125 Mass. 182 | Mass. | 1878
The only question which has been submitted for a determination in this case is, Has the petitioner, under the statutes of this Commonwealth, a right to a trial by jury upon the question whether the exercise of his business is dangerous to the public health ? It is contended by the petitioner that, if the St. of 1871, c. 167, applies to his building and trade, and deprives him of the right of appeal to a jury, it is unconstitutional. The respondent, on the other hand, contends that the statute is simply a license law, and can be sustained as a license law, even to the extent of preventing the petitioner from carrying on his business, within the constitutional exercise of legislative authority, although he has no right of trial by jury.
The important question at the outset, therefore, is, Did the Legislature intend that the order of the state board of health, passed under § 2, requiring the petitioner “ to cease and desist from carrying on the said business on the said premises, on and after the fifteenth day of May, 1876,” should be absolute, final and irrevocable ? This statute is to be expounded in view of all existing laws upon the same subject matter, and is, if consistent with proper rules of construction and interpretation, to be so construed as to be in harmony with the provisions of the Constitution of the Commonwealth. If, however, by reasonable construction, the statute cannot be interpreted in such manner as to he consistent with the Constitution, the Constitution must prevail and the statute is void. It is necessary therefore to examine the legislation upon this subject.
The earliest provincial act upon the subject of slaughterhouses is that of 1692-3, (4 W. & M.) c. 23, which is as follows “ The selectmen of the towns of Boston, Salem and Charlestown, respectively, or other market towns in the province, with two or more justices of the peace dwelling in the town, or two of the
By the St. of 1710-11, (9 Anne) a. 8, provision is made upon that subject. The preamble of the act is substantially a recital of the act before quoted, and the first section is a concise reenactment of the same provisions. The second section is as follows : “ When and so often, from time to time, as it shall appear any house or place assigned or to be assigned to and for the exercising of either of the aforesaid trades or mysteries, to
Article 15 of the Declaration of Eights is as follows : “ In all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between two or more persons, except in cases in which it has heretofore been otherways used and practised, the parties have a right to a trial by jury; and this method of procedure shall be held- sacred, unless in causes arising on the high seas, and such as relate to mariners’ wages, the Legislature shall hereafter find it necessary to alter it.”
These citations are made not for the purpose of showing that the legislative act in question is in violation of the Constitution and therefore void, but, as before intimated, for the purpose of grouping the legislation as it existed at the time of passing the act in order to aid us in the interpretation of it. And, in the same view, it becomes necessary to look into existing laws.
By the Gen. Sts. o. 26, the whole power of regulation of noxious and offensive trades is committed to the respective boards of health of the several towns. They may assign places for the exercise of such trades and may revoke such assignments. § 52. The rights of the public and of the individual exercising the trade are carefully secured. If the town board of health refuses to revoke an assignment, after the place shall have become a nuisance, and perhaps without any effort to procure a
It now becomes important to examine the statutes in relation to the state board of health. That board was established by the St. of 1869, c. 420. The board was to “ take cognizance of the interests of life and health among the citizens of this Commonwealth.” They were to “make sanitary investigations and inquiries in respect to the people, the causes of disease, and especially of epidemics and the sources of mortality, and the effects of localities, employments, conditions and circumstances, on the public health; ” and “ gather such information in respect to those matters as they may deem proper, for diffusion among the people.” It was also their duty to “advise the government in regard to the location of any public institutions.” They are required also to report to the Legislature “their doings, investigations and discoveries during the year ending December thirty-first, with such suggestions as to legislative action as they may deem necessary.” It is made their duty also “ to examine into and report, what in their best judgment is the effect of the use of intoxicating liquor, as a beverage, upon the industry, prosperity, happiness, health and lives of the citizens of the state. Also, what additional legislation, if any, is necessary in the premises.” This is the whole duty of the board under the act establishing it. No other power or duty was conferred or imposed upon such board until the St. of 1871, e. 167, which is the act under consideration. The first section of that act provides, “ Whoever, in any city or town containing more than four thousand inhabitants, erects, occupies or uses any building for carrying on therein the business of slaughtering cattle, sheep or other animals, or for melting or rendering establishments, or for other noxious or offensive trades and occupations, or permits or
