The opinion of the court was delivered by
Oliphan't, J.This is an appeal from a judgment of the Bergen County Court affirming the conviction of the defendant-appellant for a violation of N. J. 8. 2A :171 — 1, the Sunday observance law of New Jersey.
*470The complaint charged a violation of this statute in that on February 13, 1955 the appellant washed an automobile of one Albert Durkovic. The defendant operated an automobile service business in Pair Lawn, New Jersey, providing for the complete servicing of automobiles, including gas, oil, greasing, repairs and automatic washing of cars. The case was tried on a stipulation of facts and the borough officials made no charge of violation with respect to the operation on Sunday of defendant’s gasoline and service station, apparently on the theory it constitutes a work of necessity. See N. J. 8. 2A :171 — 1.
The appellant was convicted originally in the municipal court and on appeal to the Bergen County Court after a trial de novo he was again found guilty and a fine of $20 was imposed under N. J. 8. 2A :169-4, which is the penalty section applying to disorderly persons and which the County Court held applicable to this situation.
The appellant appealed from this conviction and we certified the cause here on our own motion. B. B. 1:10 — 1(a).
On this appeal the appellant raised several constitutional questions and this court required that notice be given to the Attorney-General pursuant to B. B. 4:37-2. The Attorney-General appeared and argued the appeal before us through Assistant Attorney-General Pusco. The brief on behalf of the State was drafted by Mr. Calissi, Prosecutor of the Pleas of Bergen County, and Special Assistant Prosecutor Yalente. The Assistant Attorney-General at the argument frankly stated, and the prosecutor acquiesced therein, that he could not conscientiously support the brief filed by the State and argue for an affirmance and confessed error in the conviction below of the defendant due to the lack of a penalty contained in the statute, N. J. 8. 2A :171 — 1, upon which the complaint was based. However, a confession of error relating to the jurisdiction of the subject matter is not binding on this court.
We find a decision with respect to the constitutional questions unnecessary for the disposition of the cause and we shall therefore not determine such questions or comment *471with respect thereto. Such is the regular practice of this court. Michaelson v. Wall Tp., 92 N. J. L. 72 (Sup. Ct. 1918); Grobart v. Grobart, 5 N. J. 161, 165 (1950).
The direct source of our law for the observance of Sabbath Days goes back as far as 1704, ATlinson’s Acts, 3. See also State v. Maier, 13 N. J. 235, 261 (1953). The statutory section which was the immediate predecessor of N. J. S. 2A :171-1 was R. S. 2:207-l which read as follows:
“No traveling, worldly employment or business, ordinary or servile labor or work either upon land or water, except works of necessity and charity, and no shooting, fishing, not including fishing with a seine or net, which is hereinafter provided for, sporting, hunting, gunning, racing, frequenting of tippling houses, or any interludes or plays, dancing, singing, fiddling or other music for the sake of merriment, playing at football, fives, ninepins, bowls, long bullets or quoits, nor any other kind of playing, sports, pastimes or diversions shall be done, performed, used or practiced by any person within this state on the Christian Sabbath, or first day of the week, commonly called and hereinafter designated as Sunday.
Whoever, being of the age of fourteen years or upwards, offends in the premises, shall, for every such offense, forfeit and pay, to the use of- the poor of the township in which such offense shall be committed, the sum of one dollar.”
It should be noted that that section contained a penalty. In the Revision of 1951, N. J. S. 2A :171-1 was enacted to provide as follows:
“No worldly employment or business, except works of necessity and charity, shall be performed or practiced by any person within this state on the Christian Sabbath, or first day of the week, commonly called and hereinafter designated as Sunday.”
Ueither this section nor the ensuing sections, N. J. S. 2A :171-2 to 5, contain any statutory penalty.
The appellant’s position is that his conviction is void because this section does not provide any penalty. The reason for the lack of the penalty clause is not for this court to determine. We are referred, however, to a note by the chairman of the Advisory Committee on the Revision of Statutes, found in the foreword to Title 2A:
*472“The general object of the Revision of the Sunday laws {N. J. S. 2A:171-1 to 2A:171~12) was not to make broad changes in substance, but rather to eliminate obsolete provisions. It was intended to leave municipalities with the power, they theretofore had, to control and regulate Sunday activity.”
But L. 1951, First Special Session, c. 344, sec. 8, provides:
“8. In the construction of the said Title 2A, or any part thereof, no outline or analysis of the contents of said title or of any subtitle, chapter, article or other part thereof, no cross-reference or cross-reference note and no headnote or source note to any section of the said Title 2A shall be deemed to be a part of the said title.”
