Phillips v. State

304 S.W.2d 614, 202 Tenn. 402, 6 McCanless 402, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 405
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 304 S.W.2d 614 (Phillips v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. State, 304 S.W.2d 614, 202 Tenn. 402, 6 McCanless 402, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 405 (Tenn. 1957).

Opinions

Mb. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Chapter 260 of the Public Acts of 1957 requires the observation in Tennessee of “only standard time” as fixed for Tennessee by the United States Interstate Commerce Commission. The statute forbids every governmental entity from adopting, permanently or temporarily, any other standard of time. It then provides this:

“No person, firm, partnership, corporation or other entity operating or maintaining- a place of business of whatsoever kind or nature shall employ, display or maintain or use any other standard of time in connec[405]*405tion with such place of business than standard time as prescribed by this section.”

This is a declaration of the public policy of the State by means of the exercise of the police power of the State, State ex rel. Loser v. National Optical Stores Co., 189 Tenn. 433, 447, 225 S.W.2d 263, upon a quite controversial subject.

Mr. Phillips did, in connection with the operation of his business located on a busy street in Nashville, deliberately violate this statute in order to bring about an adjudication as to its constitutionality, he being of the opinion that it is an unauthorized trespass upon his liberties.

The Trial Court sustained the Act. Phillips has appealed. His insistence is that it violates Section 8 of Articles 1 and 11, respectively, of the Tennessee Constitution, and the 14th amendment to the Federal Constitution in that it is an arbitrary exercise, so he says, of the police power of the State.

In the course of the discussion of the question made, emphasis will be placed upon certain words appearing in quotations. In each instance such emphasis is supplied.

A statute enacted by the Connecticut Legislature in 1923 provided this:

“No person, firm or corporation, organization or association, shall wilfully display in or on any public building or on any stréet, avenue or public highway any time-measuring instrument or device, which is calculated or intended to furnish time to the general pub-[406]*406lie, set ox' running so as to indicate intentionally, or indicating intentionally, any time other than the standard of time as defined by chapter 37 of the Public Acts of 1921.” Pub.Acts 1923, e. 231.

The Supreme Court of Connecticut in State v. Bassett, 100 Conn. 430, 123 A. 842, 843, 37 A.L.R. 131, noted that: —‘ ‘ The purpose of this legislation was to prevent such inconvenience and confusion to the public as might arise from the display of clocks on public buildings and highways indicating the time of day as otherwise than the standard time established by law, and prescribed for conducting the government of the state and municipalities and which was in use upon railways.” That Court sustained the Act as a valid exercise of the police power of the State with the statement that “legislation in the interest of public convenience and public welfare also comes under the police power” of the State.

In an annotation following the report there is a disagreement with the decision. The disagreement was apparently on the theory that the “legitimate limit” of the police powers is “legislation in the interests of public safety, morals and welfare.”

The Connecticut case, supra, is the only decision on the point which any one connected with this case has been able to find. There are some expressions, however, by Courts and legislative bodies indicating that, in the opinion of such governmental entities, “confusion is created when a given territory completely surrounded by standard time undertakes to operate its business under Daylight Saving Time”, Smith v. City of Pittsburgh, 30 Pa. Dist. R. 454.

[407]*407The Wisconsin case of State v. Badolati, 241 Wis. 496, 6 N.W.2d 220, 221, 143 A.L.R. 1234, after noting that “historically speaking, the method of measuring time in this country was the mean solar time of the particular place involved”, then observed that: — “This gave a satisfactory time standard for a particular community, but ivas increasingly unsatisfactory as means of transportation and communication improved, because of the wide variety of time standards in communities thrown into close relation by these improvements.”

This Wisconsin case notes that as far back as 1883 the railroads of this country agreed to maintain their schedules on the basis of four standard time zones. The result was that standard railroad time on the boundaries of a zone varied about half an hour from the mean solar time of that place. Then, “following the lead of the railroads, people in all walks of life adopted generally the time standards of the railroad, but a great many difficulties came up in Cotort cases.” The decision then gives examples of the confusion in legal matters resulting from this variance between railroad time and solar time. The decision then opines that “it was to remove this confusion that the Act of Congress of 1918 was enacted in the interests of interstate trade and commerce.”

The congressional act referred to is 15 U.S.C.A. sec. 261 et seq. Its purpose was to establish standard time over the United States and Alaska by dividing the same into five time zones with the standard time of the first zone based upon “the mean astronomical time of the seventy-fifth degree of longitude west from Greenwich”. Each fifteen degrees of longitude from the first zone is the commencement of a new zone wherein the standard [408]*408time is one hour later. It was provided by this statute that the interstate commerce commission define the precise limits of each zone — “having regard, for the convenience of commerce”, etc.

During the recent war emergency Congress enacted a Federal Daylig’ht Saving Time Statute. The State of Kentucky enacted a statute changing its official time so as to be in conformity with the time fixed by the Federal Statute. It was recited in the face of this Kentucky Statute that its enactment is ‘‘to avoid confusion and conflict.” See City of Louisville v. Louisville Livestock Exchange, Inc., 302 Ky. 536, 195 S.W.2d 76, 77.

Thus, it seems to be established with fair conclusiveness that courts and legislative bodies, when dealing with the problem, have recognized it to be a fact that inconvenience, confusion, and conflict arise when it is sought in one and the same community to operate business upon more than a single standard of time; or for different standards of time in separate communities thrown into close business relations. Certainly it cannot be said that common experience rejects this declaration of fact.

Thus, in so far as concerns this case, it must be accepted as a fact that the operation of the many and various public businesses, private and governmental, in any given communitj^ of the State upon more than a single standard of time, or upon a standard different from that of another community, has been recognized by our legislature as resulting, or so tending, in inconvenience, confusion and conflict among the people affected; t.o-wit, the public.

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Bluebook (online)
304 S.W.2d 614, 202 Tenn. 402, 6 McCanless 402, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-state-tenn-1957.