Sansing v. Cherokee County Tourist Camp Board

10 S.E.2d 157, 195 S.C. 7, 1940 S.C. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 18, 1940
Docket15130
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 10 S.E.2d 157 (Sansing v. Cherokee County Tourist Camp Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sansing v. Cherokee County Tourist Camp Board, 10 S.E.2d 157, 195 S.C. 7, 1940 S.C. LEXIS 136 (S.C. 1940).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fishburne.-

*9 These two 'cases involve identical issues. In each action the plaintiff challenges the constitutionality of an Act of the General Assembly (Act No. 248, Act June 9, 1939, Acts of 1939, 41 St. at Large, 402), which creates the Cherokee County Tourist Camp Board. The plaintiffs seek to have' the board permanently enjoined from enforcing the provisions of the Act, and are appealing from a judgment of the Circuit Court holding the Act to be constitutional, and denying the injunction.

The appellants own separate tracts of land in Cherokee County, upon which they have erected cottages for the purpose of operating tourist camps. Under the terms of the legislative Act referred to they applied for an operator’s license to conduct a tourist camp,'which was refused. The matter was heard before the Circuit Court upon the verified petition of the plaintiffs, and the answer, return, and certain affidavits filed by the defendants.

It is admitted that the Act creating the Cherokee County Tourist Camp Board is a local or special Act which relates solely to the County of Cherokee. By its provisions the board is composed of the foreman of the grand jury, the sheriff, and the county physician. It provides that subsequent to July 1, 1939, no person, firm or corporation shall maintain, operate, or own any tourist camp or roadhouse in the county without first obtaining from the board a license so to do; that application for such license shall include the name of the owner of the property, the name of the manager or operator, the general nature of the business to be conducted, and such other information as the board may require. If the application is approved the license is issued by the Clerk of. Court for Cherokee County upon the recommendation of the board upon payment of a fee of $10.00 by the applicant. The Act makes it mandatory upon the board to revoke the license of any tourist camp or roadhouse for any reason in addition to those specified in the Act which in the opinion of the board justifies such action.

*10 Section 5 provides that no license shall be'issued to any operator or manager of such roadhouse or tourist camp who has been convicted of violating the liquor law within the previous year, and requires that each employee shall submit to a physical examination once each month and possess a health certificate. And further provides that no license shall be issued to any operator until his establishment shall have been equipped with running water, adequate sewer disposals, and such other sanitary facilities as the board might see fit to require; no license shall be issued to an operator who permits liquor to be stored, sold or drunk on the premises. Section 6 provides that the licensee shall be required to keep the place of business and premises in a healthful and sanitary condition and operate said place in a decent, peaceful, orderly and lawful manner. Registration of all persons obtaining accommodations at the tourist camps is required, Section 6 (a). Section 7 provides penalties for violation of the Act within the jurisdiction of magistrate’s Courts.

The appellants assail the constitutionality of the Act as being in contravention of Article III, Section 34, Sub-section 9 of the Constitution, which prohibits the enactment of a special law where a general law can be made applicable. The Act can be sustained, of course, only upon the theory that a general law with statewide effect cannot be made applicable.

It is firmly settled in this State that while it is primarily for the Legislature to decide whether a gen-

eral law can be made applicable in any specific case, the question is ultimately a judicial one, in solving which the Courts will give due consideration to the opinion of the Legislature. Gillespie v. Blackwell, 164 S. C., 115, 161 S. E., 869; Townsend v. Richland County, 190 S. C., 270, 2 S. E. (2d), 777. In our opinion, after a careful examination of the Act under attack, in the light- of our decided cases, there is no doubt but that the Act violates the Constitution, in that it is a special law where a general law can be made applicable.

*11 The Court in Sirrine v. State, 132 S. C., 241, 128 S. E., 172, 175, quoted with approval from- Freeman’s note in 93 Am. St. Rep., 111: “A law is not constitutional if it confers particular privileges, or imposes’peculiar disabilities or burdensome conditions in the exercise of a common right upon a class of persons arbitrarily selected from the general body of those that stand in the same relation to the subject of the law. The Legislature may classify, for the purpose of legislation, if some intrinsic reason exists why the law should operate upon some and not upon all, or should affect some differently from others, but this classification must be based upon differences which are either defined by the Constitution, or are natural or intrinsic,- and which suggest a reason that may rationally be held to justify the diversity in the legislation. It must not be arbitrary, for the mere purpose of classification. The class must be characterized by some substantial qualities or attributes, which render such legislation necessary or appropriate for the individuals of the class.”

That the Act creating the Cherokee County Tourist Camp Board runs -counter to the constitutional provision prohibiting special legislation, we think is inescapable. One of the manifest objects of that instrument was to eradicate that species of. legislation involving a multiplicity of laws, and substitute in lieu of it general laws whenever it was possible to do so. “The evil sought to be remedied was the great and growing evil of special and local legislation.” State v. Hammond, 66 S. C., 219, 44 S. E., 797, 799.

Speaking to the same point the Court said, in Tisdale v. Scarborough, 99 S. C., 377, 83 S. E., 594, 595: “There had grown up in the General Assemblies of the entire Union a disposition for legislation by delegation. That kind of legislation was deemed pernicious; it lacked the settled consideration and consent of the lawmaking body; it evaded statewide responsibility; it encouraged local activity; it dis *12 couraged the attrition of minds and the consideration of those problems which make for a wise public policy. The ninth paragraph was the fruit of this large conviction of the convention.”

In the case at bar it is not shown that the operation of a tourist camp or roadhouse in Cherokee County differs in any respect from the operation of a tourist camp or roadhouse in any other section of South Carolina. It is suggested in the Circuit decree, by way of differentiation, that the tourist camps of the appellants are located on Highway No. 29, which traverses Cherokee County, which highway carries a great volume of interstate traffic. And it is said that this would contribute to a character of itinerant patronage at such camps which would not be common in all respects to similar camps located elsewhere in the State, and would, therefore, justify more rigid police regulations than would probably be required in more favorable environs. But Highway No.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.E.2d 157, 195 S.C. 7, 1940 S.C. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sansing-v-cherokee-county-tourist-camp-board-sc-1940.