McCreary v. Cohen

149 So. 208, 108 Fla. 421
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 6, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 So. 208 (McCreary v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCreary v. Cohen, 149 So. 208, 108 Fla. 421 (Fla. 1933).

Opinions

Buford, J.

In this case the plaintiff in error contends that the Circuit Court erred in discharging the defendant in error in a habeas corpus proceeding.

The defendant in error was arrested and charged with the violation of a certain ordinance of the City of Miami, .Florida. The ordinance provided in part, as follows:

“Section 2. It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation of association, in advertising for sale any goods, wares, merchandise, securities, service of anything ‘offered *423 by such person, firm, corporation or association, to use any word, figure, or sign which as therein used falsely or. fraudulently conveys, or is intended to convey, the meaning that the thing so advertised has greater value or is intrinsicically worth more, or previously sold for in Miami at a greater price, than the price so presently advertised.”

“Section 3. It shall be no defense to a prosecution under the provisions of Section 2 that the advertising upon which the prosecution is based represents the opinion of the accused as to the value, unless it is clearly stated in such advertisement that the representation as to value therein contained is a matter of opinion and not a statement of fact.”

“Section 4. The words ‘value’ - and ‘worth’ as used in Section 2 herein shall be held and construed to mean the prevailing market price at which the thing is regularly sold in Miami.”

“Section 8. Any person, firm, corporation or association violating this ordinance or any of its provisions, sections, or parts of sections, shall upon conviction, be punished by a fine not exceeding $500.00 or imprisonment for a period not exceeding sixty days, or both such fine and imprisonment, in the discretion of the Court.”

• We have quoted these sections because they are the only sections of the ordinance with which we are concerned. The return shows that the charge against the defendant in error was in four counts of which the first is typical and was as follows :

“On April 28, 1932, at and in the said City of Miami, one Joe Cohen, in advertising for sale certain goods, wares and merchandise, by means of an advertisement which he caused to be printed on page 3 of The Herald of Miami, Florida, a newspaper published in said City, offered for sale by him and by a certain corporation of which he' was an officer, and *424 by which he was employed, the name ofwhich is to the affiant unknown, did, in violation of Section 2 of ordinance No. 956 of the said City of Miami, therein unlawfully use words, figures and signs which as therein used falsely and fraudulently conveyed and was intended to cpnvey, the meaning that the said suits, meaning men’s wearing apparel, so advertised, had greater value and were intrinsically worth .more than the price so presently advertised; that.is to say that he, the said Joe Cohen, did, at the time and place in this Court hereinbefore alleged, and in the manner and by the means in this Court hereinbefore alleged, cause to be printed, on page 3 of the April 28, 1932 issue of The Herald, a newspaper printed and circulated in the said City of Miami, an advertisement reading in part as follows, to-wit:

‘Any suit in the Store!
Value to $55.00!
$15.00;’

he, the said Joe Cohen, then and there, by means of the said advertisement, intending to falsely convey to the public the meaning that the suits so advertised could be purchased for $15.00 a suit, and that some of the suits so advertised had a value and were intrinsically worth $55-.00 a suit; whereas, in truth and in fact, said suits as advertised had no greater value or was intrinsically worth half of $55.00.”

The defendant in error sued out writ of habeas corpus to which motion to quash was filed, and when same came on to be heard the Circuit Court held Sections 2, 3 and 4 of the Ordinance to be in conflict with the State and Federal Constitution and also held the affidavit to charge no offense against the laws or ordinances of the City of Miami.

It is not challenged that the City of Miami has the right and power under its charter to enact ordinances in the exer *425 cise of police power for the purpose of safeguarding the health, morals, safety and welfare of its citizens. Whether or not the ordinance under consideration is valid depends upon whether or not the authorities of the municipality.may enact an ordinance containing those provisions under its police power.

It should not be questioned that a municipality possesses authority under a charter such as is that of the City of Miami to enact ordinances to curb and prohibit the perpetration of fraud in any form whether by advertisement or otherwise. In all this counsel for both parties to this suit agree but as to what may constitute a criminal fraud there appears to be some -divergence of opinion. A fraud may be committed without anyone being the loser thereby. If one parts with his money or property because of a perpetrated fraud it is not necessarily material that he must be the loser by such perpetration. Let us say for instance that a reputable merchant has for years been selling to the public and to his regular customers three brands of hosiery. • One brand has sold at $1.00, another at $1.50 and the other at $2.00 per pair. He puts on a sale and advertises hose “$2.00 kind for 89c” but instead of selling his customers the $2.00 kind'at 89c he sells his customer and pawns off on the customer for the $2.00 kind the $1.00 kind, which are really worth and have the intrinsic value of $1.00 per pair. The customer has received his money’s worth but he has been persuaded and defrauded into parting with his money upon the representation that he is receiving an article of .even greater value. Then suppose that another merchant in the next block has been selling like hosiery at a like price and he puts on a sale offering the $2.00 kind at $1.25 per pair. Which store will the customer, relying upon the honesty and integrity of the merchants, patronize? We think the fraudulent advertise *426 ment would reap the harvest. This is one of the evils which this ordinance and other like laws and ordinances are intended- to curb. Such laws and ordinances are to be upheld and sustained upon the same theory that Chapter 311 Acts of Congress of September 26th, 1914, 15 U. S. Code Ann. Sec. 45, and especially Section 5 thereof, has been sustained by our courts. See Sears Roebuck & Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 258 Fed. 307; Proctor & Gamble v. Federal Trade Commission, 11 Fed. (2nd) 47; Federal Trade Commission v. Winsted Hosiery Co., 258 U. S. 483, 66 Law. Ed. 729; Royal Baking Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 281 Fed. 744.

In Jasnowski v. Connolly 1 Mich. (158 N. W. 229, the Supreme Court of Michigan said:

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149 So. 208, 108 Fla. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccreary-v-cohen-fla-1933.