115 S.W.2d 483 | Tex. App. | 1938
Lead Opinion
Appellee, State of Texas, acting by and through Andrew Patton, District Attorney, was granted a temporary injunction in a district court of Dallas county against appellants, on November 17, 1937, restraining the latter parties from violating the provisions of article 614b of the Vernon's Annotated Texas Penal Code; however, on this appeal the assignments urged are the same as would be presented following a final judgment of permanent injunction in the trial court. Although a statement of facts accompanies the record, all of the assignments of appellants are directed to the constitutionality of said chapter 62, page 131, Acts of the 43d Legislature, 1934, 2d Called Session, otherwise known as article 614b of Vernon's Ann. Pen. Code. The parties to this record have been previously before this court in Sportatorium, Inc., v. State,
"Section 1. It shall hereafter be unlawful for any person to conduct in public competition for prizes, awards or admission fees, any personal, physical or mental endurance contest that continues longer than twenty-four (24) hours.
"Sec. 2. It shall hereafter be unlawful for any person to conduct, within any period of one hundred sixty-eight (168) hours, in public competition for prizes, awards, or admission fees, more than one (1) such personal, physical, or mental endurance contest at the same place or location, and in which any of the same contestants engage.
"Sec. 3. It shall hereafter be unlawful for any contestant to engage in any personal, physical or mental endurance contest for a period of longer than twenty-four (24) hours.
"Sec. 4. It shall hereafter be unlawful for any person to engage, within any period of one hundred sixty-eight (168) hours, in more than one (1) personal, physical or *486 mental endurance contest which is conducted in the same place or location.
"Sec. 5. Each promoter of or person conducting any personal, physical or mental endurance contest in public competition for prizes, awards or admission fees, who shall violate any provision of this Act, or any person who shall enter any contest that violates any provision of this Act, shall be fined not less than $100.00 nor more than $1000.00 for each offense, or confined in the county jail not less than thirty (30) days nor more than ninety (90) days, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
"Sec. 6. The provisions of this Act shall not apply to any athletic contest of schools, colleges or universities of the State nor to any trial contest for the purpose of testing the strength and capacity of materials and machinery of any kind.
"Sec. 7. Any house, structure, building, place or open air space that is being used for the purposes in violation of the provisions of this Act is hereby declared to be a common nuisance. Any person who knowingly maintains or assists in the maintaining of such a place is guilty of maintaining a nuisance.
"Sec. 8. Whenever the Attorney General or the district or county attorney has reliable information that such a nuisance exists, the Attorney General or the district attorney or county attorney under his direction, shall file in the name of the State in the county where the nuisance is alleged to exist against whoever maintains such nuisance to abate and enjoin the same. If judgment be in favor of the State, then judgment shall be rendered abating said nuisance and enjoining the defendants from maintaining the same, and ordering the said house to be closed for one year from the date of said judgment, unless the defendants in said suit, or the owner, tenant, or lessee of said property make bond payable to the State at the county seat of the county where such nuisance is alleged to exist, in the penal sum of not less than one thousand nor more than five thousand dollars, with sufficient sureties to be approved by the judge trying the case, conditioned that the acts prohibited in this law shall not be done or permitted to be done in said house. On violation of any condition of such bond, the whole sum may be recovered as a penalty in the name and for the State in the county where such conditions are violated, all such suits to be brought by the district or county attorney of such county." Sections 9, 10 and 11 being immaterial, are not set out.
Appellants have advanced some 13 propositions in support of their contention, which may, for practical purposes, be grouped into three classes — the first, second, and third of which propositions complain of arbitrary distinction between persons of the same class, in violation of sections 3 and 19, of article 1, Texas Constitution, article 2, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, and section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The fourth proposition complains of the nuisance features of the act, claiming the matters regulated not being a nuisance in fact; and propositions 5 to 13 attack the various provisions of the act and the wording thereof, on the ground of "indefiniteness" and "uncertainty," inhibited by article 1, section 10 of our State Constitution; also articles 1, 6 and 8 of the Texas Penal Code, as well as the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
The basic laws, both state and national, above quoted, which appellants assert the granting of this temporary injunction infringes upon, severally provide:
Art. 1, § 3, State Const.: "All free men, when they form a social compact, have equal rights, and no man, or set of men, is entitled to exclusive separate public emoluments, or privileges, but in consideration of public services."
Id., § 10: "In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have a speedy public trial by an impartial jury. He shall have the right to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him, and to have a copy thereof. He shall not be compelled to give evidence against himself, and shall have the right of being heard by himself or counsel, or both, shall be confronted by the witnesses against him."
