Miles-Lee Auto Supply Co. v. Bellows

197 N.E.2d 247, 93 Ohio Law. Abs. 486, 26 Ohio Op. 2d 452, 1964 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 313
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1964
DocketNo. 791692
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 197 N.E.2d 247 (Miles-Lee Auto Supply Co. v. Bellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miles-Lee Auto Supply Co. v. Bellows, 197 N.E.2d 247, 93 Ohio Law. Abs. 486, 26 Ohio Op. 2d 452, 1964 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 313 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Lybarger, J.

This ease comes before tbe court on tbe petition of tbe various plaintiffs seeking a restraining order, injunction, and other relief against defendant Forest City Auto Parts Company (hereinafter referred to as Forest City) for tbe reasons set forth below.

In tbe petition, tbe six plaintiffs allege in substance tbe following:

1. Tbe defendant is an Ohio corporation engaged in selling auto parts, supplies and accessories; and tbe plaintiffs are business competitors of Forest City.

2. The plaintiffs themselves are now complying with tbe Sunday closing law (Section 3773.24, Revised Code), and Forest City bas been and still is violating said statute.

3. Arnold Bellows, president of Forest City, was convicted [488]*488of violating the statute on April 9, 1963, and is presently appealing the decision.

4. The plaintiffs have invested money in their several enterprises, have built up valuable good will and have acquired numerous customers. They know of instances where customers “have taken their patronage to defendant’s store because of the closing of their stores on Sunday,” and “each and all of them are being damaged by this loss of their customers and their trade.” (Petition paragraph 4.) The damages they have sustained individually and collectively to the present time amount to “many thousands of dollars in loss of sales and customers” (Paragraph 7), due to “the unfair and illegal acts of the defendant in keeping its place open on Sundays.” (Paragraph 4.)

5. The plaintiffs have endeavored to seek redress by enforcement of the statute on Sunday closing, but they aver that the $25 “penalty is not sufficient to deter willful offenders since it is the equivalent of a low priced license to evade the law.” Plaintiffs state “that the penalty for a second offense is of sufficient gravity to deter the breaking of this Sunday closing law” since it is “augmented by imprisonment” and would prevent evasion of the law. They say that protection by a criminal prosecution is “completely hopeless” since the city prosecutor has stated that “no second offense warrants . . . would be presented.”

6. The plaintiffs allege that “every avenue under law has failed and their only hope for protection is in this Court of Chancery.” (Paragraph 7.)

To the petition the defendant Forest City demurs on the grounds that (1) this court has no jurisdiction of the subject matter, and (2) the petition does not state facts which show a cause of action.

The office of a demurrer is to test whether or not a plaintiff is entitled to any relief, even if all of the factual allegations well pleaded in the petition are admitted, for the sake of argument, to be true. (Life Insurance Co. v. Vesser, 128 Ohio St., 200 (1934), Section 2309.08, Revised Code, makes it clear that only facts which appear on the face of the petition can be challenged by demurrer. In considering a demurrer the Court [489]*489cannot look beyond tbe petition, but must rely entirely upon tbe language used therein. (Hauer v. Provident Savings Bank & Trust Co., 111 Ohio App., 214 [1959].) In tbe interest of justice a demurrer must be liberally construed in favor of tbe pleading under attack, and tbe Court must indulge every reasonable inference from tbe facts alleged (Humphreys v. Wheeling Steel Corp., 132 Ohio St., 263 [1937]).

A demurrer, by tbe specific terms of tbe code, may challenge a petition for want of jurisdiction of either tbe person or tbe subject of tbe action, provided tbe lack of jurisdiction appears on tbe face of tbe petition. Tbe law is the same if the petition fails to state facts wbieb show a cause of action in favor of tbe plaintiff against tbe defendant. (Section 2309.08, Revised Code.) Also a demurrer may raise tbe question of tbe constitutionality of a law on which a claim in tbe petition is based. (See 71 A. L. R., 1194.)

It is obvious that tbe plaintiffs’ cause of action in equity is grounded on alleged violation of tbe Sunday closing law by tbe defendant with resulting loss of customers and money by tbe several plaintiffs. At tbe outset it is important to examine tbe statute in question, for if it is unconstitutional as defendant contends, then tbe court lacks jurisdiction of tbe subject matter of tbe suit.

Ohio’s Sunday closing law is found in Section 3773.24, Revised Code, which reads as follows:

Section 3773.24, Revised Code. Transaction of lousiness on Sunday; Exeptions.

No person, firm, or corporation shall engage in common labor or suffer or permit a building or place to be open for transaction of business, or require a person in bis employ or under bis control to engage in common labor or to open a building or place for tbe transaction of business on Sunday. In prosecutions under this section complaints shall be made within ten days after a violation.

This section does not apply to work of necessity or charity, and does not extend to persons who conscientiously observe tbe seventh day of tbe week as tbe sabbath, and abstain thereon from doing things prohibited on Sunday.

This section shall not apply to:

[490]*490(A) Traveling or the providing of services and commodities incidental thereto;

(B) Recreation, sports, amusements, entertainment, or exhibitions or the providing of services and commodities incidental thereto;

(C) Fairs held under the authority of the state or a political subdivision, or independent fairs, or the providing of services and commodities incidental thereto;

(D) The operation of publicly owned places of entertainment, recreation, or education, by a public officer, concessionaire, exhibitor, or employees of all or any of them, or any other person, or the providing of services and commodities incidental thereto.

The defendant contends that the statute violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States and Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution of Ohio. Ohio’s Constitution says that “. . . No preference shall be given by law to any religious society.” Defendant contends that Section 3773.24, Revised Code, gives preferment and makes it possible to invoke a religious test as an affirmative defense to the statute. It casts upon a court the burden of determining what religious belief a defendant has and whether he “conscientiously” observes it.

Defendant calls attention to the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Braunfield v. Brown, 366 U. S., 599 (1961), wherein the court rejected a contention that a Pennsylvania law should make an exception for persons who, because of religious conviction, observe a day of rest other than Sunday, saying on page 608:

“Additional problems might also be presented by a regulation of this sort. To allow only people who rest on a day other than Sunday to keep their businesses open on that day might well provide these people with an economic advantage over their competitors who must remain closed on that day, this might cause the Sunday-observers to complain that their religions are being discriminated against. With this competitive advantage existing, there would well be the temptation for some, in order to keep their businesses open on Sunday, to assert that they have religious convictions which compel them to close [491]

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E.2d 247, 93 Ohio Law. Abs. 486, 26 Ohio Op. 2d 452, 1964 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-lee-auto-supply-co-v-bellows-ohctcomplcuyaho-1964.