93 So. 308 | Ala. | 1922
Lead Opinion
Under the provisions of the statute in such cases made and provided, the following questions are hereby submitted to the Supreme Court for determination:
1. Is the act, entitled "An act to define trusts, monopolies, combines, profiteering and unlawful acts in hoarding, cornering or storing commodities with the purpose and intent to probably influence the price of food, commodities or any necessities of life and to fix civil and criminal liabilities, penalties or punishment and to provide remedies for the enforcement in such cases," approved September 30, 1919 (Acts 1919, p. 1088), violative of section 6 of the Constitution of Alabama?
2. Is the act supra, violative of section 7 of the Constitution of Alabama?
3. Is the act supra violative of section 22 of the Constitution of Alabama?
4. Is the act supra violative of the Constitution of Alabama, or of section 1 of the
The above questions are submitted to the Supreme Court as abstract propositions, as directed by the statute, reference being made to the case in which the questions arise, for the convenience and information of the Supreme Court.
C. R. BRICKEN, Presiding Judge. WM. H. SAMFORD, H. P. MERRITT, Judges.
In response to same the Supreme Court rendered the following opinion:
The State of Alabama v. D. B. Goldstein.
Section 2 of the act defines the offense of "profiteering" as "the selling or offering for sale of any article or commodity of food, clothing, fuel or other necessity of life with the intent of obtaining fraudulent or grossly excessive price over its true or intrinsic worth."
Section 2 further provides that — "in the ascertainment of whether such price is fraudulent or grossly excessive regard may be had to the cost price of said article or commodity to the person selling or offering the same; or evidence may be given of the cost price on the market of articles, commodities or necessities of like kind or character."
Section 7 provides that "in all cases, the question of whether the party sued violated any provision of this act, shall be a question for the jury."
The conclusion of this court upon the constitutionality of the quoted provisions of this act will be, in the opinion of the writer, the most momentous decision it has rendered in the last half of a century.
Intended to correct an economic evil — the exaction of unreasonable profits in trade — which followed in the wake of the World War, and which prevailed in every part of America, as it did in almost every part of the civilized world, the act is nevertheless, in its essential nature and effect, a direct challenge to those theories of personal liberty and freedom of action which underlie and permeate constitutional government in America It is, in short, a radical and epochal departure from the trodden paths of governmental action under hitherto recognized constitutional restraints, and a bold excursion into the field of purely paternalistic control of the private business of citizens.
The offense which is defined and denounced is the selling or offering for sale of any article or commodity of the classes named with the intent of obtaining a fraudulent or grossly excessive price. The word "fraudulent," in its legal sense, is used to stigmatize an act or transaction by which the actordeceives or overreaches another, wrongfully and to his hurt. See 26 Corpus Juris, 1059, 1060; 3 Words and Phrases, 2955. Dissociated from and deception in the act of selling, the term "fraudulent," as applied to the price asked by the seller, is merely an opprobrious epithet, without any legal or logical significance. As a form of denunciation it is, of course, intelligible, but the price in question might just as aptly be denounced as larcenous or murderous. In neither case would the epithet alter the nature and quality of the thing. Nor is it apparent to our understanding how the substitution of "and" for "or," and the reading "fraudulent and grossly excessive price," as suggested by the minority opinion, is of any constructional value, except, perhaps, as indicative of the legislative view that a grossly excessive price is, within the meaning and intent of the act, a fraudulent price.
Stripped of all specious and meaningless phraseology, the manifest purpose of the act is to punish with heavy penalty any dealer or other person who sells or offers to sell any article or commodity of the classes named, at a price which, in the estimation of a jury, would yield a grossly excessive profit to the seller.
The act assumes that every article of food and of clothing is a necessity, and lays its hand upon the daintiest and most luxurious confections of food and textures and fabrications of clothing without discrimination. It extends also to any article which a jury may regard as "a necessity of life," without other definition, although, as a multitude of judicial decisions show, that phrase is without any certainty or meaning, and varies according to the financial and social status of the individual, as well as according to time and place. See 5 Words and Phrases, "Necessity" and "Necessary."
It must be noted, also, that it is operative without regard to any conditions of scarcity or monopoly, or trade restrictions, whether the result of unlawful combinations or agreements, or otherwise, and although other dealers than the offender may be offering the article in plentiful supply at much lower prices.
The question then is, in its last analysis, a very simple one: Does the guaranty of "liberty" as declared in section 1 of the Bill of Rights, and as preserved by the
It has never been contended, so far as we are aware, that the business of selling useful and harmless commodities, to say nothing of merely casual selling, is or can be affected with a public interest, so long as trade is free and unaffected by monopolistic combinations, or artificial restraints, or emergency conditions which involve temporarily the health or safety of the public. As already noted, the operation of this act is founded upon no such conditions or considerations.
