49 Mich. 617 | Mich. | 1883
An ordinance of the city of Coldwater provides, among other things, that “ no person shall hawlc or peddle any meat, goods, wares or merchandise from door to door within the limits of the city of Coldwater without a license from the mayor.” For the license, when not for the sale of meat, fifteen dollars is required to be paid for one year, or three dollars for one day.
The defendant has been convicted under this ordinance, on evidence that without license he traveled from door to door in said city and sold a clothes-wringer. The clothes-wringers were manufactured by the defendant at Sturgis, in this State, under letters patent of the United States issued to him and one Shepardson as patentees.
I. It is objected to the ordinance that if applied to the sale of patented articles it is an interference with the power of Congress to grant exclusive rights to patentees to make and sell their inventions, and an encroachment upon the rights which the patent assures to the patentees. We agree that if this is the case the ordinance can have no such application. The power of Congress to grant the exclusive right to make and sell the articles which from their originality and value have been found deserving is exclusive, and any State legislation which undertakes to limit or restrict in any manner the privileges which the letters patent confers is an invasion of the sphere of national authority, and therefore void. This was shown in Cranson v. Smith 37 Mich. 309, and what is said there need not be repeated.
But the ordinance in question does not assume to interfere with or in any way to abridge the exclusive rights which the patentee may lay claim to under his patent. The ordinance is a police regulation, made under the general police authority of the State, and taking no notice of
It is well settled now, if it was ever doubted, that any •ordinary exercise of congressional authority does not take from the State any portion of its general power of police. Pervear v. Commonwealth 5 Wall. 475. The acts of Congress assume the existence of State regulations, and in many respects would prove inoperative and confusing if it were otherwise. The patent laws are as forcible for illustration as any other; they give exclusive rights, but they do not determine personal capacity to. contract, or prescribe the requisites for sales of patented articles, or impose the customary restrictions which are supposed to be important to the protection of public morals. All these matters are left to the State law. A patentee must observe the Sunday law as much as any other vendor ; he must put his contracts in writing under the same circumstances which require writings of others, and he must obey all other regulations of police which are made for general observance. Patterson v. Kentucky 97 U. S. 501. Invidious regulations, applicable to patentees exclusively, might be void, but there is no question of that nature here. We have no doubt that it was competent for the State to confer upon the city the power to pass such an ordinance.
That the regulation of hawkers and peddlers is important if not absolutely essential may be taken as established by the concurring practice of civilized states. They are a class of. persons who travel from place to place among strangers, and the business may easily be made a pretense or a convenience to those whose real purpose is theft or fraud. The requirement of a license gives opportunity for inquiry into antecedents and character, and the payment of a fee affords some evidence that the business is not a mere pretense.
II. It is urged, however, that the fee demanded in this ■case is unreasonable if regulation alone was in view, and is in the nature of a tax. The city charter gives power to
The conviction must be affirmed.