32 S.C. 123 | S.C. | 1890
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was indicted under section 2084 of the General Statutes, for the violation of a written contract to serve the prosecutor as a laborer for the year 1889. The indictment, a copy of which is in the “Case,” does not set out the contract alleged to have been violated ; but the allegation simply is that the defendant “wilfully, unlawfully, and maliciously did violate a certain written contract entered into on the twenty-fourth day of December, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight, between the said Jule Williams, laborer, and one J. C. Workman, landlord, and then and there did fail, wilfully and without just cause, to give the labor reasonably required of him, the said Jule Williams, under the terms of said written contract, against the form of the statute,” &c. The defendant demurred to the indictment on the ground that the act under which it was drawn was unconstitutional, which demurrer was overruled ; and the trial proceeding, the solicitor, after proving the execution of the contract, a copy of which is set out in
The defendant offered no testimony, but requested the Circuit Judge to instruct the jury : “(1) That the contract does not specify the time when the laborer was to be paid for his services, and is for that reason null and void; and therefore defendant cannot be convicted. (2) That if the jury should find that the contract does not state the time when the laborer was to be paid, the contract is void, and the defendant should be acquitted. (8) That the act under which defendant is indicted is unconstitutional, and hence defendant cannot be convicted.” These requests were all refused, and the jury were instructed that the time of payment was sufficiently specified in the contract, and that if defendant worked for the prosecutor “for a year, or twelve months, 26 days in each month, according to his contract, he was to get his pay.”
The jury having found the defendant guilty, and he having been sentenced to pay a fine of $75, or be confined in the State penitentiary at hard labor for the term of four months, defendant appealed upon the several grounds set out in the record, which make substantially these questions: (1) Whether there was error in overruling the demurrer; (2) whether there was error in refusing to instruct the jury that the contract was void on the ground that it did not state the time when the labor was to be paid, or rather whether the defendant could be indicted under the statute for violating such a contract.
. We think there was error in overruling the demurrer; for the discrimination in the punishment which may be imposed, under the provisions of section 2084 of the General Statutes, as be
The other constitutional objections cannot, in our judgment, be sustained. ' If the general assembly sees proper to make the violation of a particular species of civil contracts a criminal offence, we are unable to discover in the provisions of the constitution anything which forbids such legislation. No person is required to enter into such a contract unless he chooses to do so ;• and if he does so, he must take the consequences affixed by the law to the violation of a contract into which he has voluntarily entered, just as he subjects himself to the consequences of any other violation of the law. We are unable to discover any feature of “involuntary servitude” in the matter. Every one who undertakes to serve another in any capacity parts for a time with that absolute liberty which it is claimed that the constitution secures to all; but as he does this voluntarily, it cannot be properly said that he is deprived of any of his constitutional rights ; and if he violates his undertaking, he thereby of his own accord subjects himself to such punishment as the law making power may have seen fit to impose for such violation.
It seems to us that the demurrer to the indictment should have been sustained upon another ground, to wit, that it does not charge any indictable offence. The statute does not ’purport to make the violation of every written contract entered into between a laborer and a landlord, as the prosecutor is styled in the indictment, an indictable offence; and hence it is necessary that the indictment should show on its face that the contract alleged to have been violated was of such a character as that described in the statute, and this the present indictment does not show.
It seems to us, also, that there was error in refusing to instruct the jury that the contract in question did not clearly set forth the time when the amount was to be paid to the laborer. Section 2081 of the General Statutes describes the essentials of a
The second request to charge was properly refused, as that would ha*ve left it tc the jury to construe a written contract, which it was the duty of the court to do.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result on the ground that the indictment did not clearly set out an indictable offence.