During the century of Alabama's political existence, no Legislature has ever attempted to exercise the power in question — a persuasive argument that the power has never existed. We do not overlook the case of Mayor, etc., of Mobile v. Yuille,
An examination of the charter power and ordinance as a whole shows very plainly that there was no intention to regulate the price of bread in its relation to trade profits, but merely to require the loaves to be of such weight as to sell at the prices named, the weight to be greater or less, on a graduated scale, according to the price of flour.
There was no question of price fixing or profit making before the court, but only the question of the general regulation of the business of baking bread, as related to the health, necessities, and convenience of the public. It was observed, in substance, that the practice of the assize of bread in municipalities had long and generally existed at common law under public and governmental sanction, and its necessity and propriety had been demonstrated by experience, from which it was concluded that such a regulation was a legitimate exercise of the police power, and that immunity against such governmental interference, never having existed, was not within the personal rights impliedly reserved to citizens under the Constitution. The Constitution then in force did not contain the specific guaranty of the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," to be found in section 1 of the Bill of Rights in our later Constitutions, nor had the
The Yuille Case is reviewed in both the prevailing and the dissenting opinion in Munn v. Illinois,
"Regulating the weight of bread is common, and necessary to prevent imposition; but regulating the price of bread we should suppose would now meet with such resistance anywhere as would require a distinct determination upon its constitutional rightfulness. How the baker can have the price of that which he sells prescribed for him, and not the merchant or day-laborer, is not apparent. Indeed, to admit the power seems to render necessary the recognition of the principle that there is and can be no limit to legislative interference but such as legislative discretion from time to time may prescribe." Cooley's Const. Law (7th Ed.) 871, note 3.
Without pursuing that particular phase of the subject further, and without affirming or denying the power to fix the price of bread under emergency conditions so grave as to present a menace to the public health and safety, it is sufficient to say that the Yuille Case lends no support to the exercise of any such power as that with which we are here concerned.
On the general subject of price regulation, Judge Cooley says:
"In the early days of the common law it was sometimes thought necessary, in order to prevent extortion, to interfere, by royal proclamation or otherwise, and establish the charges that might be exacted for certain commodities or services. The price of wages was oftener regulated than that of anything else; the local magistrates being generally allowed to exercise authority over the subject. The practice was followed in this country, and prevailed to a certain extent up to the time of independence. Since then it has been commonly supposed that ageneral power in the state to regulate prices was inconsistentwith personal liberty. [The author then proceeds to a discussion of the exceptional cases in which the power may be exercised on the theory that the service, or the business, or the property, upon which the restraint is imposed is devoted to a public use or or affected with a public interest, as exemplified particularly in Munn v. Illinois,
In the leading case of People v. Budd,
But the New York court was careful to draw the line, and it explicitly marked the boundaries beyond which the police power could not constitutionally control the citizen in the conduct of his business or vocation. Said the court:
"In determining whether the Legislature can lawfully regulate and fix the charge for elevating grain by private elevators, it must be conceded that the uses to which a man may devote his property, the price which he may charge for such use, how much he shall demand or receive for his labor, and the methods of conducting his business, are, as a general rule, not the subject of legislative regulation. These are a part of our liberty, of which, under the constitutional guaranty, we cannot be deprived. We have no hesitation in declaring that unless there are special conditions and circumstances which bring the business of elevating grain within principles which, by the common law and the practice of free governments, justify legislative control and regulation in the particular case, the statute of 1888 cannot be sustained. That no general power resides in the Legislature to regulate private business, prescribe the conditions under which it shall be conducted, fix the price of commodities or services, or interfere with the freedom of contract, we cannot doubt. The merchant and manufacturer, the artisan and laborer, under our system of government, are left to pursue and provide for their own interests in their own way, untrammeled by burdensome and restrictive regulations which, however common in crude and irregular times, are inconsistent with constitutional liberty." People v. Budd, supra,
The same distinctions and limitations are noted in State v. Edwards,
"The public is interested to be well and reasonably served at the store of the tradesman, the shop of the mechanic and the office of the professional man, and yet, all these vocations are private. The goods on sale in the store, material furnished by the mechanic, and the skill employed by the professional man are the individual property of each one respectively. Their vocations are exercised for their own gain, and they have a right to the fruits of their own industry without legislative control. It must not be understood that each one may not be properly subjected to suitable police regulations as to the manner of his business (2 Kent's Commentaries, 340); but the business cannot be thereby controlled and the profits to be gained therefrom destroyed, taken away or limited by the establishment of prices; otherwise we should have a paternal government that might crush out all individual liberty, and the declaration of our Constitution would become as valueless as stubble."
