23 Colo. 504 | Colo. | 1897
The bill submitted with the foregoing interrogatories is entitled “ A Bill for An Act to Abolish and Prohibit the Use of Scrip, and to Regulate What is Known as the 6 Truck System ’ in the State of Colorado, and to Provide Penalties and Forfeitures for the Violation of This Act.”
By section B it is provided, inter alia, that:
“ Whoever shall sell goods or supplies of any kind directly or indirectly to his employés, or pay the wages of labor of his employés in goods or supplies of any kind, directly or through the intervention of scrip, order or other evidence of indebtedness, at higher prices than the reasonable or current market value in cash of such goods or supplies,” shall be liable to certain punishments and penalties designated in the act.
The interrogatories propounded call for an examination and construction of eleven sections of the state, and one section of the federal constitution, and present very important questions, upon which the decisions of the courts of last resort in this country are in irreconcilable conflict. In the limited time at our command, we cannot undertake to range the entire field of constitutional law for the purpose of determining whether the bill may not be obnoxious to some of the objections suggested, other than those hereinafter mentioned, since your honorable body has in no way indicated a purpose to adopt it as now submitted; but may, as indicated by the friends of the measure on the oral argument, amend the same in very important particulars, the nature of which amendments we cannot now conjecture.
In any event, this court ought not to be called upon to answer questions of this serious character, touching the constitutionality of pending legislation, until the same has at least passed the committee of the whole, and assumed the shape in which it may be finally acted upon. We may, how
As we said in White v. Farmers’ High Line Canal & Res. Co., 22 Colo. 191: While it is difficult to define the boundaries of the police power, it admittedly extends to the protection of the lives, health and property of the citizens, and to the preservation of good order and the public morals.
We may properly take cognizance of the fact that the most serious disturbances which have occurred in this country for the last twenty-five years have grown out of controversies between employer and employé. No one doubts the authority or questions the duty of the state to interfere with such force as may be necessary to repress such disturbances and maintain the public peace and tranquillity; and as well may the state provide in advance against certain kinds of fraud and oppression, which lead to these outbreaks.
But we all concur in holding the present bill, in some respects, obnoxious to some of the constitutional provisions specified in the interrogatories submitted. For example, in so far as section 8 undertakes to regulate the price at which goods and merchandise shall be sold to employes for cash, it is unwarranted, and not germane to the title. Since this and other objectionable features may be eliminated, as above indicated, we respectfully return herewith the interrogatories submitted.