Wells v. Commonwealth

Buchanan, J.,

(dissenting.)

I cannot concur in the opinion of the court, that a violation of section 3799 of the Code of 1904 is not a misdemeanor. To reach that conclusion it is necessary to hold that a violation of that section is not a criminal offense, for all offenses which are not felonies are misdemeanors. Code, sec. 3879. Minor’s Crimes & Punishments, p. 17.

The statute prohibits Sunday work with certain exceptions, and imposes a penalty for its violation for the benefit of the state, thus possessing’ the essential elements of a criminal statute. Jernigan's Case, 104 Va. 850, 52 S. E. 361 and authorities cited.

The history of the legislation on the subject I think shows that the statute is a part of the criminal law of the state, and its violation a misdemeanor.

In the year 1779 an act was passed, entitled “An act for punishing disturbers of religious worship' and Sabbath breakers,” by which it was provided, among other things, that “If any person on the Sabbath day shall himself be found laboring at his own or any other trade or calling, or shall employ his apprentices, servants or slaves in labor of other business, except it be in the ordinary household offices of daily necessity, or other work of necessity or charity, he shall forfeit the sum of ten. shillings for every such offence, deeming every apprentice, servant or slave so employed and every day he shall be so employed as constituting a distinct offence.” 12 Hening’s Stat. at Large, pp. 286-7.

In the year 1792 it was re-enacted as section 5 of an act, entitled “An act for the suppression of vice and punishing disturbers of religious worship and Sabbath breakers.” See Continuation of Hening’s Stat. at Large, Vol. 1, p. 192-3. The statute as amended was carried into the Code of 1819 (Code, 1819, Ch. 441, sec. 5, pp. 554-5), and was in force when Prof. *840Davis published his work on “Criminal Law” in 1838. He understood the statute to be a part of the criminal law of the state, and that a violation of it was a misdemeanor, and so treated- it in Ch. 21 of his work, under the head of “Misdemeanors Affecting the Public Police and Economy,” pages 303-343.

Without material change, that statute was carried into the "“Criminal Code” of the state, passed March 14:, 184:8, (Acts 1847-8, pp. 93, 94, 110, 112), which afterwards became a part of the code of 184:9, under the general title of “Crimes and Punishments,” page 722, and is in the chapter entitled “Of Offences against Morality and Decency.” Code, 1849, ch. 196, sec. 16. In the revision of the criminal laws of the state by the act approved March 14, 1878, and in the Code of 1887; the section is found under the same general title (acts 1877-8, p. 279; Code, 1887, p. 877), and in the chapter entitled “Of Of-fences against Morality and Decency and the Protection of Religious Meetings,” acts 1877-8, pp. 301, 304. Code, 1887, ch. 185, sec. 3799, pp. 898, 900.

In making their revision, the revisors were directed to arrange all .the statutes under appropriate titles and chapters. Acts 1883-4, pp. 702-3; Preface to code of 1849, p. VII. It is clear, as it seems to me, from the titles under which and the chapters in which the Sunday statute is found, that the re-visors of both codes, who were very learned lawyers, understood that statute to be a part of the criminal law of the state. That these titles, chapters and tables of contents may be looked to as showing the cotemporaneous construction of the code by the re-visors when engaged in their work, see Shumate v. Com’th, 15 Gratt. 653, 658. If they had not so thought, it would have been their duty to have placed the statute under some other title and in some other chapter of their work. Professor Minor, in his work on Criminal Law, so construed the statute and was of *841opinion that a violation of it was a misdemeanor. Min. Syn. of Cr. Law (1894), pp. 183-4.

The statute on the subject in force in the state of West Virginia for many years was taken from our statute, and was substantially the same as that found in the codes of 1849 and 1887. Its violation in that state was regarded as a misdemeanor, and offenders were punished accordingly. State v. B. & O. R. Co., 15 W. Va. 362, 370, 36 Am. Rep. 803; State v. Railroad Co., 24 W. Va. 783, 49 Am. Rep. 290; State v. McBee, 52 W. Va. 257, 43 S. E. 121, 60 L. R. A. 638.

