Concurring opinion of
Read, J.Christianity is a part of the laws of England, says Blackstone, and Lord Chief Baron Kelly, in the late case of Cowen v. Milbourn, Law Rep. 2 Ex. 234, uses similar language: “ There is abundant authority for saying that Christianity is part and parcel of the law of the land.”
Judge Duncan, delivering the opinion of this court, in Updegraph v. The Commonwealth, 11 S. & R. 400, forty-three years ago, said: “We will first dispose of what is considered the grand objection, the constitutionality of Christianity, for in effect that is the question.
“ Christianity, general Christianity, is and always has been a part of the common law of Pennsylvania; Christianity without the spiritual artillery of European countries ; for this Christianity was one of the considerations of the Royal Charter, and the very basis of its great founder, William Penn ; not Christianity founded *433on any particular religious tenets ; not Christianity with an established. church and tithes, and spiritual court; but Christianity with liberty of conscience to all men.” “ And to the wilds of America, peopled by a stock cut off by persecution from a Christian society, does Christianity owe true freedom of religious opinion and religious worship.” “From the time of Bracton, Christianity has been received as part of the common law of England.”
It is clear, therefore, that, as our common law is derived from England, we must look to that country for information as to what our common law on this subject was and is. England, at least for the last eight hundred years, has always had an established chureh, with the single exception of the time of the Commonwealth. From William the Conqueror to Henry the Eighth it was the Roman Catholic, and from his death to the present time, with the exception of the reign of Queen Mary, it has been the Church of England. Of course this part of the common law has been affected and controlled, „and formed by the practices and usages of the church established by law, and not by those of any other sect or denomination of Christians. England has an established church, and Scotland has also another, and neither have any control over the other. Our common law, however, is derived from England, and therefore it is only to England we are to look for it, and not to any other country.
The first day of the week, the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday, is a day for worship and rest as regulated by the civil authority. It is dies non juridieus in England, but in other respects it is the subject of positive regulation by the legislative authority. I am aware that some religious persons of some religious sects think the sanctity of Sunday, as a day of entire rest, is prescribed to all nations, and particularly to all Christians, by the fourth commandment in the Decalogue, but an attentive perusal of the 20th, 31st and 35th chapters of Exodus, and of the 5th chapter of Deuteronomy, will show that this commandment was specially limited to the Jewish nation alone. The words spoken were, “ I am the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage,” and the verses succeeding the Decalogue, and the 21st chapter which commences, “ Now these are the judgments which thou shalt set before them,” show clearly that the commandments and judgments were addressed to the Israelites alone, and so, in the 24th chapter, where the people take the covenant and said, “ all that the Lord hath said, will we do, and be obedient.” So in the 12th to the 17th verses of the 31st chapter, “ Speak thou also unto the children of Israel, saying, Verily my Sabbaths ye shall keep, for it is a sign betw'een me and you throughout your generations.” “ Every one that defiléth it shall surely be put to death; for whosoever *434doeth any work therein, that soul shall he cut off from among his people.”
“ Wherefore, the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations for a perpetual covenant.” “ It is a sign between me and the children of Israel for ever.”
So in the 35th chapter: “ And Moses gathered all the congregation of the children of Israel together, and said unto them, ‘ These are the words which the Lord hath commanded, that ye shall do them. Six days shall work be done; but on the seventh day there shall be to you an holy day, a Sabbath of rest to the Lord; whosoever doeth work therein shall be put to death; ye shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath day.’ ” So we find in the 15th chapter of Numbers: “A man that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath day” was stoned to death by the congregation.
In the 5th chapter of Deuteronomy, “ Moses called all Israel, and said - unto them, Hear, 0 Israel, the statutes and judgments which I speak in your ears this day, that ye may learn them, and keep, and do them. The Lord our God made a covenant with us in Horeb. The Lord made not this covenant with our fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive this day.” Then follows the Decalogue, but the reason assigned for the fourth commandment is in the 15th verse in these words, “ And remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and.that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence through a mighty hand, and by a stretched-out arm: therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to keep the Sabbath day.”
In the 22d verse Moses says, “ These words (the ten commandments) the Lord spake unto all your assembly in the mount, out of the midst of the fire, of the cloud and of the thick darkness with a great voice; and he added no more.”
This recapitulation of Scripture makes it clear that the fourth commandment, which is a positive statute imposed upon the Israelites alone, as a people separated from all other nations by the Almighty for special and wise purposes, was not intended either for the Gentiles, or for those living under a later dispensation. Like circumcision, it was a sign between Him and them only. It was a part of the ceremonial law, like sacrifices, and not binding at any time on any nation except the Jews. It is evident that no great nation of modern times, living under the Christian dispensation, could submit to an observance of a day of entire rest under the penalty of death for any breach of it; for the command of the Almighty inflicted this penalty on the offender. The whole Jewish constitution was framed for a small and partially barbarous nation, whose tendency was to idolatry, and upon whom were imposed burdens which could only be borne by those *435who considered themselves as specially selected by the Godhead. It was not a nation who could spread their doctrines, or convert other nations, and their mission ceased with the birth of our Saviour.
The Old Testament contains moral revealed law, ceremonial and judicial laws — the two last being either typical, or intended especially or only for the Jewish people, under the old dispensation, were terminated by fulfilment or abrogation on the coming of Christ, and the completion of the Christian dispensation. This was the view of the Apostle Paul, when he says in his Epistle to the Colossians, “ Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross ; and having spoiled principalities and powers, he made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in it. Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath days ; which are a shadow of things to come: but the body is of Christ.” Col. ii., 14, 15.
