Sections 7624 to 7637, inclusive, of Crawford & Moses’ Digest contain the provisions of act No. 285, approved May 26, 1911, of file Acts of the General Assembly of 1911, regulating plumbing in cities of the first ancl second classes. Act No. 285, p. 276, Acts of 1911. The act provides that there shall be, in every city of the first and second classes in this State, a board of examiners of plumbers, consisting of four members, two of whom shall .be master plumbers and two journeyman plumbers, to be appointed by the mayor and approved by the council. No person shall be a member of this board unless he has served a regular apprenticeship and worked as a practical journeyman for a period of five years or more. The board is given power to examine all applicants as to their knowledge of plumbing, house drainage and plumbing ventilation, and, if satisfied of the competency of the applicant, the board shall issue to each applicant a certificate authorizing them to work at the business of plumbing. The board is authorized to formulate rules regulating the work of plumbing and drainage, such regulations to include materials and workmanship and the manner of executing the work connected with plumbing and drainage. The board, from time to time, may alter such rules. It is made unlawful for any person to work in the capacity of a journeyman plumber or to install plumbing fixtures or materials unless he shall first obtain a certificate of competency, and any person violating any of the provisions of the act and any of the rules or regulations established under the authority therein designated, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall be fined not less than $5 nor more than $50 for each and every violation of the act, and, in addition, have his certificate revoked by the board of examiners.
The city council of the city of Little Rock, a city of the first class, passed ordinances pursuant to the act, creating a board of examiners of plumbers and prescribing its powers and duties. The jurisdiction of the board of examiners was to be coextensive with the corporation limits and one mile beyond, for all purposes except quarantine purposes, and for quarantine purposes, in case of epidemic, five miles beyond such limits. One of the duties of the board was to examine applicants for plumbers ’ certificates as to their knowledge of plumbing, pliimbing ventilation, and house drainage, both practically and theoretically, and, if satisfied as to the competency of such applicants, to issue to them certificates to do plumbing. The board was to receive, as compensation for their services, fifty per cent, of all the examination fees, and each applicant was required to pay the sum of $5 before an examination could be had. The ordinances authorized the board of examiners to formulate a code of rules regulating plumbing and drainage and to amend or alter such rules from time to time. The ordinances created the office of chief plumbing inspector, prescribing his qualifications, duties and compensation. He was to preside at all meetings of the board of examiners, assist in the formation of rules and regulations, and inspect all plumbing and drainage, and secure the proper performance of the work, and, in case he found the same satisfactory, to issue a certificate upon the payment of certain fees for inspection, as prescribed b;y the schedule set forth in the ordinances.
It was provided that the plumbing department should be under the supervision of the board of health. Among other things, the ordinances provided that any person working at the business of plumbing, or installing or placing any plumbing fixtures or material, without having first received a certificate from the board of examiners, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and fined a sum not less than $5 nor more than $50.
Gr. W. Replogle, for himself and others similarly situated, instituted an action in the chancery court, setting up that they were plumbers, and had practiced their vocation in the city of Little Rock and vicinity for many years; that they desired to pursue their vocation without the certificate required under the rules established by the board of examiners under the act and ordinances .above set forth. They alleged that they instituted this action against the city of Little Rock and the chief inspector of plumbing'; that, for various reasons, the act and ordinances passed in pursuance thereof were unconstitutional, and they prayed that the city of .Little Rock and the chief inspector of plumbing be enjoined from enforcing the same.
The allegations of the complaint as to the invalidity of the statute were denied in the answer, and the cause was heard upon the pleadings, the evidence adduced, and the act and ordinances' passed in pursuance thereof. The court held that the act and ordinances were valid, and entered a decree dismissing the complaint for want of equity, from which decree is this appeal.
