69 Md. 203 | Md. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Harford County for selling fertilizers without having procured the license prescribed by the Act of Assembly of eighteen hundred and eighty-two, chapter four hundred and fifty-one. He demurred to the indictment, and upon the demurrer being overruled, ho pleaded not guilty, was put upon trial, was convicted and sentenced to pay a fine. Whether the Circuit Court was correct in its ruling on the demurrer is the question presented for review by the writ of error, Tinder which the case has been brought into this Court.
The Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-two, which is entitled, “an Act to prevent fraud in the manufacture and sale of commercial fertilizers and bone dust in Harford County,” provides, in substance, that every person who shall offer for sale any commercial fertilizer or bone dust, the price of which shall exceed ten dollars a ton, shall affix to every package a certifi
The judgment of the Circuit Court is alleged to he erroneous on two grounds, viz., first, because an indictment does not lie to enforce the penalty prescribed by said Act for its violation ; and second, because the Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-six, chapter four hundred and seventy-sevén, works a repeal of said Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-two, and because the last named Act is in abeyance and inoperative, so long as said Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-six remains in force.
It has been insisted by the appellant, that an indictment is not the proper mode of procedure for enforcing the fines provided by the Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-two, because of the provisions of sections seven and nine of that statute. Those sections declare that “suit may he brought for the recovery of fines and damages,” and that “ all suits for the recovery of fines
We do not think the second assignment of error is tenable either. “ The repeal by mere implication of a former by a subsequent statute is never favored by the Courts, and it is only where they are clearly irreconcilable and not susceptible of any such fair interpretation as will allow of their standing together, that such repeal will be declared.” Higgins vs. State, 64 Md., 419. The Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-six is a Public General Law. The Act of eighteen hundred and eighty-two is a Public Local Law. If there
It will thus be seen that the titles of these two Acts are entirely different—the one being an Act to prevent fraud in the sale of fertilizers; and the other an Act to provide a system of inspections of fertilizers: That the one requires a certificate of the contents of each "
It follows from what lias been - said that proceedings by way of indictment were proper for the recovery of the fine in this case ; and we hold that "both Acts are in force in Harford County. There was, consequently, no error committed hy the Circuit Court in its judgment on the demurrer.
We have gone into a consideration of the merits of this case to the end that the questions in issue might he finally settled without further or other litigation ; though, properly, the writ of error must he dismissed because not sued out within the time limited in the rules of this Court. The judgment was entered against the appellant and sentence was passed upon him on February the twentieth last, hut his petition for a writ of error was not filed until the twenty-sixth day of the following March. This was not, as decided in State vs. Bowers, 65 Md., 363, within the time allowed hy the rules of this Court; and consequently the writ must he dismissed.
Writ of Error dismissed.