State v. . Harris , 216 N.C. 746 ( 1940 )


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  • Seawell, J.

    Defendant’s appeal raises questions of public policy as well as of law. We are concerned with the law, of course, but matters of public policy which began long before our time, and which may be found to have underwritten the fundamental laws we are asked to apply, cannot be disregarded in their interpretation.

    Statutes regulating trades and occupations by the delegation of governmental power to boards and commissions formed largely of the groups affected, intended primarily to control the personnel of the business, have *752become so common as to affect progressively and importantly tbe social and economic life of tbe State. A large number of laws of that character may be listed which not only regulate but organize into autonomous corporations occupations ranging from the learned professions to the ordinary trades. U. N. C. Law Review, Vol. 17, p. 1.

    No independent administrative supervision is provided over these organizations. No report of their activities is made to any responsible branch of the government. No audit is made by the State, except where items may incidentally affect the State Treasury. These matters are left to internal control. The organizations are, so to speak, legislatively launched and put on their own.

    The stage of internal protest has been reached. In marginal cases controversies in the courts have arisen as to whether the organization has captured a sufficient quantum of public purpose to operate as an agency of the government, or whether the police power of the State, ostensibly exercised for a public purpose, is not really farmed out to a private group to be used in narrowing the field of competition, or in aid of exploitation by creating remunerative positions in administration. Roach v. Durham, 204 N. C., 587, 169 S. E., 149; S. v. Lawrence, 213 N. C., 674, 197 S. E., 586. Without the aid of the statute these groups would be mere trade guilds, or voluntary business associations; with it they become State agencies, retaining, however, as far as possible, distinctive guild features. An exclusive self-governing status is achieved by the device of securing a majority membership on the administrative boards or commissions, and in aid of this the power of the State is heavily invoked by way of prosecution in the criminal courts of those who are unable to secure the approval of the board and obtain license to engage in the occupation.

    It is this power of exclusion of fellow workers in the same field that gives to the subject its social significance, and invites our most serious consideration of the constitutional guaranties of personal liberty and individual right called to our attention.

    The statute is meager in its expression of purpose in this regard. But the implication conveyed in the power to “examine those who ought not to be admitted,” and to make rules and regulations in the interest of the public health, safety, and welfare in connection with such examinations, supports the suggestions in defendant’s brief and argument that it was the purpose of the statute to empower the commission to apply standards of educational and moral fitness to those who desire to choose and carry on the business, occupation, or trade — however it may be called. Indeed, if that is not its purpose, we fail to find anything else in the statute in the nature of a public purpose which would necessarily preserve the organization created as a State agency.

    *753The statute before us seems to overshoot the mark in several respects: In the discrimination produced by its territorial limitations; in the attempted delegation of the legislative function to create standards, and its failure to fix limits within which the discretion of the commission may be exercised; and, in the more fundamental respect of its invasion of personal liberty and the freedom to choose and pursue one of the ordinary harmless callings of life — a right which we conceive to be guaranteed by the Constitution.

    1. Reference to section 8 of the statute shows that the license issued by the commission is not on a parity with the license usually issued by trade or professional organizations of this kind created as State agencies. The fee charged is imposed as an "additional State license fee for the privilege of carrying on the business, exercising the privilege, or doing the acts named,” and it is expressly stated that the payment of the license fee and the issuing of the license under the Revenue Act shall not “relieve any person, firm, corporation, or association of persons from the payment of the fee prescribed under section five hereof.” In close analogy to the revenue tax, the charge is graduated according to the population of the town in which the business is carried on. Any departure from that analogy may be found in section 6, which provides an immediate expropriation of the money covered into the treasury to the use of the commission in the enforcement of the act, the only apparent items of expenses being the per diem of the commission, the salaries of officers, and the salary or fees of attorneys selected by the board. Whether such a method of dealing with State funds is permissible, we need not now discuss.

