Rutzen v. City of Belle Fourche

20 N.W.2d 517, 71 S.D. 10, 1945 S.D. LEXIS 3
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1945
DocketFile No. 8761.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 N.W.2d 517 (Rutzen v. City of Belle Fourche) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rutzen v. City of Belle Fourche, 20 N.W.2d 517, 71 S.D. 10, 1945 S.D. LEXIS 3 (S.D. 1945).

Opinion

SEACAT, Circuit Judge.

This action was commenced by the plaintiffs, who are members of a religious sect known as Jehovah’s Witnesses, to enjoin the City of Belle Fourche, its mayor, councilmen, chief of police, and city attorney, from enforcing City Ordinance No. 95 of the City of Belle Fourche as against the plaintiffs and all other Jehovah’s Witnesses on account of their activity in distributing certain books, pamphlets and periodicals on the streets, sidewalks and alleys of the city, and to have said ordinance declared void as violating freedom of worship, freedom of speech and of the press, under Amendments 1 and 14 of the Constitution of the United States, and Sections 2, 3, 4 and 5 of Article VI of the Constitution of this state.

The ordiance in question provides: “It shall be unlawful for any person * * * to sell, offer for sale or distribute any books, pamphlets, tracts, charts, circulars or periodicals, or to exhibit or carry any banners, placards or advertisements or to distribute handbills upon any of the streets, alleys, sidewalks, parks or public places of or within the City of Belle Fourche, South Dakota, when such practice or practices have a tendency to annoy persons frequenting or using *12 such streets, alleys, sidewalks, parks or public places within said City, without having first having obtained a written permit thereof from said City in the manner as hereinafter expressly provided.”

Section 2 of the ordinance provides that the permit is to be issued upon application for which no fee is charged.

It is a practice of the appellants and other Jehovah’s Witnesess to go upon the streets and sidewalks of Belle Fourche to distribute their religious literature, .namely, the Watchtower and Consolation magazines, on a contribu-, tion of 5 cents a copy to defray printing expenses, or to give the magazines away on a promise of the taker to read the same. This was a form of religious worship and for which they received no pay.

On the 19th day of December, 1942, the appellants and four other Jehovah’s Witnesses were arrested by the defendant, A. O. McCullough, chief of police, for violating this ordinance. The following Saturday, and again on January 28, 1943, and June 19, 1943, the appellants and other members of this religious sect were arrested by Mr. McCullough, chief of police, charged with violating this ordinance, and at the time the action was tried to the Court on December 17, 1943, all of these prosecutions, except the arrests that were made on December 19, 1942, were pending in the Justice Court of the city or on appeal to the Circuit Court, and no further arrests had been made since the 19th' of June, 1943.’The various exibits introduced disclosed that Mr. McCullough, as chief of police, swore out all of' the complaints and made all of the arrests, and at the trial the chief of police and the city attorney were both cross-examined under the statute by the appellants. Mr. Penfold, the city attorney, testified in substance that he did not intend to harass any of these people (meaning Jehovah’s Witnesses), but that if arrests were made under the ordinance and the matter was brought to his attention, he intended to prosecute them for the violations, but did not'intend to cause the appellants or other Jehovah’s Witnesses to be arrested, or to swear out any complaint -for their arrest. On cross-examination, the chief of police testified that he was the chief of *13 police, but he was never asked if, and he did not testify that, he intended to make any further arrests or to swear out any further complaints against the appellants or any other Jehovah’s Witnesses under said ordinance.

The trial court, in exercise of its discretion as to granting of injunction, is not only authorized but bound to determine not merely whether plaintiff is entitled to injunction at the time of instituting action therefor, but whether such relief should be granted under facts as they appear at the time of trial. Ericksen v. John Morrell & Co., 70 S. D. 38, 14 N. W.2d 88.

Section 37.4302 of the South Dakota Code of 1939 provides:

“An injunction cannot be granted:
“(1)- To stay a judicial proceeding pending at the commencement of the action in which the injunction .is demanded, unless such restraint is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of such proceedings; * *

Under this section and in view of the record in this case, the trial court was without authority to stay the prosecutions that were pending at the time of the commencement of the action, as all prosecutions had been continued indefinitely, and the grounds asserted, in the complaint as entitling the appellants to the injunction may be interposed as a complete defense to any of the pending prosecutions.

The primary purpose of this suit is. to enjoin the. commencement of future prosecutions against the appellants and other Jehovah’s Witnesses under this ordinance.

The general rule is stated in 28 Am.’ Jur. 372, Section 183: “In general, equity will not intervene for the purpose of restraining the enforcement of a criminal statute or regulatory ordinance providing a penalty for its violation, even though it is being enforced in an oppressive and unlawful way and even though such statute or ordinance may be unconstitutional, since such invalidity may be interposed as a complete defense to any prosecution based on such statute. * * *

32 C. J. 279-281 says:

*14 “If the statute on which the prosecution is based is valid, the fact that the enforcement thereof would materially injure complainant’s business or property constitutes no ground for equitable interference. It is only where the statute or ordinance is unconstitutional or otherwise invalid and where in the attempt to enforce it there is a direct invasion of property rights resulting in irreparable injury that an injunction will issue to restrain the enforcement thereof. Both of these elements are indispensable, and the latter element is not present where it appears that the injury or loss to plaintiff’s business or rights of property would be only such as would incidentally flow from the arrest and prosecution thereunder. Courts will not interfere by injunction where the injury inflicted or threatened is merely the vexation of arrest and punishment of complainant who is left free to litigate the questions of unconstitutionality of the statute or ordinance or its construction or application in making his defense at the trial or prosecution for its violation.
“This general rule is based upon the principle that equity is concerned only with the protection of civil and property rights, and is intended to supplement, and not usurp, the functions of the courts of law, that to sustain a bill in equity to restrain or relieve against proceedings for the punishment of offenses would constitute an invasion of the courts of common law, and on the fact that the party has an adequate remedy at law by establishing as a defense to the prosecution that he did not commit the act charged, or that the statute or ordinance on which the prosecution is based is invalid, and, in case of conviction, by taking an appeal. * * *.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.W.2d 517, 71 S.D. 10, 1945 S.D. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutzen-v-city-of-belle-fourche-sd-1945.