Cain v. Daly
Cain v. Daly
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is a complaint in the original jurisdiction of this Court for an injunction to' restrain the *481 prosecution of plaintiff for violation of sec. 501 of the Criminal Code, which declares that “no person or persons whatsoever shall publicly cry, show forth or expose to sale, any wares, merchandise, fruit, herbs, goods or chattels whatso'ever, upon the Lord’s D'ay, or any part thereof, upon pain that every person so offending shall forfeit the same goods so cried, or showed forth or exposed for sale.”
The defendants are the chief of police and two policemen, the mayor and other members of the board of police commissioners and the recorder, who ai*e officers, of the city of Columbia, and two magistrates of the State located in said cijy. The plaintiff is engaged in the business of operating, leasing and selling the Doremus Vending Machine within the States, of South Carolina and North Carolina, with headquarters at Columbia, S. C., where after procuring a license he installed and operated a number of said machines. The Doremus Vending Machine is described as a small receptacle for wares about eighteen inches in height, six inches in width and six inches in depth, with two lodes, one to .attach the machine to a table or stand and another to open the drawers for the goods and money; that it is operated by placing a coin in a slot and raising a lever, and the mechanism is such that if the proper coin is so. placed, an article of merchandise, which can be plainly seen, will be ejected therefrom'. The wares in this case were chewing gum and cigars. The vending machines being operated on Sundays, prosecutions were begun February 27, 1906, against the plaintiff under the city ordinances, secs. 880 and 381, relating to keeping open a shop or store for the transaction of business on the Sabbath Day, and publicly working on the Sabbath Day except in cases of emergency. Plaintiff was found guilty by Recorder’s Court and fined, but on appeal to the Court of General Sessions the judgment was reversed, March 3, 1906, and plaintiff discharged. After this plaintiff purchased and installed more of the machines, and on April 8, 1906, warrants were issued before the recorder for a forfeiture of the wares in forty-one of said machines, under the statute -quoted *482 above. The cases were transferred to magistrate Moorman, and judgment was rendered in one case declaring- forfeiture of the goods, and appeal was taken therefrom to the Court of General Sessions, and pending- this- appeal the other cases were continued. Thereafter the machines were installed again, and on April 15, 1906, warrants were again issued and the goods seized. One of these cases was tried and the goods- declared forfeited, and the other cases were continued pending appeal to the Court of General Sessions.
The complaint alleges on information and belief that it is the intention o-f the defendants to continue to take his goods whenever they are found in said machines- on Sunday, and to continue to harass him with prosecutions and suits for forfeiture of the said goods and to- interfere with his business representing an investment o-f several thousand dollars, and that if required to await the determination of said appeals in the lower Courts, he will suffer irreparable loss; that the nature of plaintiff’s business and construction of the machines is such that to stop them on Sunday would require him- to take in all the machines o-n Saturday and place them in their accustomed places on Monday, thereby losing the use of them for a greater -part o-f each of these days and causing expense such as- to- materially injure and perhaps destroy the plaintiff’s business. The- complaint further alleges that numerous persons and corporations within the city of Columbia openly violate the sections o-f the Code referring to the observance of the Sabbath-, and so far as the plaintiff is informed and believes no one has for a long time been arrested or interfered with in any way for the same, and the complaint charges that the defendants, the police commissioners, are-making an unjust attack on his business and that they are actuated therein by prejudice and ill feeling toward plaintiff. It is also- alleged that a number of machines of similar design and vending the same class of wares hav-e been operated iii the city of Columbia for a long time without interference. The plaintiff asserts that his business does not violate any laws of the city or State, and *483 that the statute under which his goods were taken is obsolete and of no force in this State, having been superseded for a great many years by city and town ordinances.
The answer submits that plaintiff has a complete and adequate remedy at law for all the wrongs alleged and that the complaint shows no equity. The defendants deny that their conduct has been actuated by any improper motive or feeling or any purpose to discriminate against'plaintiff or affect his business, and allege that their acts were for the purpose of discharging, and were within, their duty as. officers; that they never assented to the operation by plaintiff of said machines on Sundays, and that if any other person has operated similar machines on Sunday, the matter has not been brought to their attention; that the only person or corporations allowed to pursue their calling on Sunday within the city of Columbia are domestic servants, venders of ice and milk, street cars and their employees, livery stables, vehicles, etc., engaged in the transportation of passengers, etc., all of which they are advised fall under the head of necessities.
It is not even claimed in this case that the statute in question is void on constitutional grounds, but it is alleged to be obsolete — that is, repealed1 by non-user. Courts should hesi *484 tate long to declare an act on our statute books obsolete from desuetude. O’Hanlon v. Myers, 10 Rich., 130. The better view is that a statute is in force until repealed by the proper authority, either expressly or by clear implication, as, for example, by the enactment of inconsistent legislation. In this case, however, there is no foundation whatever to claim' that the statute 'is obsolete. The statute is substantially in the words of the enactment of 29 Charles II., in 1678; was first enacted here in 1691, 2 Stat., 68; re-enacted in 1712, 2 Stat., 396, embodied in the Revised Statutes of 1873 as sec. 2, chap. 74, page 390, appears as sec. 1632, in the General Statutes of 1882, and as sec. 386 of Revised Statutes of 1893, and finally as sec. 501 of the Criminal Code of 1902.
*485
There being no ground for equitable interference with said criminal proceedings, the complaint for injunction is dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cain v. Daly.
- Cited By
- 14 cases
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- Syllabus
- 1. Injunction. — Criminal Prosecutions may he enjoined where they are prosecuted under a statute clearly void, and where irreparable injury to property rights may result from its enforcement. That the enforcement of a valid law would materially injure plaintiff’s business or property, affords no reason for equitable interference. 2. Sec. 501, Criminal Code, is not repealed by non-user or by implication. 3. Injunction. — That a criminal statute is not enforced against some idolaters, is no ground for restraining a prosecution under a valid law. 4. Sec. 501, Criminal Code, embraces machines automatically vending mercantile wares on Sunday. 5. License — Sunday.—A city license for conducting a business does not relieve holder of obeying Sunday laws.