City of St. Joseph v. Levin

31 S.W. 101, 128 Mo. 588, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 101 (City of St. Joseph v. Levin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of St. Joseph v. Levin, 31 S.W. 101, 128 Mo. 588, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 55 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Burgess, J. —

The defendant was charged, in the police court of the city of St. Joseph, with violating sections 76 and 77 of general ordinance number 361, of said city, by failing and refusing to submit for the inspection of one T. J. Allie, a duly commissioned police officer of said city, the book required to be kept by him as a pawnbroker, for the purpose of registering and entering a minute description of any and all personal property, bonds, notes, or other securities received by him on deposit or purchase as such pawnbroker, as provided by section 76 of said general ordinance, he, the said Levin, being licensed as a pawnbroker in said city.

The trial resulted in his conviction by the police court and the imposition of a fine of $50. He then appealed to the criminal court of Buchanan county, and he was again tried and convicted and the same fine imposed. The case is now in this court on his appeal.

The sections of the ordinance referred to in the complaint and which were read in evidence at the trial over the objections of defendant are as follows:

.“Section 76. Pawnbrokers to heep boohs, etc.— Every person so licensed as aforesaid shall keep at his place of business a substantial and well bound book in which he shall enter in writing a minute description of all personal property, bonds, notes or other securities received on deposit or purchase as aforesaid, the time when they were so received, and particularly mentioning any prominent or description marks that may be on such property, bonds, notes, or other securities together with the name, residence of the person or persons by whom they were left, the amount of purchase money, [591]*591the amount loaned, the interest charged and the time when the loan falls due; which said book shall be kept clean and legible and no entry therein shall be defaced, erased, or obliterated, and all the entries therein shall be made with ink. He shall give to the person leaving the property in the pawn, a plainly written or printed ticket or receipt, showing the transaction. Every such licensed person failing to comply with any of the provisions of this section shall forfeit to said city the sum of $20.
See. 77. Every person so licensed as a pawnbroker shall, during the ordinary hours of business, when.requested by the mayor or any police officer of the city, submit and exhibit such book in the next preceding section provided for, to the inspection of the said mayor or any police officer, and shall also exhibit any goods, personal property, bonds, notes or other securities that may be so left with the licensed person, to the inspection of the mayor or police officer. Any and every such person who shall refuse to submit such book, goods, personal property, bonds, notes or other securities as aforesaid, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and, on conviction, shall be fined not less than $50.”

The evidence showed that defendant was a pawnbroker; that he refused to submit his book kept in connection with his business as such to one of the regular police officers of said city for examination on demand, and that he was guilty as charged in the complaint. The only questions, therefore, worthy of consideration are with respect to the sufficiency of the complaint, and the validity of the ordinance.

Defendant contends that the complaint is bad, in that it fails to state that he kept a book such as the officer requested to see, or that the officer was on duty, or an acting officer, at the time, or that defendant was [592]*592a pawnbroker. While it is conceded that a complaint for the violation of a city ordinance need not state the facts upon which it is founded with the same strictness required in an indictment, it is claimed that it should state all necessary facts to show defendant’s liability.

While the complaint does not directly allege that defendant kept the book required by the ordinance to be kept by him as a pawnbroker, the only inference to be drawn therefrom is that he did. In other words, such is the logical effect of the allegation, and when the complaint is accorded the same liberal construction to which similar papers in courts of inferior jurisdiction, such as justices of the peace and police courts are accorded, we are inclined to hold it to be sufficient. There is no merit in the other objections to the complaint, which are exceedingly technical.

A further contention is that the ordinance is unconstitutional and in conflict with the fifth amendment to the constitution of the United States, which provides that no person "shall be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against himself,” and with section 11, article 2, of the constitution of the state of Missouri, which provides: "That the people shall be secure in their persons, papers, homes and effects, from unreasonable searches and seizures; and no warrant to search any place, or seize any person or thing, shall issue without describing the place to be searched, or the person or thing to be seized, as nearly as may be; nor without probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation reduced to writing.”

That amendment has no application to this case, but was intended to act on the national government only, and was not intended to limit the powers of the states, in respect of their own people. It was so held by the supreme court of the United States in Spies v. Illinois, 123 U. S. 131; 116 U. S. 252.

[593]*593It has been repeatedly held that a person when testifying as a witness could not be required to answer questions incriminating himself, that is, connecting himself with the commission of any crime for which he might be criminally prosecuted. Boyd v. United States, 116 U. S. 616; Counselman v. Hitchcock, 142 U. S. 547.

So it was held in State ex rel. v. Simmons Hardware Co., 109 Mo. 118, which was a quo warranto proceeding at the relation of the attorney general, against the defendant, charging it with an unlawful exercise of its corporate franchises, that an act of the legislature, “for the punishment of pools, trusts and conspiracies; requiring some officer of every corporation to inform, under oath, the secretary of state (under penalty of fine, imprisonment, etc.) whether such company has violated said act,” was in conflict with the constitution.

There is, however, a clear distinction between the cases cited, and the one in hand. The ordinance is a mere police regulation which the city, by virtue of its charter powers, had the right to pass, to aid in the prevention and detection of larcenies of personal property which is frequently sold or pledged to pawnbrokers by thieves, and not for the purpose of preserving evidence to be used against any other person.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 101, 128 Mo. 588, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-st-joseph-v-levin-mo-1895.