the alarm by an air raid warden and directed to extinguish the lights in his place of business and remain indoors. In violation of the rule of the council and contrary to the order of the warden, defendant left the premises and remained in the open where he was found by the warden and conducted back to his place of business. He was later arrested on warrant charged with violation of the Air Raid Precautions Act.
It is the duty of every court to seek out, if possible, a construction which will support the legislative interpretation of the constitution and nothing but a clear violation can nullify an act of assembly on constitutional grounds. Com. ex rel. Schnaderv. Liveright et al.,
We have quoted enough of the acts in question to indicate the sense of imminent danger in the mind of the legislature and a serious effort to meet an unknown future through a flexible system of protection of persons and property. This State was not alone in enacting such legislation. The danger at the time was real. In the Pacific, following December 7, 1941, Japan's naval and air forces were superior; and in the Atlantic the battle was in the balance. We were unprepared. The danger was from the air and with a turn of events in favor of the Axis powers, Pennsylvania, with its capacity for production of materials and implements of war well might have become a major target. From the vantage ground of the present, the judgment of the air raid warden in arresting this defendant for misconduct during a practice drill may be questioned. But that is beside the point, as is the fact that a remote section in western Pennsylvania may not have *126 been liable to attack in any event. This case presents the important question whether the State, in time of war, or other serious emergency, may protect its citizens and their property by legislation in the form presented. If the rule of the council was valid it operated on all citizens alike and during practice raids as well as in times of actual attack.
This legislation was enacted under the police power of the State, the "greatest and most powerful attribute of government," a power which under the constitution (Art. XVI, § 3) may never be abridged. Com. v. Widovich,
The 1942 Act authorized the Council to make rules, regulations and orders (among others) regarding: "The organization, recruiting, training, maintenance and operation of aircraft warning services" and the like; "the formulation and execution of plans for the carrying out of practice blackouts, air raid drills and warnings and of all precautionary measures under actual conditions of hostile air raids or enemy attack"; "the organization, recruiting, training, conduct and duties and powers of volunteer agencies; the effective screening or extinguishment of all lights and lighting devices and appliances"; and "the conduct of civilians and the movement and cessation of pedestrian and vehicular traffic during attack or drill."
The applicable principle has been thus stated in the often-quoted language of Mr. Justice AGNEW in Locke's Appeal,
Judgment reversed; the record is remitted to the lower court with directions to enter a finding of guilty as a matter of law, and for sentence.