DocketNumber: Appeal, 39
Citation Numbers: 185 A. 840, 322 Pa. 513, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 841
Judges: Kephart, Schaffer, Maxey, Drew, Linn, Stern, Barnes
Filed Date: 4/6/1936
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Argued April 6, 1936. Joe Stofchek was indicted for possession of liquor in violation of section 602 (b) of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Act of November 29, 1933, P. L. 15 (Special Session). The indictment was quashed on two grounds, first, that the section involved is not clearly indicated in the title of the act, and, second, that it infringed guarantees contained in our Constitution. The Superior Court reversed and we allowed an appeal to this court.
Are the penal provisions of this section of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Act1 sufficiently expressed in the title to comply with article III, section 3, of the Constitution? The latter is worded: "No bill . . . shall be passed containing more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title." *Page 516
The Commonwealth contends that section 602 (b) is embraced in that part of the title reading: "An act to regulate and restrain the sale, importation, and use of certain alcoholic beverages." Does the word "use" mean "possession"? It is urged it does not, and that the inference therefrom is not sufficient to graft thereon the penal provision. We have stated that a purpose is not clearly expressed in the title of an act if it can be ascertained only by a process of reasoning (Phillips'sEstate,
Appellant places his principal reliance on Commonwealth v.Barbono, supra. That case arose under the Act of June 15, 1911, P. L. 975, entitled "An act providing for the registration of bottles . . . or other containers; and forbidding the refilling of, or dealing or trafficking in, such registered bottles. . . ." The defendant there urged that the provision making "unlawful possession" of such bottles a penal offense was not indicated by the title. The objection was sustained. The title of that act discloses two definite purposes; first, the registration of containers, and, second, the regulation of the refilling or dealing or trafficking in such containers. No provision for general use is indicated by the title. The words "dealing or trafficking in" are distinctly restricted to a commercial use. The title of the Liquor Control Act is more comprehensive. The word "use" employed in it includes "possession." It would be difficult to use liquor without having it in possession. Possession is clearly a step in use, and "use" is not necessarily confined in meaning to active service.
A second phrase from the title, ". . . prohibiting certain sales or practices in, connections with, and transactions *Page 517 in such beverages by licensees and others," is also sufficient to give notice that possession is dealt with. But, it is urged, these words apply only to licensees, the one group of persons specifically mentioned. Appellant thus invokes the familiar maxim that to expressly name one class is to exclude all others. The principle was fully discussed in Sugar NotchBorough,
The real purpose of section 3, of article III, must be considered in answering the question raised by appellant. The provision was not intended to exercise a pedantic tyranny over the grammatical efforts of legislators, nor to place them between the horns of a constructional dilemma, namely, that the title of an act must be so general or so particularized as to include all of its subject-matter, and yet not so general as to give no indication of its purpose, nor so particular as to inferentially exclude from its scope any items inadvertently omitted. As stated in Soldiers and Saliors Memorial Bridge,
The title of the act before us indicates two cognate legislative objects; first, to regulate and restrain the sale, importation and use of certain alcoholic beverages and to impose penalties for practices or transactions prohibited by the regulations; second, to create as a means of carrying out and enforcing the regulatory provisions, the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board and the State Store system. The title of the act comprehends a complete system for liquor control within the Commonwealth. It need not be an index of the provisions, nor a synopsis of the contents: Commonwealth v. Liveright,
Has the legislature then power, under article I, section 1, of the Constitution, to make punishable the possession of liquor not acquired prior to January 1, 1934, nor purchased from a State Liquor Store? That constitutional section provides: "All men are born equally free and independent, and have certain inherent and indefeasible rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring, possessing and protecting property and reputation, and of pursuing their own happiness."
