Commonwealth v. Dietz

132 A. 572, 285 Pa. 511, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 480
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 26, 1926
DocketAppeal, 19
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 132 A. 572 (Commonwealth v. Dietz) 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. Dietz, 132 A. 572, 285 Pa. 511, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 480 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Defendants, Arthur M. Dietz and Jacob H. Dietz, have appealed from what is known as a “padlocking order,” of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, that certain property in the City of Pittsburgh shall not “be occupied or used for any purpose for one year” from the date of the decree, June, 1925.

*515 Arthur M. Dietz was the proprietor of and conducted a barroom on the premises in question, of which Jacob H. Dietz was the landlord; whiskey and other intoxicating liquors were sold for beverage purposes in this barroom; defendants were notified by proper public officials that they were maintaining a common nuisance, and that, if they did not abate it, application would be made for an injunction to that end; the nuisance continued and proceedings were instituted under sections 6 and 7 of the Prohibition Enforcement Act of March 27, 1923, P. L. 34. A demurrer to the bill was overruled and defendants were directed to answer, which they failed to do; thereupon a decree pro confesso, in the form stated in the preceding paragraph of this opinion, was entered.

The statute under which the present proceedings were instituted provides, by section 6, that, “Any room, house, building......or place, where intoxicating liquor is manufactured, sold......or possessed, in violation of this act,......is hereby declared to be a common nuisance; and any person who maintains such a common nuisance shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be subject to the penalties hereinafter provided.” Section 7 provides that, “An action to enjoin any nuisance, defined in this act, may be brought in the name of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by the attorney general......or by the district attorney of the......county, or by the solicitor of any municipality. Such action shall be brought and tried as an action in equity, and may be brought in any court having jurisdiction to hear and determine equity cases within the county in which the offense occurs. ......Upon the decree of the court ordering such nuisance to be abated, the court may......order that the room, house, building, structure......or place shall not be occupied or used for one year thereafter.” These provisions are followed, in section 7, by a further one to the effect that, if “the owner, lessee, tenant, or occupant” *516 of the premises in question shall, after an order closing the property for a year, give a bond for not less than $500, “conditioned that intoxicating liquor will not thereafter be manufactured, sold, offered for sale, bartered, furnished, possessed, or otherwise disposed of” on the premises, and that the obligor will “pay all fines, costs and damages that may be assessed” for the violation of the Act of 1923 upon such premises, the court may permit the property to be forthwith occupied and used for proper purposes. Section 10 provides that violators of the act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by fine or imprisonment, “at the discretion of the court”; and section 11, that property used and possessed contrary to the terms of the act shall be subject to seizure and forfeiture.

After calling attention to the above statutory provisions and noting that they made the possession and sale of intoxicating liquors “an indictable misdemean- or,” and the premises used for that purpose “a common nuisance,” appellants state their conception of the question involved to be, “Whether the legislature can, under the Constitution, give jurisdiction to a court of equity to abate such a nuisance where there are no interferences, actual or threatened, with property or rights of a pecuniary nature of complainants, and where the public health is not affected?” It is particularly to be noted ■that this is the only question raised before us concerning ' the form, extent or validity of the decree appealed from; and, on this question, appellants state their main contentions thus: “The Legislature cannot vest in the courts of common pleas such powers to grant relief in equity as to include that class of cases where equity did not have jurisdiction at common law or at the time of the adoption of the Constitution of 1776......A common nuisance based on mere violation of criminal law is not cognizable in equity, unless- some property rights or rights of a pecuniary nature of complainants are interfered with or the public health is affected, and the *517 Legislature cannot give jurisdiction to a court of equity to abate such a nuisance.”

In the present case, it is not pretended that “property rights” or “rights of a pecuniary nature of complainants” are interfered with; but, on the other hand, the matter dealt with is not “a mere violation of criminal law,” — it is a common nuisance detrimental to public health, and this has long been a subject within the sphere of equitable relief at the complaint of those entitled to act for the public. The complainants here are the attorney general of the State, the district attorney of the County of Allegheny, and the city solicitor of Pittsburgh, all acting on behalf of the Commonwealth, as authorized in the Act of 1923.

As to the legislation under attack being a health measure, the first section of the statute states, “This entire act is an exercise of the power granted by Amendment XVIII of the Constitution of the United States and of the police power of this Commonwealth for the protection of the public welfare, health, peace, safety and morals of the people of this Commonwealth, — and all of its provisions shall be liberally construed for the accomplishment of these purposes.” Thus it may be seen, — though appellants ignore the fact, — that the Legislature of the Commonwealth, in the exercise of its sovereign rights, has in effect declared by the Act of 1923 that the possession and sale of intoxicating liquors, contrary to law, on any premises within the State, is not only a public nuisance, but one detrimental to “the health of the people of the Commonwealth”; and there can be no question about its being well established that courts of equity may be given jurisdiction to abate a common nuisance which affects the public health: Com. v. Charity Hospital, .198 Pa. 270, 279, 283; Com. v. Kennedy, 240 Pa. 214; Penna. R. R. Co. v. Sagamore Coal Co., 281 Pa. 233; Butterfoss v. State, 40 N. J. Eq. 325, 332. In the Charity Hospital Case, supra (p. 279), it is said, “Where a......nuisance [detrimental to pub- *518 lie health] -is committed.....the attorney general..... may maintain a hill to abate” it.

It is primarily for the legislature to consider and decide the fact of what constitutes a menace to public health, then to meet it by a proper remedy, and “a statute enacted for the protection of public health...... can be set aside by the courts only when it plainly has no real or substantial relation to the subject or is a palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law”: Nolan v. Jones, 263 Pa. 128, and authorities there cited. So long as we have the illicit stream of deleterious, if not poisonous, liquors which, in spite of earnest efforts at prohibition enforcement, flow through our State, who can say that an enforcement act is not properly classed as a health measure, particularly where, in the very nature of the situation, there can be no governmental inspection of such liquors for the protection of the public.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 572, 285 Pa. 511, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-dietz-pa-1926.