    The Constitution, Article Y, section 3, requires that “the power of taxation shall be exercised in a just and equitable manner.” It cannot be successfully maintained that a tax which is levied on a part of the citizens of the State for the privilege of engaging in a business is equitably levied when a large number of the counties of the State are not included and citizens therein engaged in a like business are left immune from the tax. See 1939 amendment, excluding 14 counties.

    Rut whether we regard the imposition of the license fee as a State tax or otherwise, any law which, purporting to operate on a particular class, places upon those engaged in the business in a portion of the State a burden for the privilege which is exercised freely and without additional charge by those engaged in the business in other parts of the State is arbitrary in classification because it discriminates within the class orginally selected and extends to the latter a privilege and immunity not accorded to those who must, under the law, pay the additional exaction or quit the business. Constitution, Article I, section 7; Simonton v. Lanier, 71 N. C., 498, 503; Plott Co. v. Ferguson, 202 N. C., 446, *754163 S. E., 688; S. v. Fowler, 193 N. C., 290; Edgerton, v. Hood, 205 N. C., 816, 172 S. E., 481; Frazier v. Shelton, 320 Ill., 253, 150 N. E., 696, 43 A. L. R., 1086. The imposition of local taxes on professions and trades is another matter. State ex rel. Wooldridge v. Morehead, 100 Neb., 864, 161 N. W., 569.

    As stated, the 1939 amendment to the 1937 act above quoted exempts certain counties, fourteen in number, from the operation of the general act. If these two acts are construed in pari materia, it leaves the combined legislation clearly open to the objection of unlawful discrimination in the respect mentioned.

    The exception made by the 1939 amendment is important, material, and inseparable, and leaves no room to inquire quo animo it was made. We can neither cancel the exception nor free the rest of the statute from its unconstitutional taint. Springfield Gas & Electric Co. v. Springfield, 292 Ill., 236, 126 N. E., 739, 18 A. L. R., 929, Aff. 257 U. S., 66, 66 L. Ed., 131; Dorchy v. Kansas, 264 U. S., 286, 68 L. Ed., 686; 11 Am. Jur., p. 843, note 20.

    2. The statute authorizes the commission (sections 3 [1] [e]), to “require examination of persons not entitled to have issued to them a license as provided in this act, such examination to cover subjects deemed necessary to promote the public health, safety, and welfare of the people of the State of North Carolina.” Subsection (2) of this section provides for the suspension or revocation of licenses, after notice and hearing, “on the grounds of any violation of the provisions of this act or the rules and regulations promulgated by said commission not in conflict with this act,” and provides the right of appeal upon such suspension and revocation. Thus, an unlimited discretion is given to the commission to set up standards of their own for admission to the business of “dry cleaning and/or pressing,” according to whatever rules or regulations they may conceive to be related to the “public health, safety, and welfare of the people.”

    In licensing those who desire to engage in professions or occupations such as may be proper subjects of such regulation, the Legislature may confer upon executive officers or bodies the power of granting or refusing to license persons to enter such trades or professions only when it has prescribed a sufficient standard for their guidance. 16 C. J. S., p. 373, and cases cited. Where such a power is left to the unlimited discretion of a board, to be exercised without the guide of legislative standards, the statute is not only discriminatory but must be regarded as an attempted delegation of the legislative function offensive both to the State and the Federal Constitution. Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U. S., 356, 30 L. Ed., 220; Thomas v. Mills, 117 Ohio State, 114, 157 N. E., 488, 54 A. L. R., *7551220; J. W. Hampton, Jr. & Co. v. United States, 276 U. S., 394, 72 L. Ed., 624; People v. Monterey Fish Products Co., 195 Calif., 548, 234 P., 398, 38 A. L. R., 1186; Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U. S., 388, 432, 79 L. Ed., 446; A. L. A. Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, 295 U. S., 495, 79 L. Ed., 1570, 97 A. L. R., 947; Durham Provision Co. v. Daves, 190 N. C., 7, 128 S. E., 593.