Id., § 19: "No citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, privileges or immunities, or in any manner disfranchised, except by the due course of the law of the land."
Article 2, Code of Crim.Proc.: "Due course of law. No citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, privileges or immunities, or in any manner disfranchised, except by the due course of the law of the land. (Bill of Rights, § 19)."
Article 1, P.C. "Design of the Code. The design of enacting this Code is to define in plain language every offense against the laws of this State, and affix to each offense its proper punishment." *487
Article 6, P.C. "Unintelligible law not operative. Whenever it appears that a provision of the penal law is so indefinitely framed or of such doubtful construction that it cannot be understood, either from the language in which it is expressed, or from some other written law of the State, such penal law shall be regarded as wholly inoperative."
Article 8, P.C. "Words, how understood. Words which have their meaning specially defined shall be understood in that sense, though it be contrary to their usual meaning; and all words used in this Code, except where a word, term or phrase is specially defined, are to be taken and construed in the sense in which they are understood in common language, taking into consideration the context and subject matter relative to which they are employed."
Section 1 of Fourteenth Amendment, U.S. Const. "No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
The act in question can be classified as penal in nature, the penalty provided for its violation as a criminal law being a fine and jail sentence, and cumulative thereof, through suppression by civil proceedings as a common nuisance. The injunction features of the law are therefore more in the nature of additional punishment for its infraction than the establishment of a rule of civil conduct, as illustrated by the principles announced in road law cases. West Texas Coaches v. Madi, Tex.Com.App., 26 S.W.2d 199. Hence, the rule of strict construction should apply in testing the legal sufficiency of the law under consideration as a criminal statute. State v. Duke,
Further considering the provisions of article 614b as against the charge of unreasonable discrimination in classes assertedly similar, it is well established that, in the exercise of police power, a Legislature may recognize different degrees of possible abuse, and evil tendencies inherent in different forms of amusement or entertainment, and give effect thereto in classifying the subject, for the purpose of appropriate regulation, without being open to the charge that the statute is arbitrary or unconstitutional. See State v. Loomis,
"A very wide latitude is permitted in making selections for classification, and necessarily so, for it is obvious that things may have diverse qualities and belong to the same class, or they may have many characteristics in common and be cast into different classes. Billings v. Illinois,
"But, although theaters and playhouses are still proper subjects of police regulation, the fact that the state does not now see fit to exert its authority in that respect does not militate against its right to regulate other subjects clearly within the range of its police power. City of Butte v. Paltrovich,
"Laws are not judged by theoretical standards, but by concrete conditions which induce them, and, before the defendant can insist that the amended act be condemned, he must be able to demonstrate that there are not any valid reasons for the application of Sunday observance regulations to dance houses and dance halls which do not apply equally to theaters and playhouses (Missouri, K. T. R. Co. v. May,
Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, Vol. 2, page 813, says: "But a state may classify with reference to an evil to be prevented, and if the class discriminated against is, or reasonably might be, considered to define those from whom the evil mainly is to be feared it may properly be picked out." In Patsone v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Principles supporting the validity of tax measures, containing classifications and exemptions, may properly be invoked in determining the competency of the statute before us. The test applicable to both species of legislation is substantially similar. Indeed, it is the conclusion of the writer that more latitude is indulged as to regulations within the police power than is applicable to tax laws by reason of article 8, section 2, of our Constitution, which says: "All occupation taxes shall be equal and uniform upon the same class of subjects." In Ex parte Asotsky,
Appellee has support for the statement made that there is a present tendency in favor of certain exemptions as to persons and classes, which have been heretofore condemned by the early decisions. State v. Standard Oil Co. et al., Tex.Sup.,
And Judge Williams, in the Stephens Case, supra, a leading authority on the subject of occupation taxes, clearly states the rule prevailing in this State on the subject: "The very language of the Constitution of the state implies power in the Legislature to classify the subjects of occupation taxes and only requires that the tax shall be equal and uniform upon the same class. Persons who, in the most general sense, may be regarded as pursuing the same occupation, as, for instance, merchants, may thus be divided into classes, and the classes may be taxed in different amounts and according to different standards. Merchants may be divided into wholesalers and retailers, and, if there be reasonable grounds, these may be further divided according to the particular classes of business in which they may engage."
