State Ex Rel. Ebert v. Loden

83 A. 564, 117 Md. 373, 1912 Md. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 83 A. 564 (State Ex Rel. Ebert v. Loden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Ebert v. Loden, 83 A. 564, 117 Md. 373, 1912 Md. LEXIS 116 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

*375 Pattisow, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this ease the relator, Frank M. Ebert, on the 22nd day of October, 1910, was arrested upon a warrant charging him with having unlawfully operated a moving-picture machine in the City of Baltimore without having first secured a licence iti accordance with the provisions of Chapter 693 of the Acts of 1910 of the General Assembly of Maryland, and when carried before the respondent, a police magistrate of that city, he protested against and denied the jurisdiction and authority of the magistrate to find him guilty of any punishable offence upon the facts alleged in the warrant, for the reason that said alleged Act of Assembly which he was charged with having violated, was unconstitutional and void. The case was from time to time postponed, until on the 6th day of December, 1910, the relator, after unsuccessfully protesting against the jurisdiction of the magistrate for the reason stated above, asked for a jury trial, which was refused him, but the justice took his recognizance for his appearance before him at a later day therein named. Before the case was heard, however, the relator filed his petition in the Baltimore City Count alleging the facts as we have stated and further alleging .therein:

First: That the said Act of 1910 violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States by unjustly, arbitrarily and unreasonably discriminating against the petitioner and all others in like situation with him, who were engaged in the vocation of moving-picture machine operator in the City of Baltimore at the time of the passage of said act, by depriving him and all others in like situation with him of his and their liberties and property without due process of law, and denying to him and them .the equal protection of the laws.

Second: That the said act is also void for the reason that it violates the Constitution of Maryland:

(1) For the reasons assigned above by which, it is alleged, it contravenes the Federal Constitution.

*376 (2) Because it embraces more than one subject and its subject-matter is not sufficiently described in its title.

(3) It assumes unlawfully to delgate to a certain board of examiners attempted to be created therein, legislative powers and discretion, contrary to Article 8 of the Bill of Rights of the State of Maryland.

(4) Because, as interpreted, it vests complete summary jurisdiction in police magistrates and justices of the peace of Baltimore City to try and punish violations under it, without providing for trial by jury or for any appeal to a higher Court.

The petition then prays the Court to issue its writ of certiorari commanding the justice, Daniel J. Loden, to send and certify to such Court the record of the proceeding in the ease, together with the writ, that the jurisdiction of the magistrate might be inquired into. The writ was issued as prayed, to which a return was made and filed by the justice of the peace, termed the defendant in the certiorari proceedings, and by him a motion was made to quash the writ. The Court after hearing argument held that the petitioner having-prayed a jury trial was, under the act, entitled to a trial by jury, and thus passed an order quashing the writ and remanding the case to the justice of the peace for further proceedings, to be had in conformity with his opinion therein expressed. It is from this order that the relator has appealed.

The title of the Act of 1910, Ch. 693, is, “An Act to add a new article to the Code of Public Local Laws, to be known as ‘Moving-Picture Machine Operators,’ sub-title ‘Baltimore City,’ and be numbered — ”.

Following the title are several whereas' clauses in which attention is called to the danger to life and property incident to the use of explosives, in the operation and management of moving-picture machines, by careless and incompetent operators and to the necessity for the enactment of a law “by which none but persons who are skilled in the avocation of operating moving-picture machines or electrical project ing apparatus should be allowed to pursue that calling and *377 to that end a board of examining moving-picture machine operators should be created, whose duty it shall be to examine moving-picture machine operators desiring to follow that trade, and give such as may possess the proper requisites a proper certificate of proficiency.”

Thereafter follow the seven sections of the act.

The first section is the enacting clause.

The second section defines the meaning of the term “Moving-Picture Machine.”

The third section provides that the Governor “shall biennially appoint in and for Baltimore City three persons, one from the Board of Eire Underwriters’ Association, one master electrician to represent the Building Inspector’s office of the City of Baltimore, and one moving-picture machine operator, all of whom have had not less than five years’ experience at the business and who have resided in Baltimore City, State of Maryland, for a period of not less than two years next preceding their appointment, who shall be known as the Board of Examining Moving-Picture Machine Operators.

Section 4 provides that “all persons who at the time of the enactment of this act are engaged in the business of a ‘Moving-Picture Machine Operator’ in the City of Baltimore, as described in section 2 of this act, shall within sixty days after the first day óf May, 1910, comply with all the provisions of this act; otherwise they shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction before a justice of the peace or a police justice, be fined a sum not less than ten dollars, nor more than fifty dollars, for each day or fraction thereof that they shall pursue the business of ‘Moving-Picture Machine' Operators’ in the City of Baltimore, and, if said fine is not paid, he shall be subject to imprisonment for ninety days, or both, at the discretion of the judge.”

By section 5 it is provided that: “If any such person desires to engage or continue in said business of ‘Moving-Picture Machine Operator’ after the passage of this act he shall apply to the hoard provided for in section 3 of this act *378

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Bluebook (online)
83 A. 564, 117 Md. 373, 1912 Md. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ebert-v-loden-md-1912.