    While the power to make rules and regulations to carry into effect the laws confided to them for administration is often given to administrative bodies, and while in instances there may be some doubt as to whether the proposed regulation is legislative in character or in pursuance of a dele-gable power, it is clear that in a statute of this kind, giving the important power of admitting or excluding persons from a business, trade, or profession, only the Legislature can create the standards and provide the reasonable limits within which the power must be exercised. 11 Am. Jur., p. 947, sec. 234, note 3; Annotation: 12 A. L. R., 1436, 54 A. L. R., 1105, 92 A. L. R., 403.

    But we do not mean to say that it was within the power of the Legislature itself to invoke the police power and set up standards of the kind suggested which might exclude persons from the ordinary non-professional and non-skilled occupations which, neither inherently nor in the ordinary manner of their conduct, present a menace to the public welfare. It is only necessary to say in this connection that if the Legislature had the power, the attempt to delegate it to this commission in the manner attempted is not consistent with constitutional limitations.

    3. It will simplify discussion if we bear in mind that the controversy in this case does not concern the propriety of minor regulations of business and occupations which may be, and are, imposed generally on the principle sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas, or to the still broader field of regulation under the police power which does not involve the question of exclusion from the business, trade, or occupation made the subject of regulation. There is a great body of decision upon that subject altogether too general for satisfactory application to the question before us. Appellant challenges the power of the Legislature to impose or authorize the imposition of standards such as are contemplated in the law under review which might exclude him from one of the ordinary callings of life on the ground of educational or moral unfitness or for the want of technical, scientific skill and knowledge. He refers to the provisions of the Constitution above quoted, and claims that they should protect him in the choice and pursuit of the occupation with which this controversy is concerned.

    It is not contended, of course, that these provisions of the Constitution confer upon any person the absolute right to choose and pursue any occupation he pleases, regardless of the public interest. The Legislature *756may, through appropriate laws, protect the public against incapacity, fraud, and oppression where, from the nature of the business or occupation or the manner of its conduct, the natural consequence may be injurious to the public welfare. 11 Am. Jur., p. 1032. And in the exercise of this power it is well established that standards of personal fitness may be created and enforced by laws requiring the examination and licensing of those desiring to engage in the learned professions, and in occupations requiring scientific or technical knowledge and skill, some of which bring about a relation of trust or confidence between those who practice the trades or occupations and the clientele they serve. In re Applicants for License, 143 N. C., 1, 55 S. E., 635; S. v. Van Doran, 109 N. C., 864, 14 S. E., 32; S. v. Call, 121 N. C., 643, 28 S. E., 517; S. v. Hicks, 143 N. C., 689, 57 S. E., 441; S. v. Siler, 169 N. C., 314, 84 S. E., 1015; Lambert v. Yellowbey, 272 U. S., 581, 71 L. Ed., 422, 49 A. L. R., 575; Louisiana State Med. Examiners v. Fife, 162 La., 681, 111 So., 58, 54 A. L. R., 594, Aff. 274 U. S., 720, 71 L. Ed., 1324; State ex rel. Marshall v. District Ct., 50 Montana, 289, 146 P., 743; State v. Wood, 51 S. D., 485, 215 N. V., 487, 54 A. L. R., 719; Annotation, 55 A. L. R., 303. At the other end of the occupational scale are the ordinary trades and occupations, harmless in themselves, in many of which men have engaged immemorially as a matter of common right, as to which it is uniformly held such standards may not be applied. Smith v. Texas, 233 U. S., 630, 58 L. Ed., 1129; Bessette v. People, 193 Ill., 334, 62 N. E., 215; Dasch v. Jackson, 176 Md., 251, 183 A., 534. Somewhere between these extremes the slendering thread of police authority must come to an end, and constitutional guaranties of personal liberty must supervene.

