State v. Legum

2 Balt. C. Rep. 248
CourtBaltimore City Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 248 (State v. Legum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Legum, 2 Balt. C. Rep. 248 (Md. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

RITCHIE, J.—

The first count of this indictment is under the Act of 1894, Ch. 302; the five other counts are under the Act of 1902, Ch. 101, generally known as the “Sweatshop Law,” and they have all been denmrred to on the ground that the Acts in question infringe upon the right of the citizen to the free use of his property, and upon his right of personal liberty, without due process of law, and thus violate the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and the 23rd Article of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. It was conceded, however, during the argument that the first count is good.

Under the Code, Art. 27, Secs. 148 and 149, and the Amendatory Acts of 1894, Ch. 302, and 1896, Ch. 467, full provision is made for the sanitary conditions of all factories, manufacturing establishments and workshops in the State, and the chief purpose' of the Act of 1902, as gathered from its terms, is to reach the manufacture of the articles therein mentioned (which comprise nearly every article of men and women’s wearing apparel, and' also cigarettes and cigars), in the homes of those who therein themselves manufacture such articles, or of those in whose homes others manufacture them.

The Act provides as follows:

1. That no room or apartment in any tenement or dwelling house shall be used ;

2. For the manufacture of coats, vests, trousers, knee-pants, overalls, cloaks, hats, caps, capes, suspenders, jerseys, blouses, waists, waist-bands, underwear, neckwear, furs, fur trimmings, fur garments, shirts, purses, feathers, artificial flowers, cigarettes or cigars;

3. Except by the immediate members of the family living therein;

4. That such family is limited to the husband and wife, their children or the children of either;

[249]*2495. Tliat neither such family, nor any member thereof, shall use any such room or apartment for such purpose;

6. Without having first obtained a permit from the Chief of the Bureau of Industrial Statistics, stating the maximum number of persons which he may allow to be employed therein;

7. That such permit shall not bo granted until after an inspection of the premises;

8. And such permit may be revoked by said Chief at any time when (in his judgment) the health of the community, or of those employed, or living, in such room or apartment, may require;

9. The Chief of the Bureau and his deputies have the right at all reasonable times to enter any rooms or apartments, where any goods are being manufactured, for the purpose of inspection, and the persons in control are required to furnish access thereto;

10. The penalty for any violation of the law is a fine not exceeding §100, or imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both.

11. Other provisions of the Act prescribe certain conditions upon which any person or corporation may hire or employ others to work at making the articles referred to; requiring a like permit, revocable in like manner, and also requiring all persons or corporations contracting for the manufacture of any of the articles in question, or giving out materials out of which they are to be made, to keep a register of the persons with whom they contract, or to whom they give out such materials.

The traverser is indicted for having manufactured coats, vests, &c., at his home without a permit, and for other acts in violation of the statute.

Subject to the police power of the State, that is, the power to legislate both as to property and persons, in such respects as the public health, safety, or morals may require, the citizen is entitled to the free and profitable use of his property, and his right to pursue any lawful trade or avocation in a lawful manner, is part of his right of personal liberty.

If necessary for the public welfare, restrictions may be placed upon the use of property, or upon the right to pursue the trade or avocation one may choose to follow, and such restrictions do not deprive the citizen of his property, or his liberty, without due process of law. The constitutional guarantees referred to are not construed as interfering with the proper exercise of the police power. Property must not be a menace to the public health, or used for purposes dangerous to public safety or morals. And so the various trades, callings and professions of the people may be regulated in respect to the conditions or locality, under which, or where, they may be prosecuted, to such extent as may be necessary to protect or promote the public health, safety or morals.

Police regulations, however, must bo just and reasonable, and not oppressive or burdensome; they must not be arbitrary ; they must be necessary for the public welfare, and must not extend beyond the evil to be remedied or guarded against.

If they exceed any of these limitations, then they deprive the citizen of his property or his liberty without due process of law.

In the light of these settled principles let us look again at the Act in question, and let it be assumed, as it was in the argument, (although somewhat a matter of inference), that its object is the preservation of the public health.

The Room or Apartment. — The Act embraces every room or apartment in any tenement or dwelling house. This is not the case of prohibiting or regulating some given work or occupation within a certain locality. The Act applies to every home in the State, and to every room in each home. It is not confined to such rooms as may be used as workshops, or to such as may otherwise be used for eating, or living, or sleeping purposes, or which may be occupied by sick or diseased persons. It applies to every room no matter what its conditions, or relation to other parts of the house.

The prohibition against the manufacture in every tenement or dwelling house, of any of the articles in question except by the family, and by the family except on the conditions proscribed, impairs the right to the free and profitable use of property, whether occupied by the tenant or owner, thereby reducing its value, and interferes with the right to pursue any lawful occupation, not injurious to others, in one’s [250]*250own home, and unless this sweeping prohibition is demanded by the public health, it cannot be sustained.

The Family. — The husband ánd wife, their children, and the children of either, can so use such room or apartment only by first obtaining the permit; against all others the prohibition is absolute. The mother and father, the brother and sister, and every other relative of husband or wife, though permanent members of the household, as well as the outsider whose help may be needed, are excluded.

The Articles of Manufacture. — The manufacture of wearing apparel is one ,of the most common, useful and'necessary occupations known to the people. It is a matter of common knowledge that its prosecution under ordinary conditions, is not injurious to the health of the public,- or of those engaged in it, and it is not urged by the State that the making of cigarettes and cigars is so injurious.

It has in fact been decided by the Court of Appeals of New York in Jacob’s Case, 98 N. Y. 98, that the fiianufacture of cigars is not in itself injurious to the public health.

The Inspection and Permit. — The permit is not to be granted by the Chief of the Bureau until after an inspection of the premises has been made.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-legum-mdcityctbalt-1902.