Morrill v. State

38 Wis. 428
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 38 Wis. 428 (Morrill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrill v. State, 38 Wis. 428 (Wis. 1875).

Opinion

Lyon, J.

I. The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error have, without argument, submitted to our consideration the question whether it is competent for the legislature to make it a penal offense for any person to travel from place to place “ for the purpose of carrying to sell, or exposing to sale, any goods, wares and merchandize,” unless such person have a license as a hawker and peddler. . The point of this objection to the validity of the statute seems to be, that the actual sale of the articles is not expressly made an ingredient in the offense.

The statute was doubtless enacted in the interest of merchants having fixed places of trade, on the theory that a sound public policy demands that these should be encouraged, and traveling merchants or peddlers discouraged ; and for the further purpose of protecting honest and well disposed citizens from the arts and importunities, and frequently from the dishonest practices, of a class of traders to whom they are usually strangers, and who are not as directly amenable to those legal and social restraints which must necessarily greatly influence [434]*434the business conduct of a merchant having a fixed place of business, and depending for his patronage upon one and the same community. These objects may be as well attained by merely prohibiting the traveling for the purpose of carrying the, merchandise to sell, as by prohibiting the sale in terms. We think that if the act would be valid had it expressly prohibited sales by hawkers and peddlers without license, it is valid in its present form.

II. It is further claimed that the act of 1870 does not, in a case like this, make a violation of its provisions a penal offense. The position is, that sec. 7 relates only to patent-right dealers, and perhaps showmen, who are required by secs. 4 and 5 to obtain licenses, and not to those persons who are so required by sec. 1. The argument in support of this position seems to be based on the punctuation rather than the language of sec. 7. In giving construction to a statute the punctuation is entitled to small consideration, for that is more likely to be the work of the engrossing clerk or the printer, than of the legislature. The correct reading of so much of the section as is applicable to this case, is as follows: “ Every person who shall be found traveling within this state contrary to the provisions of this chapter ” (that is, traveling for the purposes specified in sec. 1), “shall for each offense be fined,” etc. The obvious intention of the legislature, to be ascertained from the language employed, must control, and we do not doubt that by incorporating sec. 7 in the act, the legislature expressed an intention to render a person criminally liable who travels from place to place within this state for the purpose of carrying to sell or exposing to sale any merchandise, without a license and contrary to the provisions of the act.

III. It is also claimed on behalf of the plaintiff in error, that the case comes within one of the exceptions contained in sec. 14, and hence that he was not required to obtain a license. The facts upon which this claim is predicated are as follows : Kasson & Noyes, residents' of this state, were the general [435]*435agents of the Singer Manufacturing Company (a corporation of another state), for the sale in this state of sewing machines manufactured by that company. One Clark was the agent of Kasson & ISToyes, and the plaintiff in error, who was also a resident of this state, was the agent of Clark for the sale of such machines. The offense for which the plaintiff in error was convicted, was an act done in the course of such agency. Kasson & ISToyes received the machines from the company, in parts, at Milwaukee, and there fitted the parts together and tested the machines. This work required a shop with machinery and tools, and the employment of several men. Such parts were all manufactured in other states.

Erom these facts we are unable to hold that the machines mentioned in the complaint were manufactured in this state.

IY. It is further argued that, in view of the exemptions granted by sec. 14, the act is a violation of that provision of our constitution which ordains that “ the rule of taxation shall be uniform.” Art. YIII, § 1. The attorney general contends that the act is not an exercise of the taxing power, but of the police power of the state. We are to determine which of these positions is correct.

The license fees required by the act of 1870, go into the state treasury and constitute a portion of the revenue of the state. In a certain sense, therefore, those fees are taxes, and the act requiring them to be paid an exercise of a power of taxation. Yet revenue may incidentally result from an undisputed exercise of the police power. Indeed, such is usually the result of police regulations, whether made directly by the legislature, or by a municipality acting under authority of law. But that fact does not divest the regulation of its police character and render it an exercise of the taxing power. Laws prohibiting the sale of liquor or the keeping of dogs, without license, are familiar illustrations of the exercise of police power. Such laws have been upheld by this court upon the express ground that they were not an exercise of the taxing, but of the [436]*436police power. Carter v. Dow, 16 Wis., 298; Tenney v. Lenz, id., 566; State v. Ludington, 33 id., 107. Of the same character is a law requiring certain insurance agents to pay a percentage of the premium received by them to the local fire department. Fire Department of Milwaukee v. Helfenstein, 16 Wis., 136. In Tenney v. Lenz it was expressly held that the fact that the license fees produced revenue, did not change the character of the law. It was still an exercise of the police power.

That the law of 1870 is an exercise by the legislature of police power is the more apparent when we consider the nature and extent of that power. Judge Cooley, in his admirable treatise on constitutional limitations, says : “ The police power of a state, in a comprehensive sense, embraces the system of internal regulation, by which it is sought not only to preserve the public order and to prevent offenses against the state, but also to establish for the intercourse of citizen with citizen those rules of good manners and good neighborhood which are calculated to prevent a conflict of rights, and to secure to each the uninterrupted enjoyment of his own, so far as is reasonably consistent with a like enjoyment of rights by others." p. 572. And the same learned author quotes approvingly the language of Chief Justice Shaw in Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cush., 84, on the same subject: “ Rights of'property, like all other social and conventional rights, are subject to such reasonable limitations in their enjoyment as shall prevent them from being injurious, and to such reasonable restraints and regulations established by law as the legislature, under the governing and con•trolling power vested in them by the constitution, may think necessary and expedient.”

The reasons (or at least some of them) why the legislature enacted the law of 1870, have already been stated. That they .are stated correctly, and that the common law regarded hawkers and peddlers with disfavor, and their vocation opposed in some degree to public policy, will appear by reference to [437]*437Jacobs’ Law Dictionary. We there find the following: “ Hawkers.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Wis. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrill-v-state-wis-1875.