117 A. 858 | Md. | 1922
This is an appeal from an order and judgment of the lower court, which overruled a demurrer to the answer of the respondent and entered a final judgment for the defendant, on *336 a petition for a mandamus filed by the appellants against Charles D. Gaither, Police Commissioner for the City of Baltimore. The object of the mandamus, as shown by the prayers of the petition, was to prevent and restrain the respondent from permitting the playing of professional baseball at Oriole Park on Sunday during the months of April, June, July, August and September, 1921, to command and require him to enforce and execute the laws of Maryland relating to the observance of Sunday and against Sabbath breaking on those Sundays, and to enforce and execute section 436 of article 27 of the Code upon said days, to prevent at said Oriole Park the commission of the crime of violating said Sunday law "by arresting or causing the arrest of all the participants, including both the baseball players taking part in said professional games as well as the managers holding or conducting the same, or causing the same to be held or conducted, or aiding or abetting the holding or conducting of the same, and further ordering and requiring such other relief and protection to your petitioners and their rights aforesaid as may be proper and necessary in the premises." After the court overruled the demurrer, and the attorneys for the plaintiffs informed the court that the plaintiffs declined to file any further pleading or proceeding, the judgment for the defendant was rendered.
The petition, after setting out and describing the several petitioners at length, alleges that the respondent was appointed under and by virtue of chapter 559 of the Acts of 1920, which repealed and re-enacted section 740 of article 4 of the Code of Public Local Laws (reference being to the Revised Edition of the Charter of 1915) — the Act of 1920 authorizing the appointment of one Police Commissioner instead of a Board of Police Commissioners as formerly, and providing that he should have and exercise all the powers of the board. Section 744, which sets out at length the duties of the Board of Police Commissioners, now devolved upon the respondent, will be published in connection with this opinion. Amongst other things he is required to see that all *337
laws relating to the observance of Sunday are enforced. Section 436 of article 27 of the Code is set out in full in the petition, and reference is made to Levering v. Park Commissioners,
It is alleged that at Oriole Park professional baseball games were about to be played, on each and every recurring Sunday during the months named, by professional players, hired and paid for that purpose, etc., in violation of section 436 of article 27, which will be and constitute upon each of said Sundays crimes against the laws and dignity, the peace and government, of the State. It is alleged that they will be attended by large crowds and throngs of spectators at Oriole Park, accompanied by the loud shouts and noises which invariably occur during the holding and progress of games of professional baseball. It is averred that the plaintiffs called with their counsel upon the respondent, and informed him that such games were about to be played, and submitted to him that it is his official duty to prevent said crimes, arrest the offenders and see that the laws relating to the observance of Sunday are enforced, etc.; "that thereupon, although the defendant heard and treated those of your petitioners and their counsel, who called upon and submitted the matters aforesaid to him, with the utmost courtesy and attention, nevertheless he clearly and positively declared that he did not consider it to be his official duty to interfere with the holding, playing and carrying on of said professional baseball games by said professional players at said Oriole Park on said Sundays aforesaid, although said games are about to *338 be held, played and carried on, as herein above stated, and as represented to him, the defendant, and the defendant furthermore distinctly and positively declared that he did not intend to interfere with or prevent the holding of said professional baseball games as aforesaid, or to cause the same to be interfered with or prevented by the police force under his, the defendant's, direction and control, or to arrest or cause the arrest of any of the professional baseball players taking part in said games, or of any person or persons engaged and participating in the holding, playing, carrying on or conduct of the same, but that he, the defendant, intended to permit the said games to be held then and there, as aforesaid, without interference upon his part or upon the part of the police force under his, the defendant's, direction and control, and without arresting or causing the arrest of the participants in and the managers and directors of said games or any of them; the defendant, the Police Commissioner for Baltimore City, giving as his reason for declining to interfere with the holding, playing and carrying on of said games or to arrest the professional participants therein or the managers thereof, or any of them, as aforesaid, that the manager of one of the professional baseball clubs or teams, which participated in a game of professional baseball at said Oriole Park on one of the Sundays of the spring or summer of 1919, had been arrested for criminally violating the said Sunday law of Maryland by the holding and carrying on of said Sunday professional baseball game at said Oriole Park, and that the indictment or charge against said offender had never been prosecuted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City."