Under our State and Federal Constitutions all men have the inalienable right to acquire, possess and protect property and to pursue their own happiness, and of these sacred rights no man can be deprived without due process of law. Article 2, § '2, Constitution of Arkansas 1874; Arndt. 5, Const, of U. S.; Arndt. 14, § 1, Const, of U. S. Any statute, or municipal ordinance enacted pursuant thereto, which challenges the right ' of any person to engage in the legitimate and honest occupation of plumbing, without restraint or regulation, must find its justification in the fact that such a statute or ordinance is necessary to. promote the general welfare. No individual can be deprived of the right to pursue his happiness in his own way, and to engage in honest toil in any avocation and in any manner he sees proper, in order to make a living for himself and those who may be dependent upon him, so long as he does not use such right-in a manner to injure others. So long as the individual does not transcend this bound, his conduct is not subject to police regulation. Police power can only be exercised to suppress, restrain, or regulate the liberty of individual action when such action is injurious to the public welfare. When statutes, and municipal ordinances pursuant thereto, have- been enacted- purporting to protect the. health and welfare of a community, all doubts as' to the constitutionality of such legislation must be resolved in its favor. Such deference and consideration must be given by the courts to the Legislature, a coordinate department of the government, as not to unduly inter-fere with its supreme legislative power, and never to interfere with such power unless it appears that the exercise is clearly outside the scope of the organic law, which is over all departments of the government, and which all are bound to observe- as- fundamental in the protection of the liberty, happiness, and general welfare of the community. Williams v. State, 85 Ark. 470; Dreyfus v. Boone, 88 Ark. 358; Pierce Oil Co. v. Hope, 127 Ark. 38; Baker v. Walker, 204 U. S. 311. But, when such enactments are challenged as an invasion of. the rights and liberties of the .individual guaranteed by the fundamental law, then it becomes the duty of the courts to. lay these enactments alongside, the Constitution and determine whether the exercise of the police power , in the suppression or regulation of ordinary occupations, trades, or callings, is .really necessary for the. public good.’, , , .
• Judge Cooley says: “It is an important, part of civil -liberty to have-the right to follow all lawful employment,” Cooley on Torts, 277; Mr. Tiecleman sgys: “No man’s liberty is safe if the Legislature can deny hint the right to engage in a harmless calling.” 1 Tiedemah on State.& Federal Control of Persons and Property, 236. Mr. Justice Bradley,- speaking for the United States Supreme Court in Butchers, etc. Co. v. Crescent City Co., 111 U. S. 746, says: “The right to. follow any of the common occupations of life -is an inalienable right,' * * * The right to follow any of the ordinary callings of life is one of the privileges of a citizen of the United States.”
■ These general observations are indeed but an announcement of axiomatic rules of law under our coordinate department system of government, and but the declaration of the personal rights, guaranteed by our State and Federal Constitutions, which are recognized generally by the courts of. this country. Courts of last resort, however, differ widely as to whether legislation of a similar or kindred nature to that under review is an infringement of the above rights. A majority of the courts that have had under consideration similar statutes have sustained them as a proper exercise of the police power. Douglass v. People, 225 Ill. 536; Singer v. State, 72 Md. 464; People v. Warden, 144 N. Y. 529; State v. Gardner, 58 Ohio St. 599; Blitz v. Pittsburg, 211 Pa. 561; State ex rel. Winkler v. Benzenberg, 101 Wis. 172; Caven v. Colman (Tex.) 96 S. W. 774; State ex rel. Chapel v. Justus, 90 Minn. 474; State v. DeVerges, 27 A. L. R., 1528.
