89 S.E. 40 | N.C. | 1916
This is a prosecution for a violation of an ordinance of the town of Andrews, tried in the Superior Court on appeal, where the following special verdict was returned by the jury and judgment was pronounced thereon:
"That the town of Andrews was duly chartered by the General Assembly of North Carolina in the year of 1905; that the mayor of said town is constituted an official court with the power to enforce the ordinances of said town. That the charter of the town of Andrews contains the following powers delegated to the board of aldermen, among others: `To make regulations to cause the due observance of Sunday.'
"That on 16 July, 1915, the following ordinance was passed, to wit:
"`The board of aldermen do enact: That on and after the 24th day of July, 1915, it shall be unlawful for any drug store in the town of Andrews to sell any article of merchandise whatsoever on Sunday, (810) except as hereinafter provided. That this ordinance shall not be construed so as to apply to the filling of prescriptions, selling of patent medicine, or any article for the relieving of the sick and necessary for such. That any one found guilty of violating the above ordinance shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall pay a fine of $25 for each and every offense, and each violation shall constitute a separate and distinct offense.'
"That copy of this ordinance was posted at the postoffice, a public place in said town, within a few days after its passage; and it is not known if it remained posted for thirty days when the same was removed by the postmaster.
"The foregoing ordinance has never been replaced.
"That the defendant J. W. S. Davis and Ewart Davis are proprietors of a drug store in said town, known as Davis Pharmacy; that on Sunday, 28 November, 1915, the defendant sold in this drug store one cigar *891 to Jess Porter, one package of cigarettes to Wymer Padgett, and one cigar to James Roper; these articles were not used as medicines, nor for the sick, but were among the goods kept for sale in said drug store.
"That a number of stores, two hotels, and several residents in said town kept cigars and cigarettes for sale at the same time.
"That on 25 May, 1915, the aldermen of said town passed the following ordinance:
"`(b) That it shall be unlawful for any restaurant, cafe, or lunch stand to open its doors on Sunday for the sale of any article whatever, except such restaurants, cafes, or lunch stands that are only of that class and are conducted wholly as restaurant, cafe, or lunch stand: Provided further, that this section shall be construed so as to prohibit restaurant, cafe, or lunch stand carried on in connection with a grocery store from being permitted to do business on this day. He that shall be guilty of violating this ordinance shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined within the discretion of the court, not to exceed $5; and that such sale in violation of this ordinance shall constitute a separate offense, and that the opening of the doors shall be prima facie evidence of a sale.'
"On 5 July, 1915, the following amendment to said ordinance was passed at a special meeting of the board of aldermen, to wit:
"`It is hereby ordered that the following words be added to line seven in paragraph (b), and after the words "grocery store" the following words, "fruit stands, venders of soda water, ice-cream, or any other place of business whatever."'
"That the defendants have duly paid all license taxes required by the law of North Carolina, and are regularly licensed druggists.
"That the foregoing are valid and subsisting ordinances of said town.
"`A regular meeting of the board of aldermen shall be held at the mayor's office in the town of Andrews on the second Monday in each month, at 7:30 o'clock p. m.
"`Copies of all ordinances shall, immediately after the (811) ratification thereof, be published in some newspaper printed in the town of Andrews or posted at one or more public places within said town.
"`That the foregoing ordinances shall be enforced from and after their ratification.
"`By the board of aldermen read twice and ratified this the 8th day of September, 1913.'
"If upon the foregoing facts the court is of the opinion that the defendants are guilty, the jury find them guilty; if the court be of opinion that the defendants are not guilty, the jury find them not guilty."
Upon considering the foregoing special verdict, the court is of opinion that the penalty of $25 on one class and $5 on other classes for doing identically the same business in violation of the same ordinance is an *892 unconstitutional discrimination. It is therefore considered and adjudged that the defendants are not guilty. They are discharged and the town of Andrews is adjudged to pay the cost.
(Signed) G.S. FERGUSON, Judge Presiding.
To the foregoing judgment the town of Andrews and State excepted and appealed to the Supreme Court. The question which is very fully discussed in the briefs and upon which his Honor rested his decision, that the two ordinances set out in the verdict, when considered together, operate as an unlawful discrimination between persons engaged in the same business, does not arise, as the first ordinance deals only with keepers of drug stores, and the second with the keepers of restaurants, cafes, and lunch stands.
These are distinct and easily severable occupations, and there is no finding that those engaged in them come in competition with each other.
The ordinance, however, relating to druggists is further attacked upon the ground that the town of Andrews is not authorized to pass Sunday ordinances, and also that the ordinance is within itself an unreasonable classification.
The charter of the town of Andrews specifically authorizes the board of aldermen "to make regulations to cause the due observance of Sunday"; but if this were not sufficient, the Revisal, sec. 2923, gives power to cities and towns "to make ordinances, rules and regulations, for the better government of the town . . . as they may deem best."
This last statute was considered in S. v. Medlin,
The ground on which Sunday laws are generally upheld is that the observance of Sunday is promotive of the moral and physical well-being of society, and that such statutes and ordinances are a valid exercise of the police power.
"Statutes prohibiting the pursuit of all occupations generally on Sunday have been uniformly held constitutional. Frolickstein v. Mobile,
In Soon Hing v. Crowley,
The general question of the right of classification was very fully considered by this Court in S. v. Davis,
We do not think the power has been exceeded in this instance, and the judgment of the Superior Court is therefore reversed.
Judgment should be entered against the defendant upon the special verdict.
Reversed.
Cited: S. v. Kirkpatrick,