In the case of Ex Parte Marx, 86 Va. 40, 9 S. E. 475, although not necessary, perhaps, to a decision of the case, the violation of the statute was held to be an offense for which the accused could be arrested on a criminal warrant.

By an act approved March 2, 1904, (Acts 1904, p. 79), section 3799, as found in the code of 1887 and as it had existed substantially from 1779, was amended by having added to it the following words: “From any judgment rendered under this section, the right of appeal shall lie to the defendant within ten days, to the corporation or hustings court of the city, or to the circuit court of the county wherein said judgment is rendered, and when taken shall be proceeded in as appeals in misdemeanor cases.”

If section 3799, prior to that amendment, was a part of the criminal law of the state, and its violation a misdemeanor, as I, think I have shown it was, did that amendment change its character and render its violation no longer a misdemeanor? It is true, as stated in the opinion of the court in discussing the •section as amended, that it does not in terms declare that a violation of the section is a misdemeanor. Many statutes whose violations are admittedly misdemeanors, do not in terms so declare. But that is not necessary. If an offence be punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, it is thereby constituted a misdemeanor in the absence of such designation. Davis Cr. *842Law, 223. The violation of sections 3787, 3789, 3792, 3796b, 3797, 3798, 3801 and 3803a of the same chapter are not declared in terms to be misdemeanors, yet there can be no question that they are.

If section 3799, as amended, was an entirely new provision in our law, there would be much force in the view expressed in the opinion of the court that its violation was not a misdemeanor; but when the amendment made is read in the light of the history of the legislation on the subject, it seems to me clear, with all deference to the majority of the court, that the amendment cannot be construed to have the effect of converting a criminal offense into civil wrong, when the object of the amendment, as stated in the title to the act, was merely to give the defendant the right of appeal.

If the defendant was prosecuted criminally for violating section 3799, the right of appeal, including the right of trial by jury, was given him by sections 4106, 4107 of the Code of 1904; but if the proceeding against him to recover the fine was by civil warrant, under the provisions of sections 712 or 2939, there was no right of appeal, because the judgment against him, exclusive of interest, would not amount to as much as ten dollars. The object of the amendment to the section by the act approved March, 1904, was, as stated in the title of the act, to give the defendant the right of appeal from judgments in such cases; and the provision that the appeal should be tried as appeals in misdemeanor cases was to give the defendant the right of trial by jury. It seems to me clear that the language of section 713 shows that the civil remedy provided for by it was not to be exclusive but cumulative. It provides that.where a fine without corporal punishment is prescribed, the same may be recovered, if limited to an amount not exceeding twenty dollars, by warrant, and if not so limited by action of debt, or action on the case, or by motion. There can be no question that where the fine may be more than twenty dollars it may bé recovered by *843either indictment, presentment or information, or it may be recovered by an action of debt or an action on the case or by motion, for the statute so declares. Where the fine cannot be over twenty dollars, it can be recovered by civil warrant, or it can be recovered in a criminal proceeding before the justice. If not, then we have this anomalous condition of things, that where a fine is imposed in a misdemeanor case which cannot exceed twenty dollars, the justice has no criminal jurisdiction of the offence, unless the offender be first indicted or presented in court and the case certified to the justice, as provided by section 4106 of the Code. This manifestly cannot be so since a justice is given exclusive original jurisdiction of all misdemeanors, by that section, except in a few cases otherwise specially provided for. Sec. 4106.

The penalty imposed for the violation of sections 3799, 3805a, 3862, 3863 and 3865 cannot exceed five dollars. In only one of them (3805a) is the offence declared in terms to be a misdemeanor. Ho indictment can be made for the violation of either. If the view taken by the court be correct, the violator of section 3805a alone can be prosecuted criminally, and the fine imposed for violating the other four statutes can be recovered only by a civil warrant. A conclusion which leads to such results, it seems to me, must be erroneous.

I am of opinion that there is no error in the judgment of the circuit court of the city of Eichmond, and that it should be affirmed.

Habkison, J., concurs with Buchanan, J.

Reversed.