Comer v. State

29 S.E. 501, 103 Ga. 69, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 26, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 501 (Comer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comer v. State, 29 S.E. 501, 103 Ga. 69, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 358 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Lumpkin, P. J.

On December 20,1893, the.General Assembly passed “ an act for the protection of union labels, trade-marks .and form of advertisement, and providing penalties for counterfeiting the same.” Acts 1893, 'p. 134. The provisions of ■sections 1, 2 and 5 of this statute, in so far as they render certain acts indictable, are incorporated almost' literally in sec-lions 252, 253/ánd 254 of the present Penal Code. It is certain that, in codifying these sections of the act, no material change in their terms was made. In other words, the language em[70]*70ployed in the code sections is substantially the same as that employed in the statute, and it is clear that no change of meaning can have resulted from the process of codification. The title to the act does not appear in the code. Dealing with the code sections as they now stand, this court is called upon to determine whether or not they have any application to labels, trademarks or forms of advertisement other than those adopted by associations or unions of workingmen. The question thus presented arose in the following manner: An accusation against D. B. Comer, tried in the criminal branch of the city court of Atlanta, in several counts charged him with certain violations of the above-mentioned sections of the code, in that he made counterfeits of a genuine label of the Carter Medicine Company, and used the same for the purpose of selling certain bottles of pills to which the counterfeit labels were attached, and also used a counterfeit of the genuine label of this medicine company,'knowing the same to be a counterfeit. It was not alleged in the indictment that the Carter Medicine Company was an association or union of workingmen, or that any person connected with this company had any connection with any such union or association. The accused demurred to the accusation, on the ground that it contained no sufficient charge of any violation of the criminal laws of this State, the demurrer being predicated upon the proposition that the code sections referred to, and upon which the accusation was unquestionably founded, were not intended to prohibit “the use of counterfeits or imitations of the labels, trade-marks, or forms of advertisement of any person, association or union other than a person, association, or union representing, connected with, or comprising a labor union.” The demurrer was overruled, and the accused excepted. The ruling of the trial judge was manifestly made upon the idea that the doing of the several acts alleged against Comer constituted indictable offenses, though the Carter Medicine Company was not a labor association or union of any kind. The court below necessarily held that these sections of the code protected any kind of a company using labels etc. in its business.

We have, after careful deliberation, reached a contrary con[71]*71elusion. As we understand it, the duty, devolves upon us of ascertaining and announcing the true intent and meaning of these code sections with reference to the question above indicated. We wish to state distinctly that we are not now undertaking to deal with the question which would be presented if the terms of these sections varied materially from those used ill the act from which they were codified. That is to say, we are not now endeavoring to construe that portion of the act of December 16, 1895, which declares that the code of laws prepared under the authority of the General Assembly by the codifiers therein named “ is hereby adopted and made of force as the Code of Georgia;” or determine what result would follow if in any instance it should hereafter be shown that the codifiers have used language manifestly having a different meaning from that contained in a statute which they were seeking to incorporate into the code. We wish also to explicitly state in this connection that we are not now attempting to pass upon the question whether or not legislative provisions, unconstitutional because embraced in the body of an act and not referred to in its title, would, after insertion in the code, become constitutional because of its adoption in the manner above stated. The questions just referred to are important and far-reaching; and as they do not, in our opinion, really arise in the present case, we forbear expressing any opinion concerning them. We now undertake simply to interpret the meaning of the code sections as they stand. To this end, we entertain no doubt whatever that it is legitimate and proper to examine and consider, not only the body of the original act, but its title also. Such a course we know with certainty has, by this court, from the time of its organization down to the present date, been pursued times without number in seeking to ascertain the meaning of statutes subsequently incorporated, either literally or substantially, in the various codes. We often turn to Cobb’s Digest, to digests antedating it, and to pamphlets of the laws, and examine-not only acts but also their titles, with a view to ascertaining the true meaning of language found in the code. The correctness of this assertion is too well known to admit of any doubt or question.

[72]*72A reading of the title of the act of 1893 now under consideration leads most strongly to the conclusion that the General Assembly did not contemplate the protection of labels, trademarks or forms of advertisement, which might be adopted by any and all persons or corporations, but those exclusively of associations or unions of workingmen. This seems obvious, for there is absolutely nothing in this title even remotely suggesting any purpose of protecting labels, trade-marks or forms of advertisement, other than those to which the word “union” could properly be applied. The body of the act is upon the same line, and contains nothing whatever to indicate a legislative intention of covering broader ground than that expressed in the title, except that the words “ any person” and the wmrds “such person” are introduced into those portions of the act which undertake to declare whose labels, trade-mai'ks, etc., shall not be counterfeited or used. Without setting forth the entire act, a copy of its first section will show how and in what connection the .words above quoted are therein used, and this will be sufficient to an understanding of the following discussion. That section reads thus : “ Whenever any person, association, or union of workingmen have adopted, or shall hereafter adopt for their protection, any label, trade-mark or form of advertisement announcing that goods to which such label, trademark, and forms of advertisement shall be attached were manufactured by such person or by a member or members of such association or union, it shall be unlawful for any person or corporation to counterfeit or imitate such label, trade-mark or form of advertisement with intent to use the same for the purpose of deceiving the public in the sale of the goods. Every person violating this section shall be punished upon conviction by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than two hundred dollars.”

Since, under the constitution, the title of the act operated to restrict the General Assembly to providing in the body of the act for the protection of union labels, trade-marks and forms of advertisement, it is not to be presumed that the General Assembly intended to do more; for there is no good reason for ascribing to the legislature a deliberate purpose to violate the [73]*73organic law of the State. The fact that it could not constitutionally give the'act a more extended scope than that indicated by the title, affords, we think, material aid in arriving at the real legislative intention.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 501, 103 Ga. 69, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comer-v-state-ga-1897.