So in h'is Epistle to the Galatians: “ But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage ? Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain.” Gal. iv., 9,10. “ Stand fast, therefore, in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.” Gal. v., 1.
So in his Epistle to the Romans, 14th chap., 5th verse, “ One man esteemeth one day above another ; another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind.’'’ “ He that regardeth the day, regardeth it unto the Lord: and he that regardeth not the day, to the Lord he doth not regard it;” and in the preceding chapter, 9th verse, the Apostle says, “ For this, thou shalt not commit adultery; thou shalt not kill; thou shalt not steal; thou shalt not bear false witness ; thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”
It is evident from these texts that the Apostle did not regard the fourth commandment as a part of the moral revealed law, but as a ceremonial or judicial law which was terminated by the coming of our Saviour and the completion of the Christian dispensation. It was part and parcel of the old dispensation fitted only for a small and peculiar nation, and necessarily perished with it, the whole being supplied by the Christian dispensation embracing in its outstretched arms, not a single people, but all the nations of the earth, and announcing principles of the purest morality exemplified in the life and teachings of the divine Author of our religion.
*436The fourth commandment was a positive statute, fixing the seventh day of the week as a day of rest, and is the day observed by the Jews; and of course the first day of the week cannot be the Sabbath day of the Decalogue.
The Sunday of the Christian world is therefore not the Jewish Sabbath of the fourth commandment, and such was the declared opinion of Luther, Calvin, and all the early reformers. Luther said: “ As for the Sabbath or Sunday, there is no necessity for its observance ; and if we do so the reason ought to be not because Moses commanded it, but because nature likewise teaches us to give from time to time a day of rest, in order that man and beast may.recruit their strength, and that we may go and hear the word preached.” “ The Gospel regardeth neither Sabbath nor holidays, because they endured but fbr a time and were ordained for the sake of preaching, to the end God’s word might be tended and taught.”
“ Keep the Sabbath holy for its use both to body and soul; but if anywhere the day is made holy for the mere day’s sake — ■ if anywhere one sets up its observance upon a Jewish foundation, then I order you to work on it, to ride on it, to dance on it, to feast on it, to do anything that shall remove this encroachment on the Christian spirit and liberty.”
Calvin says in his exposition of the fourth commandment, “ The Fathers frequently called it a shadowy commandment, because it contains the external observance of the day, which was abolished with the rest of the figures at the advent of Christ.”
“But all that it (the Sabbath) contained of a ceremonial nature was without doubt abolished by the advent of the Lord Christ.”
“ Though the Sabbath is abrogated, yet still it. is customary among us to assemble on stated days for hearing the word,'for breaking the mystical bread, and for public prayers, and also to allow servants and laborers remission from their labor.”
“They complain that Christians are tinctured with Judaism, because, they retain any observance of days. But I reply, the Lord’s day is not observed by us upon the principle of Judaism; because in this respect, the difference between us and the Jews is very great, for we celebrate it, not with scrupulous rigor as a ceremony which we conceive to be a figure of some spiritual mystery, but only use it as a remedy necessary to the preservation of order in the Church.” .
^They” (Luther and Calvin), says Rev. Dr. Rice, “have observed the form rather as a matter of necessity or expediency, than as divinely commanded.” Calvin encouraged the burghers of Geneva by his. own presence and example at their public recreations, as bowling and shooting, upon the Lord’s, day after their devotions at church were ended.
*437Barclay, in his Apology, says: “We not seeing any ground in Scripture for it, cannot he so superstitious as to believe, that either the Jewish Sabbath now continues, or that the first day of the week is the antitype thereof, or the true Christian Sabbath ; which, with Calvin, we believe to have a more spiritual sense; and therefore, we know no moral obligation by the fourth command or elsewhere, to keep the first day of the week more than any other, or any holiness in it. But, 1st, forasmuch as it is necessary that there be some time set apart for the servants to meet together to wait upon God; and that 2dly, it is fit at sometimes they be freed from their outward affairs, and that 3dly, reason and equity doth allow, that servants and beasts have some time allowed them to be eased from their constant labor; and that 4thly, it appears that the Apostles and primitive Christians did use the first day of the week for these purposes, we find ourselves sufficiently moved for these causes to do so also, without-superstitiously straining the Scripture for another reason; which is, that is not to be there found, many Protestants — yea, Calvin himself upon the fourth command hath abundantly evinced.”
Melancthon, Beza, Bucer, Zuinglius, Cranmer, Milton and Knox were of the same opinion, and Jeremy Taylor says: “ The effect of which consideration is this: that the Lord’s day did not succeed in the place of the Sabbath; but the Sabbath was wholly abrogated and the Lord’s day was merely of ecclesiastical institution.”
Paley, Arnold of Rugby, Archbishop Whately and our great lawgiver hold the same language. Penn says: “ To call any day of the week a Christian Sabbath is not Christian but Jewish; give us one Scripture for it; I will give two against it.”
Bishop White, the chaplain to Congress during the Revolution, and the senior bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, in his Lectures on the Catechism, p. 64, speaking of the fourth commandment, says: “ In regard to its duration, it appears evident that as far as regarded the authority of the injunction to the Israelites, and unless some new obligation can be shown, the institution ceased even in relation to Jewish converts to Christianity at the destruction of their religious polity; and that it never extended to the Q-entile Christians. Of this there shall be given but one proof; it being decisive to the point. It is in the second chapter of the Epistle to the Colossians: ‘ Let no man, therefore, judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holy-day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath days.’ Here the Sabbath is considered as falling with the whole body of the ritual law of Moses, and this may show the reason on which our church avoids the ealling of her day of public worship — 1 The Sabbath.’ It is never so called in the New Testament.’ And in the primitive church the term *4384 Sabbatizmg’ carried with it the reproach of a leaning to the abrogated observances of the law.’
