Court Opinion

ID: 6946263
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:26:00.491632+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:07:55.547781
License: Public Domain

Scates, Justice, delivered the following dissenting opinion: This cause comes into this Court by writ of error to the Circuit Court of Warren county, to review the judgment of that Court upon an agreed case between the parties, involving only, by the assignment of error, a construction of two several acts of the legislature, passed in pari materia. The action in this case is for the recovery of a penalty, and the act (2) should receive a strict construction, aided by whatever light may be received from statutes passed upon the same subject, and should not be extended beyond the plain import and meaning of the legislature. The language and meaning are too plain and clear to admit of a doubt, that tire full power to grant licenses for shows, is conferred upon tire county treasurer; and it inflicts a penalty of not less tiran ten, nor more than one hundred dollars, upon any person who shall exhibit, without such license, anywhere within the body of the county. Two years after the passage of this act, the legislature, by another act, (3) on the same subject, confers power upon incorporated towns to pass ordinances for licensing shows, amongst other things, and with power to impose fines, not exceeding five dollars, for any one breach of an ordinance, and without a clause repealing any former law establishing police regulations. I can see no repugnance in these provisions of the two acts, which would warrant, by construction of the provisions of the latter, a repeal of the former,' by implication of law. I regard the latter as a cumulative power and remedy conferred upon that portion of the inhabitants of the county, resident within the incorporation, adapted to their situation as such. In the same section, power is conferred upon the trustees to levy and collect annually a tax for the purpose of carrying their powers into execution. A different rule of construction than the one I have laid down, it seems to me, would repeal any former law conferring a similar power upon the county, if a rule of implication such as this, is to prevail. A sufficient reason may be supposed to have existed in the minds of the legislature for making these powers and remedies cumulative, in the fact that much disorder and confusion, and even danger, might arise, in populous cities and villages, from tire concourse that would attend such exhibitions, if they had not the power to prevent them, by refusing a license, when deemed expedient; and, therefore, the legislature conferred upon them this power, by suitable ordinances and penal sanctions, to provide for their own good order and security, without intending to abridge the power conferred upon the county over its whole territory. The only repugnance seems to be that abstract principle of justice which would forbid receiving two payments for a part of the same privilege. Yet in criminal proceedings we witness a conviction and fine before a justice, for a breach of the peace, and in the Circuit Court a conviction and fine and imprisonment for the same act. The same act of a party may incur 'two penalties, and constitute two offences, and subject the offender to two separate punishments, imposed by two separate acts of the legislature, not plainer, nor less repugnant in their provisions, than these. By a rule of repeal by implication, the 52d section of the Criminal Code, defining an assault with intent to murder, &c., and imposing a penalty, passed in 1833, would repeal the first section of the “Act to extend the jurisdiction of justices of the peace,” passed in 1826, because the latter imposes a fine for a breach of the peace, which offence is included in the former. I see no difference between the infliction of two punishments for the same act, when mere intent is charged to constitute one of the misdemeanors arising out of it, and the imposition of two penalties for the same act, if done at a particular place. No one will contend that there is such repugnance in these last statutes, as will repeal the latter, by implication. Yet there is more that is repugnant to our sense and feelings of justice, in the first case, than in the last. The record does not show that the trustees had passed any ordinance providing for the licensing of shows and imposing penalties. Still, as it is agreed that license was duly obtained, and counsel have not insisted on any objection of this sort, I have considered the question as submitted by them. I am of opinion, therefore, that the judgment be affirmed. Judgment reversed.   R. L. 363, $ 5; Gale’s Stat. 382.