In the case of People v. Steele,
"The broker's business is prohibited because it has been made unlawful to make a profit. The public is no better nor worse off in health, morals, security or welfare. These are arbitrary and unreasonable interferences with the rights of the individuals concerned. The business of the broker in theater tickets is no more immoral or injurious to the public welfare than that of the broker in grain or provisions. If he does not make the price satisfactory to intending purchasers, they are under no compulsion to buy. They have no right to buy at any price except that fixed by the holder of the ticket. The manager may fix the price arbitrarily and may raise or lower it at his will."
Our own court has never had occasion until now to deal with a legislative attempt to extend the police power of the state into the field of private business by the regulation of the prices to be charged and the profits to be taken by the manufacturer of or dealer in articles of trade, or by a casual owner who may wish to sell. We have no fault to find with the authorities cited in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Thomas, illustrative of the nature and extent of the police power. It will be found, however, that without a single exception they are cases involving the control of property or business which is devoted to a public use, or affected with apublic interest, as those terms have been broadly defined by the courts. An excellent and comprehensive classification of those cases will be found in People v. Steele,
It is certain that, if the police power can regulate prices and profits in private business, or in casual transactions, whether directly by arbitrary schedules, or indirectly by the discretion of juries, by the simple expedient of branding as fraudulent any price that may be deemed grossly excessive by a jury, then the same power can, by the same expedient, control the selling price of every commodity, and the compensation to be paid for every kind of labor and professional service. This would be practical socialism and it would be the end of the American ideal of personal liberty as understood and enjoyed for more than a century under constitutional guaranties designed to protect the citizen against arbitrary and unnecessary governmental interference.
This court has more than once had occasion *573
to vindicate those guaranties against legislation which sought to restrict the liberty of contracting, and the right to conduct a private business in the manner deemed best by its owner, notably in Joseph v. Randolph,
In Joseph v. Randolph, supra, the court said:
"This act has none of the characteristics of a law designed to regulate these or kindred subjects, which properly fall within the purview of domestic police. There can be nothing soinjurious or offensive in the act of hiring a single unemployedlaborer, for one's service, as to require police regulation bythe state."
In Toney v. State, supra, the court quoted with approval from the case of State v. Goodwill,
" 'A person living under the protection of this government has the right to adopt and follow any lawful industrial pursuit not injurious to the community which he may see fit. And as incident to this is the right to labor or employ labor, make contracts in respect thereto upon such terms as may be agreed upon by the parties,' etc. * * * 'The right to buy and sell property, and contract in respect thereto, including contracts for labor * * * is protected by the Constitution. If the Legislature without any public necessity has the power to prohibit or restrict the right of contract between private persons in respect of one lawful trade or business, then it may prevent the prosecution of all trades, and regulate all contracts."
In the same case this court approved also this passage from the opinion of Bradley, J., in Butcher's Union Co. v. Crescent City Co.,
" 'The right to follow any of the common occupations is an inalienable right.' It was formulated as such under the phrase 'pursuit of happiness' in the declaration of independence which [as does our own Bill of Rights] commenced with the fundamental proposition that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.' * * * I hold that the liberty of pursuit — the right to follow any of the ordinary callings of life — is one of the privileges of a citizen of the United States."
In Allgeyer v. Louisiana,
"In the privilege of pursuing an ordinary calling or trade and of acquiring, holding and selling property, must be embraced the right to make all proper contracts in relation thereto." (Italics supplied.)
In Toney v. State, supra, it was also declared that notwithstanding the right of the state to enact all needful legislation in conservation of public order, morals, health and safety, "a constitutional right cannot be impaired or destroyed under the guise or device of being regulated."
In City Council of Montgomery v. Kelly, supra, the court quoted with approval the following language:
"The pursuit of the ordinary callings of life can only be so far restrained and regulated as such restraint and regulation may be required to prevent the doing of damage to the public, or to their persons: Tiedeman's Limitation of Police Power, p. 273," and "the Legislature may not, under the guise of protecting the public interest, arbitrarily interfere with private business, or impose unusual and unnecessary restrictions upon lawful occupations." Lawton v. Steele,
It is, of course, to be conceded that the courts have never undertaken to lay down any general rule by which the boundaries of the police power may be determined in all cases. Nevertheless, the courts are all agreed that there are fields of business and private conduct which are clearly and unmistakably beyond those boundaries, and to which the power cannot be constitutionally extended. Lochner v. New York,
The Lever Act reviewed in the dissenting opinion, was strictly a war measure, designed to aid the government in its prosecution of the World War. Whether its attempt to regulate commodity prices, even in such an emergency, would have been sustained by the federal Supreme Court is a matter of conjecture, for it was stricken down on a narrower constitutional ground, and the major question was not considered. In any aspect, its enactment and annulment are of no value in the consideration of the instant case.
In our judgment this Act, in so far as it relates to the prevention and punishment of profiteering, as defined in section 2, is a clear abuse of the police power, and is offensive to the declarations and guaranties of our Bill of Rights, and also to the
In this view of the act it is not necessary to deal with other phases of its constitutionality, as discussed at length in the dissenting opinion, and we therefore pretermit any discussion of them here.