“ Whenever, in any city or town containing more than four thousand inhabitants, any building or premises are occupied or used by any person or persons or corporation for carrying on the business of slaughtering cattle, sheep or other animals, or for melting or rendering establishments, or for other noxious or offensive trades, the state board of health may, if in their judgment the public health or the public comfort and convenience shall require, order any person or persons or corporation carrying on said trades or occupations, to desist and cease from further carrying on said trades or occupations in such building or premises; a,nd any person or persons or corporation, continuing to occupy or use such building or premises for carrying on said trades or occupations after being ordered to desist and cease therefrom by said board, shall forfeit a sum not exceeding two hundred dollars for every month he or they continue to occupy and use such building or premises for carrying on said trades or dc •"ipations after being ordered to desist and cease therefrom by said board as aforesaid, and in like proportion for a longer or shorter time : provided, that on any application to said board to exercise the powers in this section conferred upon them, a time md place for hearing the parties shall be assigned by said board*191 and due notice thereof given to the party against whom the application is made, and the order hereinbefore provided shall only be issued after such notice and hearing.”
This section authorizes the state board of health to forbid the exercise of the offensive trade in any municipality of more than four thousand inhabitants. This is its whole power, under that or any other provision of law in respect to the regulation of noxious trades. By the first section of the act, the Legislature have declared their purpose that the general subject of noxious and offensive trades shall be within the control of the boards of health of the municipal corporations. Precisely the same power is given by the Gen. Sts. a. 26, § 52, to the boards of health of towns as by this section is given to the state board of health. The only difference is this, that by the St. of 1871, the state board of health is bound to give notice to a party and allow him a hearing before it can pass an order of prohibition; but under the Gen. Sts. c. 26, § 52, the selectmen may pass an order of prohibition without any previous notice. Belcher v. Farrar, 8 Allen, 325.
We cannot suppose that the Legislature intended to change the whole system of regulation of noxious trades by simply conferring the power to prohibit in certain cases upon the state board of health.
If the construction contended for by the respondent is correct, there is nowhere any power of revision of the action of the board. It is absolute, final, conclusive. In cities and towns containing four thousand inhabitants, the whole system, so elaborately prepared and enacted by the Gen. Sts. e. 26, by which the rights of the public and the rights of citizens are secured through the intervention of trials by jury in the county and before the Superior Court’, is absorbed in the jurisdiction of a state board of health; and this, too, without a suggestion of the repeal of the many provisions of the existing laws which are in conflict with this construction, and with the strong intimation conveyed by the first section, that the general system is to be preserved. It is not necessary to look at the consequences of such an interpretation to induce us to reject it; still those consequences are proper subjects for consideration, and are presumed to have been foreseen by the Legislature. It is undoubtedly true that the
The only construction which we can give to the statute, consistent with the Constitution of the Commonwealth, with existing laws recognized by the act itself as still in force, with the general policy of the legislation upon the subject, is to treat the power given by the statute as given subject to the same limitations and qualifications as that given to town boards of health upon the same subject, and, of course, with the same right of appeal. This construction of the statute preserves the general system provided by law unimpaired; it simply gives to the state board of health jurisdiction, whether concurrent with the town boards or exclusive it is not material to this case to inquire, in cities and large towns, to do what may be done in every town of the Commonwealth by the local board of health ; but we do not think that it was the purpose of the Legislature, nor does the language of the act compel us to say, that its effect is to deprive the party of that right of trial by jury, to which the citizens in such cases have been accustomed for nearly two centuries. By the Gen. Sts. e. 26, § 52, “ the board ” (the town board of health) “ may also forbid the exercise of such trade or employment within the limits of the town or in any particular locality thereof.” By § 55, the “ orders of prohibition under § 52 shall be served upon the occupant or person having charge of the
Stand for further hearing.
