Commonwealth v. Hanley

15 Pa. Super. 271, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 338
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 19, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 237
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 15 Pa. Super. 271 (Commonwealth v. Hanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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. Hanley, 15 Pa. Super. 271, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 338 (Pa. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

The defendant was indicted and convicted under the 7th section of the Act of June 7, 1895, P. L. 167, which makes it a misdemeanor for any person to practice or hold himself out as practicing the business of undertaking or the care, preparation, disposition and burial of the bodies of deceased persons, without having caused his name, residence and place of business to be registered with the state board of undertakers, as provided in the 5th section of the act, or having obtained license as provided in the 6th section. Before sentence he moved in arrest of judgment upon the grounds, first, that the indictment charged no violation of the laws of the commonwealth; second, that the act under which the indictment was drawn is unconstitutional ; third, that the verdict of the jury was not justified by the evidence. The overruling of this motion and the entering of judgment upon the verdict are the only matters assigned for error.

Where the sole complaint is, that the evidence was insuffi[277]*277cient to sustain the verdict, the remedy of the party in the trial court is by motion for a new trial, not by a motion in arrest of judgment. „ If he deems the evidence adduced by the plaintiff or the commonwealth insufficient in law, even if believed by the jury, to warrant a verdict against him, he may obtain a review in the appellate court by a request for binding instructions and excepting to, and assigning for error, the refusal so to charge. See as to criminal cases, Pauli v. Commonwealth, 89 Pa. 432. But if the granting of the motion in arrest of judgment, or the refusal of the motion, be the only matter assigned for error, the case will be reviewed on the record proper, and not on the sufficiency of the evidence. If authority is needed for these familiar and well-settled rules of practice, it will be found in Skinner v. Robeson, 4 Y. 375, Wilson v. Gray, 8 W. 25, Church v. Northern Central Railway, 45 Pa. 339, Aronson v. C. & P. R. R. Co., 70 Pa. 68, Schubkagel v. Dierstein, 131 Pa. 46, and 1 Br. T. & H. Pr. 769, 770. For this reason, as well as for the reason given by the learned judge of the court below in his opinion overruling the motion in arrest of judgment, we must decline to pass on the validity of the rule established by the state board of undertakers. We remark, however, that the manifest and sole purpose which the legislature had in view in the passage of this law was the preservation of the public health. It was plainly not its intention to give to a favored few a monopoly of the care and burial of the dead for hire. And if the state board refused to perform their duties, or if they established arbitrary and unreasonable rules, whereby the defendant was debarred of the right to apply for a license, and to have his qualifications to conduct the business of an undertaker passed upon, the law gave him a remedy. It is clear, however, that these questions of fact and law could not be determined by the court below in the trial of an indictment against the defendant for carrying on the business without first having obtained a license.

We see no defect in the form or substance of the indictment, therefore, the only remaining question is as to the constitutionality of the act under which it was framed.

Tiedeman, in his treatise on the Limitation of Police Power, p. 200, says of police regulation of skilled trades and learned [278]*278professions : “ Where the successful prosecution of a calling requires a certain amount of technical knowledge and professional skill, and the lack of them in the practitioner will result in material damage to the one who employs him, it is a legitimate exercise of police power to prohibit any one from engaging in the calling, who has not previous^ been examined by the lawfully constituted authority and received a certificate in testimony of his qualification to practice the profession.” It is upon this principle, says the learned author, that statutes, which provide for the examination of those who wish to engage in the practice of the law, of medicine and surgery and of pharmacy are sustained. The validity of a law requiring those who wish to engage in the business or calling of undertaking to submit to such examination rests upon a broader and more secure foundation than that above suggested, if it be true, as determined by the legislature, that the proper prosecution of 'that business requires “ knowledge of sanitation, preservation of the dead, disinfecting the bodies of deceased persons, the apartment, clothing and bedding in cases of death from infectious or contagious diseases.” For, lack of skill and knowledge of these things in one who pursues this calling in large cities may result, not in mere material damage to the one who employs him, but in the spread of ■contagious and infectious diseases. The regulation of such a business, by requiring those who engage in it to have that skill and knowledge, the possession and use of which will result in diminishing the dangers from such diseases, and the lack of which may result in the spread of them, is clearly a legitimate exercise of police power. • We do not deem it necessary to discuss that question further.

But it is contended that it is a local or special law, because it is confined to those who engage in business in cities of the first, second and third classes. It is urged that it violates that provision of the constitution which forbids the legislature to pass any local or special law regulating trade. But we do not regard this law as a mere trade regulation. It is true, it does affect those engaging in a particular occupation and does not apply to all persons engaging in that occupation. It is equally plain, however, that the paramount object of the law is not to discriminate in favor of or against members of the class, but to protect the public health, and that, whilst it does not [279]*279apply to all undertakers, it does apply to all undertakers of the same' class. In this respect it is plainly distinguishable from the act construed in Commonwealth v. Zacharias, 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 264. The effect upon the rights of those desiring to engage in this occupation is only incidental. It no more clearly discriminates between different members of the same class of persons than does a law requiring physicians or undertakers in cities to report deaths. Clearly, a law may impose a duty of that kind on such persons, which is not imposed on persons practicing the same profession or pursuing the same vocation in other portions of the state, without being a local or special law within the true intent and meaning of the constitutional provision under consideration.

It seems to us, therefore, that the provision of the constitution by which the validity of the law is to be tested, is that which forbids the legislature to pass any local or special law regulating the “ affairs ” of cities, and in applying that test the term “ affairs ” is to be given the broad signification which has been ascribed to it in Morrison v. Bachert and kindred cases. Even in the cases in which the strictest construction of this constitutional provision has been given, it has been conceded that upon some subjects there may be valid legislation for cities as distinguished from boroughs and townships. If it were not so, then, indeed, as was remarked in Wheeler v. Philadelphia, 77 Pa. 338, 350, would the machinery of the state government be so bolted and riveted down by the fundamental law as to be unable to perform its necessary functions. Amongst these subjects is the preservation of the public health. See Ruan Street, 132 Pa. 257, at p. 276.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Pa. Super. 271, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hanley-pasuperct-1900.