The rationale of the doctrine of these cases is that plumbing is an occupation which peculiarly affects the public health, and therefore comes well within the police power of the State to regulate the manner in which it shall be conducted. People v. Warden, supra, is a leading case. The statute in that case created an examining board of plumbers with power to examine all persons applying for certificates of competency, as employing or master plumbers, to determine their fitness and qualifications for conducting such business and to issue certificates of competency upon a satisfactory examination. The act required the board of examiners to contain the chief examiner of the city sewers and the chief inspector of plumbing- of the board of health. It required" registration with the board of health, and that the business shall be conducted under rules and regulations prescribed by that board. The act was sustained by a divided court, three of the judges being for affirmance and three for reversal. The opinions for and against the validity of the statute are able and exhaustive of the subject. Judge Gray, who wrote the opinion upholding the statute, says: “I am not unwilling- to concede that the act skirts pretty closely that border line beyond which legislation ceases to be within the powers conferred by the people of the State, through the Constitution, upon its legislative body. ’ ’ The opin ion of the dissenting judges was voiced by Judge Peckhaji. He has stated the reasons why such legislation is invalid far mure cogently than the writer can hope to do, and we adopt the reasoning of his opinion and the conclusion reached as our own. Among other things he says: “The Legislature might probably provide for a sanitary inspection of the plumbing work and thus secure a kind of work, as to its system and sufficiency, which might fairly be said to tend towards the protection of the health of the general public. But the trade of the practical plumber is not one of the learned professions, nor does such a tradesman hold himself out in any manner as an expert in the science of sanitation, nor is any such knowledge expected of him, and this act, when practically enforced, may or may not exact it of him. This board, has the very greatest, and an entirely arbitrary, discretion as to what qualifications it will exact from the applicant. It may make an examination which none but an expert in sanitary knowledge could pass, or it may make the examination entirely perfunctory. * * * If it is intended as an act simply to secure the ordinary capacity necessary for the prosecution of the trade of a plumber, it is useless and vexatious, and not a health regulation in any form. If it exact more, it is an improper addition to the qualifications of a simple tradesman. This act permits the greater exaction to be made. '* * The examination provided for by this act, if conducted for the sole purpose of discovering the qualifications of an applicant in regard to those matters which pertain and are germane to the real and practical trade of a plumber, will not have the slightest tendency to discover whether he has also the requisite knowledge to enable him to act as a sanitary expert. Taking the act as a whole, it would seem quite apparent that its purpose is to enable the employing plumbers to create a sort of guild or body among themselves, into which none is to be permitted to enter excepting as he may pass :an examination, the requisites of which are not stated, and where his success or failure is to be determined by a board of which some of their own numbers are members. In order to be at liberty to exercise his trade as a master plumber, he must pass this examination and become a-member of this favored body. It is difficult for me to see the least resemblance to a health regulation in all this. I think the act is vicious in its purpose, and that it tends directly to .the creation and- fostering of a monopoly. * * * This measure detracts- from the liberty of the citizen, acting- as a tradesman, in his efforts to support himself and his family by the honest practice of a useful trade, and I think no court ought to sanction such legislation unless it- tends much more plainly than does this act towards the preservation of the health and comfort.-of the public.”
If the act under consideration' in the above case “skirted pretty closely that border line'” beyond which the Legislature cannot go, as conceded in .the opinion upholding it, then 'certainly the act under review in the case at bar passes far beyond the border line, and violates the personal rights guaranteed by the provisions of ’both the State and Federal Constitutions above referred to. The New York statute required that the chief ’ examiner of city sewers and the chief inspector of plumbing of the board of health be members of the examining board' of plumbers, and contained other provisions which directly connected the board 'of éxaminers of plumbers with the board’ of health. ’ But the statute under consideration contains no such provisions, and there is nothing ■ in all the -■ act to indicate that its primary purpose was to conserve the public health, except’ the broad .provision’ that the plumbing department, consisting of the' examining board, the ehiéf inspector and ’ his deputies, sháll be under the supervision of the board of health of said city, and requiring the chief inspector to make a complete report of the plumbing department to the board -of health at the end of each year. The act contains no specific provisions -prescribing the manner in which the board of health of cities of the first and second classes shall regulate the plumbing department so as to make that department an efficient instrument for the preservation of the public health. The Arkansas statute contains all'the obnoxious features condemned by Judge Peckham in the New York law, and more. It requires all applicants who desire to engage in the business of plumbing, either as journeyman plumber, or as master plumber working in the capacity of a journeyman plumber, or any person installing or placing plumbing fixtures or materials, to pass such examination as to his qualifications and competency as the board may prescribe. The examination shall be of such character as to thoroughly test the applicant’s ability both practically and theoretically.
