10 N.J. Misc. 798 | Court of Common Pleas of New Jersey | 1932
January 24th, 1932, the defendant-appellant Frederick Fuller Kislingbury was arrested by the police of the city of Plainfield for violation of the third section of an ordinance of the city of Plainfield entitled “An ordinance relating to the morals, peace and good order of the city of Plainfield,” approved April 23d, 1874, and the amendments and supplements thereto. On January 27th, 1932, the city judge of Plainfield heard the complaint against the defendant-appellant, and on conviction sentenced him to pay a fine of $25. At the same time and also later other persons were convicted for violation of the ordinance and appeals from all of said convictions are now before the court. Counsel stipulated in open court that the decision in the case of Frederick Fuller Kislingbury is to be dispositive of all the appeals.
The section of the ordinance pertinent to the charge laid in the complaint provides, “no person shall cry or openly expose for sale any wares, merchandise, fruit, herbs, meats, fish, foods or chattels, or keep open any shop or store or place in which said articles are sold, or in which the occupation of barber, shoemaker, blacksmith, silversmith, or other trade requiring the exercise of manual labor is carried on, on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday, except in cases of necessity, and the sale of milk and medicine. Any person violating this section shall upon conviction thereof be fined in a sum not exceeding $25, or be imprisoned in the city or county jail not exceeding ten days, or both, in the discretion of the court. Provided, however, that this section shall not apply to any person who habitually observes the seventh day, commonly called Saturday, as the Sabbath, and who carries on his business within his premises in such a manner as not to disturb the religious observance of Sunday as the Sabbath.”
All of the persons convicted were engaged in one capacity or another in and about the Paramount theatre during a moving picture performance on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday.
Whether or not moving picture theatres may lawfully be operated on Sunday is not before this court for decision. The question raised by this appeal is whether the defendant
Do the acts alleged against the defendant in the complaint, namely, “supervising and conducting as manager thereof” a public motion picture exhibition come within the purview of this section of the ordinance?
The ordinance is penal in character and must therefore ¡be strictly construed. Its provisions cannot be extended by implication. Any case which does not come within its words ■cannot be brought within it by construction.
It was argued before the court that the words “or other trade requiring the exercise of manual labor” brought the ■defendant within the prohibition.
Certainly supervising and conducting a motion picture ■exhibition cannot by any stretch of the imagination be considered as offering for sale the wares and merchandise specifically enumerated in the ordinance or to conducting a shop •or store in which such articles are sold, or as following the occupation of a barber, shoemaker, blacksmith, silversmith, ■or the conducting of any trade requiring the exercise of manual labor.
General terms, following a specification of things of a particular class, must be understood to refer to things of the :same class, or at least of the same general character. And so, where the ordinance provides as it does in this instance against exposing for sale wares and merchandise and specifically enumerates the kind of merchandise intended, and prohibits the opening of any shop, store or place in which such articles are sold and specifically prohibits one from following the occupation of barber, shoemaker, blacksmith, silversmith, the words “or other trade requiring the exercise of manual labor” can only refer back to the things specifically
The ordinance also provides that it “shall not apply to any person who habitually observes the seventh day, commonly called Saturday, as the Sabbath, and who carries on his business within his premises in such a manner as not to disturb the religious observance of Sunday as the Sabbath.”
Such a provision is violative of the federal and state constitutions. Article 14, section 1 of the federal constitution provides against the making or enforcing of any law which abridges the privileges or the immunities of citizens or which denies to any person within its jurisdiction the “equal protection of the laws.” And the state constitution, article 4, section 11, among other things provides against granting to any individual any exclusive privilege, immunity or franchise whatever. “Equal protection of the laws” means equal security or burden, under the laws, to everyone similarly situated.
In In re Van Horn, 74 N. J. Eq. 600; 70 Atl. Rep. 906, Vice-Chancellor Garrison, in considering section 2 of chapter 185 of the act of 1908, which prohibits persons conducting theatres from admitting any child under the age of sixteen years unaccompanied by a parent or guardian or adult friend and which contains the proviso that the section “shall not apply to any performance given by or under the auspices of any public or private school or any church or Sunday school or by any charitable organization or society nor to entertainments held on piers devoted to public entertainment,” said, in referring to the fourteenth amendment of the federal constitution: “A statute to escape condemnation as infringing the rights guaranteed by this amendment must bear alike upon all individuals and classes and districts that are similarly situated, in a similar manner, and with uniformity; otherwise there would be unjust discrimination, which this constitutional
“The so-called police power of the legislature which enables it to make regulations and restrictions to protect health, morals, safety and welfare of the people undoubtedly justifies the enactment of many laws which interfere with and regulate the conduct of the individual in his relation to the public, and the judgment of the legislature is to be given great, if not controlling weight as to what conduct on the part of individuals constitutes a menace, to the health, morals, safety or welfare of the general public and its determination will rarely, if ever, be interfered with by the courts, but this does not justify a legislative enactment which discriminates where there is no basis for discrimination.
“Wherever an enactment has attempted to make that a crime in one place which by all laws of reason must be a crime elsewhere within the same jurisdiction, such attempted distinction is found by the courts to be illusory, and the act is held unconstitutional.”
The ordinance under consideration divides the people of Plainfield into classes and exempts from its operation all persons who habitually observe the seventh day commonly called Saturday, as the Sabbath, and permits such persons to carry on business in such a manner as not to disturb the religious observance of Sunday. On the other hand it prohibits other persons from carrying on business within their premises even though such persons carry on their business in such a manner as not to disturb the religious observance of Sunday, and permits the sale of milk and medicine by still another class, and finally exempts from its operation such persons who do business on Sunday “in cases of necessity” and is therefore highly discriminatory in its provisions.
In Middleton v. Middleton, 54 N. J. Eq. 692; 35 Atl. Rep. 1065, the Court of Errors and Appeals was considering an act permitting a limited divorce for adultery or desertion under Pamph. L. 1891, which act provided that for desertion, adul
“The wisdom of this law is not a question for the court. The legality of it is all that we are to determine. The legislature may prescribe those rights and obligations, but it must do so within the limits fixed by the constitution of this state and of the United States. It cannot be denied that the legislature has power to pass an act giving to all petitioners for divorce the right to apply for an absolute or a limited divorce as he or she may elect; for such an act would operate equally upon all persons, and would impose no special consequence and confer no exclusive privilege upon any. The act of 1891 is, however, not of this character in that it does confer upon certain petitioners rights, and imposes upon certain offenders consequences, which are determined, not by the character of the offense, but by the opinions of the injured party, * * “The constitution of the United States forbids any state To deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,’ and it certainly seems tolbe a true construction of that prohibition to hold that the laws which are operative should be laws which impress themselves equally upon all without regard to the individual opinions of any.”
The charge made against the defendant does not come within the provisions of the ordinance. The ordinance is discriminatory and unconstitutional and therefore the convictions must be set aside.