Further, this statement may be a little bit broader in its implication than the existing law interpreting the prior statutes as to the powers of municipalities. Some cases hold, that municipalities had the right under the Home Rule Act to supplement the provisions of the Sunday law, Sherman v. City of Paterson, 83 N. J. L. 345 (Sup. Ct. 1912); Schachter v. Hauenstein, 92 N. J. L. 104 (Sup. Ct. 1918); but in Singer v. First Criminal Court, etc., 79 N. J. L. 386 (Sup. Ct. 1910), the court held a municipal corporation could not confer a right to violate the provisions of the Sunday law. See also City of Elizabeth v. Windsor-Fifth Ave., 31 N. J. Super. 187, 190 (App. Div. 1954).
Penal statutes are to be strictly construed, and while it may be said that it is to be presumed that the Legislature would not denounce certain acts without providing a penalty, yet penal consequences cannot rest upon a mere presumption. Such legislative purpose must be expressed, and in clear and direct language.
We find no such language indicating an intention by the Legislature that its purpose was to substantially increase the penalty for a violation of the act or vesting this power in the municipalities. We cannot supply it by implication.
A law generally consists of three parts: (1) the scope and intent of the law; (3) the content of the law; (3) a sanction or penalty, and this is peculiarly true of a criminal or gwast-criminal statute. A criminal statute without a pen*473alty clause is of no force and effect. The penalty is an essential to such a statute, and if none is specified a court has no warrant to supply the penalty if the Legislature has failed to clearly manifest such intention to impose one.
The eminent author, 1 Bishop, Criminal Law (9th ecL), sec. 6, states “Indeed, daw,’ without punishment for its violation, is in the nature of things impossible.”
Blackstone with unusual clarity states the following fundamental propositions:
“As to offenses merely against the laws of society, which are mala prohibita, and not mala in se; the temporal magistrate is also empowered to inflict coercive penalties for such transgressions; and this by the consent of individuals; who, in forming societies, did either tacitly or expressly invest the sovereign power with the right of making laws, and of enforcing obedience to them when made, by exercising, upon their non-observance, severities adequate to the evil. * * *
* * * and it is moreover one of the glories of our English law that the species, though not always the quantity or degree, of punishment is ascertained for every offense; and that it is not left in the breast of any judge, nor even of a jury, to alter that judgment, which the law has beforehand ordained, for every subject alike, without respect of persons. For, if judgments were to be the private opinions of the judge, men would then be slaves to their magistrates; and would live in society, without knowing exactly the conditions and obligations which it lays them under. And besides, as this prevents oppression on the one hand, so on the other it stifles all hopes of impunity or mitigations; with which an offender might flatter himself, if his punishment depended on the humor or discretion of the court. Whereas, where an established penalty is annexed to crimes, the criminal may read their certain consequence in that law; which ought to be the unvaried rule, as it is the inflexible judge, of his actions.” 4 Chitty Blackstone, p. *8, *378.
This fundamental principle that every criminal statute must contain a penalty is one of the foundations of our criminal law and is a development from the deep-seated resentment of the Star Chamber method of trial. See Pound, Spirit of the Common Law, 49, 50.
Where a statute fails to provide a penalty it has been uniformly held that it is beyond the power of the court to prescribe a penalty. United States v. Evans, 333 U. S. 483, 68 S. Ct. 634, 92 L. Ed. 823 (1948); State of Tennessee v. *474Davis, 100 U. S. 257, 25 L. Ed. 648 (1880); Mossew v. United States, 266 F. 18, 11 A. L. R. 1261 (2 Cir. 1920); McNary v. State, 128 Ohio St. 497, 191 N. E. 733 (1934); Commonwealth ex rel. Varronne v. Cunningham, 365 Pa. 68, 73 A. 2d 705 (Sup. Ct. 1950).
The wisdom of this statute is for the Legislature, and while its effect on a criminal proceeding instituted, such as the one here, produces an anomaly the most that this court can do is call the attention of the Legislature to the result. Dacunzo v. Edgye, 19 N. J. 443 (1955).
Our holding is that due to the lack of a penalty in this statute a person cannot be convicted as a disorderly person and fined as such for a violation thereof. Such holding is limited strictly to the applicability of N. J. S. 2A :171-1 to a criminal proceeding.
The judgment is reversed.