The late Rev. Dr. James "VY. Alexander, a very distinguished divine of the Presbyterian Church, writing from New York, says, 44 The question of riding in our street cars on Sunday is agitating our community. I have not been able to decide it. The poor go IN cars, the rich IN coaches. The number of horses and men is less than if there were no cars. It is a query, whether as many cars as would be demanded by those (among half a million), who have lawful occasion to journey. If so, the whole question would be reduced to one of individual vocation to this amount of locomotion. The whole matter of the Christian Sabbath is a little perplexed to my mind. 1st. All that our Lord says on it is primd facie on the side of relaxation. 2d. The Apostles who enforce, and, as it were, re-enact every other commandment of the ten, never advert to this. 3d. Even to Gentile converts they lay no stress on this, which might he expected to come first among externals. 4th. According to the letter Paul-teaches the Colossians (xi., 16) not to be scrupulous about Sabbaths. I am not,' therefore, surprised, Calvin had doubts on the subject.. I must wait for more light.”
To the young man whom he directed to keep the commandments, if he would enter into eternal life, and who asked him, 44 Which ?” 44 Jesus said, Thou shalt do no murder; thou shalt not commit adultery; thou shalt not steal; thou shalt not bear false witness; honor thy father and thy mother, and thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself,” is a strong corroboration of the second reason above given by Dr. Alexander.
The Sabbath of the fourth commandment being abrogated and abolished, our Saviour did not command the observance of Sunday, nor is it alleged that there is any express direction to observe it by any of the Apostles to be found in the New Testament.
That Sunday (dies solis) grew up by usage among the primitive Christians as a stated day of prayer, and was recognised as such in the time of Justin Martyr, is certain. But it was clearly not a Sabbath in the Jewish sense, for the division into weeks was not recognised in the Roman world until the third and fourth centuries, and all Christians who were slaves, could not have obliged their heathen masters to give them one day in seven, for an entire rest from all labor.
So, from Pliny’s letter to the Emperor Trajan, it would appear, the primitive Christians met before it was light, for worship and prayer, which was obviously adopted that it might not interrupt the labors or occupations of the day, a large portion of these early disciples belonging to the servile and laboring classes. •
- When Christianity became the religion of the emperor, and of *439course of the state, we find the division into weeks used, and the days called by the planetary names, as dies solis (day of the sun), dies lunce (day of the moon), &c. In A. d. 321 the Emperor Constantine the Great, in the exercise of his civil authority, ordained as follows: “ Let all judges and people of the town rest, and all the various trades be suspended, on the venerable day of the sun (venerabili die solis). Those who live in the country, however, may freely and without fault attend to the cultivation of their fields (since it often happens that no other day may be so suitable for sowing grain and planting the vine), lest, with the loss of favorable opportunity, the commodities offered by Divine Providence should be destroyed.”
The act for keeping holidays and fast-days of the 5th and 6th Edward the 6th, chap. 3 (1552), is framed upon the same principle as the edict of Constantine, and speaking of the days appointed for the worship of God, which are called Holy Days, says this, “ not for the matter and nature, either of the time or day ;” “for so all days and times considered 'are God’s creatures, and all of like holiness. Neither is it to be thought that there is any certain time or definite number of days prescribed in holy scripture, but that the appointment, both of the time and also the number of days is left by the authority of God’s word to the liberty of Christ’s Church, to be determined and assigned, orderly in every country, by the discretion of the rulers and ministers thereof, as they shall judge most expedient to the true setting forth of God’s glory and the edification of their people.” Then follow the holy days to be kept, “ all Sundays in the year.” These are festivals.
By the 6th section, it is provided, “ That it shall be lawful to every husbandman, laborer, fisherman, and to all and every other person or persons, of what estate, degree or condition he or they be, upon the holy days aforesaid, in harvests or at any other time in the year when necessity shall require, to labor, ride, fish or work any kind of work, at their free will and pleasure, anything in this act to the contrary notwithstanding.”
In Swann v. Broome, 3 Burr. 1595, it was decided that Sunday was dies non juridicus, and Lord Mansfield says, “ Anciently the courts of justice did sit on Sunday. The fact of this, and the reasons of it, appear in Sir Henry Spellman’s original of the terms.”
“ It appears, by what he says, that the ancient Christians practised this. In his chapter of law-days among the first Christians, using all days alike, he says, ‘ The Christians at first used all days alike for hearing of causes, not sparing (as it seemeth) the Sunday itself.’ They had two reasons for it. One was in opposition to the heathens, who were superstitious about the observation of days and times, conceiving some to be ominous and *440unlucky, and others to be lucky; and therefore the Christians laid aside all observance of days; a second reason they also had, which was by keeping their own courts always open, to prevent Christian suitors from resorting to the heathen courts.
44 But in the year 517, a canon was made, 4 Quod nullus episcopus vel infra positus die dominico causas judicare prcesumat.’ And this canon, for exempting Sundays, was ratified in the time of Theodosius, who fortified it with an imperial constitution. 4 Solis die (jquem dominicum recte dixere major os') omnium omnino litium et negotiorum quiescat intentio.’ The whole canon is also decreed verbatim in the capitulars of the Emperors Carolus and Ludovicus.”