It is further alleged that the refusal of the respondent will cause additional municipal expenses to be incurred, and will result in an unlawful and unauthorized increase in the rate of taxation for local purposes in the City of Baltimore, that the petitioners will suffer irreparable and remediless injury and damage, and the public policy of the State and the laws thereof would be thwarted and nullified and the community and public generally hurt and damaged, etc. *339
The answer admits that some of the petitioners called with their counsel upon the defendant, and requested the defendant to enforce the laws of Maryland relating to the observance of Sunday, and to prevent the contemplated and intended playing of baseball on Sunday during the months named, but specifically denies each and every one of the charges against him set out above, emphatically and unreservedly. It will not be necessary for us to quote from the answer, but it is sufficient to say that they are not simply general denials, but each charge is denied, referring to the language used in the petition.
The answer further alleges "that he has fully and completely enforced the Sunday laws in Baltimore City to the best of his ability and judgment with the force at his disposal"; that he began his term of office on June 1st, 1920, and on the 21st of that month he presented to the foreman of the grand jury for the May term of court charges against the president of the Baltimore Baseball Exhibition Company for working and doing bodily labor on Sunday, June 20th, 1920, at Oriole Park, and allowing and ordering his employees to work and do bodily labor at the time and place mentioned, in violation of the law, and also for selling certain goods, wares and merchandise, to wit, score cards, entitling the holder to admission to the baseball game, to a large number of spectators, whose names and addresses were given to the grand jury, and also the names of a large number of witnesses and of all the players who took part in the game for both teams, the names and addresses of each and every person who sold score cards, and of all employees working on the grounds. He was afterwards informed by the foreman that the grand jury declined to take any action, and practically the same thing was alleged as to the September term grand jury.
The answer then alleges that there are several methods of bringing to the bar of justice violators of the law: one, by summarily arresting them; two, by causing warrants upon oath to be issued for the arrest of alleged offenders; three, *340 by referring the charges to the grand jury; that during his term of office he has avoided when possible the making of summary arrests, especially where the alleged offender is a citizen of Baltimore, and may be apprehended without difficulty; that he considered it a proper police method to avoid the taking of a citizen by force to the station house when such peremptory action can be avoided without injury to the State; that "your respondent further avers that the summary arrest frequently causes disorder, riot, bloodshed, inasmuch as an alleged offender will more often resist during the stress of excitement, especially in the presence of a large crowd." Again it is said in the answer "that police experience convinces your respondent that it would probably cause a riot to physically arrest a large proportion of the people who violate the Sunday laws, especially where the violation occurred publicly among a large crowd or gathering. In order to make arrests at Oriole Park on a Sunday, it would require the presence of about two hundred policemen, and even with this large force, there will be grave danger of mob violence. That your respondent does not think it his duty to take steps when the petit juries of Baltimore City have uniformly declined to find convictions in similar cases even though the facts set out in the indictments were conceded."
The respondent alleges that it is his intention to present to the grand jury all the facts and circumstances, with a list of witnesses whenever a game of baseball is played at Oriole Park on Sunday, and if he "feels at any time that the dignity and peace of the State requires him to use other and different methods, he will resort to them"; that he "intends to bring to trial every offender of the Sunday laws whom the grand jury will present and use every other method which, in his judgment, will aid in the prevention of crime."
The answer goes on to give reasons why he thinks he could not rely on a petit jury to convict, and says: "The petitioners have in fact requested your respondent to use force to the limit to arrest summarily certain alleged violators of the *341 law, whom the grand jury of the City of Baltimore has, on numerous occasions and twice within your respondent's incumbency, declined to present. Your respondent avers that he has always enforced the Sunday laws and will continue to enforce them, but your respondent respectfully submits with due deference that it is discretionary with him to enforce the law according to approved police methods and in accordance with the safety and welfare of the public. Your respondent feels that as Police Commissioner, it is within his power to determine whether or not a summary arrest should be made or whether the matter should be referred to the grand jury. Your respondent further maintains that in controlling a large police force and protecting the safety of a large city, he should be allowed, within the limits of the law, to determine how an offender should be arrested and when an offender should be arrested."
The answer does present a most unfortunate and much to be regretted condition of affairs in the City of Baltimore, if the Commissioner is correct. We are not now concerned with the question whether what is now section 436 of article 27 of the Code is a wise law, or one which ought to be continued in force, or whether baseball playing on Sunday by professional players should be permitted, but that section is a law of this State, and was not only in colonial days, having been passed in 1723, but it has been re-enacted as law by the Legislatures of Maryland twice since then, by the Code of 1860 and the Code of 1888, and has been continued in the present Code, the third volume of which contains this section, as well as the other statutes on Crimes and Punishments in this State, and it was enacted by the Legislature of this State as late as February 24th, 1914, that said Code "be and the same is hereby legalized and shall be deemed and taken in all the courts of the State, and by all the justices of the peace of the State, and by all public officials of the State, to be evidence of the Public General Laws of the State," contained in the Code of 1888 and statutes passed subsequent thereto. A similar provision was made as to the Code of *342 1904, prepared by the Honorable John Prentiss Poe. This statute cannot therefore be truly said to be merely a relic of colonial times, but it has been kept alive in the different codes just as any other statute which has been continued in force by them. Section 436 is just as much a binding law on the people of this State today as any other law in article 27 of the Code is, which deals with crimes and punishments. It is just as binding on a grand juror who has taken the comprehensive and solemn oath which grand jurors take, and on the petit jurors who under their oaths are bound to render their verdicts in criminal cases according to the law and evidence, as any other section of that article on crimes and punishments in force in this State.