A digest of the United States Supreme Court decisions, as well as those of last resort from other states, is to the effect that it is the duty of courts to sustain a classification if any reasonable distinction can be found, Rast v. Van Deman Lewis Co.,
Appellants cite Jackson v. State, 55 Tex. Crim. 557,
As to the exemption of those who may engage in trial tests of materials and machinery, it is also generally known that persons, firms, or corporations usually conducting such activities are regulated strenuously in these times as to hours, wages, and working conditions, as well as in workmen's compensation regulations and benefits — making a clearly distinct and recognized class. The object of such mechanical test is obviously other than directly financial, and lacking the human element of prolonged competitive physical or mental exercise.
Appellants, under their fourth proposition, argue the Legislature has here carved out and placed in the pattern of the law a species of human activities denominated artificial or statutory nuisances, when such are in no sense nuisances in fact. Judge Phillips, in Stockwell v. State,
Appellants' propositions 5 to 13, inclusive, wherein they undertake to condemn *491
article 614b as too vague, indefinite, and uncertain for enforcement, are the law points that have really troubled us. In Missouri K. T. R. Co. v. State,
In Augustine v. State, 41 Tex. Cr.R. 59,
Bearing in mind the above-established canons of construction, the wording of sections 1 and 2 of article 614b, given usual and ordinary meaning as defined in any standard dictionary, simply prohibits any person from conducting in public competition for prizes, awards, or admission fees, any personal, physical, or mental endurance contest that continues longer than 24 hours; nor shall there be more than one such contest in any one week in the same place or location, in which any of the same contestants engage. This is sufficiently definite and certain to any one familiar enough with that character of business, to seek to engage in it, to apprise him as to what he can or cannot do. Specified conduct here is made an offense. The statute simply inveighs against all the conduct named, of the character and for the periods therein specified, just as homicide is generally denominated a penal offense, except on the statutory justifiable grounds. As appropriately stated by Judge Phillips, in State v. T. P. R. Co.,
But appellants point out that one conducting such a business, desirous of complying with the law, is at a loss to know what is meant by the different places or locations where endurance contests might continue within its terms. The law is clear, we think, as to the wording of the statute "at the same place or location," and if an operator seeks to undertake continuous performances by a statutory compliance as to other places or locations, a fact question would arise in the event of criminal proceedings, similar to the issue of self-defense in a prosecution for murder. The following passage from State v. I. G. N. R. Co.,
Appellants argue that sections 3 and 4 of the act, within their plain terms, forbid no specific or definite conduct, and could refer to all acts of physical or mental endeavor, because neither public competition nor competing for prizes, awards, or admission fees are expressly comprehended. We are at liberty to view the act as a *492
whole, in giving effect to these particular sections. Bearing in mind the preceding sections, followed by section 5, providing, "or any person who shall enter any contest that violates any provision of this Act," it is obvious that sections 3 and 4 are referable to persons engaging in public competition for prizes, awards, etc., taking into consideration, as is proper, the context and subject-matter relative to which such language is employed. Art. 8 P.C., supra; McLeod v. State, 77 Tex. Cr.R. 365,
It is further contended that certain words and phrases in the act are too vague and indefinite for understanding and enforcement as criminal charges. Where the particular words assailed, taken in connection with the context of the act, are commonly understood, their use does not render a statute invalid; the Legislature not being required to define words in common or daily use. A statute is sufficiently certain if the words and phrases employed have a technical or other specific meaning, well enough known to enable those within their reach to correctly apply them. Hygrade Provision Co. v. Sherman,
While no penal law should be sustained unless what it commands is so clearly expressed as that any ordinary person can understand in advance his duties thereunder, and the departure therefrom which the law attempts to make criminal, Tozer v. United States, C.C., 52 F. 917, we think the Legislature here has informed the citizen with reasonable precision what conduct it intended to prohibit by this statute, and is sufficiently explicit that all persons subject to its penalties may know what acts it is their duty to avoid. United States v. Brewer,
The more or less laudable interest evinced, by individuals and promoters, to determine the present-day capacity for human endurance, as compared to ancient Grecian standards — not for patriotic, but for commercial reasons, however — is of recent but wide development, taking manifold forms. More than 20 states have enacted legislation for the relief of the overworked contestant for Marathon honors within the past three years, though since 1903 Pennsylvania has limited athletic exhibitions to 12 hours per day. Colorado and Louisiana have laws on the subject quite similar to article 614b. Judge Looney of this Court (Sportatorium, Inc., v. State,
Concluding our discussion of these several propositions of appellants, we hold the language of the article in question is sufficiently definite and certain as that a person affected thereby can reasonably be informed when he is violating or about to violate the same.