Lord Mansfield then cites several other subsequent canons, and says, 44 These canons were received and adopted by our Saxon kings.” He cites also a constitution of Edward the Confessor, and continues,44 These canons and constitutions were all confirmed by William the Conqueror and Henry the Second, and so became part of the common law of England.”
As to the observation,44 That the courts of justice never have . been restrained, by Act of Parliament, from sitting on Sundays, and that the 29th of Car. 2, c. 7, does not extend to giving judgments.”
44 It was needless to restrain them from it by Acts of Parliament. They could not do it by the canons anciently received and made a part of the law of the land; and, therefore, the restraining them from it by Act of Parliament would have been merely nugatory. But fairs, markets, sports and pastimes were not unlawful to be holden and used on Sundays at common law; and therefore it was requisite to enact particular statutes to prohibit the use and exercise of them upon Sundays, as there was nothing else that could hinder them being continued in use.”
In Maekalley’s Case, 9 Co., it was 44 Resolved, That no judicial act ought to be done on that day; but ministerial acts may be lawfully executed on the Sunday.” These cases are distinctly affirmed in Huidekoper v. Cotton, 3 Watts 59; Kepner v. Keefer, 6 Id. 231; Fox v. Mensch, 3 W. & S. 444.
It is clear, therefore, that in England, Sunday, or the Lord’s day, was considered an ecclesiastical institution, and the only co'femon-law restraint imposed upon it, as an observance of the day, was that no judicial proceedings should be had on Sunday, and that courts should not sit on that day.
In early times Parliament sat on Sunday; for in the reign of Edward the First, in 1278 and 1305, three statutes were made on Sunday, and Froude, in his first vol. of the History of Henry the Eighth, p. 67, speaking of the English archery, says, 44 Every hamlet had its pair of butts, and on Sundays and holidays all *441able-bodied men were required to appear in the field, to employ their leisure hours ‘ as valyant Englishmen ought to do,’ utterly leaving the play at the bowls, quoits, dice, kails, and other unthrifty games. Qn the same days the tilt-yard, at the hall or castle, was thrown open, and the young men of rank amused themselves with similar exercises.”
By the Act of 3 & 4 William 4, ch. 31, reciting that the profanation of the Lord’s day is greatly increased by certain meetings, which are usually or occasionally held on that day, it enacts that all such meetings of corporations, vestries and public companies, and every o,ther meeting of a public and secular nature required to be held on any Lord’s day, shall be held on the preceding Saturday or succeeding Monday.
It is therefore evident that the Lord’s day was considered like any other day, to be subject to regulation by the civil authority alone, who could, if it were deemed expedient and necessary, authorise the courts to sit on Sunday, notwithstanding the common-law prohibition.
By the Act of the 29 Charles 2, ch. 7, for the better observance of the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday, no tradesman, artificer, workman, laborer or other person whatsoever, shall do or exercise any worldly labor or work of their ordinary callings, upon the Lord’s day or any part thereof (works of necessity and charity only excepted), “ under a penalty of five shillings.”
Under this statute, it has been held, a sale of a horse was not void, such sale not being made in the. ordinary calling of the plaintiff or his agent, so a contract of hiring made on a Sunday between a farmer and a laborer for a year is valid, and the enlistment of a soldier by a recruiting officer is not within the statute. The words “ other person or persons” do not include the owner or driver of a stage-coach, and, therefore, their contracts to carry passengers on a Sunday are binding; so an attorney entering into an agreement on Sunday for the settlement of his client’s affairs, and thereby rendering himself personally liable, is. not thereby exercising his usual calling; and the penalty can only be incurred once on the same day. So. a farmer engaged in haymaking on Sunday is not within the statute ; nor are railways. “The statutes clearly do not apply to railway companies, so as to render it illegal for them to run trains for the conveyance of goods or passengers on a Sunday:” Chitty on Carriers. 117..
Such was the law of England at the foundation of the Province of Pennsylvania by William Penn, for although railways were not in existence, stage-coaches were, in 1658, in Cromwell’s time. Penn’s views on the subject of Sunday are to be found in his works and those of Barclay, and were the views of the Society of Friends, who were the early colonists. In the laws agreed upon in England expression is given to them in the 36th lavf,:,,.. *442“ That according to the good example of the primitive Christians, and for the ease of the creation, every first day of the week, called the Lord’s day, people shall abstain from their common daily labor, that they may the better dispose themselves to worship God, according to their understandings.”
In the great law passed at Chester, in December 1682, we find this declaration as to liberty of conscience: “Nor shall he or she at any time be compelled to frequent or maintain any religious worship, place or ministry whatever, contrary to his or her mind, but shall freely and fully enjoy his or her Christian liberty in that respect without any interruption or reflexion.
“ But to the end that looseness, irreligión and atheism may not creep in under pretence of conscience in this Province, ‘Be it further enacted,’ that according to the example of the primitive Christians, and for the ease of the creation, every first day of the week, called the Lord’s day, people shall abstain from their usual and common toil and labor. That, whether masters, parents, children or servants, they may the better dispose themselves to read the Scriptures of truth at home, or to frequent such meetings of religious worship abroad as may best suit their respective persuasions.”
With all Penn’s liberality, we find by Janney’s life of him, he was strictly orthodox in his own belief: p. 575.