    On the factual situation presented in this case we are of the opinion that the occupation in which appellant desires to engage belongs to the latter class and that he is within the protection of constitutional guaranties in its pursuit. The exigencies of decision in this case do not lead us far from a consideration of the character of the business or Occupation itself, the probability, if any, of injury to the public welfare for lack of regulation, and the appropriateness of the drastic method of exclusion proposed as a means of preventing such harm to the public. But, in a large part, the argument has been addressed to the theory that the trend of recent decisions adopting a more liberal attitude toward regulation of business under the police power has largely reduced the case before us to a question of mere expediency in the enactment of the statute, which is a matter within the sound judgment of the Legislature and unreviewable by the courts. It is insisted that the business is “clothed with a public interest,” and it is thought that there is thus provided a smooth path for legislative action without imbrications due to constitutional guaranties. The argument is not without a suggestion that the Court should yield to *757"tbe Legislature tbe ultimate determination of tbe relative importance ■of tbe social interests involved in maintaining or overruling applicable -constitutional guaranties.

    It is tbe fault of tbe argument, not of its candid restatement, if it falters at critical points. Under it there is not a calling or trade, bow-■ever simple and harmless, that may not be preempted and monopolized by tbe first group that stakes out its claim and raises over tbe camp tbe '“keep-off sign.” If tbe Court should adopt a theory of that sort it ■cannot thereafter hope to protect tbe rights of any man under these ■constitutional provisions from tbe grossest aggression.

    Those who are versed in tbe history of this expression (“clothed with -a public interest”) will understand our disinclination to make tbe rights either of society or tbe individual to depend on a play upon words. Tyson & Bro.—United Theatre Ticket Office v. Banton, 273 U. S., 418, 71 L. Ed., 718, 58 A. L. R., 1236. There are many social and public interests which logically form no basis for police interference with private business or for withdrawing tbe protection of constitutional guaranties. Society is always interested in tbe trades and occupations which underlie it; there is a social interest arising from tbe mutuality of patronage and service; and there are many situations in tbe social complex that may create a desire on tbe part of one group to improve tbe conditions of contact and pressure with another, none of which as social or public interest is comparable with tbe importance of tbe social interest involved in tbe maintenance of personal liberty guaranteed by tbe Constitution. Tyson & Bro.—United Theatre Ticket Office v. Banton, supra; Ribnik v. McBride, 277 U. S., 350, 72 L. Ed., 913, 56 A. L. R., 1327. Compare: Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Kentucky, 161 U. S., 677, 40 L. Ed., 849; Munn v. Illinois, 94 U. S., 113, 24 L. Ed., 77; Chas. Wolff Packing Co. v. Court of Industrial Relations, 262 U. S., 522, 67 L. Ed., 1103, 27 A. L. R., 1280.

    Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S., 502, 78 L. Ed., 940, upon which tbe prosecution seems to lean rather heavily, deals with tbe suggested test— “whether tbe business is clothed or affected with a public interest” — and while it recognizes tbe impracticality of the formula, tbe technique employed leaves us in doubt whether tbe Court intended to dismiss it altogether — through tbe process of benevolent dispersion — and adopt a new liberalism toward governmental control of business, or to stick to tbe formula in a much expanded sense and give to tbe new adjustment between social demands and constitutional restraint tbe color of historic authenticity. Annotation: 119 A. L. R., 985, 986.

    Miami Laundry Co. et al. v. Florida Dry Cleaning and Laundry Board et al., 183 So., 759, 119 A. L. R., 956, another cited case, also uses tbe touchstone “clothed with a public interest” and apparently *758regards the validity of police regulation as deriving its sanction from tbe formula.

    Neither of these cases deals with the question of excluding persons from the occupations which were the subject of regulation. 'Whatever importance they may have in the general field affected by the decisions, the generalizations reached are too remote to control decision upon the more fundamental issues raised by the facts in the case at bar.

    The constitutional provisions under consideration are categorically directed to restraint of the police power in its attempted exercise in the respects named. They have a direct and special relation to the choice and pursuit of an occupation — both as a property right and as a matter of personal liberty. Their scope and effect upon proposed legislation in this field must be left with the Court, or the guaranties might as well never have been written into the Constitution, and all the struggle and achievement which they represent is frustrated.

