74 Minn. 376 | Minn. | 1898
Lead Opinion
The defendant was tried and convicted of keeping open a barber shop on Sunday for the purpose of cutting hair and shaving beards, contrary to the provisions of G- S. 1894, § 6513, which reads as follows:
“All labor on Sunday is prohibited, excepting the works of necessity or charity. In works of necessity or charity is included whatever is needful during the day for good order, health or comfort of the community; provided, however, that keeping open a barber shop on Sunday for the purpose of cutting hair and shaving beards shall not be deemed a work of necessity or charity.”
The only question is as to the constitutionality of. this act, which is assailed by the defendant on two grounds: (1) That the whole act is invalid, it not being within the police power of the state to prohibit any kind of labor or business on Sunday which does not interfere with the peace and good order of the community; (2)
1. We shall not spend much time on the first point. It has been decided in this state, in accordance with an almost unbroken line of authorities elsewhere, that the legislature may, in the exercise of the police power of the state, establish by law, as a civil and political institution, the first day of the week as a day of rest, and may prohibit upon it the performance of any manner of labor, business or work except only works of necessity or charity. State v. Ludwig, 21 Minn. 202.
So-called Sunday legislation has, with many persons, and occasionally even with courts, been the subject of adverse criticism, as an unwarranted interference with that freedom of religious belief and practice which is guarantied to every man by the constitution. These criticisms proceed upon an entirely erroneous theory as to the object of such legislation.
In some states it has been held that Christianity is part of the common law of this country, and Sunday legislation is upheld, in whole or in part, upon that ground. Even if permissible, it is not necessary to resort to any such reason to sustain such legislation. The ground upon which such legislation is generally upheld is that it is a sanitary measure, and as such a legitimate exercise of the police power. It proceeds upon the theory, entertained by most of those who have investigated the subject, that the physical, intellectual and moral welfare of mankind requires a periodical day of rest from labor, and, as some particular day must be fixed, the one most naturally selected is that which is regarded as sacred by the greatest number of.citizens, and which by custom is generally devoted to religious worship, or rest and recreation, as this causes the least interference with business or existing customs.
It is sometimes said that mankind will seek cessation of labor at proper times by the natural influences of the law of self-preserva.tion; also that, if a man desires to engage on Sunday in any kind of work or business which does not interfere with the rights of others, he has an absolute right to do so, and to choose his own time of rest, as he sees fit. The answer to this is that all men are not in fact independent and at liberty to work when they choose.
The object of the law is not so much to protect those who can rest at pleasure as to afford rest to those who need it, and who, from the conditions of society, could not otherwise obtain it. Moreover, if the law was not obligatory upon all, and those who desired to do so were permitted to engage in their usual vocation on Sunday, others engaged in the same kind of labor or business might, against their wishes, be compelled, by the laws of competition in business, to do likewise. See dissenting opinion of Justice Field in Ex parte Newman, 9 Cal. 502, afterwards adopted as the views of the court in Ex parte Andrews, 18 Cal. 679.
2. The enacting clause of the statute under which defendant was convicted was passed in 1885, being section 225 of the Penal Code. The proviso was added in 1887. Laws 1887, c. 54.
If keeping a barber shop open on Sunday for the purposes of shaving and hair cutting was not a. work of necessity or charity, within the meaning of the original statute, the amendment has not changed the law, and the statute, as it now stands, is not open to the objection of being class legislation. Under the original statute, what were works of necessity or charity was largely left to be decided as a question of fact, which would often be a question for the jury. The effect of the amendment was to make this a question of law, instead of fact, as to keeping a barber shop open.
In the exercise of the police power in establishing a day of rest, a very large discretion must be allowed to the legislature in determining what kinds of labor or business should be prohibited, and what are and what are not works of necessity or charity; and unless their classification is manifestly purely arbitrary, and not founded upon any substantial distinction or apparent natural reason which suggests the necessity or propriety of different legislation, the courts have no right to interfere with the exercise of legislative discretion.
Courts will take judicial notice of the fact that, in view of the custom to keep barber shops open in the evening as well as in the
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 open on Sunday is not a work of necessity or charity, while as to all other kinds of labor they have left that question to be determined as one of fact.
It will be noted that what the law forbids is, not a man’s shaving himself, or even getting some one else to shave him, but the keeping open a barber shop for that purpose on Sunday. The object of the law was not to interfere with those who wish to be shaved on Sunday, or primarily to protect the proprietors of barber shops, but mainly to protect the employees in them, by insuring them a day of rest. We are of opinion that the whole act, including the proviso, is valid.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent.