51 Ky. 532 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1851
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This petition was brought by Catlett and Buck, upon a note executed to them by George W. and William W. Ray, on the 28th of October, 1849, for the payment of $566.79, eighteen months after date. The defendants filed two pleas in bar, each of which was adjudged bad on demurrer, and a third plea afterwards offered, having been rejected by the Court upon objections made, and a judgment was rendered against them for the amount of the note with interest, &c.
The first plea merely states that the note sued on was executed, delivered, and received on the 2Sth day of October, 1849, and that the day was Sunday, the Christian Sabbath. The second plea states, in addition, that at the data of the note the plaintiffs were drug
These pleas are founded upon, and bring in question, the construction of a provision contained in the 36th section of the act of 1801, (Slat. Law 1275,) which is in the following words, viz :
“ If any person, on the Sabbath day, shall himself be found laboring at his own or any other trade or calling, or shall employ his apprentices, servants, or slaves, in labor or other business, whether for profit or* amusement, unless expressly permitted by this act, (and no work or business shall be done on the Sabbath day, unless the ordinary household offices of daily necessity or other work of necessity or charity,) he shall forfeit the sum of ten shillings for every offence, deeming every apprentice, servant, or slave so employed, and every day he shall have been employed as constituting a distinct offence. Provided, however, that no person who is a member of any religious society who observes any other day of the week, etc., shall be liable, etc., so that he observes one day in seven agreeable to the regulations aforesaid.”
This is the first case, so far as we know, in which it has been attempted to bring this statutory prohibition to bear upon any civil transaction made or entered into on the Sabbath day. And if it be conceded that the infliction of a penalty for doing the particular act described implies a prohibition of such acts, and that the Courts must regard .every transaction which comes within the prohibition as unlawful, and therefore as being void or unenforcible, the fact that for nearly fifty
In the third plea, which was afterwards offered, there seems to be some attempt to obviate the objections to the two first pleas, by stating that the note was executed on Sunday, in consideration of drugs, medicines, etc., then and there sold by the plaintiffs to the defendants, in the transaction of the ordinary business of the plaintiffs. But although the plea states twice the day of the month and year in which the note was executed and delivered, it does not state in terms
We are aware that in giving a strict construction to these pleas and to the statute on which they arefounded, we may not have followed the course of decision in some other States where statutes on the same subject have been enacted. But it is probable that these statutes are not precisely like ours in language, and the legislation of some of those countries may have intended more than to secure public decorum and quiet, and abstinence from labor on the Sabbath. Our statutes protect religious worship from disturbance, but can neither compel attendance upon it, nor contribution towards its maintenance, nor any devotional duties or observances. And we are satisfied that the particular clause now in question had no other object in view but that of enforcing decorum and quiet on a- day regarded as holy by a large portion of the community, and of securing rest from labor on that day, (unless where some other day is kept as a religious observance,) to all persons employed to labor for othei-s. It is quite probable that the legislature did not think of any effect which this provision might have upon isolated transactions of a pri
We refer to the case of Geere vs. Putnam, (10, Mass. Rep. 317,) as deciding that in that State a note executed on Sunday is not necessarily void. And in Vermont, although it has been decided that a contract finally executed on Sunday is void, (0, Vert. Rep. 219.) it has also been decided that, if not fully closed on that day, the contract is not void,- because some of its terms might have been fixed on that day,- or indeed because most of the business out of which the consideration of the contract arose, was transacted on that day. (18, Verint. Rep. 379.) And in Adams vs. Gay, (in which these decisions are referred' to, and which was decided by fhe Supreme Court of Vermont,) it is also affirmed Os a principle for which the case of Williams vs. Paul,, (6, Bingham 603) is referred to, that although the contract be closed on Sunday, yet if affirmed on a subsequent day, it becomes validy And it is further asserted by the Court, that if either party há's done or given anything under such a contrae!, a réfusal of fhe other party upon a subsequent demand tó malee institution or compénsdition should be regarded as a confirmation of the contract. (Seethe casereporled in 10th Law Reporter, 348.) These conservative principles, engrafted by the Courts ón fhe statutes of other' States as' being necessary to prevent the mischief and frauds which might be perpetrated under color of law, Confirm the propriety of the strict construction which we bávé'ád-dopled, and the cases referred to afford authority for, rather than against the conclusion which we have already expressed in the present cáse.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.’*