Murphy v. Simpson
Murphy v. Simpson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
These parties traded and exchanged horses on the Sabbath day, and this action was brought by one of them against the other, on account of an alleged unsoundness in the horse he had got from him. The plaintiff’s action was based upon a warranty of soundness. The defendant stated, in his answer, that the contract relied upon by the plaintiff was made and executed on the Christian Sabbath, and that neither the plaintiff nor defendant were members of any religious society who observed as a Sabbath any other day in the week than Sunday or the Christian Sabbath. The circuit court decided that this defense was insufficient, and the plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for forty dollars in damages. To reverse that judgment the defendant has prosecuted this writ of error.
The defense relied upon in this case is founded on the statute which provides, that “no work or business shall be done or performed on the Sabbath day, unless the ordinary household offices of daily necessity, or other work of necessity or charity; and if any person on the Sabbath day shall himself be found at his own or any other trade or calling, or shall employ hi3 apprentices, servants or slaves or other person, bond or free, in labor or other business, whether the same be for profit or amusement, unless such as is permitted above, he shall be fined two dollars for each offense.” (Revised Statutes,page 265.)
The exchange of horses by the parties on the Sabbath day was evidently a business prohibited by the statute, and lor the doing of the act the parties were liable for the penalty which the statute inflicts.
It is a well established doctrine of the law, that where a statute has in view the protection of the public morals, a contract, arising out of any particular act, infringing its provisions, cannot be supported, although-the statute merely inflict a penalty for the doing of the act, and do not expressly declare the contract unlawful. In such a statute, a penalty implies a prohibition.
In the case of Ray, &c. v. Catlett and Buck, 12 B. Monroe, 533, it was held, that the mere acceptance of a note on the Sabbath did not involve the person accepting it in any of the consequences resulting from a breach of the law by the other party, unless he knew that the note had been made as well as delivered on Sunday. And the court also said, that it was not prepared to decide that the mere execution and delivery of a note, or its mere acceptance on Sunday was laboring in any trade or calling, unless it be a part of some other transaction done also on Sunday, which may be regarded as labor in some trade or calling.
The opinion delivered in that case, impliedly admits, that a contract forming a part of some transaction done on the Sabbath, which might be regarded as labor in some trade or calling, would be illegal, and could not be enforced.
Our statute does not merely prohibit a person from doing work on the Sabbath day, in his own trade or calling, but the prohibition embraces work or business in his own or any other trade or calling, and applies to every description of secular labor or business, except the ordinary household offices of daily necessity, or other work of necessity or charity.
Exchanging, or as it is usually term ed, swapping horses, is as much a trade or business ¿s selling a horse, or any other commodity would be. It is a violation of the statute, when done on the Sabbath day-
The defense in this case is a valid one and should have been sustained.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial, and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
“ Section 906. In the publication of the reported “ decisions of the Court of Appeals, it shall be the “ duty of the reporter to make a short abstract of the “ facts of the case involved in the decision, followed “ by the legal propositions made by counsel in the “ argument on both sides, with the authorities relied “ on for ther support.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.