141 Ga. 482 | Ga. | 1914
two of the act was not invalid. See also Banks v. State, 124 Ga. 15 (52 S. E. 74, 2 L. R. A. (N S.) 1007). A similar clause in a statute was under consideration In Re Milecke, 52 Wash. 312 (100 Pac. 743, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 259, 132 Am. St. R. 968), which was held broadly not to be violative of any constitutional provision. In the course of the opinion it was said: “Nor do we think that that part of section 2 of the act, providing that if it be shown that a party has refused or neglected to pay for his accommodations, ■ or has removed or surreptitiously attempts to remove his baggage, such showing shall be prima facie evidence of guilt, does violence to any constitutional provision. It is elementary that, when a crime is defined, the legislature may provide the quantum as well as the proof. It is not going beyond sound reason to say that when a person asks for'and receives accommodations at a hotel, for which he does not pay, or if he undertakes to destroy the innkeeper’s lien on his baggage, he should assume the burden of showing an honest intent.” Under the principles of the cases cited above, the legislature, by enacting the hotel act of 1910, now under consideration, prescribed a reasonable classification of subject-matters to which the act should be applicable, and by section two pronounced a legitimate rule of evidence, applicable in cases of prose-. cution for violation of the act. The law is operative throughout the State, and equally applicable to all persons coming within its scope. It does not in any sense violate the provision of the State con
Owing to the character of the several businesses classified in the first section, of the act, they constitute fruitful objects for fraudulent impositions. The statute specifies certain acts of a character naturally tending to deceive, which persons designing fraud might do, and denounces and penalizes .them. The statute is a valid State law. There is no inherent right to commit fraud. The provision of the 14th amendment against abridgment of privileges and immunities was not intended to prevent a State from adopting laws for the suppression and punishment of frauds. It does not appear from any view-point that the .act of 1910 (supra) violates the 14th amendment. In the light of the foregoing rulings the questions propounded are answered in the negative.