5 Ga. App. 615 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
We think that the court erred in overruling the motion for new trial. Section 422 of the Penal Code, which provides that “any person who shall pursue his business, or the work of his ordinary calling, on the Lord’s day, works of necessity or charity only excepted, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” is taken from the statute of 29 Charles II, e. 7, s. 1. It was first adopted in Georgia in 1762, and the language we have quoted above is the same as that employed in our ancient pre-revolutionary statute. The identical question now presented to us was not passed upon by the Supreme Court in Scandrett v. State, 124 Ga. 142 (52 S. E. 160); for Justice Beck, delivering the opinion of the court, said that it was unnecessary to decide “whether or not proof of a single sale on the Sabbath day would support a charge of violating the Penal Code, §422,” inasmuch as the evidence in that case showed that the defendant had followed that business for several Sundays, and there was no evidence that he had any other business or calling.
There are some considerations which would induce us to treat the language in §422 more broadly than we do, and to hold, if' we could, that any work of any kind done upon Sunday, except works of necessity‘and charity, is contrary to law. But §422 is a penal statute, and, by the universal rule of construction, must be «construed strictly against the State, and in favor of the citizen. And under this rule of construction it is clear that no matter how immoral it may be to work on the Lord’s day, -no such work is «criminal unless it be the work of one’s ordinary calling. This is The view taken of the original statute of Charles II by the English courts; and while some of the decisions may not be binding, they .are authority that any one may consult with profit. The Supreme Court also, in a number of cases, has defined the meaning of “ordinary? calling,” in the statute, to be a business in which one is at least partly engaged, a business which occupies a portion of one’s
The defendant, Ellis, never sold anything before the Sunday in. question, or on any day thereafter prior to the accusation; therefore his sporadic sale on the Sunday in question did not make him a vender of soda-water or lemonade, or indeed a tradesman of any kind. He was a farm-laborer. His conviction was unwarranted. No matter what may be our personal views, a construction different from that which for several centuries has been given to the law on this subject is not within the proper exercise of the power of this court. The legislature, however, has it within its power to prescribe a more stringent regulation upon the subject of Sunday observance, if it sees proper to do so.
Judgment reversed.