92 A. 773 | Md. | 1914
The appellee was indicted for refusing to occupy the seat in a car on the Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric Railway Company to which he had been assigned by a conductor in charge of the car. He demurred to the indictment "for the reason that the Act of Assembly therein set forth is unconstitutional and void, in that it denies to him the equal protection of the law, is contrary to the Constitutions of the State of Maryland, and of the United States of America, and for other errors appearing in the record." The demurrer was sustained by the lower Court, and this appeal was taken by the State. The traverser was indicted under Chapter 248 of the Acts of 1908, page 88 (now codified in 3rd Vol. of Code in Article 27, § 398-403, inclusive). Section 1 of that Act provides that,
"Conductors or managers of all railway companies and corporations, and all persons running or operating cars, or coaches by electricity, running twenty miles beyond the limits of any incorporated city or town of the State for the transportation of passengers, are hereby authorized and required to designate separate seats for white and colored passengers, without any difference in the quality of or convenience or accommodation of the seats in such cars or coaches. The ordinary seat for two persons shall be deemed a separate seat within the meaning of the Act."
Section 2 prohibits discrimination in the quality of or convenience or accommodation in the seats, etc. Section 3 requires conductors or managers of railways to assign to each white or colored person his or her respective seat in the car, and provides that if a passenger refuses to occupy the seat to which he or she may be assigned, the conductor or manager can refuse to carry such passenger and may put him off the car, etc., and then contains the following provision:
"and the passenger so refusing to occupy the designated seat to which he or she may be assigned shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on indictment *379 and conviction thereof, shall be fined not more than fifty dollars, or be confined in jail not more than thirty days, or both, in the discretion of the court, for each offense."
Section 4 imposes a penalty on the conductor or manager who upon request refuses to perform the duties imposed upon him by the Act. Section 5 authorizes the conductor or manager in charge of the car to assign passengers of the same color to vacant seats, when the seats are all occupied but not filled, and with the permission and consent of the occupant to assign a passenger of the other color to an unoccupied seat. Section 6 exempts persons employed as nurses or valets, when accompanying those needing attention.
The indictment contains only one count and follows the language of the statute — describing the traverser as a colored person and a passenger on the car.
This Act is very similar in most of the provisions, to Chapter 109 of the Acts of 1904, excepting the latter applied to companies, corporations and persons running or operating cars or coaches by steam. In Hart v. State,
The ruling of the lower Court cannot therefore be sustained on the ground that the statute is invalid because its terms are sufficiently broad to include interstate passengers, and the main reason relied on by the appellee why the judgment should be affirmed was that the indictment does not state or show whether the traverser was an interstate or intra-state passenger, and does not negative the constitutional exception, if the statute be construed as exempting interstate passengers by reason of the Federal Constitution. The general rule, which has frequently since been repeated, was thus stated by JUDGE BRISCOE inStearns v. State,
In Wright v. State,
No other objection to the indictment was pointed out, and it follows from what we have said that the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded in order that the traverser may be tried upon the indictment against him.
Judgment reversed and the case remanded the appellee to paythe costs. *385