DocketNumber: No. 7510SC258
Judges: Britt, Parker, Vaughn
Filed Date: 6/18/1975
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
Article II, Section 24,- of the Constitution of North Carolina, in pertinent part, provides:
“(1) Prohibited subjects. The General Assembly shall not enact any local, private, or special act or resolution:
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(j) Regulating labor, trade, mining, or manufacturing;
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(3) ... [a]ny local . . . act . . . enacted in violation of the provisions of this Section shall be void. .
(4) General laws. The General Assembly may enact general laws regulating the matters set out in this Section.” '
The quoted section is in all material respects identical to the relevant section in effect prior to the adoption of the revised constitution in 1970.
By its terms, the act in question applies only to an ill-defined unincorporated area made up of less than one county. It is a local act.
Petitioner seeks a license to engage in the retail sale of beer and wine. The retail sale of beer and wine is a “trade” within the meaning of this constitution. Food Fair v. Henderson, 17 N.C. App. 335, 194 S.E. 2d 213. “Trade” refers to a business venture for profit. Smith v. County of Mecklenburg, 280 N.C. 497, 187 S.E. 2d 67. Except for the local act in question, petitioner, upon compliance with the general laws regulating the sale of beer and wine, would be free to pursue that trade.
A local act that authorizes or prohibits the sale of beer and wine is a local act regulating or governing a trade and is void.
In State v. Chestnutt, 241 N.C. 401, 85 S.E. 2d 297, the Supreme Court upheld a conviction for racing on Sunday in violation of a local act. The act prohibited all motor vehicle races on Sunday without regard to whether profit or other compensation was involved. The court carefully limited its opinion to the attack then being made on the act and said that -it regarded “the statute as placing a ban upon a specified activity, to wit, motor vehicle races on Sunday in Wake County, rather than as a regulation of labor or trade in which the defendants and others are privileged to engage.”
Appellant suggests that since the local act in question here also makes it unlawful to “give away” the designated beverages, the rationale in Chestnutt should control the disposition of the case at bar. We disagree. The only substantial effect of the local act before us is to regulate the sale of alcoholic beverages. Its effect on trade is not, therefore, merely incidental. The only practical consequence of the additional proscription against giving the beverages away is, most likely, an aid to enforcement of the provisions regulating the sale of alcoholic beverages— a trade.
The trial court correctly concluded that Chapter 626 of the Public-Local Laws of 1937 violates Article II, Section 24(1) (j) of the Constitution of North Carolina and is void. Food Fair v. Henderson, supra. The judgment is, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.