August 31, 1908. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The defendant, William James, was convicted before a magistrate of the offense of violating the Sunday law, contained in Criminal Code, section 500. The Circuit Court, on appeal, affirmed the judgment of the magistrate.
The defendant is a butcher and ice dealer in the town of Manning. He was arrested on three warrants, charging three separate offenses of selling ice and meat, and delivering ice and meat, to three different persons, and carrying on his ordinary business, by such sales and deliveries on Sunday, 4th August, 1907.
Contrary to the contention of the counsel for the prosecution, the magistrate ordered the three charges to be consolidated *Page 199 into one, holding whatever might be the number of sales and deliveries, as all were on the same day, they constituted but one doing or exercising worldly labor, business or work of the defendant's ordinary calling, within the terms of the statute. Our statute is the same as the English statute (29 Car., 11 Ch., 7). In deciding under that statute the precise point here involved, in Crepps v.Durden, Cowp., 640, Lord Mansfield said: "On the construction of the act of parliament the offense is `exercising his ordinary trade on the Lord's day,' and that without any fraction of a day, hours or minutes. It is but one entire offense, whether longer or shorter in point of duration. So, whether it consists of one or of a number of particular acts, the penalty incurred for this offense is five shillings. There is no idea conveyed by the act itself that if a tailor sews on the Lord's day, every stitch he takes is a separate offense; or if a shoemaker or carpenter work for different customers at different times on the same Sunday, that those are so many separate and distinct offenses. There can be but one entire offense on one and the same day." This case was cited and the principle applied in holding a number of acts of adultery to constitute but one offense in In re Snow,120 U.S. 274; 30 L.Ed., 658. The argument against this construction of the statute, on the ground of the inadequacy of the fine of one dollar to prevent the violation of the law, loses its force in view of the fact that the General Assembly has not seen fit to change the penalty, though the judgment of Lord Mansfield was rendered in 1777 and that of the Supreme Court of the United States in 1887.
The main question is whether the sale or delivery of ice or fresh meats to the residents of the town of Manning on Sunday is a work of necessity. A work of necessity, within the meaning of the statute, may be that labor necessary to save the worker himself from unforseen and irreparable loss, or it may be that necessary to the community. There is no evidence that the sales or deliveries *Page 200 here under consideration were made to persons who had any unusual or sudden necessity for these articles, so the question here is whether such sales or deliveries on Sunday are ordinarily necessary to the people constituting the municipal community of the town of Manning. It is impossible to state, in the form of a legal proposition, the degree of need or inconvenience which would amount to necessity.Lawton v. Rivers, 2 McC., 446. 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. No doubt a thing which is merely needful or desirable to the residents of a town might be a necessity to the residents of a great city. So, also, that which was a luxury a century ago may have become now a necessity. There is always, however, a tendency, which ought not to be sanctioned, to claim accustomed luxuries as necessities falling within the exception of the law.
The obvious intention of the statute is to set apart one day for rest from ordinary labor, so as to give opportunity to all for leisure and the contemplation of the higher things of life. This purpose would be defeated if the Courts should hold every work a necessity, the interruption of which would break into the ordinary habits of the community, or produce a degree of public inconvenience or discomfort. Assuming that supplies could not be laid in on Saturday, there is still no ground to say it is a grievous deprivation not to have ice and fresh meat every day in the week. Discussion of the numerous authorities is unnecessary. Various kinds of labor alleged to fall within the exception of works of necessity in Sunday laws are considered in the following cases:Com. v. White (Mass.), 5 L.R.A. (N.S.), 322; McGatrick v. Wason, 4 Ohio St., 566; Yonoski v. State (Ind.), 41 Am. Rep., 614; Topeka v. Hempstead, 58 Kan., 328; Arnheiter v. State (Ga.), 41 S.E., 989; Hennersdorf v. State (Tex.), 8 Am. St. Rep., 448; Murray v. Com., 24 Penn. St., 270; Com. v. Louisville, etc., R.R. Co. (Ky.), 44 Am.Rep., 475; *Page 201 Rep., 475; Philadelphia, etc., R.R. Co. v. Lehman (Md.), 40 Am. Rep., 415; State v. McBee (W.Va.), 43 S.E., 121;Burns v. Moore (Ala.), 52 Am. Rep., 332; McGrath v.Mervin (Mass.), 17 Am. Rep., 117; Hamilton v. Austin,62 N.H. 575; State v. Knight (W.Va.), 1 S.E., 569.
So far as we can find, there is no precedent for holding the continuance on Sunday of ordinary sales or deliveries of ice or fresh meat to be a work of necessity in a town, and there is no sound argument in favor of such a conclusion.
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.