94 Neb. 785 | Neb. | 1913
The relator, the county attorney for Adams county, instituted proceedings in quo warranto in the district court for .that county, to oust the respondent from the state of Nebraska, and from a judgment of ouster the respondent appeals.
The pleadings, consisting of the amended information, the answer and reply, are voluminous a.nd will not be set out. A reference to the real points in issue will be sufficient. The judgment of ouster was based solely on the fol-' lowing findings:
“The court further finds that on August 25, 1911, after
In deciding the case upon these findings, the court ig
The record shows that at the time respondent was reinstated it paid to the secretary of state the full amount of occupation tax and penalty demanded by the secretary for each of the years named, and by its answer it alleges that it “is Aviliing and desirous and stands ready to comply Avitli all and every laAvful provision of the statutes of said state.” The fact, if it be a fact, that the secretary of state may have erred as to the amount required to entitle respondent to reinstatement is not sufficient to sustain a judgment of ouster, and especially so when respondent was before the court offering to fully comply with every statutory requirement. The record also shows the filing by respondent of its reports with the attorney general. The court, therefore, erred in its findings upon which it based its judgment.
We might rest here, and remand the case, for further proceedings, but, as such a course would not end the litigation, we have concluded to consider the main question, which has been so ably argued by counsel on both sides in their briefs and at the bar.
Chapter 179, supra, is as follows: “An act to prohibit gift enterprises and to provide punishment for a violation of the same.
“Section 1. (Gift Enterprise.) It shall be unlaAvful for any person or persons to engage in any gift enterprise in this state. Every person who shall sell or offer for sale any real estate or article of merchandise of any description whatever, or any ticket of admission to any exhibition
“Section 2. (Same — Penalty.) Any person or persons who shall engage in any gift enterprise in this state shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined in any sum not exceeding five hundred dollars, or imprisoned in the county jail not exceeding six months, or both, at the discretion of the court.”
The amended information alleges substantially that in-violation of this act respondent is conducting a gift enterprise at Hastings, Nebraska; that the method of conducting its business is to hold out the promise of a gift or bestowal of certain trading stamps to any person who may purchase goods, and tlieir redemption at its place of business, for the benefit of a certain institution, to wit, Stein Brothers, with the intent of building up and maintaining a monopoly and obstructing open competition; that Stein Brothers conduct clothing, grocery, millinery and furniture departments; that respondent and Stein Brothers have been and are now engaged in the violation of this act. The method of issuing trading stamps by merchants to their customers and of their redemption by the trading stamp company is a matter of common knowledge and need not be detailed here. The business has grown to enormous proportions and is now being carried on in practically every state in the Union. As a result of present-day agitation along the line of what some of the courts have characterized as governmental paternalism, the legislatures of many states have been induced to pass laws substantially similar to the one under consideration here. While they differ somewhat in phraseology, they are, as
In considering a similar statute, in Young v. Commonwealth, 101 Va. 853, 867, a case in which the business of the respondent here was being considered, it is said: “ ‘The act, as we construe it, prohibits a person from selling a given article, and at the same time, and as á part of the transaction, giving to the purchaser a stamp, coupon, or other deAdce which Avill entitle him to receiAre from some third person some other well-defined article in addition to the one sold. This is equivalent to declaring that it is illegal for a man to give away one. article as a premium to the buyer for having purchased another; for, as already intimated, it can make no possible difference that the article gWen aAvay with the sale is delivered to the purchaser by a third person instead of the seller himself. We think it is clear that such a prohibition is an unwarranted interference Avith the individual liberty which is guaranteed to every citizen, both by our .state constitution and also by the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States. * * * This inalienable right is trenched upon and impaired Avhenever the legislature prohibits a man from carrying on his business in his OAvn Avay, provided always, of course, that the business and the mode of carrying it on are not injurious to the public, and
In April, 1911, the legislature of the state of Massachusetts, under a practice prevailing in that state, submitted to the supreme court a bill prohibiting gift enterprises,
“We, the justices of the supreme judicial court, having considered the question upon which our opinion is required under the order of April 4, 1911, a copy of which is hereto annexed, are constrained to answer it in the negative. The principles applicable to statutes of this kind were considered and discussed in Commonwealth v. Emerson, 165 Mass. 146, Commonwealth v. Sisson, 178 Mass. 578, and O’Keeffe, v. Somerville, 190 Mass. 110. In the last of these cases a statute was held unconstitutional in part upon grounds which are equally applicable to the house bill referred to in the order, and which require us to hold that the provisions of this bill are unconstitutional.
“The bill is drawn in broad terms, and it purports to forbid transactions that are not different in principle from contracts of sale which always have been held to be within the constitutional right of persons in every state to possess and acquire property, to transact legitimate business, and to buy and sell and get gain. * * * There is nothing in the conduct proposed to be prohibited that necessarily appeals to the gambling instinct or involves any element of chance. Such statutes and ordinances have been held unconstitutional by the highest courts in a large number of states. (Citing an unusually large number of cases from many states.)
“The court of appeals of the District of Columbia, in its decisions in Lansburgh v. District of Columbia, 11 App. Cas. D. C. 512, and in District of Columbia v. Gregory, 35 App. Cas. D. C. 271, stands almost alone, although it has been followed by one or two federal judges, in reaching an opposite conclusion.” To that opinion the court attached the following syllabus: “A statute making it a
As opposed to this formidable array of authorities, relator is compelled to rely upon Lansburgh v. District of Columbia, supra, State v. Hawkins, 95 Md. 133, and Humes v. City of Ft. Smith, 93 Fed. 857, the last being an opinion by a district judge. As against the last case respondent cites Humes v. City of Little Rock, 138 Fed. 929, the opinion being by another district judge in the same state. State v. Hawkins, supra, is completely destroyed as an authority in this case by State v. Caspare, 115 Md. 7, 80 Atl. 606, in which case the Maryland court gets squarely in line with the many other states cited and followed by the supreme court of Massachusetts.
We deem it unnecessary to prolong this opinion,- as the reasoning in support of our conclusion exhaustively appears in many of the cases cited by the Massachusetts court. The reasoning of those cases compels our concurrence. We therefore hold that chapter 179, supra, in so far as it might be construed to prohibit the business in which the respondent is engaged, is in conflict with article I of the Bill of Rights, and the fourteenth amendment to the Federal Constitution.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the action dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.