Edward K. Murray was convicted and fined $10 and costs in police court under a complaint charging that, in Douglas county, he, “being a barber, working as such in the barber shop of the Hotel Fontenelle, did then and there on Sunday, July 29, 1917, barber one John Doe, * *' * the said John Doe, real name unknown, being at the time of said barbering a guest at the Hotel Fontenelle. ’ ’
On appeal a jury was waived, and the case being tried to the court on a stipulation of facts, the judgment was affirmed by the district court. Defendant prosecutes error.
The stipulation follows :■ “ (1) The defendant, Edward K. Murray, is a barber by profession, and as such was on Sunday, the 29th day of July, 1917, in the employ of the Interstate Hotel Company, then operating the Hotel Fontenelle in the city of Omaha, Douglas county, Nebraska; that the said defendant on said day and time and place, and in the barber shop owned and operated by said hotel company in said hotel company’s building, did barber one Harry C. Lefler under direction of said hotel company. •
“ (2) That said Lefler at said time was a guest of said Hotel Fontenelle, having arrived late the night before f^om some distant point in another .state; that when said Lefler, -guest of said hotel,- came into the barber shop and demanded services, he was in necessary need of barbering in order to be comfortable and healthy and in order to make himself presentable in appearance and acceptable to. the other guests of the hotel in the dining room and lobby thereof; that said Hotel Fontenelle has a'capacity to entertain more than 300 guests at a time, and on or. about the date mentioned above there
Defendant argues that the barber act, namely, chapter 234, Laws 1917, is not applicable to the facts; that it is “class and special legislation,’’ that “it discriminates against barbers and in favor of other common laborers by imposing on barbers a sevérer penalty than that imposed by the general Sunday act on other common laborers, and is therefore unconstitutional.” The “general Sunday act” referred to imposes a fine “not exceeding $5 nor less than $1” for working on Sunday “at common labor, work of necessity or charity only excepted.”- Rev. St. 1913, sec. 8802.
Section 1 of the act in question, so far as applicable, provides: “It shall be unlawful for any person,” his agents or servants, “to conduct, carry on or to perform
We do not think the act will bear the construction contended for by defendant. It applies equally to all of the members of a certain class, namely, the barbers of the state, and it seems to be a reasonable exercise of the police power. Under this power the legislature in its discretion may impose such reasonable penalty as. will apply to all the members of any given class of persons, for working on Sunday as it may deem reasonbly necessary to make the act effective. Statutes similar to ours that inflict a heavier penalty for barbering on Sunday than is imposed on other classes of labor for violation of the general Sunday acts have been held' constitutional. Breyer v. State, 102 Tenn. 103; Stanfeal v. State, 78 Ohio St. 24; People v. Bellet, 99 Mich. 151. In the Michigan case the subject is discussed afi some length. The court aptly said:
“It is conceded that the state, in the exercise of its police power, has' the right to enact Sunday laws, and that it also has the' right to provide for the regulation and restriction of those engaged in an employment which, in and of itself, may prove harmful to the community, such as the liquor traffic. But it is contended that the business of conducting a barber shop is not of this class, and that it is in the nature of class legislation to .prohibit this business under more severe penalties than*55 those provided for the conduct of other legitimate business on Sunday. We do not deem the act in question open to such objection. By class legislation, we understand such legislation as denies rights to one which are accorded to others, or inflicts upon one individual a more severe penalty than is imposed upon another in Wee case offending. ’ ’
Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (7th ed.) 554, is cited in support of the text.
Defendant argues too that, in view of the stipulation which provides that Lefler “was in necessary need of barbering in order to be comfortable and healthy,” this made the barbering a work of necessity. We do not think so. Lefler was barbered in the barber shop. Under, the agreed statement of facts he did not come within the class of persons who are excepted from the operation of the statute and for whom the services of a barber may lawfully be performed “in connection with the medical treatment of persons confined to their rooms or in a hospital and being under the care of a physician. ’ ’ If any of these conditions had obtained, the barbering, under the express terms of the act, would, of course, be construed to be a work of necessity. It will not be presumed that the legislature by this act intended to make it a crime in a case of emergency to cut the hair or to remove the beard of a person who has sustained injuries about the head or face and for whose proper treatment such services are required. The facts stipulated do not present a case of that kind.
Defendant’s contention that it is not within the province of the legislature to define what is a work of necessity or charity does not seem to be well founded. In Petit v. Minnesota, 177 U. S. 164, the supreme court of the United States commented on and approved this language found in the Minnesota opinion: “In view of all these facts, we cannot say that the legislature has exceeded the limits of its legislative' police power in declaring that, as a matter of law, keeping barber shops
We do not find reversible error. The judgment is
Affirmed.