The action of the trial court in granting the injunction herein is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
My views on the question decided in the majority opinion are expressed with cited authorities in the dissenting opinion of Sportatorium, Inc., v. State, Tex.Civ.App.
Bearing upon the uncertainty of the provisions, attention is directed to the case of Wolfe v. State, 127 Tex. Crim. 213,
So here we have one member of this court and the Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas construing this statute to mean one thing, and two judges of this court and the Waco Court of Civil Appeals construing the statute to mean another, on identically the same state of facts. Manifestly, the expression of the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, in the case of Graham v. Hines,
The Penal Code of this State provides that the design of enacting it is to define in plain language every offense, P.C. 1925, art. 1; and that no person shall be punished for an offense, if "the penal law is so indefinitely framed or of such doubtful construction that it can not be understood." P.C. arts. 6, 8. The Constitution also guarantees to every citizen the right to know the nature and character of the accusation against him. Const. art. 1, § 10. In my opinion, the statute here under consideration, which has been construed by the Court of Criminal Appeals of this State as meaning one thing, and by the majority of this court and the Waco Court of Civil Appeals as meaning another, is so indefinite and uncertain as to be obnoxious to the Constitution and the statutes of the state. There is no fixed rule stated when a citizen shall know when he is within or without the law. The statute is penal in its nature. Every act made penal invades the constitutional guarantee of liability and the use of property.
Furthermore, there is no rule more fixed than the one requiring that a penal statute, invading and inhibiting the personal conduct and prerogative of citizens in their relations and in the use of their property, must operate uniformly and equally upon all alike. Section 6 of the statute under consideration, article 614b, P.C., provides: "The provisions of this Act shall not apply to any athletic contest of schools, colleges or universities of the State, nor to any trial contest for the purpose of testing the strength and capacity of materials and machinery of any kind." *494 This, I think, makes the statute obnoxious to the constitutional provision of equal rights, immunities, and privileges to all citizens.
In the case of Jackson v. State, 55 Tex. Crim. 557,
In the case of Ex parte Baker, 127 Tex. Crim. 589,
It is the peculiar province of the Court of Criminal Appeals of this State to construe penal statutes, and its opinions should have controlling force on the action of the civil courts of the State in construing such laws, and for that reason the expressions of the Court of Criminal Appeals on analogous statutes are quoted, and, I think, bear directly on the issue here involved.
Conceding that the Legislature, in enacting this statute, was prompted by a worthy motive and sincere belief that the type of amusement prohibited constituted an evil, nevertheless, the Legislature was circumscribed by constitutional limitations which denied to it the power to declare by statute an act done by one of its citizens is illegal, and that the same act done by another of its citizens, or by another group of its citizens of the same class in relation to the act, is legal.
If "personal, physical or mental endurance contests, conducted in public competition for prizes, awards or admission fees and continuing longer than twenty-four hours" constitute an evil and a nuisance, a proper subject of police regulation by the State, the constitutional reservation does not permit the Legislature to declare that any such act done or committed at one place or location is legal and the operators not amenable to the law; and that the same identical act done at some other place or location is illegal, and the operators subject to the penalty subscribed. If such a law stands as a proper police regulation, then there is nothing as I can see to prohibit any person or group of persons from opening up and operating a school, college, or university, at some place or location, it matters not where, and then, under the auspices of such an improvised institution, conduct a personal, physical, or mental endurance contest, and thus come under the exemption of the statute; while, without such school, the same party conducting such contest would come under its condemnation. *495
If the evil sought to be regulated is in fact a nuisance and subject to be abated and the operators thereof guilty of a crime, how can it be said that it would lose its evil characteristics if conducted by some school, college, or university of the State, and then, too, retain the evils, if conducted in the State by educational institutions outside of the State, or by individuals within the State? I do not believe it is a proper classification to allow any school within this State to do an act which is declared a nuisance by expressed statutory provisions, and to deny the same thing to schools outside of Texas, or to individuals in Texas not connected with schools, colleges, or universities. Clearly, if such endurance contests are permitted by schools, colleges, or universities of this State and is denied to schools, colleges, and universities out of this State, and to individuals or groups of individuals in other places or localities, the law so declaring deprives the latter class of equal immunities and privileges guaranteed under both the State and Federal Constitutions.
I do not deem it necessary to enter into a further discussion of the question, but respectfully indicate my inability to agree with my associates.
Addendum
Overruled.
BOND, C. J., is in accord with the conclusion of the majority herein not to certify to the Supreme Court, but dissents to their action in overruling the motion for rehearing.