33 W. Va. 188 | W. Va. | 1889
Writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Fayette county, pronounced on September 29, 1887, upon an indictment against the Fire Creek Coal & Coke Company, a domestic corporation. There was a motion to quash, and a demurrer to the indictment, each of which were overruled, a trial by jury and conviction, and a fine of $25.00 imposed upon the defendant. The indictment is under the provisions of the fourth section of chapter 68, Acts of 1887, which provides, in substance, as follows : That it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, company, corporation, or association engaged in mining or manufacturing, and who shall be interested in merchandising, to knowingly and willfully sell any merchandise or supplies whatsoever to any employe at a greater per cent, of profit than merchandise and supplies of the like character, quality, and quantity are sold to other customers, buying for cash, and not employed by them. The violation of this section is made a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine not exceeding $100.00 and not less than $25.00.
That section of the act having been held void, as an abridgment of the guarantied rights and privileges of the citizens of this State, it seems to me that the fourth section of the same act — the one now in question — must, for the reasons and upon the authorities and principles set forth in the opinion in the said case of State v. Goodwill, be also held unconstitutional and void. There are many considerations for selling goods or supplies at a less per cent of profit to one customer than to others. The goods may be of the “like character, kind, quality, and quantity,” and still there may be considerations, entirely proper, .why the sale should not be at the same price in all cases — such as the character and promptness of the customer; the risk of loss ór time of payment, the aggregate amount of purchases by the same person of different kinds of goods or supplies. It may be more profitable to sell a large bill of different kinds of goods to a large consumer than to sell one of the same kind of articles to one who buys nothing else.
In condemning this statute, we do not wish to give countenance to the idea that any employer, whether he is engaged in mining, manufacturing, or any other business, has the right to discriminate against his employes, by selling to them goods or supplies, under similar circumstances, at a greater per cent, of profit than he does to his other customers. Such a discrimination is not only unjust, but it is subversive of the first principles of trade; and no employe should buy from such employer. The remedy is in the hands of the employe. He is not compelled to buy from his employer; and the general law, without any special statute, will fully protect him in his refusal to do so. The ground on which this act is condemned is that it is class-legislation, and an unjust interference with the rights, privileges, and property of both the employer and the employe, and places upon both the
For these reasons, and upon the principles announced in the opinion of this Court in State v. Goodwill, hereinbefore referred to, we hold the said fourth section of the act aforesaid unconstitutional and void.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, the demurrer to the indictment sustained, and the defendant discharged.
REVERSED.