Commonwealth v. Alderman

119 A. 551, 275 Pa. 483, 1923 Pa. LEXIS 680
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1923
DocketAppeal, No. 157
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 119 A. 551 (Commonwealth v. Alderman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Alderman, 119 A. 551, 275 Pa. 483, 1923 Pa. LEXIS 680 (Pa. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Chief Justice Moschziskee,

Defendant was sentenced, on conviction of possessing and transporting intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes, contrary to the Act of May 5, 1921, P. L. 407, known as the Woner Act1; section 20 of this statute, covering the offenses charged, provides that “Any person who shall......transport......or possess any intoxicating liquor within the State for beverage purposes [except as specially allowed] shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”

The licensing features of the Woner Act are not here involved; their constitutionality was upheld in effect by Commonwealth v. Vigliotti, 271 Pa. 10, affirmed by the federal Supreme Court in Vigliotti v. Com., 42 Sup. Ct. (U. S.) R. 330, issue of May 15, 1922.

The principal contentions now before us are that the Constitution of Pennsylvania is breached by the present [486]*486statute (1) attempting to delegate, to the national government, law-making power vested solely in our legislature (article II, section 1, Pa. Const.), and (2) endeavoring to write into the code of this State part of a federal statute, known as the Volstead Act, in violation of article III, section 6, of our Constitution, which reads as follows : “No law shall be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred, by reference to its title only, but so much thereof as is revived, amended, extended or conferred shall be reenacted and published at length.” These attacks were dismissed by both the lower tribunal and the Superior Court; hence this appeal.

The particular part of the Woner Act appellant claims to be unconstitutional, in the above-mentioned respects, is section 1, which provides that the “vinous, spirituous, malt or brewed liquors,” dealt with in the statute, shall , mean all such liquors “fit for beverage purposes, other j than such as are, from time to time, determined and \found to be intoxicating by act of Congress passed pursuant to, and in the enforcement of, the Constitution of ;he United States,” and that the phrase “intoxicating liquors” shall mean “anything found and determined, (from time to time, to be intoxicating by act of Congress passed pursuant to, and in the enforcement of, the Constitution of the United States.”

The above-quoted statutory provisions do not present a delegation of legislative power contrary to the Constitution of Pennsylvania but simply an acceptance by our legislature of the inevitable, an acknowledgment of that which the federal Supreme Court, interpreting the 18th Amendment (National Prohibition Cases, infra), has pronounced the law of the land, “operative throughout the entire territorial limits of the United States,” and “binding all legislative bodies, courts, public officers and individuals within those limits,” — this interpretation being “in no sense dependent on, or affected by, action or inaction on the part of the several states or any of them”: National Prohibition Cases, 253 U. S. 350, 386, 387; see [487]*487also Com. v. Nickerson, 236 Mass. 281, 292-6, 128 N. E. 273, 277-9. Had the provisions now questioned been left out of the Woner Act, that statute, to be valid legislation, would have to be read and construed as though they were there: Com. v. Vigliotti, supra, 14; Vigliotti v. Com., supra. Knisely v. Cotterel, 196 Pa. 614, 635, holds that “No act can be rendered unconstitutional by a section which makes no change whatever in the law as it was before and which might have been omitted without any effect whatever”; this principle is applicable to the instant case and governs it.

While on the subject of the Woner Act representing a delegation of legislative power, it may be added, there is force in appellee’s position that the parts of the statute alleged to be thus faulty should be viewed as merely designating a definite source of information, or standard, for the ascertainment of a fact essential to the application of the law. That such course is permissible was decided by us in Locke’s App., 72 Pa. 491, 495, 498; but appellant objects that the criterion for finding the fact in question may be changed by Congress from time to time, and contends that the express contemplation of this possibility by the statute before us manifests a plain purpose to delegate legislative power. Even were the contention just stated viewed with favor (which we are not convinced it should be), still this court would be obliged to hold that appellant cannot raise the suggested objection; for no one is entitled to be heard on a constitutional point which does not prejudicially affect1 him in the case under review: Mesta Machine Co. v. Dunbar Furnace Co., 250 Pa. 472, 476. To date, there has been but one piece of national legislation on the subject in hand — the Yolstead Act, and this was passed prior to the present indictment1; appellant, not being harmed by any change in the law since its first pronouncement, cannot complain on that score.

As to defendant’s second contention, consideration will show that the Woner Act, under the circumstances here [488]*488involved, does not exhibit a forbidden mode of writing legislation from another jurisdiction into the statutory law of this State. The restrictions of the Pennsylvania Constitution, relied on to sustain appellant’s argument to the contrary, were never intended to provide for a situation like that created by the grant of concurrent power in the 18th Amendment, which has been construed by our highest judicial authority to give Congress paramount power to legislate for the enforcement, of prohibition, at least to the extent that’ state legislatures, and all others, must accept the interpretation which the national law-making body, acting within its constitutional rights, may put upon this branch of the fundamental law; and the interpretation placed thereon by the Volstead Act, so far as the meaning of “intoxicating liquors” is concerned, has been affirmed by the federal Supreme Court as a valid exercise of this power: National Prohibition Cases, supra; Ruppert v. Caffey, 251 U. S. 264, 299.

When considering the subject1 of legal restrictions on methods of legislative expression, in Greenfield Avenue Case, 191 Pa. 290, 295, 296, we said that, “Ordinarily, the power to do any act includes the power to determine the method of doing it,” adding that “a constitutional provision, intended t'o operate as a restraint on the legislature with respect" to the language and forms of expression to be used in framing [statutes]......is not to be so construed as to embrace cases not fairly within its general purposes or policy, or the evils which it was intended to correct”; and the situation at bar is certainly not “fairly within” the scope of the evils sought to be guarded against by the constitutional provisions cited above. That is to say, the concurrent power created by the 18th Amendment' represents such a radical change of, and is so novel to our governmental system (Com. v. Nickerson, 236 Mass. 281, 291, 128 N. E. 273, 277), it cannot reasonably be looked upon as in any sense anticipated by our Constitution. We are not unmindful of the [489]*489rule that the organic law is presumed to be made with an eye to the future (Cochranton T. Co. v. P. S. C., 263 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
119 A. 551, 275 Pa. 483, 1923 Pa. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-alderman-pa-1923.