    The mere expediency of legislation is a matter for the Legislature, when it is acting entirely within constitutional limitations, but whether it is so acting is a matter for the courts, and more especially legislative determinations in this field are subject to review. S. v. Williams, 146 N. C., 618, 61 S. E., 61; Sterling v. Constantin, 287 U. S., 378, 77 L. Ed., 375. We quote from 11 Am. Jur., p. 1060: “The determination of what businesses are affected with a public interest is primarily for the Legislature. It must be considered, however, that in spite of the fact that it is entitled to great respect, a mere declaration by the Legislature that a business is affected with a public interest is not conclusive of the question whether its attempted regulation on that ground is justified. The matter is one which is always open to judicial inquiry. Private business may not be regulated or converted into public business by legislative fiat.” Tyson & Bro.—United Theatre Ticket Office v. Banton, supra; Hirsh v. Block, 50 App. D. C., 56, 267 F., 614, 11 A. L. R., 1238; Wolf v. Fuller, 87 N. H., 64, 174 Atl., 193, 94 A. L. R., 1067. The Legislature cannot, by preamble or fact-finding declaration, attribute to a business or occupation a character which it does not have according to common knowledge and experience and thus withdraw the legislation from judicial review. Hoblitzel v. Jenkins, 204 Ky., 122, 263 S. W., 764; Chas. Wolff Packing Co. v. Court of Industrial Relations, supra; MacRae v. Fayetteville, 198 N. C., 51, 150 S. E., 810; Otis v. Parker, 187 U. S., 606, 47 L. Ed., 323.

    We think, on practical analysis of cases presented, the rule will still hold good that regulation of a business or occupation under the police power must be based on some distinguishing feature in the business itself or the manner in which it is ordinarily conducted, the natural and *759probable consequence of which, if unregulated, is to produce substantial injury to the public peace, health, or welfare. When such classifications .are made, the Court will pass on their reasonableness and determine as to the validity of the legislation.

    But the power to regulate a business or occupation does not necessarily include the power to exclude persons from engaging in it. Replogle v. City of Little Rock, 166 Ark., 617, 267 S. W., 353, 36 A. L. R., 1333; People ex rel. Durham, Realty Corp. v. La Fetra, 230 N. Y., 429, 130 N. E., 601; State v. Porter, 94 Conn., 639; State of Ohio v. Helvering, 292 U. S., 360, 78 L. Ed., 1307. When this field has been reached, the police power is severely curtailed. “The right of a citizen to pursue any of the ordinary vocations on his own property and with his own means, can neither be denied nor unduly abridged by the Legislature, for the preservation of such right is the principal purpose of the Constitution itself. In such cases, the limit of legislative power is regulation, and that power must be cautiously and sparingly exercised, unless the business is of such character as places it within the category of social and economic ills.” Ex Parte Dickey, 76 W. Va., 576, 85 S. E., 781; 2 Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 8th Ed., p. 1329.

    Referring to industrial trades, it is said in the article on Constitutional Law, 11 Am. Jur., 1048: “As to them, the power of regulation is comparatively slight, when they are conducted and carried on upon private property and private means.” In such cases the lawmaking body is usually relegated to restrictions distinctly regulative rather than prohibitive. The principle justifying requirements of personal fitness as a condition for engaging in an occupation is a narrow exception to pertinent constitutional guaranties of personal liberty which cannot be enlarged beyond its proper scope without such violence to their purpose as would be subversive of the freedom which has been universally attributed to the American system. It follows that there is a well recognized gap between the regulation of a business or occupation and restrictions preventing persons from engaging in them to which courts must pay careful attention. While many of the rights of man, as declared in the Constitution, contemplate adjustment to social necessities, some of them are not so yielding. Among them the right to earn a living must be regarded as inalienable. Conceding this, a law which destroys the opportunity of a man or woman to earn a living in one of the ordinary harmless occupations of life by the erection of educational and moral standards of fitness is legal grotesquery.

