For the first offense section 2 imposes a fine; for the second or further similar offense, imprisonment for a term not less than six months nor more than two years. The defendant admitted that he had previously been convicted in the Federal Court; and for this reason, according to a recital in the judgment, he was sentenced to imprisonment in the present case; but the aggravated punishment prescribed for a subsequent conviction cannot be imposed unless the prior conviction, which is an essential part of the description of the second offense, is. charged in the indictment. C. S., 4617;
S. v. Davidson,
The State contends, however, that under the general law any person who violates the provisions of the prohibition act may be fined or *292 imprisoned or both fined and imprisoned in the discretion o£ the court (C. S., 3410); that the act of 1925 (Public-Local Laws, ch. 114), confers upon residents of the five counties to which it applies a privilege or immunity not enjoyed by other residents of the State; and that such privilege or immunity is inhibited by the organic law.
In theory constitutional government is based upon equality of rights, privileges and protection. The Fourteenth Amendment provides: “No • State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States, or deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws”; and, as said by
Mr. J ustice Field,
these provisions intend “that in the administration of criminal justice no different or higher punishment should be imposed upon one than such as is prescribed to all for like offenses.”
Barbier v. Connolly,
This principle, it should be understood, was not designed to interfere and does not interfere with the police power of the State, the object of which is to promote the health, peace, morals and good order of the people, to increase the industries of the State, to develop its resources, and to add to its wealth and prosperity.
Barbier v. Connolly, supra,
12 C. J., 1185, see. 953. Legislation of this character is a necessity; but in the exercise of the police power classification must be natural, not arbitrary; it “must always rest upon some difference which bears a
*293
reasonable and just relation to the act in respect to which the classification is proposed, and can never be made arbitrarily and without any such basis.”
Gulf Co. v. Ellis,
But the statute under consideration cannot be sustained on the ground that it was enacted in the exercise of the police power. The question is whether it shall supersede “the law of the land,” — the general public law which was designed to operate without exception or partiality throughout the State. It is needful to remember that the indictment was drafted under the general law, and that the decisive question is whether offenders in the five counties referred to may lawfully be exempted from the punishment prescribed by the general law; whether they shall be subject only to a fine when the offenders in ninety-five other counties may be punished by imprisonment. In our judgment this part of section 2 is neither equal protection of the laws nor the protection of equal laws
(Connolly v. Pipe Co., supra);
it is the grant of a special exemption from punishment or an exclusive or separate privilege which is forbidden by the cited provision. This conclusion is upheld in principle in our own decisions and in those of other jurisdictions. In the ease of
William W. Jilz,
3 Mo. Appeal R., 243, the Court said: “The general law applicable to the State prescribed as the punishment for the offense of which the petitioner was convicted, imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one year, or a fine not exceeding $500, or both such fine and imprisonment. A law prescribing a different punishment from this in St. Louis County is clearly unconstitutional.” At the special session of 1880 the General Assembly of North Carolina, enacted a statute applicable to twelve counties, purporting to make the killing or injury of livestock hy a ear or an engine a misdemeanor and providing that the engineer, the conductor, and the superintendent of the railroad should be indictable. The Code, 2327
et seq.
The Court, holding that the act was unconstitutional, remarked: “We do not say, that there may not be local legislation, for it is very common in our statute books, but that an act divested of any peculiar circumstances, and
per se
made indictable, should be so throughout the State, as essential to that equality and uniformity which are fundamental conditions of all just and constitutional legislation.”
S. v. Divine,
No error.
