City Council of Charleston v. Wentworth Street Baptist Church

35 S.C.L. 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 35 S.C.L. 306 (City Council of Charleston v. Wentworth Street Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Council of Charleston v. Wentworth Street Baptist Church, 35 S.C.L. 306 (S.C. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Curia, per Frost, J.

The appeal calls in question the validity of the Ordinance of the City Council which imposes, the penalty sued for, on two grounds. First, that the ordinance is unconstitutional — and, secondly, that in its provisions, the City Council exceded the power granted to them by the charter.

The constitutional objection has not been made in the argument; and, in the opinion of court, is untenable.

The first section of the Ordinance prohibits any person or persons, body politic or corporate, to establish any place or places for the burial of the dead, except.such as are already established for such purposes, under a penalty of five thousand dollars. Under this section the action is brought.

The ,second section prohibits the burial of the dead in any other burial ground or place, within the limits of the City, except such as are already set apart and devoted to such purposes.

The charter of the city vests in the City Council, “full power and authority, from time to time, under their common seal, to make and establish such bye-laws, rules and ordinances respecting the harbor, streets, lanes, public buildings, work-houses, markets, wharves, public houses, carriages, wagons, carts, drays, pumps, buckets, fire engines, the care of the poor, the regulation of seamen or disorderly people, negroes, and in general, every other bye-law or regulation that , shall appear to them requisite and necessary for the security, welfare and convenience of the city, or for preserving peace, order and good government within the same.”

The rules for the construction of the words, parts and clauses of Statutes, are so general that they do not carry any great weight of authority in their application to any particular case. But this remark is not true, or at least not to the same extent, in the application of these rules to different classes of Statutes, as public and private, penal and remedial, such as relate to matters of mere administrative regulation, and such as are designed to effect some purpose of great public convenience. A statute made pro bono publico, shall be construed in such manner that it may, as far as possible, attain the end proposed. Accordingly, the New River Water Act was held, although only the City of London is mentioned, to extend to places adjacent, because it is said, all statutes made for the convenience of the public ought to have a liberal construction — to be expounded largely and not with restrictions. The Statute 23 Hy. 8, c. 10, enacted that “all conveyances to the use of parish churches, guilds and companies, erected out of devotion, &c. and all other like uses and intents,” should be void; and the question was whether a devise, on condition to found a free school, and for the sustenance of certain poor men and women., was against the [308]*308Statute. And it was adjudged the Statute did not extend to the devise. In the Magdalen College case, though it was admitted that, by the general rule of construction, if the ]£¿ng }-,e not iiame(j jn a Statute, he shall be exempted from it, because the law gives the King this prerogative and dignity, that he is not included in the common words “ person or Persons) bodies politic or corporate,” yet it was unanimously resolved, that general statutes which provide for the maintenance of religion, the advancement of learning and the relief of the poor, shall be extended generally, according to their words, and include the King. Lord Coke refers to the decision in Porter’s case, as shewing that, by construction of law, lands conveyed for the advancement of learning and maintenance of the poor, have been preserved and maintained, against the general'words of the Statute; and he adds, it is the office of the Judges to make such a construction's will redress the mischief and advance the remedy; and to suppress all evasions which may be made, in order to continue the mischief; that the law will never, by any construction, advance a private interest to the destruction of a public; but, on the contrary, will advance the public interest as far as it is possible, though it be to the prejudice of a private one.

It cannot be disputed that the Act incorporating the City of Charleston is an Act pro bono publico, and may claim the liberal construction applied to such statutes; so that the public welfare and convenience shall not, if they can be maintained without violating the plain meaning of the statute, be surrendered to a private interest. By the application of this rule, it is to be determined whether the City Council has the power to prohibit the establishment of other burial places within the limits of the city, than such as the City Council may authorize and appoint; and forbid the burial of the dead in any other than the burial places which may be established by its authority.

In all ages, and among all people, the burial of the dead has been the subject of religious and public care, that it should be done with due respect and in a manner not offensive to survivors. The funeral rights of the Egyptians were ordered by the priests. In Greece they were, in some measure, the care of Government. In Rome, by the law of the twelve tables, it was ordered “ hominem mortuum in urbe ne sepelito neve vicinitate." All nations, the most refined and the most barbarous, in all times, have manifested a sedulous care and attention to the rites of sepulture. Reverence for the dead, decency, public health, comfort and convenience, are all concerned in the proper regulation of burial. The evils resulting from its neglect are, principally, to be apprehended in the crowded population of cities, and it, therefore, most properly pertains to municipal government. In the preamble [309]*309of the Act incorporating the city, the Legislature declared, (when the city was inconsiderable, compared with its present extent) “ that it had been found impracticable, and, probably, would become thereafter more so, for them to devise, consider, deliberate on, and determine all such laws and tions as emergencies, or the local circumstances of the city may, from time to time, require,” and thus relinquished to the municipal authorities of the city, their power of legislation in all those matters that concerned its order, convenience and welfare, which they conceived they were not qualified to exercise.

When power is conferred on the City Council to pass every bye-law or regulation that shall appear to them requisite and necessary for the security, welfare and convenience of the city, can it be the proper construction of the Act to except, from this large and undefined ground, the authority to regulate the burial of the dead? This authority is expressed in the very terms of the grant.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.C.L. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-council-of-charleston-v-wentworth-street-baptist-church-scctapp-1850.