109 Kan. 779 | Kan. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants appeal from a judgment of conviction finding them guilty of violating an Order issued by the district court of Crawford county enjoining them from calling a strike in any of the coal mines of that county. The answer in the court below contained fourteen divisions, seventeen subdivisions, and five divisions of one of the subdivisions. Here, however, the defense presents but one question — the constitutionality of the statute under which the conviction was had— chapter 29, Laws of Special Session of 1920 — creating the
The constitutionality of the industrial court act was exhaustively considered in The State, ex rel., v. Howat, ante, p. 376, 198 Pac. 686, and certain specific features were considered with equal care in Court of Industrial Relations v. Packing Co., ante, p. 629, 201 Pac. 418, and with these decisions we are entirely content, for the reasons therein set forth.'
No claim or intimation is brought forward that the evidence was not abundantly sufficient to warrant the judgment— merely that the act is void. The statute now again assailed grew out of an emergency condition, and was framed and passed to cover emergencies and prevent their recurrence. This was made plain in the Packing Company decision and no occasion arises now to reiterate anything heretofore said by this court touching the validity of the act.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.