McPherson v. Village of Chebanse

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a suit to recover from the defendant, who was engaged in the business of vending goods, wares and merchandise in the village of Chebanse, a penalty for keeping open his place of business in said village on Sunday, for the purpose above mentioned, in violation of an ordinance of the village prohibiting persons from keeping open their places of business in the village, for the purpose of vending goods, wares and merchandise, on Sunday. In the county court a demurrer was sustained to the declaration, and judgment was given for the defendant. On appeal to the Appellate Court for the second District, the judgment was reversed, and an appeal taken to this court.

The only point made for the reversal of the judgment of the Appellate Court is, that the village had no power to pass the ordinance in question. • Subdivision 66, of section 62, article 5, of the “Act to provide for the incorporation of cities and villages, ” (Rev. Stat. 1814, p. 221,) gives the power “to regulate the police of the city or village, and pass and enforce all necessary police ordinances. ” Under this grant of power, we are of opinion, there is found authority for the passage of the ordinance.

It is insisted this clause only refers to the organization and regulation of a police force. We think this a too narrow construction,—that the clause is not limited in its application to police officers, but may extend to and embrace a subject matter of police regulation, under the general police power of the State. Unintermittent toil of body or mind is not the best condition of either. They have need of relaxation and periods of rest from labor, in order for their healthfulness and greatest working efficiency. From the antiquity and general extent of the practice of setting apart one day in seven as a day of rest, that would seem to be denoted as a suitable, if not the necessary, requirement of the human economy as to the portion of. time which should be given to rest from labor. Thus, with the Jews, under the Mosaic code, we find one day in seven (the Sabbath) dedicated to an entire cessation from ordinary labor. Afterward we have the Lord’s day. In A. D. 321, Constantine, by edict, ordered the suspension on Sunday of all business in the courts of law, except the manumission of slaves, and all other business except agricultural labor. In Great Britain, from early times, Sunday was set apart as not to be employed in secular labor. With respect to the transaction of judicial business, there came the legal maxim, dies dominions non est juridicus. In the 29th of Charles II, (A. D. 1678,) after there having been passed several-previous statutes prohibiting certain acts and business on Sunday, the statute was passed prohibiting the doing of any worldly labor, business or work of one’s ordinary calling upon the Lord’s day, works of necessity and charity excepted. In this country, statutes of a similar character, prohibiting labor on Sunday to a more or less extent, exist in most, if not all, the States of the Union. Aside from the religious aspect, the appointment of the Sabbath merely as a day of rest from labor, stands recommended as a valuable institution of State policy.

Authorities are cited to the purport that a municipal corporation can not, under any general grant of authority, adopt ordinances which infringe the spirit of the State law, or are repugnant to the policy of the State, as declared in its general legislation; and as our statute (section 261 of the Criminal Code, Rev. Stat. 1874, page 391,) goes only to the extent of forbidding such labor on Sunday as “disturbs the peace and good order of society, ” it is insisted that the ordinance goes beyond the State legislation on the subject,—that it is inconsistent with and against the policy of the general statute. The police regulations of a village may differ from those of the State upon the same subject, if they be not inconsistent therewith. (Cooley’s Const. Lim. 198.) The ordinance does not prohibit what the statute permits. There is no repugnancy between them. The ordinance may consist with the statute. The former differs from the latter in being more specific. We do not admit that the keeping open of the stores in a village on Sunday is allowable under the statute—that it would not disturb the peace and good order of society. Sunday, as it is observed by common usage, is not only set apart as a day of rest from labor, but it is devoted to religious worship. The consecration of the day to its wonted manner of observance, is a blessing to mankind. Besides the recuperative effect' referred to, it has its other beneficent uses. It affords opportunity for moral, intellectual and social culture. It is promotive of good habits, and tends to improve the manners of men. It is civilizing and refining in all its influences. Whatever detracts from the observance of the day, as it is customarily observed, is not to be countenanced. The keeping open by persons of their places of business in a community, on Sunday, for the exercise of the business of their ordinary callings, is a public and serious interference with the observance of the day in its accustomed mode of observance. It is obstructive of the purposes for which the Hay is set apart. It is offensive to the moral sense of the’ community. It disturbs the peace of society, in its open interference with the peace and quiet of a day devoted as a day of rest and for religious worship. It disturbs the good order of society, in publicly and flauntingly, and in defiance of public sentiment, desecrating a day, and inviting others to its desecration, set apart for purposes of the highest well being of human society,—hence the entire harmony of the ordinance with the statute. As a police regulation, in the interest of the good order and well being of the community, the ordinance, in our opinion, finds justification. See Cooley’s Const. Lim. 596, and authorities there cited.

The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.