Let this opinion be duly certified to the Court of Appeals. *574
Dissenting Opinion
As provided by statute (Acts 1911, p. 449;
Is the act violative of the
The act for construction is entitled "An act to define trusts, monopolies, combines, profiteering and unlawful acts in hoarding, cornering or storing commodities with the purpose and intent to probably influence the price of food, commodities or any necessities of life and to fix civil and criminal liabilities, penalties or punishment and to provide remedies for the enforcement in such cases." By section 1 thereof a trust or combine is declared to "include any combination or agreement or the information of any plan or design, express or implied, between corporations, firms or individuals, or any two or more of them," in the instances specifically stated:
(a) To restrict or reduce the output or production or to increase the price of any article or commodity of food, clothing, fuel or other necessity of life or to attempt to acquire a monopoly therein within the state; (b) to prevent or restrict competition in the manufacture, marketing, transportation, selling or purchasing of any produce, commodity or necessity of life; (c) to fix a price on any article or commodity of food, clothing, fuel or other necessity of life which is not regulated by the supply of or the demand for such commodity or necessity of life; (d) to preclude, restrict or embarrass the freedom of commerce or the competition in trade of any commodity or necessity of life by pooling or hoarding the same.
In section 2 profiteering is defined to mean "the selling or offering for sale of any article or commodity of food, clothing, fuel or other necessity of life with the intent of obtaining fraudulent or grossly excessive price over its true or intrinsic worth;" and it was further declared that "in the ascertainment of whether such price is fraudulent or grossly excessive regard may be had to the cost price of said article or commodity to the person selling or offering the same; or evidence may be given of the cost price on the market of articles, commodities or necessities of like kind or character."
Section 3 defines a monopoly as meaning "any person, firm or corporation or a combination of the same who shall undertake to purchase or in any way or manner get possession or control of any article or commodity of food, clothing, fuel or other necessity of life for the purpose of withholding the same from the regular and due course of trade with the intent of affecting the price thereof."
In section 4 it is declared that it shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to be or remain a party to any profiteering, trust, combine or monopoly, or to hoard in any way or manner any foodstuff or other necessity of life for the purpose of profitably affecting the price of such article in this state; declares the venue of actions in this state as stated; and that actions may be maintained (section 5) in manner therein indicated; and provided that a violation of the same shall be a misdemeanor, and upon conviction punished by fine or imprisonment. (Section 6); whether the party sued violated any provision of this act is made a question for the jury in section 7; and that the terms of the act shall be liberally construed to suppress the mischief aimed at and to advance the remedy is provided in section 9. The act, taking effect upon its approval, is declared to be supplementary legislation, but repeals "all laws in conflict" therewith (section 11); and that "any part of provision of this act held to be unconstitutional shall not be held to effect the remainder" of the act, section 13. Section 12 declares that the act "is not intended and shall not apply to persons holding foodstuffs, farm products or necessities of life raised by themselves or on their own premises, or to persons holding the same for such persons."
It may be said at the outset that the exemption provided in section 12 is not for decision — whether it is founded on a proper classification, rests upon a reasonable basis, is not essentially arbitrary, and does not deny the equal protection of the law to other classes not so exempt. Davis v. State,
The maxim "noscitur a sociis" is that general specific words which are capable of an analogous meaning, being associated together, take color from each other, so that the general words are restricted to a sense analogous to that of the less general. State v. W. U. T. Co.,
The subjects and purposes of regulation under the police power of government have been often discussed by the courts. For example, the police power has been held to extend to the regulation of slaughtering cattle and of market places (Butchers' Union, etc., Co. v. Cresent City Co.,
Approaching the main question for decision, it must be conceded of our dual system of government that there is inherent authority under the police power: (1) To pass laws necessary to protect the property and the morals, as well as the lives, of the people, and to promote the public convenience and general prosperity; and that statutes having that effect and purpose have not been held invalid because incidentally affecting commerce between the states, except only as Congress has interposed restraint. L. N. v. State,
Where the issue is whether a state statute, in its application to facts which are set out in the pleading and admitted by demurrer, violates the
With this general statement of the respective jurisdictions and powers of state and federal authority, it is interesting to note that by the act of August 10, 1917, and the amendment thereto or re-enactment of October, 22, 1919 (volume 41, part 1, Public Laws, U.S. Stat. at L. 66 Cong. p. 297 et seq.; vol. 40, pp. 276-278), of what is called the "Food Control Act Amendments," the federal government sought to enter this important field and deal with the subject and some of the objects embraced in the provisions of the state statute now submitted for construction. The reason for the federal statute was declared to be the existence of a state of war, and that it was deemed essential "to the national security and defense, for the successful prosecution of the war and for the support and maintenance of the army and navy, to assure an adequate supply and equitable distribution, and to facilitate the movement of foods, feeds, wearing apparel * * * in this act called necessaries; to prevent, locally or generally, scarcity, monopolization, hoarding, injurious speculation, manipulation, and private controls, affecting such supply, distribution, and movement; and to establish and maintain governmental control of such necessaries during the war." Lawrenceburg Co. v. Jones,
