The questions propounded by appellants as arising on the assignments of error may be stated as follows: (1) Must a property owner engaged in a private enterprise submit to the use of his property by others simply because they are members of a different race? (2) Was there error in the charge as to what sufficed to constitute a violation of G.S. 14-134?
The questions are stated in the order of priority selected by appellants and are accordingly so treated.
There is no substantial dispute with respect to the facts. L. A. Coletta, with his partner, owned a building at the corner of Roxboro and Dowd Streets in Durham. There they did business under the name of Royal Ice Cream Company, retailing ice cream and sandwiches. The building is separated by partition into two parts. One part has a door opening on Dowd Street; the other portion has a door opening on Roxboro Street. Each portion is equipped with booths, a counter, and stools. Over the Roxboro Street door is a large sign marked “White,” and over the Dowd Street door is a similar sign marked “Colored.” Sales are made to members of the different races only in the portions of the building as marked.
Defendant Moore is pastor of Asbury Temple, a Methodist Church located on Braswell Street,. a mile or mile and a half from the business conducted by Royal Ice Cream Company. Defendants gathered at the church to discuss the “plight of employment of qualified Negro young people.”
Led by defendant Moore, they went from the church to the Royal Ice Cream Company, parked their car to the rear of the establishment and proceeded through the back door to the portion of the store set apart for white patrons. Defendant Moore gave orders to the clerk for each of the defendants. The clerk refused to serve defendants and called the manager.
Moore testified: “Then Mr. Coletta talked to me and said he did not want to cause any trouble but he wanted us to leave, but I said, as a Christian, I cannot possibly leave, that we wanted to be served as American citizens and, above all, as persons who believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. . . . We spoke in voices so that other people could hear, that is, other people in the room. Mr. Barnhill (a police officer) told me that I was under arrest. However, he said if we would leave he would not arrest us, but I told him, as a Christian, and believing that the power of the Church is above the State, and that’s where the State gets its ultimate power, and that as American citizens, that we could not leave without doing damage to the Constitution, I could not lea,ve. Mr. Coletta told us that he would serve us on the colored side but not on the white side.”
*458 The evidence shows the partitioning of the building and provision for serving members of the different races in differing portions of the building was the act of the owners, of the building, operators of the establishment. Defendants claim that this, separation by color for service, is a violation of their rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
Defendants, by motion first made in the Superior Court, sought to quash the warrant. This motion, made after conviction and while the cases were pending on appeal, was addressed to the discretion of the court. The court did not abuse its discretion in overruling the motion.
S. v. St. Clair,
While defendants did not properly preserve their right to assert constitutional protection by the motion to quash, nevertheless, if the evidence, as defendants claim, establishes that defendants were merely exercising their constitutional rights, punishment for so acting should not be inflicted and defendants’ motion to nonsuit should have been allowed
Our statutes, G.S. 14-126 and 134, impose criminal penalties for interfering with the possession or right of possession of real estate privately held. These statutes place no limitation on the right of the person in possession to object to a disturbance of his actual or constructive possession. The possessor may accept or reject whomsoever he pleases and for whatsoever whim suits his fancy. When that possession is wrongfully disturbed it is a misdemeanor. The extent of punishment is dependent upon the character of the possession, actual or constructive, and the manner in which the trespass is committed. Race confers no prerogative on the intruder; nor does it impair his defense.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States created no new privileges. It merely prohibited the abridgment of existing privileges by state action and secured to all citizens the equal protection of the laws.
Speaking with respect to rights then asserted, comparable to rights presently claimed, Mr. Justice Bradley, in the
Civil Rights Cases,
In
U. S. v. Harris,
More than half a century after these cases were decided the Supreme Court of the United States said in
Shelley v. Kraemer,
Dorsey v. Stuyvesant Town Corp.,
The right of an operator of a private enterprise to select the clientele he will serve and to make such selection based on color, if he so desires, has been repeatedly recognized by the appellate courts of this nation.
Madden v. Queens County Jockey Club,
The fact that the proprietors of the ice cream parlor contributed to the support of local government and paid a license or privilege tax which license contained no restrictions as to whom the proprietors could serve cannot be construed to justify a trespass, nor is there merit in the suggestion that the complaint on which the warrant of'arrest issued, signed by an officer charged with the duty of enforcing the laws, rather than by the injured party, constituted state action denying privileges guaranteed to the defendants by the Fourteenth Amendment. The crime charged was committed in the presence of the officer and after a respectful request to desist. He had a right to arrest. G.S. 15-41.
*461
Screws v. U. S.,
Defendants insert in their brief what they say is a provision of the code of the City of Durham, enacted in 1940. It is noted, however, that no such ordinance was offered in evidence. The record as brought to us, prepared by appellants and accepted by the State as correct, does not indicate that any such ordinance was offered in evidence or called to the attention of the court, if then in effect. “We cannot take judicial notice of municipal ordinances. 31 C.J.S., Evidence, Section 27.”
Fulghum v. Selma,
Defendants assign as error the following portion of the charge: “If a person without permission or invitation, express or implied, without legal right or bona fide claim of right intentionally enters upon the land of another, and after entering thereon his presence is discovered and he is unconditionally ordered to leave and get off of the property by one in the legal possession thereof, and if he refuses to leave and remains on the land, he is a trespasser from the beginning, and the statute read to you by the Court applies and he is deemed to have been forbidden to enter the property.”
The court correctly described a trespasser. S.
v. Cooke,
Does the statute, G.S. 14-134, apply to such a trespasser? Defendants maintain it has no application since it only makes criminal an
entry
after being forbidden. The merit, if any, in the position taken is determined by ascertaining the wrong condemned. The denomination of the criminal act and the historic interpretation given to the words used to define the act provide the answer to the question. The statute, first enacted in 1866, is entitled “An Act to Prevent Wilful Trespasses on Land, and Stealing Any Kind of Property Therefrom.” It is now grouped with other statutes relating to wrongs done to the owners of real estate in a subchapter of our criminal laws entitled “Trespasses to Land and Fixtures.” Looking at the titles, it is apparent the Legislature intended to prevent.
*462
the unwanted invasion of the property rights of another.
S. v. Cooke, supra; S. v. Baker,
What is the meaning of the word “enter” as used in the statute defining criminal trespass? The word is used in G.S. 14-126 as well as G.S. 14-134. One statute relates to an entry with force; the other to a peaceful entry. We have repeatedly held, in applying G.S. 14-126, that one who remained after being directed to leave is guilty of a wrongful entry even though the original entrance was peaceful and authorized.
S. v. Goodson, supra; S. v. Fleming,
No Error.
