Arnreich v. State

132 A. 430, 150 Md. 91, 1926 Md. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 132 A. 430 (Arnreich v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnreich v. State, 132 A. 430, 150 Md. 91, 1926 Md. LEXIS 11 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Ferdinand M. Arnreich, George Weil and George H. Sloatfield were separately indicted and convicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City for the violation of section 12 of article 56, of the Annotated Code of 1924. This section provides:

“No person or corporation other than the grower, maker or manufacturer shall barter or sell or otherwise dispose of, or shall offer for sale any goods, chattels, *93 wares or merchandise within this State without first obtaining a license in the manner herein prescribed.”

Each of these parties was, in separate trials, adjudged guilty and sentenced to pay a line of one dollar and costs. From these judgments the respective defendants have prosecuted appeals to this Court. In this court, the three appellants being represented by tbe same counsel, their cases were argued together. In the lower court there was on behalf of each defendant a motion to quash the indictment filed, which being overruled, a demurrer was then filed, which also was overruled by tbe lower court; there was then filed on behalf of each defendant four special pleas in bar, to which said plea in bar the State demurred, which demurrer the lower court sustained. Whereupon the plea of not guilty was entered and upon this plea the trial proceeded and resulted as above stated.

The first contention of the appellants is that their motion to quash and demurrer to the indictments should have been sustained, for the reason that the indictments should have shown affirmatively on their face that the prosecution was with the approval of the 'Comptroller of the Treasury. This contention is based upon the language of chapter 138 of the Acts of 1924, now codified as section 7 of article 56 of the Code of 1924. This section, after providing! for the appointment by the Comptroller of the Treasury of a chief inspector of state licenses and three assistant inspectors of state licenses, provides:

“And the Comptroller of the Treasury is hereby authorized and empowered to superintend the issuance of all licenses by the clerks of the several courts of this State, and he is further empowered to investigate, through the said inspectors to be appointed under tbis section, the adequacy of all licenses applied for and issued by the clerks of the several courts of this State to the end that all persons, firms and corporations required to procure licenses under the laws of this State shall procure the same according to the laws thereof. *94 and the said inspectors, with the approval of the Comptroller of the Treasury, shall institute proceedings for the prosecution of all persons, firms or corporations failing to procure a license or a license for an adequate amount, said prosecution to he in accordance with Section 6 of this Article, and the Comptroller of the Treasury is hereby empowered to have general supervision over the license laws of this State. Provided, however, that any law or part of law under which the State Tax Commission has exercised or may exercise any authority similar to that conferred upon the State Comptroller by this section, be and it is hereby repealed to that extent, it being the purpose of this section to concentrate in the office of the State Comptroller the power to supervise the issuance of all licenses issued by the clerks of the several courts of this State, and that this power shall he exercised by no> other official.”

Section 6 of article 56 of the Code of 1924 provides:

“It shall be the duty of the sheriffs and constables of the several counties and Baltimore City, and the agents and inspectors of the State Tax Commission of Maryland to make diligent inquiry of all persons, firms and corporations doing business in this State, and apprehend and take before some Justice of the Peace, all persons, firms and corporations found doing business without a license, as may be required by law, to be committed or held to hail for appearance at the succeeding term of the Circuit Court for the county or Criminal Court of Baltimore City to answer the charge of selling goods without a license.”

And further provides for the penalty upon conviction.

Section T of article 56 was the re-enactment with amendments, by chapter 138 of the Acts of 1924, of chapter 516 of the Acts of 1922, and the only change made by the Act of 1924, chapter 138, was to empower the Comptroller of the Treasury to appoint four inspectors of state licenses, one to be designated as chief inspector' and the other three assist *95 ant inspectors, in the place of a single inspector, as provided hy the Act of 1922. Prior to the enactment of chapter 516 of the Acts of 1922, the State Tax Commission had authority to supervise the issuance of certain licenses, and the effect of the proviso in that act, also contained in the Acts of 1924, oh. 138, was to withdraw from the State Tax Commission the authority to exercise this supervision, and to concentrate it in the office of the Comptroller of the Treasury. It is true that the Acts of 1922, eh. 516, as well as section 1 of article 56 of the present Code, authorized the inspectors appointed hy the Comptroller to institute proceedings for the prosecution of all persons, firms or corporations failing to procure a license, or a license for an adequate amount, hut this provision does not repeal section 6 of article 56, which makes it the duty of the sheriffs and constables of the various counties and Baltimore City to apprehend and institute proceedings for the conviction of all persons who have failed to take out a license as required by law. In other words, the authority given to the license inspectors, with the approval of the Comptroller, is in addition to and not in lieu of the provisions of section 6 of article 56. This, we think, is the proper construction of the language used, and wa's evidently the legislative intent. To give it any other construction would be to' say that the Legislature, after declaring the failure to take out a license by all persons who by law were required to do so, was a misdemeanor and punishable by fine and imprisonment, meant that they could only be convicted, or proceedings leading to their conviction could only be instituted, by warrants sworn out by the inspectors of licenses with the approval of the Comptroller. It is clear that the Legislature could not have had such an intent, but loft the violation of this law to be punished by information furnished a’s in all other violations of law, and in addition thereto, made it the specific duty of all sheriffs and constables to apprehend violators of this law, and also imposed a similar duty on the inspectors of licenses with the approval of the Comptroller. We do not think that *96

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 430, 150 Md. 91, 1926 Md. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnreich-v-state-md-1926.