56 S.C. 420 | S.C. | 1900
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the acts of 1897 — 22 Stat., 457 — under which the appellant has been convicted, is unconstitutional. That statute reads as follows: “That any laborer working on shares of crop, or for wages in money or other valuable consideration, under a verbal or written contract to labor on farm lands, who shall receive advances either in money or supplies, and thereafter wilfully and without just cause fail to perform the reasonable service required of him by The terms of the said contract, shall be liable to- prosecution for a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be punishable by imprisonment for not less than twenty days nor more than thirty days, or to- be fined in the sum of not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars, in the discretion of the 'Court: Provided, The verbal contract herein referred to shall be witnessed by at least two disinterested witnesses.” From the language of this aot it will be seen that the offense denounced is, not merely the violation of a contract by a laborer employed to' work the lands of another, but the offense consists in receiving advances either in money or supplies, and thereafter wilfully and without just cause failing to perform the reasonable service required of him by the terms of the contract. It is apparent, therefore, that this case differs widely from the case of The State v. Williams, 32 S. C., 123, upon which appellant seems mainly to rely. There the defendant was indicted simply for a violation of the contract into’ which he had entered with the land-holder, by' wilfully failing to give to the land-holder the labor reasonably required of him by the terms of the contract, which was made a penal offense by sec. 2984 of the Gen. Stat. of 1882. By that section it was made a penal offense for either party, the land-holder or the laborer, to violate the contract therein referred to; but
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.