— after stating the case: The police power of the State is the authority, vested in the Legislature by the Constitution, to enact all such wholesome and reasonable laws, not in conflict with the fundamental laws—the Constitution of the State and the Unitеd States, together with laws made in pursuance of it — as they may deem conducive to public good.
Carr
v.
Alger,
We see nothing in the act that confers on any individual or class of persons peculiar privileges or immunities, or that-imposes restrictions on any person or class of persons in the disposition of their property, or in making purchases from others. Every citizеn of North Carolina, who may buy or sell cotton in the counties of Anson, Northampton or Richmond, is equally amenable to the penalties mentioned in the-act, and liable to indictment if he fails to see that a written assignment, or bill of sale in the prеscribed form, is executed, witnessed and delivered to the nearest Justice of the Peace.
The statute then comes within the definition of a public local law. Such laws, if they operate uniformly and subject all persons who come within the defined locality and violate their provisions to indictment in the same way, and to the same punishment, are not repugnant to the Constitution of North Carolina.
State
v.
Muse, 4 D. &
B.,
319; State
v.
Chambers,
The Courts can take judicial notice of the fact that, owing to the nature of cotton as a grоwing crop, and the .usual methods adopted in gathering and ginning, it is peculiarly exposed to theft until it is baled. It seems that section 1006 of
The Code
forbidding the sale of cotton in the seed, or lint cotton in quantities less than a bale, between the hours of sunset and sunrise, was intended to protect planters of cotton by withdrawing the temptation offered to dishonest men to take from their fields, storehouses and ginhouses a valuable product that is so difficult to identify and reclaim, and to sell it to dealers under the cover of darkness. It is the duty of the Courts to assume that the Legislature enacts laws with a view to the public benefit. We must presume that the provision of
The Code
referred to. was, in
*719
the opinion of the General Assembly, insufficient to afford adequate protection to the producers of this great staple in thdse counties mentioned in the law under which the hill of indictment was drawn, and therefore persons who disposed of small quantities of loose cotton, even in daylight, were required to execute a receipt that might prove valuable in tracing the movements of a thief. We can see how the law might have been enacted with a view to afford necessary protection to property, and when it proposes upon its face to metе out the same punishment for violation of its provisions to the seller and buyer, we cannot go behind the manifest meaning of the act, according to all legal rules of construction, and hunt for a hidden intent, under the guise of regulating trade, to restrict the rights of any class of persons to enjoy the fruits of their own labor.
Powell
v.
Com.,
114 Penn. State Reports, 276;
Soon Hing
v. Crowley,
Speaking of laws that apply only to particular localities, or particular classes, Judge Cooley says: “If the laws be otherwise unobjectionable, all that сan be required in these cases is that they be general in their application to the class or locality to which they apply and that they are public in their character, and of their propriety and policy the Legislature must judge.” Cooley Const. Lim., marg. p. 390; ibid, star p. 596.
Though this Court was the first in the American Union to assert and exercise the salutary power to declare an act . of the Legislature unconstitutional, it has since shown its conservative spirit by refusing to pass upon or question the power of a co-ordinate branch of the State government, equal in dignity and clothed with more extensive discre *720 tionary power, except when the violation of the organic law was palpable.
The police power, under our Federal system of government, has been left with the States, and the only limit to its exercise in the enactment of laws by their Legislatures is, that they shall not prove repugnant to the provisions of the fundamental law — the State Constitution and the Federal Constitution, with the laws made under its delegated powers. Cooley’s Const. Lino., star p. 574. The extent to which State laws have been sustained, when enacted under this reserved power, will appear by reference to a few leading cases:
Butchers’ Union Co.
v.
Crescent City Co
,
It rеmains to discuss the other position, that the statute under consideration is in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States If we have shown, by the authorities cited and reasons adduced, that such local legislation does, not come within the inhibition of the organic law of the State against a grant of
“
exclusive or separate emoluments or privileges,” or the toleration of monopolies, when every citizen who comes within the sphere of its operatiоn is alike amenable for a violation of its provisions, it would follow that it could not be declared void, because it abridges the privileges or immunities of any citizen, or class of citizens, of the United States. The Supreme Court of the United States hаs so held in a number of cases.
Missouri
v.
Lewis,
The States did not originally delegate to the government of the United States the power to protect the citizens of the
*721
State, and the duty originally assumed by the States of guaranteeing equal rights to all, remains still equаlly as-binding as an obligation and unimpaired as a right as when the Federal Constitution was adopted. The Fourteenth Amendment extends the right of citizenship in the State and nation to all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, and assumes-for the Federal Government the obligation to protect all such citizens against oppression under any law enacted by a State that abridges their privileges or immunities, deprives them of life, liberty or property without due process of law,, or denies to them the equal protection of the law.
United States
v.
Cruikshank et al.,
It has been held by the Supreme Court of the United States, that no legislation is open to the charge of depriving-one of his rights without due process of law, if it be genеral in its operation upon the subject to which it relates, and is-enforceable in the usual modes established in the administration of government, with respect to kindred matters — that is, by process or proceedings adapted to the nature of the-case.
Dent
v.
West Virginia,
Two of the authorities cited in support of the defendant’s contention (Jacobs’ case, 98 N. Y., and concurring opinion of Justice Field in Bartemeyer v. Iowa, 18 Wallace, 137) tеnd to establish the doctrine on the one hand that the Legislature cannot prohibit one from carrying on a lawful occupation under the guise, which is palpably false, of protecting the public health, because it is a law in restraint of tradе, nor, on the other, prohibit the sale or use of property already in one’s possession, because the denial of the right of enjoying it, or disposing of it, is depriving the owner of property without due process of law. Granting that the first of these positions is tenable, the principle is not at all analagous to that which governs our case. There can be no question about the right of the State to regulate the manner of selling any article produced or ma'nufactured within its bordеrs, in any portion of its territory, with the purpose apparent, from the terms of the law, of protecting the manufacturer or producer against fraud or dishonesty. Cooley’s Const. Lim., star p. 587; Tudeman’s Lim. on Police Powers, § 89.
It is a rule, founded on reason, and supported by authority (as we have already intimated), that we should hold the apparent purpose of the law to be the real objects aimed at *723 by a co-ordinate branch of the. State government, whose duty it is to provide for the protection of its сitizens.
Upon the same principle as that announced in Jacobs’ case, the Court of Appeals of New York, in the case of
The People
v.
Marks,
But whatever may be the proper construction of the laws, similar in their provisions to those found in New York or Pennsylvania, or whether they shall - be ultimately held by our Courts valid or invalid, the production of cotton is not forbidden, nor the mode of its culture prescribed, and the' sale of it is not prohibited, but regulated, by the Act of 1887, as amended by the Act of 1889, and there is therefore no analogy between the cases.
There was error in the holding that the defendant was not guilty. Let this opinion be certified, to the end that a verdict of guilty be entered.
Error.