The power thus vested in the examining board, without any restriction, and without any specification of the knowledge that should be required of plumbers in order to pass the examination, would enable the board, if it so elected, to arbitrarily prescribe theoretical tests, with which no applicant could comply, even though he might have perfect knowledge of and be thoroughly skilled in all the practical work of a plumber. The personal rights guaranteed by our State and Federal Constitutions cannot be taken away on theories.
The appellant, Replogle, alleges in his complaint that one of the rules adopted by the examining board requires applicants to submit to a test in wiping lead joints. Sixty per cent, is marked off for failure to meet such test; that wiping lead points is an obsolete practice, and no longer an essential part of a plumber’s knowledge, as the board well knew; that this requirement is an unjust, arbitrary and discriminatory condition precedent to the issuance of certificates. He further alleges that he is a practical plumber, well versed and skilled in the art, but that he failed to meet the unfair and arbitrary test required by the board, and was thus wrongfully and illegally denied a certificate.
Whether these allegations were sustained by the proof the record does not disclose, but we refer to them because they'serve to illustrate the arbitrary and oppressive power that the board of examiners might exercise to deprive one who- is thoroughly qualiíiéd to do the practical work of plumbing, of his constitutional right to pursue his avocation, and perhaps his only livelihood, because, forsooth, he was unable to answer some technical or theoretical question not in any sense germane to the real and practical trade of a plumber, and not having even the remotest connection with the actual conservation of the public health. The constitutionality of the act must be tested, not by what the board has actually done, but by the power it actually has. The presumption that public servants will do their duty cannot be indulged in determining whether the act violates the Constitution. It is a question of the power conferred and what the board might do under it, and, to be valid, the act must meet every test required by the Constitution, even the most extreme.
In this connection we desire to quote again • from Judge Peckham, after he became a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Lochner v. New York, 198 U. S. 45, had under consideration an act of the State of New York forbidding employees from working’ in a bakery or confectionery establishment more than sixty hours in one wrnek. The act had been sustained by the Court of Appeals of New York, the same two judges of the State court dissenting as had joined with Judge Peckham in his opinion in the case of People v. Warden, supra. Speaking- for the Supreme Court of the United States, Judge Peckham:, among other things, says: “It is impossible for us to shut our eyes to the fact that many of the laws of this character, while passed under what is claimed to be the police power for the purpose of protecting the public health or welfare, • are, in reality, passed from other motives. We are justified in saying so when, from the character of the law and the subject upon which it legislates, it is apparent that the public health or welfare bears but the most remote relation to the law. The purpose of a statute must be determined from the natural and legal effect of the language employed; and whether it is or is not repugnant to the Constitution of the United States'must be determined from the natural effect of such statutes when put into operation, and not from their proclaimed purpose. The court looks beyond the mere letter of the law in such cases.”
Although bottomed on a different statute, we consider that the language above quoted from Judge Peck-ham, speaking for a majority of the Judges of the Supreme Court of the United States, is exceedingly apposite to the case in hand.
In State ex rel. Richie v. Smith, 42 Washington, 237, the Supreme Court had under consideration a statute like ours regulating plumbing. Judge Rudkin, voicing the unanimous opinion of the . court, after quoting extensively from the opinion of Mr. Justice Peckham in the case of People v. Warden, supra, says: “We have quoted at length from this dissent, because a Federal question is involved -and because the views of the learned justices are in accord with our own, and, in our opinion, are shared by a majority of the Supreme Court of the United States, of which, he is now a member.” Judge Rudkin concludes his exhaustive and illuminating opinion as follows: “We are satislied that the act has no such relation to the public health as will sustain it as a, police or sanitary measure, and that its interference with the liberty of the citizen brings it in direct conflict with the Constitution of the United States.”
The opinion of the Washington court is in harmony with our own views. It follows that the decree of the trial court must be reversed, and the cause will be remanded with directions to enter a decree granting' the prayer of the appellant’s complaint.
McCulloci-i, C. J., and Smith, J., dissenting.