It is certain also that he agreed with Luther and Calvin, and the statute of Edward 6th, as to the institution of the Lord’s day, and that the mode of observance of it should be prescribed by the civil authority.
In 1705 was passed the act to restrain people from labor on the first day of the week, which is copied verbatim from the English statute, in the prohibitory part of the first section to which a penalty is attached, and is therefore .to be construed in the same way, which would not have brought either stage-coaches or railways, if they had been in existence, within the act.
This remained the law until the 30th of March 1779, when an act for the suppression of vice and immorality was passed, by the 2d section of which it was enacted., “ That if any person shall do any kind of work of his or her ordinary calling, or follow or do any worldly employment or business whatsoever on the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday (works of necessity and mercy only excepted),” he should-be fined.
This act not having been enforced, and the fine, being payable in depreciated currency, having become less than a shilling in specie currency, another act was passed on the 25th September 1786, forbidding under a penalty any person doing or performing any worldly employment or business whatsoever on the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday (works of necessity and charity only excepted).
*443“ Provided always, that nothing in this act contained, shall be construed to prohibit the dressing of victuals in private families, bake-houses or i'n lodging-houses, wine and other houses of entertainment for the use of sojourners, travellers or strangers, or to hinder watermen from landing their passengers, or stagecoaches or stage-wagons from carrying travellers (having the consent of a justice of the peace upon extraordinary occasions), on the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday, nor to the delivery of milk, or other necessaries of life, before nine o’clock in the forenoon, nor after five of the clock in the afternoon of the same day.”
Then came the Act of the 22d of April 1794, which was passed the year after the yellow fever had devastated our city, and which is the existing law. The first section enacts that, “ if any person shall do or perform any worldly employment or business whatsoever on the Lord’s day, commonly called Sunday (works of necessity and charity only excepted), he shall for every such offence forfeit and pay four dollars.”
It will be observed that the Act of 1682 contained no penalty, which was, however, supplied by the Act of 1700; but the Act of 1705, like the statute of Car. 2, did not apply to stage-coaches or to travellers by public conveyances, and this was the wise and liberal law of the province under which grew up the usages mentioned by C. J. Lowrie, in Commonwealth v. Neshit, 10 Casey 398, and which would be illegal under a strict construction of the Act of 1794. In 1779 and 1786 the language was changed, and this accounts for the exception of stage-coaches in the proviso of the last-named act.
The cardinal error in Johnston v. Commonwealth, 10 Harris 109, in the omnibus case, is in treating Sunday as set apart by divine command, and from the whole decision two judges, two-fifths of the court, dissented in opinions of very great weight and force ; and the error in Commonwealth v. Nesbit, 10 Casey 398, was in assuming, that usages which were considered exceptions, had grown up under laws of a similar character, which we have seen was not the case, instead of treating them as works of necessity, which they clearly are.
Judge Bell, in Specht v. Commonwealth, 8 Barr 325, puts the Sunday law on .its true basis: “ Its sole mission is to inculcate a temporary weekly cessation from labor, but it adds not to this requirement any religious obligation.”
I shall therefore treat the case before us as one within the exceptions of necessity and charity. Before doing so, it will be proper to consider the history of this prohibitory law. With us it binds all persons, whether Israelites or Seventh-day Christians. In Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York and Ohio, persons who conscientiously believe and keep the seventh day as *444holy time, may do secular work and labor on Sunday, provided they disturb no other persons ; and in Connecticut the prohibition to do any work is limited to that portion of the day between the rising of the sun and the setting of the same. Our very illiberrality should make us more desirous to extend the limits of necessity and charity, and not to confine them within narrow boundaries in this age of improvement.
After another season of pestilence, the legislature, on the 4th April 1798, passed an act to prevent the disturbance of religious societies in the city of Philadelphia during the time of divine service, which, after reciting the Act of the 6th February 1731,. relating to religious societies, and stating that they had purchased lots and erected churches, and other houses of religious worship, and that by the constitution of this Commonwealth it is declared “ that all men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their conscience:” “'And whereas, it would be nugatory to grant the said rights: without securing the peaceable and quiet enjoyment of them:” it then enacted that the religious societies aforesaid were each authorized by a suitable person “ to extend and fasten so many chains across the streets, lanes or alleys,” as may be sufficient “ to hinder and obstruct all coaches, coachees, chariots, chaises, wagons and other carriages whatsoever, and all and every person or persons, riding or travelling on horseback, from passing by the said churches or houses of religious worship during the time of divine service therein.” They were only to be extended across the streets on Sundays, nor then until the commencement of divine service within said churches, said chains to be taken down before dusk and immediately after divine service is ended in the same.
The iron sockets in which the posts- were fixed to which the, chains were attached, are still to be seen opposite some of the old churches-. In 1816, this act was extended to the incorporated district of the Northern Liberties, and both acts were repealed in 1831, showing that the public were convinced that the passage of these vehicles and horses, neither disturbed the congregations during divine service, nor injured the property, or decreased the value of the churches.
Shortly after this, railroads, with steam as a propelling power, were in operation in this state, and particularly the Columbia and Harrisburg roads, forming a through route from Philadelphia to Harrisburg ;■ and in 1846- the Pennsylvania Railroad was incorporated, and in 1849 had nearly reached Hol-lidaysburg, where it was to connect with the Portage Road. On the 14th of November 1849 the board of directors passed the following resolution: Resolved, That the general superintendent be instructed to discontinue, from and after the 31st December next, all operations *445on tbe road on the Sabbath, and to make at his earliest eonveni ence such general arrangements as may be necessary to relieve all persons in the service of the company from duty on that day.” At the annual meeting of the stockholders on the 3d December 1849, Mr. Joseph R. Ingersoll offered a resolution stating that the above resolution of the directors “ has the entire concurrence and approbation of this meeting, and that the directors are entitled to the especial thanks of their constituents for having vindicated the law of the land and the sanctity of the Christian Sabbath.”