The case was then tried in the Superior Court, and the jury returned the following verdict and special findings, each signed by their foreman and affirmed in court:
“Verdict. The jury affirm the order of the state board of health, in full, dated April 3,1876. The jury answer, No.”
“ Special findings. The jury alter the order of the state board of health, dated April 3, 1876, as follows: that Mr. George A. Sawyer shall be permitted to continue the business of slaughtering animals on the premises now occupied by him in the town of Watertown, under the restrictions as per appended sheet.
“ 1. Mr. George A. Sawyer shall be required to concrete the cellar under his slaughter-house, in concave form.
“ 2. Mr. Sawyer shall not keep swine in or under his slaughter-house.
“ 3. All offal and offensive matter shall be removed from the above premises before ten o’clock, p. M., of the day of killing, in covered, water-tight boxes or tanks.
“ 4. Said premises shall be kept at all times in a condition of neatness and cleanliness acceptable to the local board of health.”
The respondent moved to set aside the verdict, for the following reasons:
“ 1. That the verdict does not determine, pass upon, or in any wise relate to certain matters embraced in and prohibited by the order of the defendants appealed Irom, to wit, the business of tendering.
“ 2. That the verdict neither affirms, annuls or alters said order in substantial particulars, to wit, as to the business of ren dering.
“ 3. That the verdict is indefinite and uncertain, and does not prescribe in what condition the premises shall be kept so that such condition can be determined from the verdict.
“ 4. That the verdict delegates to another tribunal authority in the premises and power to enlarge or limit the finding of the jury and the order appealed from.
“ 5. That the fourth restriction contained in the verdict is void, and vitiates the verdict.
“ 6. That the verdict is partial, incomplete, and does not cover the subject matter of the order appealed from.”
The motion was overruled; and the respondent appealed to this court.
When this petition was before us at a former term, it was decided that the petitioner had the same right of appeal from an order of the state board of health as from that of the local board.
The statutes of the Commonwealth do not in terms authorize either the local or state board of health to prescribe regulations for the mode of carrying on noxious or harmful trades or business. Their power is that of prohibition. Gen. Sts. c. 26, § 52. Although no authority is given to regulate “ offensive trades,” yet by § 5 of the same chapter it is provided that “ the board shall make such regulations as it judges necessary for the public health and safety, respecting nuisances, sources of filth, and causes of sickness, within its town,” &c.' By § 56, any person aggrieved by the order of prohibition may appeal therefrom: and provision is made for a speedy hearing before a jury. Section 58 provides that “the verdict of the jury, which may either alter the order, or affirm or annul it in full, shall be returned to the court for acceptance as in the case of highways; and said verdict, when accepted, shall have the authority and effect of an original order from which no appeal had been taken.”
The order of the state board of health appealed from is “ that George A. Sawyer of Watertown be and he hereby is directed to discontinue the business of slaughtering and rendering on the premises now occupied by him, on and after the fifteenth day of May, 1876.”
