87 N.J.L. 192 | N.J. | 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Supreme Court held that the act of May 26th, 1912 (Pamph. L., p. 235), by which street railway companies were required to grant free transportation to police officers when in uniform or on duty, was a constitutional exercise by the legislature of its police power. In this view we concur.
That this statutory provision has a direct tendency to secure the presence of police officers upon street railway cars is attested by the very complaint of the plaintiff in error. That the presence of such officers upon such cars has a tendency to prevent disorderly conduct and to afford protection to passengers, if not an admitted fact is at least one of those determinations of fact that the legislature has the right to make for itself when prescribing a police regulation. Hopper v. Stack, 69 N. J. L. 562; Lyons v. Morris, 86 Id. 206.
The argument against the constitutionality of this regulation is based fundamentally upon the contention that the considerations that have just been mentioned were not those that operated upon the mind of the legislature, which, on the contrary, it is said, were of a purely monetary character, the real purpose of the legislation in question being to save expense to the public by throwing it upotí the public utilities by the exaction from them of an unconstitutional tribute.
This argument fails to discriminate between the purposes of legislators and the objects of legislation, and hence gives no force to the established doctrine that courts deal only with the latter, i. e., with the objects of legislation as expressed in the statutory language, and are not concerned with and indeed cannot take judicial notice of the purposes of the lawmaker saving as they are so expressed. This practical distinction is pointed out in the opinion of the Supreme Court in Sawter v. Schoenthal, 81 N. J. L. 197, which upon this point has survived destructive criticism.
Another canon of constitutional law is that the language of the legislature will if possible, be so construed as to uphold rather than to destroy a statute it has enacted. We have seen that the result of the statute in question is to induce the presence of the police upon street railway cars, and that the police 'protection thus secured is within the object expressed in the language of the statute; if now it be conceded that it is also permissible to find in such language that the purpose of the legislature in the enactment of this
Affirming as we do the judgment of the court below in so far as it applies to police officers and upon the single ground of the police power, we think it proper to add that in our opinion such judgment is not sustainable upon either of the other grounds relied upon below, viz., that of indirect compensation to the plaintiff in error, or that of a custom to which it had assented.
The judgment of the Supreme Court is affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chancellor, Chibe Justice, Garrison, Trenciiarb, Parker, Bergen, Minturn, Kalisch, Black, Yrebenburgh, White, Terhune, Williams, JJ. 13.
For reversal—-None.