In U.S. v. Cohen Groc. Co.,
In Twining v. New Jersey,
The real inquiry propounded by the Court of Appeals, as affecting the rights of citizenship, is whether the statute violates the
The effect of the
On writ of error to the Supreme Court of the state of Arizona to review a decree which sustained a decree of the superior court for Cochise county in that state, sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing the complaint in a suit seeking injunctive relief in an industrial dispute, Mr. Chief Justice Taft, in Truax v. Corrigan, supra, speaks of the guaranty of the
"It is true that no one has a vested right in any particular rule of the common law, but it is also true that the Legislative power of a state can only be exerted in subordination to the fundamental principles of right and justice which the guaranty of due process in the
Of the provisions of that amendment forbidding a state to deny to any person the equal protection of the law, it is said:
"The clause is associated in the amendment with the due process clause and it is customary to consider them together. It may be that they overlap, that a violation of one may involve at times the violation of the other, but the spheres of the protection they offer are not coterminous. The due process clause brought down from Magna Charta was found in the early state Constitutions and later in the
And it was said further that —
"The equality clause of the
Is the act in question one depriving a citizen of the United States or of this state of the right of ownership, proper control, contract or sale of personal property? Does it abridge any privilege or immunity of a citizen of the United States as to the same guaranteed by the federal Constitution? Does it deprive "any person" of his property without due process of law, or deny to any person within the jurisdiction of the state the equal protection of the law in the due exercise of the right of ownership of said property as regulated or denied by section 2 of the Alabama statute?
The statute defines and regulates the right of contract that is declared fraudulent and a *578
violation of section 2 by a sale or offer of sale of personal property contrary to its provisions. Analogous classifications, rested on a reasonable basis and not essentially arbitrary, are found in several of our statutes, to wit: The provision for cattle guards to be erected and maintained by railroad corporations or persons operating railroads (Code, §§ 5513, 5654; A. St. A. B. Ry. Co. Y. Fowler,
Statutes and ordinances — other than for the punishment of the criminal — as for the condemnation of the res, in aid of the enforcement of the prohibition laws, to prevent larceny, burglary, counterfeiting, etc., have been upheld, and may properly "curtail the rights of innocent persons (1) as interfering with their rights of purchase and receipt of property, or (2) as limiting and regulating their powers of enjoyment and disposal of their own property." New Mexico v. Brooken,
Out of the mass of decisions it has been defined and declared that the right to conduct one's lawful business without the wrongful and injurious interference of others is a valuable property right, which will be protected, if necessary by injunctive process. Hardie-Tynes Mfg. Co. v. Cruise,
"In Dobbins v. Los Angeles,
It is established by state and federal decisions that the right to sell (Dorman v. State,
In a discussion of the Beechnut Case, this question was aptly urged on the Supreme Court of the United States by the Solicitor General as follows:
"The right to refuse to enter into contracts is no more absolute or sacred than the right to contract. The right to refuse to sell and the right to sell are both natural rights, but they may both be limited in the public interest. Liberty of contract is protected by the
The case of the United States v. Colgate,
"In the absence of any purpose to create or maintain a monopoly, the act [we interpolate, the Sherman Act] does not restrict the long-recognized right of trader or manufacturer engaged in an entirely private business, freely to exercise his own independent discretion as to parties with whom he will deal. And, of course, he may announce in advance the circumstances under which he will refuse to sell. 'The trader or manufacturer, on the other hand, carries on an entirely private business, and can sell to whom he pleases'"
— was explained in Federal Trade Comm. v. Beechnut Pkg. Co., supra. It was said that the Colgate Case was a prosecution under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (U.S. Comp. St. § 8820 et seq.), coming to the Supreme Court of the United States under the Criminal Appeals Act (U.S. Comp. St. § 1704), wherein the Supreme Court "must accept the construction of the indictment as made in the District Court; and that upon such construction the only act charged amounted to the exercise of the right of the trader, or manufacturer, engaged in private business, to exercise his own discretion as to those with whom he would deal, and to announce the circumstances under which he would refuse to sell, and that thus interpreted no act was charged in the indictment which amounted to a violation of the Sherman Act." The subsequent case of U.S. v. Schrader's Son,
"To pronounce abnormal conduct on the part of * * * natural competitors, controlling one-third of the trade of the country in an article of prime necessity, a 'new form of competition,' and not an old form of combination in restraint of trade, as it so plainly is, would be for this court to confess itself blinded by words and forms to realities which men in general very plainly see, and understand and condemn, as an old evil in new dress and with a *580 new name." American Column Lumber Co. v. United States, supra.
