Relator by this proceeding seeks a writ of prohibition to prevent the respondent, the Police Judge of the City of Charleston, from trying him upon a warrant charging a violation of an ordinance forbidding work or labor on the Sabbath day, upon the ground, as contended by the relator, that the said ordinance is void. He insists that the'common council of the City of Charleston does not possess any authority under its charter to pass an ordinance prohibiting work or labor on Sunday; and, further, that even though it does possess such authority, the ordinance involved here is void because it prescribes penalties in excess of those prescribed by state law for the like offense.
The respondent insists that under the charter of the city the council has full authority to pass the ordinance under which the warrant of arrest was issued. The provisions of said charter relied upon as granting such authority to the council are: “See. 7. The council of said city shall have, *624and is hereby granted power — To promote the general welfare of the city, and to protect the persons and property of citizens therein; To preserve and protect the peace, order and safety and health of the city and its inhabitants; To prescribe and enforce ordinances and rules for the purpose of protecting the health, property, lives, decency, morality, cleanliness and good order of the city and its inhabitants, and to protect places of divine worship in and about the premises where held, and to punish violations of all ordinances, if the offense under and against the same shall also constitute offenses under the laws of the State of West Virginia or the common law; To carry into effect these enumerated powers and all other powers conferred upon said city expressly or by implication in this and other acts of the legislature, the council of said city shall have the power, in the manner herein prescribed, to adopt and enforce all needful orders, rules and ordinances not contrary to the laws and constitution of this state; and to prescribe, impose and enforce reasonable fines and penalties, including imprisonment in the city lock-up, jail or station house.”
It will be noted that these provisions confer no authority by words upon the council to pass any law regulating the observance of Sunday, but it is contended that the authority to pass ordinances to protect the health, property, lives, decency, morality, cleanliness and good order of the city does confer authority to pass an ordinance making it unlawful to work or labor on the Sabbath day. It is quite true that a municipal corporation derives its authority from the legislature, and can exercise no authority except that conferred upon it by its charter. Does a provision authorizing a city council to pass ordinances to protect and preserve the health, property, lives, decency, morality, cleanliness and good order of the city include within its terms authority to pass an ordinance prohibiting work or labor on the Sabbath day? The answer to this question necessitates an inquiry as to the basis for such legislation. If it rests upon an attempt' to enforce observance of religious rites and ceremonies, then it does not fall within the terms of the authorization above *625quoted, and in fact if this was the basis of such enactments they would likely be beyond the legislative competence entirely. But that is not the basis of Sunday observance laws at all. From the standpoint of the lawmaker they have no reference whatever to religious obligations or duties. There may have been a time when the observance of the Sabbath day was enforced by clerical edicts, and when it was observed because of the fear of ecclesiastical condemnation. These regulations now, however, find their foundation and basis in the uniform experience of mankind teaching that it is not only advisable but necessary for the moral, mental and physical preservation of the race that those engaged in labor should periodically cease therefrom; that there should be periodic times of rest and recreation. There is, perhaps, no economic principle upon which there has been over a long period of time such uniformity of opinion. Certainly, since the year 321 A. D., when the Emperor Constantine promulgated an edict requiring the cessation from labor on one day. out of every seven, there has been uniformity in the legislation of all civilized nations upon this particular question, and we are unacquainted with anything in modern life which is contrary to the judgment of the philosophers and scientists, based, not only upon the facts of history, but upon scientific experimentation as well. We are, therefore, of opinion that the authority conferred upon the common council of the City of Charleston to pass ordinances to protect the morals of the citizens of the city confers authority to pass a Sunday closing ordinance. We find no dissent from this view among the courts of the country, but do find much authority consonant therewith. In the case of Theisen v. McDavid, 34 Fla. 440, 26 L. R. A. 234, it was held that a city council had authority to pass an ordinance forbidding work on the Sabbath day under a provision in its charter conferring upon it authority to pass such ordinances and' laws as may be expedient and necessary for the preservation of the public peace and morals, the holding being that such an ordinance was promotive of the morals of the citizens of the