This resolution, with others, was referred to a committee of five, of which Mr. Ingersoll was the chairman, to report at an adjourned meeting on the 24th December. At this meeting the committee made an elaborate report, and reported back the resolution for adoption, and it was accordingly adopted by the meeting.
These proceedings are all to be found in the Third Annual Report of the company, but what followed is not in print, nor is there any allusion to them in the Fourth Annual Report.
On the 11th March 1850, at an adjourned general meeting, the following resolution was offered:—
“ Resolved, as the sense of this meeting, that the said resolution was premature, and should be forthwith rescinded.”
And on the 19th March the operation of the resolution of the 14th November 1849, was suspended until the further action of the stockholders. In pursuance of a resolution of the 19th March, polls were opened on the 25th March and closed on the 29th April, making 31 voting days, and the result was:
1125 stockholders voted 17,882 shares for Daily Lines,
704 stockholders voted 12,663 shares against Daily Lines, giving a majority of 421 stockholders and 5159 shares for Daily Lines, and this has been the uniform practice for seventeen years and upwards, and, so far as I know, is the invariable practice of all the railroads in Pennsylvania, and I know it to be so on all railroads running into Philadelphia and Pittsburg.
At the meeting of the 19th March, the late John B. Myers offered the resolution restoring the lines on Sunday, and I seconded it, and it was supported by Colonel James Page and other prominent citizens, and opposed by Mr. Ingersoll and others. The discussion was thorough and ample, and, although the city was a very large stockholder, her vote was not east at all, but it was decided by the votes of the individual stockholders. The propriety and legality of this decision, giving back to the public one-seventh part of the year, I have never heard questioned, and the clergy and laity have profited largely by it. In Pittsburg, where many of its citizens, including clergymen, reside in the country on the lines of the railroads, the Pennsylvania Railroad, several years ago, at the urgent solicitation of these persons, including *446judges of the local courts, established what is called the church train, beginning with a few passengers, and growing up to its present magnitude. In the Pittsburg Legal Journal, and in all the Pittsburg papers, you find this advertisement of the Pennsylvania Railroad:—
“THIRTEEN DAILY TRAINS.
“SUNDAY TRAINS.
“ The Church Train leaves Wall’s Station every Sunday at 9.15 a. m. and arrives in Pittsburg at 10.05 a. m. Returning, leaves Pittsburg at 12.50 p. ir., and arrives at Wall’s Station at 2 p. n.”
The Pittsburg, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad, Pan Handle route; the Allegheny Valley Railroad ; the Western Pennsylvania Railroad, and the Pittsburg and Connellsville Railroad, all advertise and run similar Sunday church trains, and the Eort Wayne and Chicago Road have one train arriving, and one leaving, every Sunday during church time. The same is true as to the running of trains on Sundays on all the roads running into Philadelphia. The Pennsylvania, West Chester, Philadelphia Wilmington and Baltimore, the Reading, North Pennsylvania and Philadelphia and Trenton Railroads, all run trains on Sunday. The German-town and Norristown run twenty trains on Sunday, and the Market.Street Passenger Railway carries passengers to and from the Pennsylvania and West Chester Railroads on that day. All these are publicly advertised, and have been used for years, and • no man, however religious, has ever refused to use them, or has ever attempted to have them stopped.
The editor of the Press, in a letter from London of the 18th August, and published in that paper of the 5th September last, uses this language:—
“ This, a warm Sunday in London, is probably a very hot one in Philadelphia, and I cannot help thinking of the hundreds and thousands of my fellow-creatures at home still cruelly deprived of those facilities of cheap and pleasant travel enjoyed in every other city of our own and foreign countries. I will not cite the profligate example of Paris, where the Sabbath is a day of revelry instead of rest, nor even of those continental capitals which have no higher ambition than to imitate Paris. But if any stronger argument were asked than the simple fact that the population of Philadelphia would be immensely benefited by the enjoyment of these facilities, let us take the example of London.
“ All these churches were crowded, and the great body of the worshippers had reached them by omnibus and the underground railroad. These lines run regularly and always full, the only exceptions being that the railroads stop from eleven A. M. to one R. M., or during divine service. You will recollect that while we were imploring the courts and the legislature of Pennsylvania to *447allow the cars to run on the city railroads on Sunday, it was proposed to suspend travel during church hours, but nothing could induce the over-pious opposition to yield. The underground railroad company issue tickets for the use of the working classes at one shilling, or twenty-five cents a weeJc, including Sundays, which entitle one person to a daily ride to and from his home. The effect has been to provide cheaper lodging-houses for the laboring people on the outskirts of the city, and of course to improve the general health, by breaking up those close and filthy 1 stews’ and ‘ mews,’ where so many have suffered and pined away in former years. If Sunday travel were stopped in London it would breed a riot. The most earnest protests would come from the dissenters and their great preachers, Hall, Spurgeon, Binney and Conway, whose immense tabernacles would be empty in bad weather, and hundreds prevented from hearing the Word of that God, who never designed that his creatures should be denied light and air on the Sabbath day. When I told one of the dissenting leaders that Philadelphia, with streets seven and eight miles long, leading from below the Navy Yard to beyond Richmond, had neither omnibuses nor railroad cars for public use on Sunday, he was amazed; and when I added, that for advocating the use of these indispensable conveniences on that day, I was denounced by a number of clergymen, most of them Presbyterians, he said that they took an odd way of showing their Christianity. ‘ Why, sir,’ he said, ‘ if the poor people of London could not ride out on Sunday, there would be twenty funerals where there is now but one.’ The underground railroad is the poor man’s preferred conveyance ; and it is a most profitable improvement.”
