Commonwealth v. Briggs

34 Pa. D. & C. 97, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 217
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedDecember 2, 1938
Docketno. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Pa. D. & C. 97 (Commonwealth v. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Briggs, 34 Pa. D. & C. 97, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 217 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Kun, J.,

Defendant appealed from his conviction by a magistrate for violation of the Act of July 2,1937, P. L. 2821, which makes it unlawful for any person to advertise or hold out by any means that any sale of goods, wares, and merchandise is a “closing out” sale unless a license is first obtained from the city treasurer to conduct such a sale.

Under the terms of the act, an applicant for a license thereunder must disclose under oath the true name of the owner of the goods to be offered for sale, the name of the operator of the sale, a full and complete inventory of the quantity, kind, and character of the goods to be offered for sale, the method by which the owner of the goods acquired title to the same, and the reason for the urgent disposal thereof. A penalty of $100 fine, or 30 days’ imprisonment, is imposed upon any person conducting or being responsible for any such sale, who makes or who is responsible for any misrepresentation in connection with the goods so offered for sale.

On May 7,1938, defendant, Henry J. Briggs, as treasurer of Blaylock & Blynn, Inc., applied to the city treas[99]*99urer, under the act, for a license to conduct a “going out of business” sale at 1702 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. The license granted was subsequently revoked by the city treasurer, and because defendant continued ostensibly for the corporation to conduct the “going out of business” sale after such revocation, this prosecution was instituted against him for conducting such a sale without a license.

In the meantime, Blaylock & Blynn, Inc., filed a bill in equity in Court of Common Pleas No. 6, June term, 1938, no. 2648, against the city treasurer and other officials seeking to enjoin them from in any way interfering with the conduct of the sale, and from seizing the license or revoking the same. The matter was heard by Judge Lamberton, of Court of Common Pleas No. 5, sitting in summer court on July 22, 1938, and in consideration of the fact that the license which had been issued would by its terms expire on August 10th, so that the question involved thereafter would be moot, he refused to issue a preliminary injunction against the city treasurer and other defendants, and while making the casual comment that he thought the act in question is unconstitutional, added that “probably the best way to test the constitutionality of the act would be by an appeal from a fine imposed under section 4 thereof.” It is precisely in that way that the matter is before us now.

We are well satisfied that the act is a piece of salutary legislation and it is constitutional.

“The prevention of fraud and deceit, cheating and imposition, is . . . within the [police] power, and a state may prescribe all such regulations as, in its judgment, will secure or tend to secure the people against the consequences of fraud”: 6 R. C. L. 208, sec. 202.

We heartily approve the statement of Mr. Justice Knight of the Supreme Court of Alabama in the recent case of State v. Kartus, 230 Ala. 352, 355, 162 So. 533, upholding a similar act:

[100]*100“It is not a violation of either the Federal or State Constitution [and it would not be of our State Constitution] to prohibit a person from misrepresenting what he has to sell in order to impose upon purchasers, even if the subject of the sale is an article just as good as the one it is represented to be”; and we adopt the further comment of the learned justice as applying to the matter before us, to wit:
• “The prohibition or regulation Touches no honest man or honest act, but merely restrains the practice of fraud in order to protect purchasers who buy on the strength of representations made and are entitled to what they pay for’.”

Other cases upholding this type of legislation are In re West, 75 Cal. App. 591, 243 Pac. 55, Shelnutt v. City Council of Augusta, 163 Ga. 502, 136 S. E. 446, State ex rel. v. Mizell, etc., 106 Fla. 65, 142 So. 824, and People ex rel. v. Jenkins, etc., 202 N. Y. 53, 94 N. E. 1065.

As stated in our own case of Commonwealth v. Everett et al.., 111 Pa. Superior Ct. 302, sustaining the validity of an act of assembly requiring a registration certificate from the department of welfare for anyone undertaking to solicit funds for charitable, religious, and other purposes :

“The State [by the 14th Amendment] may not arbitrarily interfere with private businesses or prohibit lawful occupations or impose unreasonable restrictions upon them. This does not prevent a state from exercising its police power in an endeavor to protect its citizens from imposition and fraud.”

Defendant has raised the further objection that the Act of 1937, supra, is a local and special law, in violation of article III, sec. 7, of the State Constitution, because by its terms it applies only to “cities of this Commonwealth and in boroughs having a population of more than two thousand five hundred inhabitants”. The argument is made that because the act does not apply to a borough [101]*101having a population of 2,500 inhabitants, but applies to one having a population of 2,501 inhabitants, it is on that account unconstitutional. An apt answer to that contention is found in the language of Mr. Justice Mitchell in Commonwealth v. Moir, 199 Pa. 534, 545, answering a similar contention against the validity of the Act of March 7, 1901, P. L. 20, known as the ripper bill, being “An act for the government of cities of the second class”, as follows:

“No argument, for example, could be more plausible than that there is no real difference in municipal needs, between a city of 99,000 and one of 100,000 population. It is a sufficient answer that the line must be drawn somewhere, and the legislature must determine where.”

The learned justice goes on to say that so long as the legislation is not drawn with reference to irrelevant or wholly local matters, the courts have no authority to interfere. The courts recognize that classification is ofttimes necessary to escape from the intolerable inconveniences of uniformity of regulations under circumstances and needs essentially different: Wheeler et al. v. Philadelphia et al., 77 Pa. 338.

The legislature, in passing the act under consideration, had a reasonable basis for considering that the evils sought to be corrected could hardly exist in small boroughs of less than 2,500 inhabitants. There is little opportunity for the perpetration on a gullible public of such frauds which the act seeks to minimize, in small communities in which people are more or less known to each other, and where there is the daily opportunity for the people therein to observe what is going on. No merchant in such a small place could conduct a so-called “going out of business” sale, and during its progress have new merchandise delivered to him for stacking up his shelves, without being readily detected by his fellow-townsmen.

It was entirely proper for the legislature not to burden business people in such small places with the cost of li[102]*102censes for such sales, or put additional burdens upon the administrative officers of such small places with the duties incident thereto. The evils intended to be cured by the act under consideration are naturally to be found in more populous centers where there is greater opportunity for unscrupulous competition with little opportunity on the part of the public to detect it.

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Related

State v. Kartus
162 So. 533 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1935)
In Re West
243 P. 55 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)
People Ex Rel. Moskowitz v. . Jenkins
94 N.E. 1065 (New York Court of Appeals, 1911)
Com. of Pa. v. Everett
170 A. 720 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Shelnutt v. City Council of Augusta
136 S.E. 446 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1927)
Wheeler v. Philadelphia
77 Pa. 338 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1875)
City of Wilkes-Barre v. Meyers
6 A. 110 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
Perkins v. Philadelphia
27 A. 356 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1893)
Bennett v. Norton
32 A. 1112 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1895)
Seabolt v. Commissioners of Northumberland County
41 A. 22 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)
Commonwealth v. Gilligan
46 A. 124 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1900)
Commonwealth v. Moir
49 A. 351 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1901)
Commonwealth v. Middleton
60 A. 297 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1905)
Commonwealth v. Heller
67 A. 925 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1907)
Pittsburg's Petition
32 Pa. Super. 210 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. D. & C. 97, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-briggs-paqtrsessphilad-1938.