It is to be observed that the business of “ slaughtering ” and the business of “ rendering ” are not the same business. They are carried on sometimes conjunctively, and sometimes separately. They are not equally offensive; and, when carried on in the same establishment, they are undoubtedly more offensive than when either is carried on without the other; and whether the prohibition of the state board of health is confined to the carrying on of both kinds of business in connection, or whether it is an order prohibiting each, is unimportant. No criticism of the order is made in this respect. The. petitioner accepts it as a prohibition of each business, and that is as favorable a view as can be taken for the validity of the order. Nor does the petitioner claim to carry on the business of rendering, nor does he seek for any modification of the order in this respect. His appeal relates only to the order forbidding his carrying on the business of slaughtering. That subject only was presented to the consideration of the jury. Under the statute above cited, the jury have authority to affirm the order in full. Although with slight informality, yet with no possibility of error, the jury find chat they do not affirm the order in full. The same section of the statute provides that the jury may alter the order. And, upen this branch of the case, the jury make “ special findings,” commencing their special findings thus : “ The jury alter the order of the state board of health, dated April 3,1876, as follows: that Mr. George A. Sawyer shall be permitted to continue the business of slaughtering animals on the premises now occupied by him in the town of Watertown, under the restrictions as per appended sheet.” The restrictions, four in number, as well aa
It would undoubtedly have been within the power of the court, before the verdict was affirmed, to have had all the findings of the jury incorporated into a single one in the form of an order framed substantially as if ordered by the state board of health; and that, perhaps, would have been the preferable mode of affirming the verdict. We do not, however, think the mode adopted so defective in form as to require us therefore to set it aside. The record shows that the petitioner set forth in his petition the order of the state board of health, in the terms in which it was made, and prayed that a jury might either alter or annul in full such order of prohibition. The several findings of the jury appear also upon the record, and, upon the principle that that is certain which can be made certain, we think the several findings of the jury may be so applied to and incorporated with the original order, that the whole is sufficiently clear, precise and definite, in matter of form.
There remains, then, only the question whether in substance the findings of the jury are warranted; and it seems to us the proper test of this is, Is the order, as modified by the jury, one which the state board of health is authorized to make ? And we think it is. As already suggested, we think either the local or the state board of health, under the general authority given them to “ make such regulations as it judges necessary for the public health and safety, respecting nuisances, sources of filth,” &c., may properly make regulations as to the mode of conducting offensive trades. It may be that such regulations must be enforced, if not obeyed, by absolute prohibition ; and it may be that the order making them would of itself be an order of prohibition to the conducting of them in any other mode.
The law prescribes no standard by which the propriety of such regulations must be judged. It rests only in the sound judgment and discretion of public officers appointed because of their qualifications for such duty, but subject to the revision of a jury;. and the restrictions and limitations imposed by a jury must be of an extraordinary character for the court to interfere and say that, in law, they are not authorized. On examining
The first is, “ that the petitioner shall be required to concrete the cellar under the slaughter-house in concave form.” There can be no doubt or misunderstanding of the meaning of this language. And the court cannot say that it is not a proper and a reasonable requirement. The second is, “ Mr. Sawyer shall not keep swine in or under his slaughter-house.” Certainly, no objection can be made to this. The third is, “ All offal and offensive matter shall be removed from the above premises before ten o’clock, P. M., of the day of killing, in covered water-tight boxes or tanks.” Nor is there in this anything objectionable. Of course, the true construction of “ removal ” is effectual removal from the premises.
The fourth and only remaining restriction is, that “ said premises shall be kept at all times in a condition of neatness and cleanliness acceptable to the local board of health.” We do not understand this finding as an imposition of any duty upon the local board of health. There is probably nothing in it which would not be implied by law if it were omitted. It is a simple declaration that there shall not be allowed any accumulation of filth from any source or by any means, by which the premises should become a nuisance; and the reference to the local board of health is probably as to the legal standard of neatness; but, whatever may be its construction, we do not see that it in any manner vitiates the finding of the jury; for if, when the petitioner has complied with all the regulations of the order, as altered by the jury, he, by some extraneous means, accumulates filth upon his premises, in such manner as to injuriously affect the public health, and in some other mode creates a nuisance, the law would subject him to the control of the local board of health, as well as to that of the state board.
There is a peculiarity in this proceeding which quite distinguishes it from the ordinary rules which govern appeals. The appeal to a jury does not vacate the order. It remains in full force till annulled or altered. If not annulled or altered, it still stands; if altered, it stands as altered. If the alterations made are absolutely impracticable, the order still stands just as if the original order had been made in the terms of the order as altered