State Ex Rel. Daniel v. Kizer

162 S.E. 444, 164 S.C. 383, 81 A.L.R. 722, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 21, 1932
Docket13333
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 162 S.E. 444 (State Ex Rel. Daniel v. Kizer) 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
State Ex Rel. Daniel v. Kizer, 162 S.E. 444, 164 S.C. 383, 81 A.L.R. 722, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 22 (S.C. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice BeeasE.

This action, brought in the original jurisdiction of this Court, seeks an injunction to prevent the defendants, either directly or indirectly, from operating, or attempting to operate, or to have others to operate, unlawful slot machines in this State, and also to enjoin them from interfering with the law enforcement officers in .enforcing the statutes of the State relative to unlawful slot machines.

The complaint of the plaintiff, which is of considerable length, briefly summarized, alleges that the defendants and others have been operating, and are continuing to operate, in violation of the law, slot machines within this State; that they have conspired, and are conspiring, to violate the criminal laws regarding slot machines; and that they have been, and are, making a concerted effort to hinder and embarrass the peace officers of the State and to prevent them from enforcing the laws by bringing numerous injunction suits in both the State and Federal Courts.

We gather from the record that the defendants, A. R. • *386 Kizer, J. R. Williams, B. W. Biggs, Robert Harvie, R. D. Goore, O. P. Jamison, R. S. Hand, B. T. Brown, Goore Sales Company, Goore-Manus Company, Dixie Sales Company, and W. D. Kelley, have been properly served with the summons and complaint in the action. Except the parties named, no other person has been served.

The only defendant who has made answer to the complaint is O. P. Jamison. Pie contends that the machines operated by him are not in violation of law, and that the statutes under which the proceedings are brought, Section 196, Criminal Code of 1922, and Act No. 264, page 367, of the Acts of 1931, are unconstitutional, null and void, in that they are in conflict with the Constitution of this State and ■that of the United States.

One of the machines operated by the defendant, Jamison, was brought before the Court for inspection and examination. We are convinced that it is an unlawful slot machine under our decision in Harvie v. Heise, etc., et al., 150 S. C., 277, 148 S. E., 66.

The constitutionality of the “Slot Machine Statutes” was recently passed upon by a “Three-Judge Court,” in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of South Carolina, in the case of E. M. Durant, plaintiff, v. N. L. Bennett, Sheriff of Spartanburg County, et al., defendants, and the case of A. R. Kiser (one of the defendants here), plaintiff, against the same defendants, 54 F. (2d), 634. In those cases, the statutes were held to be constitutional, the opinion of Hon. J. Ryles Glenn, United States District Judge, being concurred in by Hon. John J. Parker, United States Circuit Judge, and Hon. H. H. Watkins, United States District Judge.

The temporary injunctions granted in the Federal Court, involving the same kind of slot machines in many instances referred to in this proceeding, were dismissed by the “Three-Judge Court,” and the conduct of the slot machine operators, both as to the operation of the machines and the manner in *387 which they had used and abused the process of the Federal Court, was severely condemned. This Court is entirely satisfied with the very able opinion of Judge Glenn, which we take the liberty to adopt as our opinion, and a copy of it, which is hereto attached, will be reported.

While this Court dislikes to resort to the harsh remedy of injunction to enforce the criminal laws of the State, and would prefer not to use that process in any way to prevent trial by jury, we are forced to feel that the persons who have been operating unlawful slot machines in this State, including several of the defendants in this action, have shown very little respect for the laws and the Courts; that they have not sought, as they might have done, trial by jury, but themselves have endeavored time after time to prevent such trials by applications for writs of injunction. As pointed out in the opinion of Judge Glenn, if a slot- machine operated by one of them is not prohibited by law, the owner or operator has the right to recover in the Courts of this State, under the statutes, such machine, when it has been seized by a peace officer, and he has further redress if his property rights are invaded.

This Court, of course, should not grant injunctions against parties who have not been served with the process in the cause, and to that extent the prayer of the complaint is denied. The defendants who have been served, however, should not continue to operate slot machines in violation of the law, and the injunction as to them, prayed for, is granted.

The opinion of Glenn, United States District Judge, is as follows:

“For the last several years the State of South Carolina has been peculiarly vigilant in its activities to enforce its criminal statutes directed against gambling devices. Particularly have these activities been directed against the operation of so-called slot machines which have been-placed in the State and which are undoubtedly operated primarily as gambling de *388 vices. It appears that these machines are so constructed as to yield an enormous return to the owners and the local custodians with whom the owners place the machine. In that the machines, so far as outward appearance is concerned, closely resemble innocent vending machines, the determination of the illegality of each particular machine has not always been an easy task. The owners of the machines have sought Court protection in State and Federal Courts alike. Proceedings have been had in the original jurisdiction of the State Supreme Court. See Harvie et al. v. Heise et al., 150 S. C., 277, 148 S. E., 66. But the opponents of the slot machine felt that Section 196 of the Code of Laws of 1922, Vol. 2, was not drastic enough. Accordingly, the Legislature of 1931 passed a very far-reaching statute (37 St. at Large, 367), against all forms of gambling devices, vending machines which could be operated as gambling devices, and all games of chance. It is not necessary to set out the entire statute, as only Section 3 of the said statute is attacked as being violative of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and of certain provisions of the South Carolina Constitution of 1895. This section is as follows: “That any vending or slot machine, punch board, pull board, or other device pertaining to games of chance, prohibited by this Act shall be seized by any officer of the law and at once taken before any magistrate of the county in which such machine is seized, who shall immediately examine same, and if he is satisfied that such vending or slot machine is in violation of this Act or any other law of this State, he shall direct that said machine be immediately destroyed.”

“Since the passage and approval of this statute, the officers of the State, both State and county, have proceeded to seize slot or vending machines which belong to the petitioners in these cases. We refer to the complainants throughout this opinion as petitioners, in that the case is primarily before us on an application for an interlocutory injunction. In that the *389

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.E. 444, 164 S.C. 383, 81 A.L.R. 722, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-daniel-v-kizer-sc-1932.