In England the railroads are not compelled to run on Sundays, but whenever they do, they are obliged to provide a cheap train also, which shall stop at all the usual stations, so as to accommodate poor persons. Some sixteen years ago, the directors of the railway between Glasgow and Edinburgh stopped the Sunday train, except the mail car, which they were obliged to run to carry the mail. This road has been lately purchased by the North British Railway Company, who have resumed the Sunday trains, much to the comfort of the people. It is not astonishing that the Scottish clergy, who are all' of one denomination, should be very strict in their Sunday observances, when it was thought improper to walk on Sunday afternoon, after divine service, for recreation, and when in some parts of Scotland, a clergyman cannot shave himself on Sunday morning, because it is an infracfaction of the fourth commandment, “ In it thou shalt do no manner of work.”1
All other modes of passing from one part of the state to ano*448ther are extinguished, and travelling by private conveyance no longer exists. If the Sunday prohibition extends to railroads, then no errand of mercy, at any distance from the city, can ever be accomplished on that day. I have had a personal experience of the value of Sunday trains; for on a Sunday I was enabled to take a most distinguished physician, who could not leave the city on any other day, to see a sick sister, at thirty miles distant, leaving after breakfast and returning before dinner.
Í have therefore no hesitation in saying, that I consider Sunday trains as coming within the exceptions of necessity and charity.
The Commonwealth v. Nesbit was decided in the autumn of 1859, eight years ago, and Chief Justice Lowrie said: “ The law regards that as necessary, which the common sense of the country, in its ordinary modes of doing its business, regards as necessary.” “ By this test, iron and glass are necessaries of life, and they cannot be obtained without some work being done on Sundays, if the business is to be performed according to the ordinary skill and science of the country. The law never inquires whether iron and glass generally, or in such large quantities, are really necessary, in the strictest sense of the word, or whether it is not possible to improve the art, so that Sunday may not need to be violated. This is not the province of law, but of individual enterprise and science. Law, therefore, does not condemn those employments which society regards as necessary, even when they encroach on the Sabbath, if according to the ordinary skill of the business it is necessary to do so; and then, the business being recognised as necessary, it may be performed by means- of the services of others, and by all the ordinary means of the business, as far as it is necessary.” So, he considers the business of keeping a livery stable is a necessary employment in large towns, and this includes the hiring out of horses and carriages on every day of the week. So, you must bring the Monday’s issue of every daily paper within the exception, for the types are set, and all the work is done on Sunday, whilst on a Sunday paper, all the work is done on Saturday.
There are now four passenger railways in Pittsburg, operating seventeen miles of road, and passing in front of churches of every sect and denomination, and all running on Sunday, and used and patronized by divines, judges, and all the religious persons in the community. They have met with universal approbation, and the Sunday cars have become a matter of absolute necessity in taking persons to and from church, and have conduced greatly to the peace and quiet of the city and suburbs.
This is the universal belief, and I know it to be correct, having frequently ridden in them on Sunday.
Sunday cars are used in Boston, New York, Albany, Troy and *449Brooklyn, in Hoboken and Jersey City in New Jersey, Baltimore, Nashville, Cincinnati, Washington, St. Louis and Chicago, and give universal satisfaction. Within the last ten years, 167 miles of passenger railway have been built and worked in this city, which have entirely superseded the omnibuses, which had numbered 400, and have virtually dispensed with all- other means of general locomotion in this city.
At the time of the passage of the Sunday law, the population of the city of Philadelphia was under 30,000, and we now have within the corporate limits a population nearly double that of the whole state in 1790, when Pittsburg had but 1200 souls, and the county of Erie was not the property of the Commonwealth. Some of the vehicles named in the Act of 1798, are now known only by tradition, and an entire and radical change has taken place in the means of locomotion accommodated to a municipality of 130 square miles in area, with 100,000 dwellings, and with streets extending miles in length, and many of them separated by a navigable stream, which increases the difficulty of passing from one part of the city to another.
In 1794 we had no waterworks, no iron pipes, no steamboats, no canals, no railroads, no gas, no telegraph, no Atlantic cable, and only one stone turnpike — all of which are matters of indispensable necessity, and coming clearly within the necessity exception of the Sunday law.
In 1856 the first passenger railway was chartered. The passenger railways to-day, in the short period of eleven years, traverse nearly every portion of the city, and pass over the Schuylkill by the bridges at Chestnut and Market streets, at Fairmount and Girard Avenue. The rails laid are broad, and accommodate all vehicles, whether for pleasure or burden, with a smooth surface, diminishing greatly the noise and the labor of the horses. To an invalid, nothing can he more grateful than to escape from the cobblestones, and to ride on the railway track. It has been decided that no person can claim damages from a company whose road passes on a street in front of his property. These passenger railways are therefore legal institutions, and the owners of the tracks laid on the streets subject to a modified user by the public. Workmen and laboring men are enabled by these railways to work a long way from their homes without the fatigue of walking long distances, and the consequent loss of time; men of business, old persons, invalids, women and children, are enabled to ride on their different errands at a small expense. Our city spreads out in every direction, because distances are in fact annihilated by the passenger railways.
