State v. Haase

116 N.E.2d 224, 97 Ohio App. 377, 68 Ohio Law. Abs. 193
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1953
Docket22928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 116 N.E.2d 224 (State v. Haase) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haase, 116 N.E.2d 224, 97 Ohio App. 377, 68 Ohio Law. Abs. 193 (Ohio Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

OPINION

By SKEEL, J:

This appeal comes to this Court on questions' of law from a judgment entered in the Police Court of the City of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, finding the defendant guilty of a violation of §13044 GC. (Sec. 3773.34 R. C.) The defendant is a part owner of a hardware store located at 2078 S. Taylor Rd., and known as the Barr Hardware Store. On Apr. 5, 1953, which was Sunday, or the first day of the week, an officer of the police department of the City of Cleveland Heights, went to defendant’s hardware store and found it open for business with the defendant in charge. One of the State’s witnesses testified that defendant told him that the store was open for business seven days a week. The defendant did not take the witness stand in his own defense or by his own testimony dispute any of the material allegations of the affidavit which was filed April 5, 1953, as the basis of this action. The defendant before trial filed a motion to quash, claiming §13044 GC (§3773.24 R. C.), to be unconstitutional and that, the affidavit does not state an offense punishable under the laws of Ohio. The motion' should have been designated “demurrer,” particularly in raising the question of the constitutionality of §13044 GC (§3773.24 R. C.), as provided by §2941.58 R. C. Davis v. State, 32 Oh St 24; State v. Bateman, 7 N. P. 487. The trial court overruled the motion.

Upon trial, the defendant proffered testimony that hardware stores in cities and villages contiguous to the City of Cleveland Heights were open on Sunday and that his opening on Sunday was necessary to meet such competition and that *195 the following businesses were permitted to operate in the City of Cleveland Heights without being arrested for violating the Sunday closing law. (Sec. 3773.24 R. C.): Drugstores in which items of hardware (such as are for sale m defendant’s store) are offered for sale on Sunday; gasoline stations; garages; a radio and television sales and repair shop; real estate offices; shoe store; a store selling garden and lawn equipment, seeds, fertilizers and the like, and other stores of like character all of which evidence was excluded by the court.

The defendant claims the following errors;

1. In overruling motion to quash.

2. In exclusion of evidence of other businesses being operated and allowed to remain open on Sunday (said evidence being proffered by cross-examination of State’s witnesses and witnesses offered by the defendant).

3. In excluding the testimony of the arresting officer proffered on cross-examination as to what, in his opinion, was a work of “necessity.”

4. In refusing to enter judgment for defendant at the close of all the evidence.

5. In overruling defendant’s motion for new trial.

Three questions are presented:—

1. Did the state make out a case without proof that defendant’s business was not, as operated by him on Apr 5, 1953, one of “necessity” under the saving clause of the statute?

2. Is the statute constitutional? (Sec. 3773.24 R. C.)

3. Does the enforcement of the statute unequally, that is, causing defendant’s arrest for conducting his hardware business on Sunday, without interfering with others who conduct like businesses on Sunday which are not such as come within the saving clause of the Act, constitute a violation of defendant’s constitutional rights under the XIV Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and of Art. I, Sec. 2 of the Constitution of Ohio, guaranteeing to him equal protection under the law?

There is some authority in other States that one or more of the exceptions contained in the saving clause of the Sunday closing law, according to the facts of the case, must be negatived in the complaint and such negative fact established by the State in making out its case. 50 Amer. Juris. 828. But under the law of Ohio, unless such negative averment is necessary as a part of the description of the crime charged, it need not be alleged in the complaint or established by evidence as a part of the State’s case. In Billigheimer v. State. 32 Oh St 435, parag, 2 of syllabus, provides:

*196 “2. a negative averment to the matter of a proviso in a statute, is not requisite in an information, unless the matter of such proviso enters into and becomes a part of the description of the offense, or is a qualification of the language defining or creating it.”

See also: Hirn v. State, 1 Oh St 16; Cheadle v. State, 4 Oh St 477, Becker v. State, 8 Oh St 391, Strenglien v. State, 17 Oh St 453; Moody v. State, 17 Oh St 111, Hall v. State, 58 Oh St 676, 153 A. L. R. 1277 (parag. 111, “exception not in the enacting clause”).

On page 461 of the opinion, in the Strenglien case, supra, the court quoted from 1 Wharton American Crim. Law, Sec. 378, as follows:

“If provisos and exceptions are contained in a distinct clause it is not necessary to state in the indictment that the defendant does not come within the exception or to negative the proviso it contains, ‘for all these are matters of defense, which the prosecutor need not anticipate, but which are more properly to come from the prisoner.’ ”

At the time that this prosecution was commenced' §13044 GC defined the elements of the crime charged against defendant, of keeping his hardware store open on Sunday for the transaction of general business.. The exceptions to the statute are contained in separate sections that is, §13045 GC and §13406 GC, the first of these sections providing for the exception contended for by defendant. So that here not only is the exception contained in a separate clause of the statute, but in a completely separate section. The fact is that in the Revised Code, effective in Ohio as of October 1, 1953, these three sections have been put into a single section (§3773.24 R. C.), but in separate paragraphs and the recodification did not change the meaning or interpretation of our statutes.

Under the Bigamy statute, §13026 GC (§2905.43 R. C.) the exception extended to one whose husband or wife has been absent continuously for five years next preceding the second marriage without being known to such person to be living within that time. The State need not negative such exception in the indictment and a defendant claiming to come within the exception must establish such claim as a defense. Strenglien v. State, supra.

Under the Carrying Concealed Weapons statute, §12919 GC (§2923.01 R. C.) an exception is provided in §13448-4 GC (§2845.76 R. C.) that if a prudent person would be justified in carrying a weapon in defense of himself, property or family, under the circumstances, and the defendant was engaged in a lawful business such circumstances shall require a jury tg *197 acquit defendant. The courts have been unanimous in holding that this exception to the carrying concealed weapons charge constituted an affirmative defense and the state has no burden to negative it either in the indictment or on trial of the action. Porello v. State, 121 Oh St 280; Fink v. State, 40 Oh Ap 431; Hart v. State, 42 Oh Ap 501.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.E.2d 224, 97 Ohio App. 377, 68 Ohio Law. Abs. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haase-ohioctapp-1953.