community. So in the ease of City of St. Louis v. *626Cafferata, 24 Mo. 94, a charter provision authorizing the city of St. Louis to make rules, regulations, by-laws and ordinances for the purpose of maintaining the peace, good government and order of the city, etc., was held to confer authority upon the city council to pass a Sunday dosing ordinance, it being the opinion of that court that no city could be said to be well governed where this great moral principle was not recognized. Another instructive case is that of City of Clinton v. Wilson, 257 Ill. 580, in which it was held that charter provisions authorizing the council to regulate the police of the city, and pass and enforce all police ordinances, conferred power upon the municipal council to pass an ordinance regulating work and labor on the Sabbath day. In State v. Freeman, 38 N. H. 426, it was held that a charter provision authorizing the city to make any by-laws, regulations and ordinances which may be necessary for the well-being of the city, authorized the passage of a Sunday closing ordinance. Other pertinent authorities are Schumacker v. Little Falls, 92 N. J. L. 106, 108 Atl. 113; Detamore v. Hindley, 83 Wash. 322; Power v. Mordstrom, 150 Minn. 228; State v. Weiss, 97 Minn. 125; Hiller v. State, 124 Md. 385; Sherman v. Paterson, 82 N. J. L. 345; State v. Burbage, 172 N. C. 876; Ex Parte Johnson (Okla.), 201 Pac. 533; City of Corvallis v. Carlisle, 10 Ore. 139; Jones v. The City of Richmond; 18 Gratt. 517. See also II Dillon Municipal Corporations, § 719; 28 Cyc. 743; and 25 R. O. L., title “Sundays and Holidays'’ §9. We are well satisfied that the ordinance is not void for lack of authority in the city council to pass the samé.
The relator relies upon our cases of Judy v. Lashley, 50 W. Va. 628, and State Ex Rel. Morley v. Godfrey, Mayor, 54 W. Va. 54, to support his contention. In the former case it was held that a city ordinance prohibiting the carrying of a pistol was void for lack of authority upon the part of the city council to pass it; and in the latter case a like holding was made in reference to the operation of a gaming table. The municipal corporations involved in those cases were incorporated under ch. 47 of the Code, and the only provision contained in that chapter at that time upon which the ordi*627nances attacked could rest was one authorizing' the councils of cities, towns and Tillages to protect the persons and property of the citizens, and to preserve peace and good order therein. There was no such broad grant of the police power as exists in the case of the charter of the City of Charleston. It was held that the carrying of a pistol, which is usually done concealed, was not Tiolative of the public peace or good order; nor was the conducting of a gaming table, which is usually carried on secretly. If there had been a grant to the municipal corporations in those cases in such terms as to include practically the entire scope of the States police power, the holdings would no doubt haye been entirely different. Those cases distinctly hold that the legislature could grant the power to the municipality, but that it had not done so. In this case the grant of power is almost, if not quite as broad as the police power of the State.
Nor do we think there is any merit in the contention that the ordinance is void upon the ground that the penalty prescribed for its violation is different from that prescribed for the violation of a state law covering the same subject. It is quite true that municipal corporations organized under chapter 47 of the Code may not prescribe a more severe penalty for their violation than is prescribed by state law for the violation of state statutes covering the same subject, but the City of Charleston has a special charter and the legislature has put no such limitation as that in its charter. That limitation is placed in chapter 47 in express terms. In the charter of the City of Charleston the council is given authority, not only to pass the ordinance, but to prescribe such reasonable penalties as the council may deem necessary to compel obedience to its terms. There is no contention here that the penalty prescribed is not reasonable.
The charge made against the relator is that he sold soft drinks and conducted a soft drink stand on the Sabbath day. If we could say as matter of law that this act with which he is-charged did not constitute a violation of the ordinance, of course, the writ of prohibition would issue, but we cannot say as matter of law that selling soft drinks and conducting *628a soft drink stand is not a violation of the ordinance. 25 E.. C. L., title “Sundays and Holidays” § 12; McAfee v. Commonwealth, 173 Ky. 83, 190 S. W. 671, L. R. A. 917 C 377 and note. There may be circumstances under which that sort of a business would not fall within the inhibition of the •ordinance. The reasonable requirements of modern life make necessary the doing of some things on Sunday which in former times were considered not at all necessary. The facts in each particular case, however, must control, and a reasonable and sensible construction given to the law so as to make it consistent with the basis upon which it rests, and that is the preservation and promotion of the physical, moral and mental welfare of the people.
It results from what we have said that the writ of prohibition prayed for will be refused.
Writ refused.