The stoppage of these railways would utterly derange the whole business of the city, reduce the value of all property, and entirely destroy the present prosperous condition of our metropolis. The *450railways are therefore an absolute necessity, and are clearly within the exception of the statute. These railways are in operation a very large portion of the twenty-four hours, and in some instances every hour of the twenty-four. Their necessity in .cold, wind, rain, hail, sleet and snow, and in the heats of midsummer, all acknowledge.
Most of the plaintiffs, if not all, have places of business on streets where passenger-cars are passing every few minutes, and no one has complained that they have ever interfered with his addition of items in a bill, in his correspondence with his customers, or the details of his trade or occupation. Clergymen and religious persons have family worship on week days, and meetings for religious worship are held on various days besides Sundays, but I have never heard that the cars disturbed them or interfered with the prayers put up by pious men on every day in the year in their own dwellings, except in the single case of Sunday. People sleep whilst the cars are running, and no one complains of them as a nuisance,
The greatest nuisance is the driving up of carriages during the sermon to take home at the close of the service the rich members of the congregation. There are two services a day, occupying two hours in the morning, and two hours in the afternoon, say four hours out of the twenty-four, and to protect these four hours we are asked to enjoin the whole day.
When there is no religious worship, a church experiences no inconvenience, and its complaint is like that of an owner of an uninhabited dwelling, and entitled to no more consideration. It is certain that a railway-car, rolling over a smooth iron rail, occasions no more real noise than a wagon or a carriage driven smartly over a cobblestone pavement.
It is to be recollected that this noise of the rolling of the ears is legal, and authorized by Acts of Assembly, and therefore it is damnum, absque injuria, and it clearly is not such an annoyance “ as materially to interfere with the ordinary comfort of human existence,” and neither of the plaintiffs could obtain any damages, much less substantial damages at law, so as to entitle him to an injunction: Crump v. Lambert, Law Rep. 3 Eq. 409.
As to disturbing persons in private dwellings on Sunday, it is an absurdity, which requires no answer. If, therefore, the churches, or rather the individual pewholders, have no right to complain, what right have these plaintiffs to deny others the right of locomotion, in order to force them to attend church in the very teeth of the constitutional provision, “ That no man can of right be compelled to attend, erect or support any place of worship, or to maintain any ministry against his consent.”
Having established the absolute necessity, in the present state of our city, of passenger railways, and the utter impracticability *451of doing without them, why should there be one day in seven in which that necessity must cease, and not operate? All that ceases on Sunday is common toil or labor, and the intention is to protect the laboring man, who earns his bread by the sweat of his brow. Besides worship and prayer, there are hours for healthful and innocent recreation. These are protected by the constitutional ■ provision.
We have public squares and a great public park owned by our fellow-citizens, and intended for their benefit, and that of their wives and children. Clergymen, lawyers, physicians, merchants, and even judges, have six days in the week, in which they may enjoy all these and other similar advantages, and which they may do so cheaply by means of the passenger railways. The laboring man, the mechanic, the artisan, has but one day in which he can rest, can dress himself and his family in their comfortable Sunday clothes, attend church, and then take healthful exercise ; but, by this injunction, his carriage — the poor man’s carriage, the passenger ear — is taken away, and is not permitted to run for his accommodation. The laboring man and his children are never allowed to see Fairmount Park, a part of his own property.
The cars are required on Sunday to carry persons to and from church, and are not these church-going people entitled to have them? The necessity for this clearly exists on Sunday, and so it does enable persons to partake of the fresh air in the squares and parks and in the country.
But we should not oblige the working man to confine himself to his own narrow, stifling room, and forbid him to enjoy the fresh air of heaven. We have three long months of summer which the laboring man cannot escape. Merchants, manufacturers, lawyers, judges and physicians run away from them, and even clergymen leave their churches, and go to the sea-shore or to the mountains, to avoid the torrid months of July and August. Shall not the operative have the poor privilege allowed him of a passenger car on Sunday ?
The same necessity exists on Sunday as on any other day, enhanced by the fact, that you are preventing thousands from attending houses of religious worship.
I place my opinion, therefore, of the entire legality of running passenger cars on Sunday, on the same footing with the Sunday trains of the steam railroads, as being clearly within the exceptions both of necessity and charity. The mail protects nothing but the mail-car on the steam railroads, and many of the trains carry no mail at all.
If I conceded the illegality, still it would be clear to me that these plaintiffs have no standing in this court, and no right to ask for any injunction against these defendants. It is a matter for the Commonwealth alone, “ and she has her own chosen officers to *452protect her own rights, and the rights of the whole community-are what constitute public rights, or the rights of the Commonwealth.”
I am deeply impressed with the necessity of a proper observance of Sunday as a day of worship and prayer, and of rest from labor; but living under the new dispensation, and not under the old dispensation, I feel no inclination to turn the Lord’s day into a Jewish Sabbath.
The decrees in both cases should be reversed.1
Strong and Aqnew, JJ., dissented.In 1658, the Presbytery of Strathbogie condemned an offender accused of Sabbath-breaking for saving the life of a sheep.
Note. — Sunday.—Dies solis — Dies Dominica — The Lord’s Day.
Saturday. — Dies Sabbati — Sabaday, Norman French; Sabado, Spanish; Sabbato, Italian; Sabado Da Gloria, Holy Saturday in Mexico ; Sabbalum, Latin.