Moreover, this particular statute has been the subject of litigation several times and has been invariably sustained as a valid law. We need only mention several decisions in reference to playing baseball on Sunday. In Birnie's Case, in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, quoted at some length in Levering
v. Park Comm'rs.,
If such conditions exist in Baltimore City, they are certainly to be lamented by all law-abiding citizens, and something ought to be done to correct them. It is no excuse to say that only those who are fanatical on the subject desire to have it enforced, even if that be true, although in the answer in this case the Police Commissioner has said under oath that he, "believes in the observance of the Sunday laws and that they should be enforced with all the vigor that the better element of the community will support." Every one has a right to his own opinion as to whether such a law as this is a wise one, but no one has a right to violate it, or favor its violation, as long as it is law, simpy because he is in favor of Sunday baseball or other things prohibited by it. It may be that those who are active in their opposition to Sunday baseball may, in their zeal, antagonize those who do not approve of all of their methods, but, however that may be, that cannot justify the violation of the law. If one set of people can safely thus act, it will not be surprising if others follow their example and violate other laws, the violation of which may be of more serious consequences. There is a lawful way of getting rid of a law, if the majority of the people do not want it, but that does not justify either the majority or a minority to violate it, as long as it is law, simply because it is not in accord with their views or wishes.
But while we fully realize and appreciate the seriousness of the situation, when we are informed by the Police Commissioner's answer, not only that the law had been openly violated Sunday after Sunday, but that grand juries refused to indict and the petit juries refused to convict, and find in the brief of the appellants a statement that "whether the mandamus prayed for by the appellants, the petitioners, in this *344 most grave and serious case shall go or be denied will decide whether the State law preserving the Lord's Day shall be aliving or a dead enactment. If the writ goes, the law shalllive; if it be denied, the law shall perish in Baltimore City," we must be governed by law in determining this case, as well as all other cases. Although the briefs before us furnish evidence of great ability and industry, the real questions we are called upon to decide are comparatively simple and, as to some points, thoroughly established by our own decisions, by which we must be bound, unless we do what we have tried to show that others should not do — ignore the law of the State. If such unfortunate results follow our decision, as stated in the appellants' brief, it is not the fault of this Court, which must be controlled by its understanding of the law.
Under our decisions, we might have disposed of this case in a few pages, for if we reversed the order of the lower court, how could a mandamus be of any avail? Although the petition concludes with something in the nature of a prayer for general relief, it was long since determined in this State that "although compared to a bill in equity for specific performance, it (mandamus) is a common law process, issued for the special purpose indicated in the writ, and the relief prayed is not modified according to circumstances, as under the prayer for general relief, in a bill in equity" (Booze v. Humbird,
While what we have said is sufficient to show that we cannot direct the writ of mandamus to issue, and, if we did, it could be of no avail, as the games of baseball sought to be prevented were over before the case reached us, there are some other matters which are entitled to our consideration. There is no charge or suggestion that the Police Commissioner acted corruptly. There can be no doubt that he denied the material allegations in the petition, or that the demurrer to the answer admitted the facts which were well pleaded. Yet the case was disposed of in the lower court on that demurrer. The theory of the appellants seems to be that, notwithstanding the denials, the admissions the commissioner made in reference to referring the cases to the grand juries and their refusal to act were sufficient to show that he was in reality doing nothing which could be of avail towards preventing the violation of the law, and therefore the writ of mandamus should have been issued. But they disregard some matters which the court was called upon to take into consideration.