    In one respect authorities are agreed: It is necessary to a valid exercise of the police power that the proposed restriction have a reasonable *760and substantial relation to the evil it purports to remedy. Leggetts v. Baldridge, 278 U. S., 105, 111; Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U. S., 390, 67 L. Ed., 1042, 29 A. L. R., 1446. Is there anything in this business, or calling, constituting a substantial menace to the public peace, health or welfare to which such restriction has a reasonable relation? Groping in a meager field, even with the diligent aid of counsel, we are unable to find it. Looking at the dry cleaning and/or pressing business in the light of the record and briefs, and applying such common knowledge of the subject as we are permitted to use, we are confirmed in our view that it is an ordinary, simple occupation which, conducted in the normal way, involves no special danger to the public peace, health, or welfare, and requiring no regimentation of personnel to keep it in safe channels. If so, exclusion of persons from its enjoyment as a means of livelihood must be attributed to some other purpose to be accomplished by the law, and is violative of constitutional guaranties.

    We do not recall that it has been contended that the occupation is one requiring a background of learning or scientific training or a special degree of technical skill; the facts would not warrant such contention. Nor has it been suggested that there is any greater opportunity for fraud in the business than that found in hundreds of other ordinary callings of life.

    We do not attach importance to the manner in which the results are obtained — whether the material is cleansed by water or fuller’s earth or soap or gasoline, or whether smoothness and smartness has been imparted to garments by drying on a flat stone or using a sad iron, roller or press. All of these methods have been employed at one time or another in this most ancient of trades. Physical improvements in the trade have not so changed its character as to alter its relation to the public.

    It is argued that the danger to workmen from the use of inflammable liquids in the cleaning process justifies the “examination” and exclusion of persons from the occupation. Such a danger is properly the subject of general State laws, but as considered here it is a matter more related to intelligence and prudence than to education. Besides, we do not apply such standards to filling station attendants, cooks, and many others exposed to similar dangers, which are comparable to a thousand others from which no ordinary occupation is entirely free. We cannot rest decision on a plausibility that might properly be regarded as a pretext to save the statute. On the contrary, it would be our duty to hold that the danger suggested might be met with less drastic regulation and, looking through the form to the substance, to declare that the objectives sought by the statute, in so far as any public purpose is concerned, are merely ostensible. Lochner v. New York, 198 U. S., 45, 49 L. Ed., 937.

    *761Turning to the argument that the statute is justified as a measure intended to protect the public against fraud, we may observe that there is no business or occupation which is not likely to have its quota of dishonest men. The danger to the public comes from the character of the man and not from any unusual opportunity afforded him in the business, which is inherently amoral. Like any other business, morality is imparted to it only by the character of the men engaged in it. We would probably fail in the attempt to secure honesty as a by-product of industry through the process of starving out original sin. “ ‘If occasional opportunity for fraud is to be the test, then there is no reason why every grocer, every merchant, every automobile dealer, every keeper of a garage, every manufacturer, and every mechanic .who deals more frequently with the public in general, and whose opportunities for fraud are far greater than those of the real estate agent or salesman, may not be put on the same basis. If that be done, then only those who, in the opinion of certain boards or the courts, have the necessary moral qualifications will be permitted to engage in the ordinary occupations of life. The result will be that all others who fail to establish their moral fitness will not only be deprived of their means of livelihood, but will become a burden either on their families and friends or the community at large. In our opinion, the right to earn one’s daily bread cannot be made to hang on so narrow a thread. Broad as is the police power, its limit is exceeded when the State undertakes to require moral qualifications of one who wishes to engage or continue in a business which, as usually conducted, is no more dangerous to the public than any other ordinary occupation of life.’” Rawls v. Jenkins, 212 Ky., 287, 292, 279 S. W., 350.

    If the act is defective, as we think it is, in failing to disclose a justifiable relation to a reasonably necessary public purpose, it is clearly a monopoly offensive to Art. I, sec. 31, of the Constitution. Socially considered, this is its most serious offense.

