Graham v. Gaither

117 A. 858, 140 Md. 330, 1922 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 25, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 117 A. 858 (Graham v. Gaither) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Gaither, 117 A. 858, 140 Md. 330, 1922 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order and judgment of the lower court, which overruled a demurrer to the answer of the respondent and entered a final judgment for the defendant, on' *336 a petition for a mandamus filed by the appellants against Charles H. Gaither, Police Commissioner for the City of Baltimore. The object of the mandamus, as shown by the prayers of the petition, was to' prevent and restrain the respondent from permitting the playing of professional baseball at Oriole Park on Sunday during the months of April, June, July, August and September, 1921, to command and require him to enforce and execute the laws of Maryland relating to the. observance of Sunday and against Sabbath breaking on those Sundays, and to enforce and execute section 436 of article 27 of the Code upon said days, to prevent at said Oriole Park the commission of the crime of violating said Sunday law “by arresting or causing the arrest of all the participants, including both the baseball players taking part in said professional games as well as the managers holding or conducting the same, or causing the same to he held or conducted, or aiding or abetting the holding or conducting of the samé, and further ordering and requiring such other relief and protection to your petitioners and their rights .aforesaid as may he proper and necessary in the premises'.” After the court overruled the demurrer, and the attorneys for the plaintiffs informed the court that the plaintiffs declined to file any further pleading or proceeding, the judgment for the defendant was rendered.

The petition, after setting out and describing the several petitioners at length, alleges that the respondent was ap^pointed under and by virtue of chapter 559 of the Acts of 1920, which repealed and re-enacted section 740 of article 4 of the Code of Pfiblic Local Laws (reference being to the Revised Edition of the Charter of 1915) — the Act of 1920 authorizing the appointment of one Police Commissioner instead qf a Board of Police Commissioners as formerly, and providing that he should have and exercise all the powers of the board. Section 744, which sets out at length the duties •of the Board of Police Commissioners, now devolved upon the respondent, will he published in connection with this opinion. Amongst other things he is required to see that 'all *337 laws relating to the observance of Sunday are enforced.' Section -136 of article 27 of the Oode is set out in full in the petition, and reference; is made to Levering v. Park Commissioners, 134 Md. 48, to show that this Court has decided that the playing of baseball on Sunday by professionals and others who may be hired and paid for that purpose, aucl whose occupation and employment is the playing of snch games, “dearly contravenes the, provision of the Code which declares that ‘no person whatsoever shall work or do any bodily labor on the Lord’s Day commonly called Sunday * * and every person transgressing this section and being thereof convicted before a justice of the peace shall forfeit five dollars to be applied to the use; of the county.’ ”

It is alleged that at Oriole Park professional baseball games were about to be; played, on each and every recurring Sunday during the mouths, named, by professional players, hired and, paid for that purpose, etc., in violation of section 436 of article 27, which will be and constitute upon each of said Sundays crimes against the laws and dignity, the peace and government, of the ’State. It is alleged that they will be attended by large crowds and throngs of spectators at Oriole Park, accompanied by the loud shouts and noises which invariably occur during the holding and progress of games of professional baseball. It is averred that the plaintiffs called with their counsel upon the respondent, and informed him that such games were about to be played, and submitted to him that it is his official duty to prevent said crimes, arrest the offenders and see that the laws relating to’ the observance of Sunday are enforced, etc.; “that thereupon, although the defendant heard and treated those of your petitioners and their counsel, who called upon and submitted the matters aforesaid to him, with the utmost courtesy and attention, nevertheless he clearly and positively declared that he did not consider it to he his official duty to interfere with the holding, playing and carrying on of said professional baseball games by said professional players at said Oriole Park, on said Sundays aforesaid, although said games are about to *338 be held., played and carried on, as herein above stated, and as represented to him, the defendant, and the defendant furthermore distinctly and positively declared that he did not intend to interfere with or prevent the holding of said professional baseball games as aforesaid, or to canse the same to he interfered with or prevented by the police force under his, the defendant’s*, direction and control, or to’ arrest or cause the arrest of any of the professional baseball players talcing part in said games, or of any person or persons engaged and participating in the holding, playing, carrying on or conduct of the same, but that he, the defendant, intended to permit the said games to be held then and there, as aforesaid, without interference upon his part or upon the part of the police force under his, the defendant’s, direction and control, and without arresting or causing the arrest of the participants in and the managers and directors of said games or any of them; the defendant, the Police Commissioner for Baltimore City, givingi as his reason for declining to interfere with the holding, playing and carrying on of said games or to arrest the professional participants therein or the managers thereof, or any of them, as aforesaid, that the manager of one of the professional baseball clubs or teams, which participated in a game of professional baseball at said Oriole Parle on one of the Sundays of the spring or summer of 1919, had been arrested for criminally violating the said Sunday law of Maryland by the holding and carrying on of said Sunday professional baseball game at said Oriole Park, and that the indictment or charge against said offender had never been prosecuted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City.”

It is further alleged that the refusal of the respondent will cause additional municipal expenses to’ be incurred, and will result iu an unlawful and unauthorized increase in the rate of taxation for local purposes in the City of Baltimore, that the petitioners will suffer irreparable and remediless injury and damage, and the public policy of the State and the laws thereof would be thwarted and nullified and the community and public generally hurt and damaged, etc.

*339 The answer admits that some of the petitioners called with their counsel upon the defendant, and requested the defendant to enforce the laws of Maryland relating to the observance of Sunday, and to prevent the contemplated and intended playing of baseball on Sunday during the months named, but specifically denies each and every one of the charges against him set out above, emphatic-ally and unreservedly. It will not be necessary for us to quote from tbe answer, but it is sufficient to say that they are not simply genera] denials, but each charge is denied, referring to the language used in the petition.

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Bluebook (online)
117 A. 858, 140 Md. 330, 1922 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-gaither-md-1922.