In the first place, there can be no doubt that the Police Commissioner has large discretion as to the best method to be pursued in order to stop the violation of law. If it be true that petit jurors will not convict in such cases, it might well be doubted whether it would be best to summarily arrest the parties and take them before justices of the peace, as they could give bail and eventually be entitled to trials before juries. There was at least enough in the answer to make it necessary for the court to have evidence before it in order to determine whether there were such facts existing as would justify issuing the mandamus. As the demurrer admitted the facts in the answer which were well pleaded, and practically every allegation in the petition was denied, it would seem that the porper course for the appellants to have pursued was to have filed a replication and introduced evidence. It is true that even if an officer has discretion in the performance *346
of his duties he cannot simply fold his hands and refuse to do anything. As CHIEF JUDGE McSHERRY said, in Manger v. Board ofExaminers,
We do not mean that, if the appellants had shown by evidence or by admissions in the answer, that the course pursued by the commissioner was entirely futile, and known by him to be so, and that there were other methods which, if adopted, could be made effectual, the commissioner could excuse himself simply by saying he would continue to endeavor to enforce the Sunday law by efforts he knew to be useless and futile, but the court ought to have been thoroughly satisfied that the grand juries would continue to refuse to indict violators of a statute which had been declared to be valid by the highest court in the State, before it could have determined that the commissioner was adopting a method which he knew, or ought to have known, would be of no possible avail.
It cannot be assumed that every grand jury before which such cases are brought will refuse to indict because several of them have done so. Nothing was said at the argument, or in the briefs, to the effect that a grand jury in Baltimore did not have the power to indict for violation of this statute, and hence we have not felt called upon to make any special *347 investigation into that question. It is probably done under sec. 444 of art. 4 of the Public Local Laws (Act of 1880, chap. 211), as it provides that "when any fine or penalty is imposed by any Act of Assembly of the state * * * for doing of any act forbidden to be done * * * or for omitting to do any act required to be done * * *, the doing of such act, or the omission to do such act, shall be deemed to be a criminal offense; such offense, in the City of Baltimore, shall be prosecuted by the arrest of the offender for such offense and by holding him to appear in or committing him for trial in the Criminal Court of Baltimore, at the Saturday sessions of said court * * *, or said offense may be prosecuted by indictment in such court," etc. If we are right in supposing that that is probably the statute under which indictments for such offenses are found, it does not seem to be entirely clear why the method by indictment is adopted, but there may be some good reason which does not occur to us, but is known to a judge who is a member of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, and sits in the different courts of that city. A judge of that bench, who has experience in the criminal court, as they all have from time to time, would certainly be more competent to judge of the best and most effective methods to adopt in that court than those who have no such experience, or they may differ as to that, but they certainly know better than the petitioners did. Those engaged in some particular lines of work in helping to suppress vice and prevent violations of the law are very apt to have their own ideas of the best methods to be pursued, and they are not always right in regard to them.
But it would seem to be clear that when, as in this case, the whole ground for the claim of the right to have a mandamus issue is that the Police Commissioner not only did not adopt the method the plaintiffs insist upon, which they say is the best method, but did adopt another method which, although authorized by law, has thus far proven ineffective, although not because the Commissioner did not do all he could to make his method effective, but because another department *348 of the law did not do its part, the plaintiffs' case is not made out. It may be that a firm and decided stand taken by the Commissioner might be productive of more good results than what has been done — that is to say — if he positively and emphatically notified the people who had charge of Sunday baseball that the games of which he has notice must not be played, as there is a law prohibiting them, and if they then persisted in doing so, he took active steps to prevent them, not by arresting them for what they had already done, but by preventing them from having the games, even if it did take two hundred policemen to do so, and there was danger of mob violence, as the answer says. A firm resistance of such a mob, and such adequate punishment for riot or similar offenses as the law provides, would not have to be repeated often to let people know that such violations of law would not be permitted in Baltimore. That might be a more effective way than the Commissioner adopted, but if he was honest in what he did, and the way he adopted was one of those authorized, it would seem to be clear that under our decisions the court could not compel him to adopt the other way, by a writ of mandamus, unless it was certain that his method was and would be futile, and in order to show that such was the case there ought to have been something more than argument — there should have been proof.
In the case of Upshur v. Baltimore City,
But it is not necessary to prolong this opinion by quoting from the numerous decisions in this State and elsewhere to show that, when an officer of the law has discretion vested in him as to certain acts and the method of performing them, the court will not generally, by mandamus, require him to perform them in any particular way, if it is satisfied that he acted honestly and within what the law left to his discretion, or that when the respondent has denied the material allegations of the petition, and it is left uncertain as to what method was best to be pursued, mandamus will not lie.
Both sides have shown commendable zeal and industry in citing authorities as to when the courts will, or will not compel officers to enforce laws. While we do not agree with either side, that when properly considered they are practically unanimous, each side claiming that the unanimity is on that side, none of them convince us that the appellants were entitled to the writ of mandamus under the facts and circumstances set out in this record.
We will affirm the order appealed from, as that is the practice adopted by this Court, even in cases where the writ is denied wholly or in part because it is too late to direct a mandamus to issue.
Order affirmed, the appellants to pay the costs, above andbelow. *350