City of St. Joseph v. Elliott

ON MOTION FOB REHEARING.

Ellison, J.

The motion for rehearing is grounded chiefly on the fact that the foregoing opinion makes use of the word “desecrate,” aiid cites State v. Williams, supra, where the same word is used. It is argued from this that, since to desecrate a day means to take from it its sacred or religious .character, and since we have stated the object of the law to be to prevent the desecration of the Sabbath, such law is unconstitutional, in that it contravenes article 2 of the state constitution, guaranteeing religious freedom and liberty of conscience.

Whether laws enforcing the observance of Sunday be bottomed alone on matters spiritual and religious and have for their sole object the enforcement of religious duty, or whether such laws are merely the exercise of the state’s police power regulating the customs, peace or health of the people, can make no practical difference to this defendant. These laws, under constitutions like ours, are everywhere upheld, though the reasons upon which they are sustained are various. So if defendant has been convicted on the theory that the law made him observe the Sabbath either from a religious duty to God, or a political duty to the state, or a social duty to his fellows, or all of these combined, can make no difference. Each of the foregoing have been given as reasons back of the law, and each leading to *423the one result of upholding the law, and convicting this defendant.

It is not our province to decide this ordinance to be constitutional for one or the other of these reasons, and we do not undertake to do so. But that it is proper to hold that it is an object of such laws to prevent the desecration of the Sabbath, there can be no doubt. To say otherwise would be to shut one’s eyes to all history and to isolate one’s self from his daily surroundings. Because no one can be compelled to do any act of religious service on Sunday, it by no means follows that he cannot be prevented from desecrating the day. For I apprehend that no man will be found with sufficient temerity to say that all Sunday laws in this country have not as a part, at least, of their object the protection oí the observance of religious duties, and that the moving cause of their enactment was not in obedience to, and the result of, religious sentiment existing in the state where enacted.

Bloom v. Richards, 2 Ohio St. 387, is a leading case taking the ground that such laws find their support in the police power of the state which could as well have fixed upon any other day of the week; yet Judge Thurman says, in his opinion, that the statute could not stand “if its sole foundation was the Christian duty of keeping that day holy, and its sole motive to enforce the observance of that duty.” He further says that Sunday was properly selected by the legislature because of the feelings of a Christian people.

So another case asserting the same reason for such laws (Specht’s case, 8 Barr. 312) concedes that the motive of the law-makers, as shown by the statute itself, was ‘ ‘ to prohibit the ' profanation of a day regarded by them as sacred.” The court further says on the same subject; “In a Christian community where a very large majority of people celebrate the first day of the week as their chosen period of rest from *424labor, it is not surprising that that day should have the legislative sanction ; and as it is also devoted to religious observances we are prepared to estimate the reason why the statute should speak of it as the Lord’s day, and denominate the infraction of its legalized rest a profanation. Yet this does not change the character of the enactment. It is still, essentially, but a civil regulation .made for the government of man as a member of society, and obedience to it may properly be enforced by penal sanction. To say that one of the objects of the legislature was to assert the sanctity of the particular day selected, is to say nothing in" proof of the unconstitutionality of the act.”

In the eye of all that class of authorities which maintain such laws from a religious or divine standpoint, to prevent desecration of the day is, of course, the leading and chief object; so it will thus appear, that, • from whichever standpoint the matter is viewed, the opinion is not subject to the criticism made by counsel.

Though the foregoing disposes of the motion, will add on my own responsibility, that whatever may be individual opinion on the question of Sunday observance, whether as a religious, social or political duty, there can be no doubt in the mind of any man, who will be fair with himself, that the motive power behind all these laws is the Christian religion, and that they are enacted in compliance with the demands of a Christian people. And, as • said in Tiedeman’s Limitations of Police Powers, “those who are most active in securing the enforcement of Sunday laws do so, because of the religious character of the day, and not for any economical reasons.” And so the great weight of authority recognizes this; and while some mingle the civil and the religious, the divine and the human, in their reasoning, there are few, indeed, who altogether omit the divine. Thus the day is termed in different adjudications on Sunday laws asa “ holy day,” a “ sacred day,” a “day *425of sanctity,” the “Lord’s day,” as a “consecrated day,” and as being set apart by “divine command.” And so Judge Scott in State v. Amts, 20 Mo. 214, with that blunt honesty of purpose, which distinguished him, says, that our constitution was “made by Christian men” and that “on its face it shows that the Christian religion was the religion of its framers,” and that long before it was framed “experience had shown that the mild voice of Christianity was unable to secure the due observance of Sunday as a day of rest,” without the aid of the civil powers.

The truth is that some courts having concluded (perhaps without sufficient justification) that laws enacted for the observance of Sunday as a religious duty were repugnant to constitutions guaranteeing religious freedom, and yet determined to uphold them, have set about to find other reasons than those based on Christianity. These reasons Ringgold, in his work on the law of Sunday (p. 101), declares to bean “afterthought of the courts ; that is to say, that it is an attempt to find a sanction for these statutes in considerations which have never been the moving causes of their enactment.” He further says (p. 88), in speaking of some opinions on this subject that, “in more than one instance, there is a manifest consciousness of the fallacies maintained, which suggest that the reasoner is suffering an intellectual martyrdom as sublime, in its way, as any physical sacrifice of the olden time.”

But, as before stated, whatever may be the reason for such statutes they are valid enactments. The motion will be overruled.