But, the State possesses inherently a broad police power which transcends all other powers of government. There is therefore no unqualified right to acquire, possess, and enjoy property if the exercise of the right is inimical to the fundamental precepts underlying the police power. This court said in Commonwealth v. Widovich,
This State has adopted many acts aimed at the beneficial supervision of the traffic in intoxicating liquors. The Brooks High License Law of May, 1887, P. L. 108, restricted the trade in such liquors to licensed persons, and established certain rules for its conduct. Among the objections made to the Brooks Law was that regulation was thereby taken out of the defined scope of the police power, in that the State by creating agencies for the sale of intoxicating liquors promoted rather than repressed a public evil. We dismissed this contention inCommonwealth v. Vigliotti, supra. See also Raudenbusch'sAppeal,
The Liquor Control Act is stated by the legislature to be ". . . an exercise of the police power of the Commonwealth for the protection of the public welfare, health, peace and morals of the people of the Commonwealth, *Page 521
and to prohibit forever the open saloon; . . ." While that body may so express its object, the courts will examine the act3 to determine whether there is a real relation of the subject-matter to that purpose. As thus examined its provisions are in entire accord with the police power of the State as it has been defined by our decisions. The act provides an effective barrier to many evils affecting the public welfare. It cannot now be seriously argued that the State may not determine what liquors shall be sold to the public, and prevent the sale of those which it determines are illicit concoctions definitely injurious to health: Purity Extract Co. v. Lynch,
But appellant contends that the State has no power to make the mere possession of liquor punishable because *Page 522
such use is harmful to no one, and because the real purpose of the act is to create a state monopoly in the sale of liquor. We have never decided the question whether the bare possession of liquor can be made punishable, although the Snyder Act of March 27, 1923, P. L. 34, so provided. Statutes in other jurisdictions were enacted with this object prior to the Eighteenth Amendment. As to the validity of these acts there was a difference of opinion in the courts of those other states having constitutional guarantees similar to those of Pennsylvania. The tendency of the earlier decisions, which has persisted in several jurisdictions, was to regard such enactments as violative of the inherent right of citizens to be protected in their possession of private property. It was held that the mere possession of liquor, without more, was in no way injurious to the public at large, and could not, therefore, afford justification for the exercise of the police power. To this effect: Re Luera, 28 Calif. App. 185; Ex parte Francis,
A contrary view prevails in the majority of jurisdictions, including the federal courts. It was pointed out in UnitedStates v. Murphy, 264 Fed. 842, citing Purity Extract Co. v.Lynch, supra, that a transaction which is innocuous, if considered separately, may nevertheless be included in the scope of a general prohibitory measure designed to accomplish a purpose well within an admitted governmental power. The evil here does not lie in the mere possession of liquor but in the potentialities for improper use which inhere to such possession. See Massey v. United States, 281 Fed. 293. And, inCrane v. Campbell,
These decisions are based upon the premise that possession is the first essential towards barter and sale, and is in aid of illicit traffic: Rose v. United States, 274 Fed. 245; Page v.United States, 278 Fed. 41. While they would not be controlling, they aid in our determination. Following the rule of the majority of states for the reasons given, we hold that the legislature has the power to prohibit the mere possession of intoxicating liquor as a means of assisting the enforcement of its regulatory measures.4
A sufficient answer to the objection raised here and in the following question is found in the regulation of the act prohibiting sales of liquor to minors, which is of great importance in such traffic. If they may possess liquors purchased outside of Pennsylvania, acquired from others who have or have not so purchased, or made at home, then the very evil this statute intended to prevent, and the abolition of which is absolutely necessary to our social life, is permitted to flourish.
The next question is, may the State, even though it can prohibit possession of all liquor, limit the prohibition to liquor not purchased from the State Stores or obtained prior to their creation, or is this distinction invalid as arbitrary discrimination?
The same protest of discrimination was heard against the earlier licensing system. See Eberle v. Michigan, supra; Statev. Chastian, supra. The preferment of the State Stores is essential to the efficient control of the liquor traffic in Pennsylvania. If the legislature did not strike at unauthorized distributors, and those who patronize them, the entire purpose of the act would be defeated. *Page 524 It cannot be successfully urged that section 602 (b) is not in furtherance of that general purpose.
The State has the power to enact such laws since the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution. The Twenty-first Amendment expressly reserves to the states the power to regulate the use or importation of liquors within their jurisdictions. It is an incident of the powers originally belonging to the states and reserved to them by the Tenth Amendment to the federal Constitution: United States v. Lanza,
Order affirmed.