"Jobbers and wholesale dealers who would supply the trade may not get the goods of the company, if they sell to those who do not observe the prices indicated or who are on the company's list of undesirables until they are restored to favor by satisfactory assurances of future compliance with the company's schedules of resale prices. Nor is the inference overcome by the conclusion stated in the Commission's findings that the merchandising conduct of the company does not constitute a contract or contracts whereby resale prices are fixed, maintained, or enforced. The specific facts found show suppression of the freedom of competition by methods in which the company secures the co-operation of its distributors and customers, which are quite as effectual as agreements express or implied intended to accomplish the same purpose. By these methods the company, although selling its products at prices satisfactory to it, is enabled to prevent competition in their subsequent disposition by preventing all who do not sell at resale prices fixed by it from obtaining its goods." Federal Trade Comm. v. Beechnut Pkg. Co., supra.
The terms of the Lever Act held indefinite and nonconstituting a fixing by Congress of an ascertainable standard of guilt and as inadequately informing a person accused of the violations thereof of the nature and cause of the accusation against him, are that "it is hereby made unlawful for any person willfully * * * to make any unjust or unreasonable rate or charge in handling or dealing in or with any necessaries. United States v. Cohen Groc. Co.,
" * * * The section forbids no specific or definite act. It confines the subject-matter of the investigation which it authorizes to no element essentially inhering in the transaction as to which it provides. It leaves open, therefore, the widest conceivable inquiry, the scope of which no one can foresee and the result of which no one can foreshadow or adequately guard against."
In article 5 of Amendments to the Federal Constitution is contained the provision that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. A material part of due process of law declared in article 6 — that the accused be "informed of the nature and cause of the accusation" — is not contained in the
"The section forbids no specific or definite act. It confines the subject-matter of the investigation which it authorizes to no element essentially inhering in the transaction as to which it provides."
That is, in short, it is unconstitutional because no standard of duty had been established. That decision is not based on the provisions of the
The words of section 2 of the Alabama statute for construction are different from that indefiniteness condemned in the Lever Act. It is made unlawful for any person to sell or offer for sale any necessity of life with the intent of obtaining fraudulently or grossly excessive price over its true or intrinsic worth. There is no delegation of legislative power, no leaving to the jury the ascertainment of the nature and cause of the accusation against a defendant, no depriving a person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. True, the legislative standard of the right of contract or of its limitation beyond which the act is declared a crime is to be found in the relation between the cost price of the article or commodity to the person selling the same and that for which it is offered for sale or sold, and the cost price on the market of articles, commodities, or necessities of like kind or character. That is not such as was condemned in Bailey v. State, supra; Truax v. Corrigan, supra; Chicago, M. St. P. R. Co. v. Minnesota,
When the instant statute is contrasted with the Lever Act, there is not that analogy between section 2 and the provision of the act of Congress condemned (section 4 of the original act, as amended by section 2 of the act of 1919), such as to bring the Alabama statute within the controlling influence of U.S. v. Cohen Groc. Co., supra. The necessary tests were supplied in section 2 of the Alabama statute by the declared rule of evidence; as where statutes direct adherence to market values (Internl. Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, *581
In Internl. Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, supra (writs of error to the Court of Appeals to review judgments affirming convictions in the circuit courts in that state) Mr. Justice Holmes, delivering the opinion, stated that the conviction was for having entered into an agreement with other named companies for the purpose of controlling the price of machinery manufactured by them "and of enhancing it above their realvalue; and for having so fixed and enhanced the price, and for having sold their harvesters, etc., at a price in excess of their real value, in pursuance of the agreement alleged." The rights of plaintiff in error were rested under the
"In order to reach what is called the real value, a price from which all effects of the combination are to be eliminated, the plaintiff in error is told that it cannot avail itself of the rise in materials because it was able to get them cheaper through one of the subsidiary companies of the combination, and that the saving through the combination more than offset all the rise in cost. * * * Value is the effect in exchange of the relative social desire for compared objects expressed in terms of a common denominator. It is a fact and generally is more or less easy to ascertain. * * * The reason [for the granting of the writ] is not the general uncertainties of a jury trial but that the elements necessary to determine the imaginary ideal are uncertain both in nature and degree of effect to the acutest commercial mind." Pages 1287, 1288.
