179 P. 457 | Mont. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction in a criminal prosecution originally brought in a justice’s court of Silver Bow County, for a violation of Chapter 17, Laws of 1917, commonly known as the Trading Stamp Law, the title and section 1 of which read as follows:
“Section 1. Every person, firm or corporation who shall use, and every person, firm or corporation who shall furnish to any other person, firm or corporation to use, as a gift or bonus, or otherwise, in, with, or for the sale of any goods, wares or merchandise, any premium or bonus, including stamps, coupons, tickets, certificates, cards, or other similar devices which shall entitle the purchaser receiving the same with such sale of goods, wares or merchandise to procure from any person, firm or corporation, any premium or bonus, including goods, wares or merchandise free of charge or for less than the retail market price thereof upon the production of any number of said stamps, coupons, tickets, certificates, cards or other similar device; and every person, firm or corporation placing premiums or bonuses or goods, wares or merchandise, including such as crockery, chinaware, aluminumware, tinware, graniteware, or anything else that may be included (in) or contained or delivered with packages of any kind of merchandise of any description, shall, before so furnishing, selling or using the same, obtain a separate license therefor from the county treasurer of each county wherein such furnishing or selling or using of such premiums or bonuses shall take place, for each and every store or place of business in that county from which such furnishing or selling of premiums or bonuses as herein enumerated, or in which such shall take place.”
Section 2 imposes an annual license fee of $6,000 for permission to do what section 1 prohibits merchants from doing without such license.
The trial in the justice’s court resulted in a verdict of guilty and the imposition of a fine. The defendant appealed to the district court where, after the overruling of a demurrer to the complaint upon the ground, among others, that the facts stated did not constitute a public offense, a trial de novo was had upon an agreed statement of facts. Conviction again followed. Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction.
The complaint charges that the defendant “did willfully,
The agreed statement shows substantially these facts: The defendant Lutey Bros, is a corporation doing a mercantile business in the city of Butte in nine different stores. The Sperry-Hutchinson Company, a New Jersey corporation engaged in furnishing to retail merchants “trading stamps” under a contract the preamble of which recites the scheme to be “a cooperative system of giving a cash discount on small as well as large cash purchases, for the purpose of encouraging cash trade,” etc., entered into a contract with Lutey Bros, to furnish to it the system and services relating thereto. The stamps were furnished to and used by the defendant, the method of their issue and use being briefly the following: The customer who made a purchase at any one of the Lutey stores, was, upon
“Subject to the notice in our Green Stamp Books, this stamp will be redeemed by us in cash. It is our property and not transferable except as stated in such notice.
“The Sperry & Hutchinson Co.”
On each of the stamp-books is found this legend: “Redeemable only in cash. ’ ’
On the part of the respondent, we are asked to affirm the judgment assessing a fine of $25 against the defendant, and to require it to pay an annual license fee of $6,000 under the statute, before it can use trading stamps in its business as evidence of a cash discount. On the part of the appellant, we are regaled with a mountain of legal argument and judicial opinion, by which (as was remarked by the Chief Justice on the oral argument) “the court is blinded by the blaze of light,” in which the constitutionality of the Act is assailed, upon the ground that it aims at the deprivation of that freedom of contract and choice of lawful occupation protected by constitutional guaranties.
The fundamental policy of the Act is to regulate the giving of premiums or bonuses. The language employed in section 1, however, is so worded and contains so many meaningless words and phrases that it all but defies analysis. Its title is open to even more severe criticism in that respect. From a consideration of both the title and the body of the Act, it may be said that the statute is aimed at three distinct classes and may be paraphrased somewhat as follows: 1. Every person, firm or corporation who shall use trading stamps which entitle the person receiving the same to exchange the stamps for goods,
An offense is not punishable unless it falls within the condemnation of some penal statute. If it is not plainly and specifically within the Act, it is not against law, and no conviction can be had thereunder. Its provisions are not to be
Webster defines a premium to be, “A price for a loan, a sum in addition to interest; a bonus.” Bonus: “An allowance in addition to what is usual, current or stipulated, as a bonus on stocks.” See, also, The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, under the definitions of the words “bonus” and “premium.” That the impositions of the Act áre drastic and so highly penal
Does the furnishing of trading stamps, redeemable in cash, as shown in the case before us, constitute the giving of a premium or bonus as variously described therein? The transaction involves no element of chance, uncertainty or contingency. In fact, it amounts to a specific deduction for a cash purchase, regardless of amount — a percentage discount — a rebate, and does not therefore fall within the condemnation of the statute. “When the purchaser and the seller understand that the token, coupon or stamp issued with the sale of goods is of a stated cash value, the transaction thereby becomes purged of its objectionable features and influences which such legislation condemns.” (Trading Stamp Cases, 166 Wis. 614, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 707, 166 N. W. 59.) We are fortified in this interpretation of the Act by the reasoning of the courts in numerous cases. (Olson v. Ross (N. D.), 167 N. W. 385; Rast v. Van Deman & Lewis Co., 240 U. S. 342, Ann. Cas. 1917B, 455, L. R. A. 1917A, 421, 60 L. Ed. 679, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 370; Tanner v. Little, 240 U. S. 369, 60 L. Ed. 691, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 379; State v. Weigle (Wis.), 168 N. W. 385; Trading Stamp Cases, supra.)
From the views expressed, it becomes apparent that the questions respecting the application of constitutional guaranties are merely hypothetical; and we decline to anticipate a proposition so momentous until a case is presented in which the precise facts are involved.
The complaint does not state a public offense and the court erred in overruling the general demurrer interposed by defendant. The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to the district court to dismiss the proceeding.
Reversed and remanded.