The title of the act is as follows: "To regulate and restrain the sale, importation, and use of certain alcoholic beverages, conferring powers and imposing duties upon the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, the Department of Public Instruction, other officers of the State government, courts, and district attorneys; authorizing the establishment and operation of State stores for the sale of such beverages not for consumption on the premises, and the granting of licenses, subject to local option, to sell such beverages for consumption on the premises; forbidding importation or bringing of such beverages into the State except as herein provided; prohibiting certain sales or practices in, connections with, and transactions in such beverages by licensees and others; making disposition of the receipts from State stores and of license fees; and imposing penalties."
The first case decided construing this section was Blood v.Mercelliott,
Investor's Realty Co. v. Harrisburg , 281 Pa. 200 ( 1924 )
Guppy v. Moltrup , 281 Pa. 343 ( 1924 )
Reeves v. Philadelphia Suburban Water Co. , 287 Pa. 376 ( 1926 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. White v. Miller , 313 Pa. 140 ( 1933 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. MacElwee , 294 Pa. 569 ( 1928 )
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Bridge , 308 Pa. 487 ( 1932 )
Vance v. W. A. Vandercook Co. , 18 S. Ct. 674 ( 1898 )
New York Ex Rel. Silz v. Hesterberg , 29 S. Ct. 10 ( 1908 )
State v. Bradley , 109 S.C. 411 ( 1918 )
Phillips's Estate , 295 Pa. 349 ( 1928 )
Commonwealth v. Widovich , 295 Pa. 311 ( 1928 )
Specktor v. Hanover Fire Ins. Co. , 295 Pa. 390 ( 1929 )
Boocks's Petition , 303 Pa. 363 ( 1931 )
Com. v. West Philadelphia Fidelio Mannerchor , 115 Pa. Super. 241 ( 1934 )
Purity Extract & Tonic Co. v. Lynch , 33 S. Ct. 44 ( 1912 )
Eberle v. Michigan , 34 S. Ct. 464 ( 1914 )
Ex Parte Wilson , 6 Okla. Crim. 451 ( 1911 )
Bartemeyer v. Iowa , 21 L. Ed. 929 ( 1874 )
Commonwealth v. Gardner , 297 Pa. 498 ( 1929 )
Teachers' Tenure Act Cases , 329 Pa. 213 ( 1938 )
Dornan v. Philadelphia Housing Authority , 331 Pa. 209 ( 1938 )
Breinig v. Allegheny County , 332 Pa. 474 ( 1938 )
Hadley's Case , 336 Pa. 100 ( 1939 )
United Retail Employees of America, Local No. 134 v. W. T. ... , 341 Pa. 70 ( 1940 )
Brennan v. Pittston Brewing Corp. , 344 Pa. 495 ( 1942 )
CAVANAUGH v. GELDER , 364 Pa. 361 ( 1950 )
Harrisburg v. Pass , 372 Pa. 318 ( 1953 )
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Woodside v. Sun Ray Drug Co. , 383 Pa. 1 ( 1955 )
County of Allegheny v. Commonwealth , 507 Pa. 360 ( 1985 )
Replogle v. COM., PA. LIQUOR CONT. BD. , 514 Pa. 209 ( 1987 )
Harr, SEC. of Bkg. v. Boucher , 142 Pa. Super. 114 ( 1940 )
Kensington Club Liquor License Case , 164 Pa. Super. 401 ( 1948 )
Pine Grove Hose, Hook & Ladder Co. No. 1 Liquor License Case , 167 Pa. Super. 194 ( 1950 )
Commonwealth v. Knox , 172 Pa. Super. 510 ( 1953 )
Commonwealth v. Stone , 191 Pa. Super. 117 ( 1959 )
Commonwealth v. Leswing , 135 Pa. Super. 485 ( 1939 )
Black v. Liquor Control Commission , 323 Mich. 290 ( 1948 )
Stabs v. City of Tower , 229 Minn. 552 ( 1949 )