    Monopoly, as originally defined, consisted in a grant by the sovereign of an exclusive privilege to do something which had theretofore been a matter of common right. 41 C. J., 82. The exclusion of others from such common right is still considered a prominent feature of monopoly, and the consequent loss to those excluded of opportunity to earn a livelihood for themselves and their dependents, the danger of becoming a public charge, with attendant humiliation and insecurity, has been considered. the prime reason for the public policy then adopted into the Constitution. But here, the Constitution itself does not analyze — -it condemns. The ordinary trades and occupations are specialized forms of service developed through the necessity of division of labor in civilized life. The Government did not create them, does not own them, *762and the grant of the privileges of such trades and occupations to a limited group of citizens is “contrary to the genius of a free State and ought not to be allowed.”

    The set-up in this type of organization, with complete internal control and power given to interested members of the group to control admission to the trade, and with little else of importance relating to regulation, raises a suspicion as to its public purpose. Not of itself sufficient to invalidate the statute, it invites the scrutiny of the Court as to the public nature of the objectives really pursued, which might readily be found in a desire to limit the field of competition. That we have indulged this form of group organization, to the extreme limit of constitutional barriers, should be by this time convincingly evident.

    There is a definite obligation of law to progress which should not be ignored in the interpretation of the Constitution. But the liberal formulas in which this relation is usually expressed are mere abstractions, when applied to the instant case. It has not been made to appear that progress has made any substantial change in the relation between those-engaged in the occupation under consideration and those whom they serve that would require a reappraisal of the Constitution. The changes-which have been brought to our attention are rather in the social and political viewpoint respecting the relation between society and the individual, in which the importance of personal liberty is under constant attrition, in the desire for more sweeping governmental control in private affairs and in the development of pressure groups which are unable to reach their objectives through voluntary association and, for reasons not entirely altruistic, demand the powerful aid of law. The usual symptom is an endemic desire to have the public protected against them, although the public is not sensible of any harm which they may do it, or any need of protection. This beau geste should not blind the Court to the fact, when it exists, that the kind of protection afforded, resting on the principle of exclusion of fellow workers, is more related to obvious benefits accruing to the group in its private character than to the merely colorable advantage to the public.

    The admonition of the Constitution requiring frequent recurrence to fundamental principles is politically sound. Only in this way may we avoid a break with tradition that preserves the spirit, and often the letter of the law. One of the cardinal rules of construction as applied to the Constitution is that it must be interpreted in the light of its history. This is peculiarly demanded in this case, when we are dealing with principles which have a key position in our political set-up, and endeavoring to give them the scope and effect the framers of the Constitution, and the people to whose genius it was acceptable at the time of *763its adoption, intended them to have. Whitman v. National Bank, 176 U. S., 559, 44 L. Ed., 587; Steele M. & E. Co. v. Miller, 92 Ohio St., 115, 110 N. E., 648; Story v. Richardson, 186 Cal., 162, 198 P., 1057. “Every constitution has a history of its own which is likely to be more or less peculiar, and unless it is interpreted in the light of this history, is liable to be made to express purposes which were never in the minds of the people agreeing to it.” Cooley, C. J., People v. Harding, 53 Mich., 481, 19 N. W., 155. Missouri v. Illinois, 180 U. S., 208, 45 L. Ed., 497.

    Knowledge of the sources from which these provisions of the Constitution came, and the political conditions which gave rise to them, is a part of the common learning of all English speaking peoples. There is nothing in government more dangerous to the liberty and rights of the individual than a too ready resort to the police power. It is a sufficient reference to history to recall that these restraints were the outcome of an appreciation of that fact, born of experience. They are categorically addressed to that issue. They are the product of an individualistic age, and there is little room to doubt their intended scope and purpose as affecting decision in the instant case. Resort to the police power to exclude persons from an ordinary calling, finding justification only by the existence of a vague public interest, often amounting to no more than a doubtful social convenience, is collectivistic in principle, destructive to the historic values of these guaranties, and contrary to the genius of the people who did all that was humanly possible to secure them in a written constitution. Ve believe that they were intended to give to the individual a larger endowment of personal liberty than could be otherwise guaranteed; a greater opportunity for initiative, and the acquisition of those interests which make for responsible citizenship. A departure from these standards may be regarded as social retrogression. No good can come to society from a policy which tends to drive its members from the ranks of the independently employed into the ranks of those industrially dependent, and the economic fallacy of such a policy is too obvious for comment.

