City of Jackson v. Mitchell
This text of 100 So. 513 (City of Jackson v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
By chapter 194, Laws of 1918 (sections 4884a to 4884f, Hemingway’s Supplement 1921), the legislature provided for the punishment of any person afflicted with syphilis or any other venereal disease who, knowing of such condition, shall have sexual intercourse with any other person, and by section 2 of said act gave the state board of health full power to isolate, quarantine, or otherwise confine, intern, and treat such person afflicted with such infectious venereal disease for such time and under such restrictions as may seem proper, and to pass all such rules and regulations as to the isolation, quarantine, confinement, internment, and treatment as may be needful. Section 3 of said act provides that any person suspected of being afflicted with any such infectious venereal disease shall be subject to physical examination and inspection by any representative of the state board of health, and, for failure or refusal to allow such inspection or examination, such person may be punished as for a misdemeanor.. Section 4 of said act provides that any person knowingly violating any rule or regulation promulgated by the state board of health, under the authority of this act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be punished by fine or imprisonment or both.
An affidavit was made against the appellant, Pearl Mitchell, before the city clerk of the city of Jackson, which as finally amended provided after the formal parts:
if,Dr. Hardy Hays then and there being an officer of the board of health, in the proper performance of his [771]*771duties as such officer, ‘did then and there have information on which he suspected the defendant Pearl Mitchell of being afflicted with a contagious venereal disease, did then and there summon said defendant Pearl Mitchell to appear before him as such officer of the board of health to be by him examined, and the said Pearl Mitchell did then and there willfully and unlawfully fail and refuse to appear for such examination.”
The defendant was convicted in the city court and took an appeal to the circuit court, where a demurrer was filed to the affidavit on the grounds:
(1) That “the affidavit charges no violation of the laws of the state of Mississippi, or ordinance of the city of Jackson, Mississippi;” (2) “that the only statute which would permit of a prosecution against her for failure to submit to an examination for veneral disease is House Bill No. 568, of the Acts of the Mississippi legislature of 1918, which said statute is void because violative of the Constitution of the state of Mississippi;” and. (3) that section 3 of the above act referred to violates sections 14, 23, and 26 of the' state Constitution, and that the act “is void in that it is too broad and uncertain in its terms and that it is too general and too sweeping and provides for the deprivation of innocent citizens of their liberty without process of law and without their being given opportunity to defend themselves.”
The demurrer was sustained and appeal prosecuted by the city of Jackson.
The constitutionality of the act is elaborately argued in the brief, but we think the action of the court below must be upheld because if the section be valid the affidavit is insufficient to charge a violation of the statute. It will be noted from a reading of the affidavit that it sets forth no rule or regulation of the state board of health requiring the appearance of the suspected person before the health officer at his office, if indeed the board had such power to pass such regulation under the act, and as the statute does not require any person suspected of being so afflicted to appear at the office of the state board [772]*772of health or at any agent’s office for such examination, the statute is not necessarily violated by the refusal of the person to respond to such notice. The utmost that is required by section 3 of the statute of the person suspected under the terms of the act is to allow an inspection or physical examination by the member of the state board of health or its lawful agent. No enlargement of the statute can be placed upon it by construction for the reason that the statute is to be strictly construed, and nothing can .be taken by intendment or presumption against the defendant. The health officer cannot require, under the terms of the statute, such person to appear before him. He must go to the person and make demand upon the person at his place of business or residence. The affidavit does not allege that the affiant, Dr. Hays, went to the defendant and disclosed the ground of his opinion or suspicion and then and there demanded the right under the statute to make such examination or inspection. Again the affidavit does not disclose that Dr. Hays in fact had any information that would authorize him to suspect the defendant to be so infected, nor does it disclose, if it had such information, its source, character, or reliability. Certainly the statute cannot be construed to mean that mere suspicion founded on gossip or rumor would be sufficient. It is extremely doubtful as to whether the statute could be upheld if the information was not disclosed under oath by some credible person. A statute, to say the least of it, goes to the very limit of constitutional power in invading the liberty and privacy of the citizen. The statute provides, however, no means of hearing to the suspected person prior to submitting to the examination requested, and he is given no opportunity under the language of the statute to be heard. If the statute is valid, such hearing must be provided for. It is doubtful whether the provisions of section 2 of the statute are sufficiently specific to authorize the state board of health to provide such rules, but to uphold the statute such rules must be provided somewhere and the suspected person must be informed and given [773]*773an opportunity to be heard on the question before being required to submit to such a test.
It is familiar learning that the court will not pass upon the constitutionality of the statute unless it is necessary to do so in order to dispose of the case, and we think that the affidavit is insufficient to subject the citizen to the prosecution because it does not disclose a violation of the statute as written. The power of the state to protect the public health is very great, but all legislation looking to that end, in view of our constitutional provisions above set out, should be carefully framed so as to safeguard as far as possible the rights of the citizens and to prevent an invasion of the Bill of Bights in the Constitution. It is somewhat remarkable that, in dealing with so important a subject, and one which goes to the very limit of constitutional power, the legislature did not itself provide the procedure and safeguards necessary to secure the objects of the legislation. Of course in such questions as searching the persons or houses and the effects and possessions of the people, the probable cause is for judicial determination, and as the act here in question confers upon the board of health rule-making power equivalent in its effect to legislation it is doubtful whether the board of health can be both prosecutor and trier of the case.
The case of Wragg v. Griffin, Sheriff, 185 Iowa, 243, 170 N. W. 400, 2 A. L. R. 1327, and case note at page 1332, is an instructive case upon this question and the powers of the state with reference to health regulations were discussed in such way as to show the seriousness of the question sought to be raised here.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
100 So. 513, 135 Miss. 767, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-jackson-v-mitchell-miss-1924.