These necessary elements to determine the fact, for the lack of which in the Kentucky statute it was denominated an "Imaginary ideal," are supplied by the Alabama statute, and rendered certain both "in nature and degree of effect to the acutest commercial mind' by the reasonable rule of evidence declared, to wit, (1) The cost price of the article or commodity to the persons selling or offering the same for sale, together (2) with the cost price on the market of articles, commodities, or necessities of like kind or character. This latter element of market value was not supplied by the Kentucky statute. It was "market value under (a) fair competition, and (b) under normal market conditions;" and this double ascertainment or conjecture of normal conditions and fair competition as elements of market value, was condemned as the requirement by statute of the ascertainment of an "imaginary ideal" in International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, supra. That this is the true interpretation, by the Supreme Court of the United States, of the defect found in the Kentucky statute under the
"We regard this decision as consistent with Nash v. United States,
It is thus conceded that a standard fixed by market value is admissible and just, and that the Kentucky statute was condemned only because in truth it did not apply this standard, but called for an estimate of what prices would have been under nonexistent and imaginary conditions — "under fair competition and under normal market conditions."
In Collins v. Kentucky, supra (in error to the Court of Appeals of Kentucky), Mr. Justice Hughes rested the decision on Internl. Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, supra, declaring of the test that to determine his conduct, a defendant was bound to ascertain the real value (1) "not according to the actualities of life, or (2) by reference to knowable criteria, but (3) by speculating upon imaginary conditions and (4) endeavoring to conjecture what would be the value under other and so-callednormal circumstances with fair competition, eliminating the abnormal influence of the combination itself, and of all other like combinations, and of still other combinations which there were organized to oppose." By *582 reason of this twofold uncertainty the statute is held defective. The standard fixed by the Alabama statute was vastly different, more definite, and ascertainable, providing, as it does, a twofold security that evidence may be given of the cost price on the market, and of the "cost price of said article or commodity to the person selling or offering the same" for sale, in the ascertainment of whether such price at which it is sold or offered for sale was fraudulent and a cheat.
In the later case of Fox v. Washington,
"We understand the state court by implication at least to have read the statute as confined to encouraging an actual breach of law. Therefore the argument that this act is both an unjustifiable restriction of liberty and too vague for a criminal law must fail. * * * If the statute should be construed as going no farther than it is necessary to go in order to bring the defendant within it, there is no trouble with it for want of definiteness. See Nash v. United States,
"Every statute is presumed to be constitutional. The courts ought not to declare one to be unconstitutional, unless it is clearly so. If there is doubt, the expressed will of the Legislature should be sustained." Munn v. Illinois,
In Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas,
"Apart from the common law as to restraint of trade thus taken up by the statute the law is full of instances where a man's fate depends on his estimating rightly, that is, as the jury subsequently estimates it, some matter of degree. If his judgment is wrong, not only may he incur a fine or a short imprisonment, as here; he may incur the penalty of death. 'An act causing death may be murder, manslaughter, or misadventure according to the degree of danger attending it' by common experience in the circumstances known to the actor. * * * 'The criterion in such cases is to examine whether common social duty would, under the circumstances, have suggested a more circumspect conduct.' 1 East, P. C. 262."
It is thus established that this rule, long obtaining in England and in the states of the Union, has been reaffirmed and applied under the
The case of Miller v. Strahl, supra, construed a statute of Nebraska requiring innkeepers, in case of fire, to give notice to guests and inmates at once, and "to do all in their power to save" them unharmed. Because of this last clause, that statute was challenged as offensive to the
"Could the statute exact less? It is the dictate of humanity, and gets nothing from its expression as a legal obligation except a penalty for its violation, and the facts of the case reject any charge that it was enforced to the extent of risk of the life of anybody or to the injury of anybody. * * * Rules of conduct must necessarily be expressed in general terms and depend for their application upon circumstances, and the circumstances vary. * * * And what better test could be devised than the doing of 'all in one's power' as determined by the circumstances? The case falls, therefore, under the rule of Nash v. United States,
In Omaechevarria v. Idaho,
"Men familiar with range conditions, and desirous of observing the law will have little difficulty in determining what is prohibited by it. Similar expressions are common in the criminal statutes of other states. This statute presents no greater uncertainty or difficulty, in application to necessarily varying facts, than has been repeatedly sanctioned by this court. Nash v. United States,
In sustaining the Arizona Employers' Liability Act, Mr. Justice Pitney declared that states are left with a wide range of legislative discretion, notwithstanding the provisions of the
"There are cases in which even the criminal law requires a man to know facts at his peril. Indeed, the criterion which is thought to be free from constitutional objection, the criterion of fault, is the application of an external standard, the conduct of a prudent man in the known circumstances, that is, in doubtful cases, the opinion of the jury, which the defendant has to satisfy at his peril and which he may miss after giving the matter his best thought. The Germanic [Oceanic Steam Nav. Co. v. Aitken]
The federal decisions may be concluded by a reference to the case involving the Emergency Housing Laws for the District of Columbia and that of the Legislature of New York. In Levy Leasing Co. v. Siegel, and 810 West End Ave. v. Stern, 258 U.S. ___,
It should be noted that provisions of the Emergency Housing Laws challenged were:
"It shall be a defense to an action for rent accruing under an agreement for premises in a city," etc., "occupied for dwelling purposes, that such rent is unjust and unreasonable, and that the agreement under which the same is sought to be recovered is oppressive." Chapter 944.