    We violate no precedent in referring to the important function these guaranties of personal liberty perform in determining the form and character of our Government. They are not accidental or unrelated. They fall into the pattern of democracy upon which our institutions are founded. In no other part of the fundamental law is caught and held the aspiration for this sort of freedom. If those whose duty it is to uphold tradition falter in the task, these guaranties may be defeated temporarily, or permanently lost through obsolescence. But it is idle to hope that the superstructure will survive its foundation stones. We learn from Biblical story that Jeremiah stood by the ruined walls of the *764once glorious Jerusalem and exclaimed in amazement and anguish: “Is-it nothing to you, all ye that pass by?”

    We are aware of our duty to sustain an act of the Legislature where its constitutionality may be merely a matter of doubt. Wells v. Housing Authority, 213 N. C., 744, 197 S. E., 693; Gunter v. Sanford, 186 N. C., 452, 120 S. E., 41. But this principle does not require that the defendant be made the victim of two mistakes — one by the Legislature and another by the Court. Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch (U. S.), 137, 2 L. Ed., 60; McCray v. United States, 195 U. S., 27, 49 L. Ed., 78; State v. Williams, supra. These cases are not cited pro forma to maintain a principle universally recognized — the power of the Court to declare an act void for unconstitutionality. They are selected because they bear upon the conditions requiring such a decision and the solemn duty resting upon the Court to uphold the Constitution according to the obligations of office.

    Under the challenge which the Constitution itself makes to the prosecution, the proponents of the drastic measure of exclusion have not been able to show to the Court a single substantial evil connected with the business under which such a restriction may be justified, or any reason at all the adoption of which would not embarrass the Court. In its factual setting the case departs completely from those in which this-Court has approved regulation of this kind. In this situation there does not seem to be much room for a discussion as to the rules under which the Court approaches its duty of applying the constitutional test to this, act of the Legislature. Any presumptions or burdens which may exist are satisfied when the facts are laid bare to the Court and the situation is found to be wanting in those conditions and those circumstances upon which alone the power of the Legislature in its exercise of the police-power must depend. Obedience to the Constitution on the part of the Legislature is no more necessary to orderly government than the exercise of the power of the Court in requiring it when the Legislature inadvertently exceeds its limitations. “It has been frequently stated, in cases where the questions are presented for judicial review, that in order to-sustain legislation under the police power, the courts must be able to see-that its operation tends in some degree to prevent some offense or evil or to preserve public health, morals, safety, and welfare, and that if a statute discloses no such purpose, has no real or substantial relation to-these objects, or is a palpable invasion of rights secured by fundamental law, it is the duty of the courts so to adjudge and thereby give effect to the Constitution.” 11 Am. Jur., p. 1087, sec. 306. In such a situation the duty of the Court is clear. “There is a fundamental canon or construction that a Constitution should receive a liberal interpretation in favor of a citizen, especially with respect to those provisions which were *765designed to safeguard the liberty and security of the citizen in regard to both person and property.” 11 Am. Jur., p. 670.

    We hold the act to be unconstitutional, in that its application to only a part of the whole class engaged in the occupation is discriminatory, in that it is an attempted delegation of the legislative function in the creation of standards by the commissioners created in the act, and in that it attempts to exclude from an ordinary harmless occupation, upon insufficient grounds, those who are entitled under the constitutional guaranties to engage in it, and thereby creates a monopoly in the group to which such privilege is extended.

    The conviction under the statute is of no effect.

    The judgment is

    Eeversed.

    Stacy, C. J., concurs in result.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 6 S.E.2d 854, 216 N.C. 746, 128 A.L.R. 658, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 385

Judges: Seawell, Devin, Stacy

Filed Date: 2/2/1940

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/11/2024