43 So. 584 | Ala. | 1907
The appellant was convicted of the violation of an .ordinance which declared it an offense for a retailer to keep open any part of his house on the Sabbath day. Ordinances regulating, under the police power, the liquor business, especially in relation to the proper and orderly observance of the Sabbath, have been too often approved to require, in these days, any reconsideration of their propriety or validity, except in the respect to decide whether the ordinance brought up for consideration is within the hounds fixed by paramount law, constitutional, statutory, and charter, aided by judicial decision. Ancl in interpreting or construing ordinances the rule, applicable to statutes generally, is that “courts will give them a reasonable construction, and will incline to sustain rather than overthrow them. * * Thus, if by one construction an ordinance, will. he valid, and by another void, the courts will, if possible, adopt the former.” — 1 Dillon on Municipal Corp. § 420.
The apxiellant seems to contend that the only propel' interpretation of the ordinance is that it attempts to create an offense in the keeping open on the Sabbath of any part of the building wherein the retailer carries on his business. Such a construction should not, we think, be placed upon the ordinance; and, if it was, the ordinance would he patently void, because under it the resident or occupant of an edifice in which the retailer pursued his business would he inhibited from keeping open on the Sabbath his abode or place of business (if otherwise allowed), though wholly disconnected from the place of business. Rather than this construction, which invalidates the ordinance, one reasonable, and also favorable to validity, is that the ordinance makes it an offense to keep open any part of the division, apartments, or connected section of the house used for the retailing business. It cannot he, doubted that such an ordinance is within the competency of the muni
What has been said disposes of the major part of the assignments of error. The evidence adduced shows, without dispute, that the front door of the appellant’s place where he carried on the business of retailing was kept open on the Sabbath day averred, and the general charge was given for the city. There was no error in this action. The fact that between the lunch counter on one side of the room and the bar on the other there was, from front to back of the room, on that day, a heavy duck or tenting curtain, suspended from two feet below the ceiling to within a foot of the floor, cut so as to permit a person to go to the bar or to come therefrom towards the lunch counter, but obstructing the view of the bar by a person on the opposite side, could not avail to appellant’s advantage, because it was too slazy to be seriously considered a partition of the room from that part set apart to the bar.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.