State v. . Williams

26 N.C. 400
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 N.C. 400 (State v. . Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Williams, 26 N.C. 400 (N.C. 1844).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

'The conduct of the defendant is contrary to the usages of North Carolina, the general welfare, and likewise to the law of the land. It seems tq us to be very reprehensible; for we perfectly concur in the eloquent pas *402 sage in the Commentaries, on the propriety and political nc-cessity of keeping one day of the week for the purposes of public worship, relaxation and refreshment. 4B1. 63. The ^nst|tut|onj wherever it has existed, has proved to be a great good, promoting private virtue and happiness among all classes, and the public morals and prosperity. It is, therefore, fit, that every commonwealth, and especially one, in which Christianity is generally professed, should set apart by law a day for those purposes and enforce its due observance by such sanctions as may seem adequate. Byastatutein this State, the profanation of Sunday, by working in a person’s ordinary calling, is punished by a pecuniary fine, recoverable by a summary proceeding before a justice of the peace. Rev. Stat. c. 119. s. I. As that statute does not make the ofFence indictable, it is not punishable in that mode, unless it be so at the common law. That we have now to enquire of, since, although we may unite with the great bulk of our fellow citizens in reprobating an act bringing scandal on our own people, and giving so much offence to the most moral and pious among us, we are, nevertheless, not to punish the act, contrary to the law.

The indictment is for compelling certain slaves, belonging to the defendant, to work on several Sundays in the ordinary calling of the defendant on his farm. It lays those acts to be to the common nuisance and concludes at common law.

We do not find it any where stated, that doing secular work on Sunday is per se an offence at common law. There is, indeed, in the Crown Circuit Companion a precedent, (which is also adopted in 2Chitty. Cr. L. 20) of an indictment against a butcher as a commo'n Sabbath breaker and profaner of Sunday, for having, within certain times, kept a common public and open shop in a town on Sunday and sold therein meat to divers persons. Mr. East also, speaking of offences against God and religion, remarks, that the profanation of Sunday is by a variety of statutes punishable in particular instances by summary process before magistrates; *403 and then adds, that “it is also said tobe indictable at the common law.” And he cites the precedent just mentioned. In the precedent the act is laid as a nuisance.; as it is in the indictment before us. There is however, a marked difference between the cases; the work here not being in a town, nor such as in itself is likely to annoy any person, except as .the want of a decent respect for the sentiments of our citizens generally and their sense of religious duty might render it offensive to them, whether they saw it or only heard of it. It was in a rural situation, gathered no crowd, disturbed no body For working on a farm would not seem in itself a molestation to others, more than cooking meals on that day at one’s home or taking a journey either to or from one’s home, the latter being, all, customary acts in all Christian Countries, including our own.

The truth is, that it offends vs, not so much because it disturbs us in practising for ourselves the religious duties, or enjoying the salutary repose or recreation, of that day, as that it is in itself a breach of God’s law, and a violation of the party’s own religous duty. But we do not perceive how it can become an offence at common law even when the labor is both openly and publickly performed, as in a town, for example, except upon a process of reasoning of this kind: That the Christian religion isa part of the common law, that it forbids work on Sunday, not only as a sin in itself, !but as a disturbance to others and an injury to the State, and therefore that the law prohibits such profanation and punishes it. But we cannot believe that such a principle was established at the common law. In the first place, the extent of the obligation of the Sabbath under the gospel is a point, on which the professors and teachers of Christianity have been far from agreeing. Some contended for a strict exclusive dedication of Sunday to public worship and private devotion, while others thought it not inconsistent with the duties ofre-ligion, but rather, as promoting their cheerful and hearty discharge to employ a part of the day in sports and pastime, which are commonly deemed innocent. And others, again, *404 professed to bold, that the fourth commandment was addrcs-ed to the Jews only, and, not being of moral obligation, is now abrogated. It seems, however, to be generally agreed) ^ sjg0r 0£ tjjg Mosaic law, at least according to Pharisaic srictness, was much softened under the Christian dispensation., as well as the day of rest charged. We know, too, that very liberal, perhaps lax, sentiments on this point prevailed among those in authority in Church and State in the ancient days, when the foundations were laid of the common law of England. It would not, then, be likely; that the temporal judges would, without the enactment of Parliament, assume to punish the violation of Sunday, as being a breach of Christian or of religious duty. We should rather expect them to leave that to the censure of the Spiritual Judge, who was charged peculiarly with the office of enjoining on all subjects the duties of religion and obedience to the canons of the Church. Such was the course of both Parliament and of the temporal courts in respect to some acts) which are, at least, as scandalous as that now before us. For example, the act of 1 Car. 1 c. 1, prohibits certain sports on Sunday under pecuniary penalties, and then provides, that the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction shall continue, and those of-fences be punished as if the act had not been made. To this day the crimes of personal impurity have been left to ecclesiastical censure alone; and though all agree that incontinence is opposed both t-o the Christian and Mosaic dispensations neither Parliament has to this day enacted that it shall be punished by the temporal Judge, nor have those Judges ventured to assume the jurisdiction without the authority of Parliament. Although it may be true, that the Christian religion is a part of the common law, it is not so -in the sense that an act contrary to the precepts of our Savi- or or Christian morals, is, necessarily, indictable. Those which are merely against God and religion were left to the correction of conscience, or the religious authorities of the -State, Such, necessarily, must be the character of acts which .are criminal only in respect of the day on which they *405 are done, being a day set apart by the author of our religion for his peculiar service. As offences against religion merely, they were the subjects of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, unless Parliament interfered and by an act made them the subjects of the jurisdiction of the temporal Judges.

That to some extent would follow from the establishment of a particular religion or church in the State, as it thereby would be criminal to deny and deride the establishment made by law, or its distinguishing doctrines. But we do not find, that, at the common law, the holiness of the Sabbath was held to be one of those doctrines of the established churches, so far as to make its violation a crime by the municipal law. In Rex v

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.C. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-nc-1844.