17 N.M. 214 | N.M. | 1912
OPINION OP THE COURT.
The information charged the defendant with having engaged in a game of base ball on Sunday, and that he thereby violated section 1368, C. L. 1897, in three particulars, viz: First: That it was such sport as constituted a violation of the statute; second: That it constituted attendance at a public meeting, and third, that it constituted labor. Section 1368 as follows:
“Any person, or persons who shall be found on the first day of the week, called Sunday, engaged in any sports, or in horse racing, cock fighting, or in any other manner, disturbing any worshiping assembly, or private family, or attending any public meeting, or public exhibition, excepting for religious worship or instruction, or engaged in any labor, except works of necessity, charity, or mercy, shall be punished,” etc.
In the case of State v. Prather, 79 Kansas, 513; 100 Pac. 57, the Supreme Court of Kansas, in discussing the question as to whether baseball was prohibited by a statute, which prohibited all “games” on the Sabbath day, said:
“In the broad sense in which the word is often used it includes baseball. Giving the statute this interpretation the statute applied to every contrivance or institution which falls within the general term. This construction would make the statute apply to every game of authors, whist, chess, checkers, backgammon and cribbage, even when played within the privacy of one’s home, and to croquet, basket ball, tennis and golf, whether played in public or private grounds. It hardly seems possible that it could have been the intention of the legislature to enact -a provision so drastic in its terms as to make the playing of all games on Sunday misdemeanors without regard to their character.” And the Supreme Court of Missouri, in the case Ex Parte Joseph Neet, 157, Mo. 527, in speaking of baseball, says:
“Baseball does not belong to the same class, kind, species or genus as horse racing, cock «fighting, or card playing. It is to America what cricket is to England. It is a sport or athletic exercise, and is commonly called a game but it is not a gambling game or productive of immorality. In a qualified sense it is affected by chance, but it.is primarily and properly a game of science, of physical skill, of trained endurance and of natural adaptability to athletic skill.”
To hold that the word “sports,” used in bur statute was designed to prevent people from engaging in baseball on Sunday, would make the statute so drastic that it would prohibit all sports, however innocent or harmless they might be, and however much they might tend to make the Sabbath day a day of rest and relaxation from labor. As remarked by the court in Ex Parte Joseph Neet, supra., “Such a construction would have curtailed many of the pleasures of many of our people, without elevating them or improving their moral tone. Until the law-makers expressly provide for such sweeping changes in the lives and customs of our people, it is not proper for the courts by construction to impair their natural rights to enjoy these sports or amusements that are neither mala in se nor mala prohibita — neither immoral or hurtful to body or soul.”
The second count of the information charges that the defendant “did unlawfully engage in and attend a public exhibition and a public meeting, to-wit, a game of baseball, said meeting and exhibition not being for religious worship or instruction.”
“Exertion of muscular strength, or bodily exertion which occasions weariness; ,particularly, the exertions of the limbs in occupations by which subsistence ■ is obtained; as in agriculture and manufactures, in distinction from. exertion, of strength in play or amusements, which are denominated - exercise, rather than labor.” Physical exertion alone certainly does not constitute labor within the meaning of the statute, otherwise people would be precluded by statute from walking, engaging in any recreation, or doing any act, unless the same was a matter of necessity, charity or mercy; nor does the mere fact that remuneration is received for physical exertion, change the character of that exertion so as to make it labor, if it would not otherwise be so. If a man chops a cord of wood, we would all agree that that is labor, whether he receives any compensation for .it or not. ■ And on the other hand it must equally be true that recreation or amusement is not transformed into labor because the persons indulging in the recreation or amusement receives pay for so doing. This would be placing, we think, an unwarranted construction upon the statute. No one would contend that the action of a band, which plays in many of our cities and towns on Sunday, for the entertainment of the public, is engaged in labor, within the meaning of the statute, although the members receive compensation therefor; nor would it be contended that the statute extended to the case of a paid singer in a church choir, who sings for the entertainment of the congregation and for the benefit of religious worship and instruction, thereby attracting the attendance of persons who might not otherwise attend church.
For the reasons above stated, the judgment of the lower court is reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to the lower court to discharge the defendant.