Section 4 of said chapter provides that nothing contained therein shall prevent a plaintiff from pleading and proving in such action a fair and reasonable rent for the premises. Mr. Justice Clarke quotes from the Marcus Brown Co. Case as follows:
"The chief objections to these acts have been dealt with in Block v. Hirsh. In the present case more emphasis is laid upon the impairment of the obligation of the contract of the lessees to surrender possession, and of the new lease, which was to have gone into effect upon October 1, last year. But contracts are made subject to this exercise of the power of the state when otherwise justified, as we have held this to be. Manigault v. Springs,
In Block v. Hirsh, supra, the statute construed Act Cong. Oct. 22, 1919, c. 80, tit. 2, § 109 (41 Stat. at L. 297, 298, 301). That for consideration in Brown Holding Co. v. Feldman, supra the "Stay Law" of New York (Laws 1920, c. 942, 944, 947), made applicable to cities having a population of a million or more, suspending until November 1, 1922, the right of the landlord to recover possession of real property occupied for dwelling purposes, except where the person holding over is objectionable or where the landlord seeks to occupy the premises as a dwelling for himself and his family, or intends to demolish the building and construct a new one, providing that the tenant or occupant is ready, willing, and able to pay a reasonable rent. Especial emphasis was laid in the latter case: (1) Upon the impairment of the obligation of the contract of the lease to surrender possession. Of this Mr. Justice Holmes observes: "But contracts are made subject to this exercise of the power of the state when otherwise justified," and cites many federal authorities to support the view. And (2) that the laws are discriminating in respect of the cities affected and the character of buildings dealt with. The classification was held to be justified, as the "evil to be met was a very pressing want of shelter in certain crowded centers."
The effect of the decision in Levy Leasing Co. v. Siegel, supra, is that a standard sufficiently definite to satisfy the due process of law clause of the federal Constitution is adopted by the provisions of New York Laws 1920, c. 944, enacted in the exercise of the police power in the emergency growing out of the World War, that it shall be a defense to an action for rent accruing under an agreement for the rental of premises occupied for dwelling purposes that such "rent is unjust and unreasonable, and that the agreement is oppressive, provided, however, that plaintiff may plead and prove in such action a fair and reasonable rent for the premises, and recover judgment therefor." See Wood v. Vogel,
The foregoing will suffice to show the validity of the Alabama statute, without reference to other statutes that have been sustained by state and federal courts, where tests have been supplied by reference to rates fixed by public service commissions or other governmental agencies under delegated legislative discretion or administrative powers, furnishing abundant examples. Johnson v. Craft, supra; Whaley v. State,
If the test declared by the Kentucky statute — "of the market value under fair competition and under normal marketconditions" — had been merely "the market value" without regard to unfair competition and abnormal conditions of themarket, we apprehend the statute would not have been declared offensive to the due process clause of the
To determine his conduct, according to the circumstances and actualities of life, or by reference to "knowable criteria" (using the language of the Supreme Court of the United States), the defendant was not required by the Alabama statute, at the time of the commission of the act on which the indictment is rested, to speculate upon imaginary conditions, the value under "normal market conditions" and "fair competition," or of the "real value" after eliminating abnormal influences of combinations to affect the price. He was only required to look to the cost price of the necessity to him as related to the cost price of such article or commodity on the market at the time of the sale or offer of sale. When so doing he ascertained, or may have done so, his good faith or his culpability — between the "two extremes of the obviously illegal and the plainly lawful" — and he was thus informed of his general duty in the matter to himself and to the purchaser as a member of the general public. The conditions thus imposed by a state statute on a person, as stated in Internl. H. Co. v. Kentucky, supra, "are as permanent as anything human, and a great body of precedents" heretofore cited from our statutes. When these conditions are coupled with familiar practices, it is made "comparatively easy" by the exercise of common sense and common honesty for any and every person to keep to what is safe and to avoid what is a fraud or cheat upon his customer as a member of the general public whose welfare is sought to be conserved by the police regulation in question.
It follows from the foregoing that section 2 of the Alabama statute is not offensive to any of the provisions of the
The discussion may be closed with the observation that it is a general rule of construction, followed by the Supreme Court of the United States, that statutes should be construed fairly in such a way as to avoid doubtful constitutional questions; and it is to be presumed that state laws will be construed in that way by the state courts. U.S. ex rel. Atty. Gen. v. D.
H. Co.,
This is aside from the rule that if a statute is fairly susceptible of two constructions, we should adopt that which will uphold the statute, even though it be the less natural. Quartlebaum v. State,
We may conclude the matter by saying it must be conceded that the Legislature of any state may enact a statute providing that proof of one fact shall constitute prima facie evidence of another related fact. Adams v. New York,
McCLELLAN, J., joins in the dissent.