150 Minn. 247 | Minn. | 1921
The defendant was convicted in the municipal court of St. Paul of maintaining a maternity hospital without first having obtained a license, and appeal's.
Two questions are raised: (1) Whether chapter 50, p. 76, Laws 1919 (Ex. Sess.) is unconstitutional because it embraces more than one subject; (2) whether it is unconstitutional within article 1, § 7, of the Constitution guaranteeing due process.
The statute defines a maternity hospital, for the purposes of the act, and provides for its licensing by the state board of control. Conducting such a hospital without a license is a misdemeanor. Regulations are prescribed for its conduct, and for the health and well-being of the inmates, and public welfare is in view. The purpose of the constitutional provision is to prevent a fraud upon the public and the legislature by the passage of acts, the nature of which is not disclosed in their titles, and to prevent the passage of unrelated measures by a combination of interests concerned with only a part of them and regardless of the others, so that each does not receive separate legislative consideration on its merits. State v. Erickson, 125 Minn. 238, 146 N. W. 364; State v. Shevlin-Carpenter Co. 99 Minn. 158, 108 N. W. 935, 9 Ann. Cas. 634; State v. Cassidy, 22 Minn. 312, 21 Am. Rep. 765; 3 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. §§ 8906-8920, and cases cited. We are unable to see that the act under consideration contains anything which is not germane to the title. Within the constitutional sense it- embraces but one subject.
We do not agree with counsel for the defendant that the statute grants to the board of control arbitrary power to withhold a license, regardless of conditions, and.that it is therefore void within Noble v. Douglas, 274 Fed. 672, and other cases cited in his brief. The statute is paternalistic. So are other statutes enacted in the exercise of the police power. It contemplates an investigation and consideration of conditions and a supervision and regulation by the board, but an arbitrary refusal of a license is not intended.
The only questions decided are that the title of the act is sufficient within the constitutional requirement, and that in the exercise of the police power the legislature may require maternity hospitals to be licensed.
Order affirmed.