167 Ga. 160 | Ga. | 1928
Section 416 of the Penal Code provides that “Any person who shall pursue his business, or the work of his
An early case very similar in principle to that presented by the question now before us was where the defendant was prosecuted for furnishing food on Sunday for the team of the owner whose live stock needed feeding in order to pursue the journey. This court held that the statute which was in the same language at that time as at the present did not forbid such feeding, and that the sale of the provender for the live stock was an act of necessity and an exception to the general inhibition forbidding one to pursue his business and ordinary calling on the Lord’s day.
The word “necessity,” as defined in 37 Cyc. 552, is “not the physical and absolute necessity, but the moral fitness and propriety of the work done under the circumstances of each particular case.” From this it would seem to follow that whether an act shown to have been committed, and alleged to be criminal because in violation of the Sunday law, came within the exception provided for acts of necessity would be a question of fact to be determined by a jury. Statutes similar to section 416 are in force in other States, and the only difficulty which has arisen in the construction of the exceptions made for works of necessity or charity appears to have been based upon differences of opinion as to what constitutes works of necessity. All the courts are agreed that statutes providing a day of rest are constitutional, and that they should be liberally construed so as to effectuate the purpose intended; but frequently it is hard to determine whether the particular act under investigation is really a work of necessity, and this has 'induced the courts generalty, when there was reasonable doubt whether the work was or was not one of necessity, to treat the question, as we think quite properly, as one of fact and determine it according to the facts of each particular case. As said by Judge Carroll in McAfee v. Commonwealth, 173 Ky. 83 (190 S. W. 671, L. R. A. 1917C, 377), in defining the “necessity” which will relieve one doing work of his ordinary calling from the penalty of the law, “It is also well settled by the current authority that the necessity that will excuse engaging in work or business on the Sabbath day need not be a physical necessity or an imperative or overpowering necessity. It need be only a reasonable necessity and one that is created by some real or unexpected emergency or uncommon or ex
The rule which has frequently been reiterated in our sister State of South Carolina is: “It is impossible to state in the form of a legal proposition the degree of need or inconvenience which would amount to necessity. . . Necessity is an elastic term. It does not mean that which is indispensable, but it means something more than that which is merely needful or desirable.” Charleston Oil Co. v. Poulnot, 143 S. C. 283, 295 (141 S. E. 454, 458). The Supreme Court of Arkansas, in Rhodes v. City of Hope, 171 Ark. 754 (286 S. W. 877, 47 A. L. R. 1104), held that the sale of gasoline is not such “necessity” as to be permissible on Sunday within the meaning of Sunday restrictive laws. Thus it will be
We have cited the foregoing cases, and we might cite a number of Georgia decisions on the provision of our Penal Code now under consideration, such as Arnheiter v. State, 115 Ga. 572 (41 S. E. 989, 58 L. R. A. 392), Penniston v. Newnan, 117 Ga. 700 (45 S. E. 65), and Hunt v. State, 19 Ga. App. 448 (91 S. E. 879), to show that in some instances courts have held that the necessity of the work was determined by the peculiar circumstances; but we have reached the conclusion that the question propounded by the Court of Appeals, relating solely to the sale of gasoline, should be answered in the affirmative, after consideration of “the present-day use to which automobiles are put.” As a matter of common knowledge of which the court will take judicial cognizance, if the law forbade the sale of gasoline on the Sabbath under any and all circumstances, many instances would occur in which the user of the vehicle would be altogether deprived of recreative rest or of himself performing acts of necessity and/or charity. Many would be deprived of taking even an absolutely necessary journey. It will not do to say that gasoline sufficient for a journey might be procured on Saturday, for that might not be the case. The journey undertaken might require more gasoline than the vehicle was prepared to carry, or the most urgent mission of necessity or charity might be stopped by the breakage of the gas line or tank and the loss of gasoline by leakage. We have suggested only a few instances in which a sale of gasoline under the ruling of any of the courts would be held to be a necessity, and it may be that sales would be made which would not measure up to the strictest definition of the word “necessity” as given by the authorities. But in the light of modern-day methods of traveling by automobile, we are of the opinion that our answer must be controlled by the same reasoning as used by this court in Augusta & Summerville Railroad Co. v. Renz, 55 Ga. 127 (4), 128, where Chief Justice Warner said: “In view of the dependence of the people for travel, in the cities where street-railroads have been established, by that mode of conveyance in going to church, visiting the sick, etc., we are not prepared to hold that the running of street-railroads in cities and the vicinity thereof, where the same have been established, on