Territory of Hawaii v. Ah Choy

17 Haw. 331, 1906 Haw. LEXIS 83
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Haw. 331 (Territory of Hawaii v. Ah Choy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of Hawaii v. Ah Choy, 17 Haw. 331, 1906 Haw. LEXIS 83 (haw 1906).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

HARTWELL, J.

The defendants were convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of $5 each and $1.15 costs by the district magistrate of Honolulu upon a charge of violating an ordinance of the county of Oahu made by its board of supervisors against spraying clothes with liquid projected from the mouth.

[332]*332The defendants appealed from the judgment upon points of law, viz.: “That said judgment is illegal and invalid because :•

1. That this Court has no jurisdiction of or concerning the charge entered against the defendants, or of the subject matter of said cause.

2. That said charge sets forth no offense under any law of the Territory of Hawaii.

3. That the District Court has no power or authority to add costs to the fine imposed in and by said judgment.

4. That the ordinance alleged in and by the charge herein to have been violated by these defendants is null and void, because the Board of Supervisors of the County of Oahu had no power or authority to prescribe imprisonment as a punishment for the violation of any ordinance made or enacted by it; that said ordinance is an illegal discrimination against Chinese laundrymen, and an unreasonable regulation and beyond the power of said Board of Supervisors to make, pass or enact.”

The defendants’ contention may thus be summarized: (1) This method of spraying clothes cannot lawfully be prohibited; it not appearing to be injurious to health its prohibition is not a health regulation made in the exercise of police powers of sanitation or any other police power and is unreasonable; (2) as Chinese only use this method its prohibition is made against them and is class legislation; (3) the County Act gives no power to the board of supervisors to require imprisonment for nonpayment of fines imposed, for violation of its ordinances. The ordinance is therefore radically defective; the part which authorizes a fine cannot be treated separately from the concluding part of the same sentence which requires imprisonment for nonpayment of fine. It is not a case of fine or imprisonment in which the former might be valid if the latter were invalid but the imprisonment is a necessary consequence of nonpayment of the fine.

The defendants abandoned in argument their first and third points of law.

The following is the ordinance in question:

“Section 1. It shall be unlawful for any person or persons, ironing or performing any act, in the laundrying of clothing of another, or in the laundrying of clothing for hire, within the [333]*333County of Oahu, to spray any article so laundered with liquid sprayed or projected from the mouth of said person or persons, or to direct or permit any person m his employ to so spray such article so laundered.

“Section 2. Any person violating any of the provisions of this ordinance shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be fined not less than Five Dollars, nor more than Twenty-Five Dollars and in case such fine is not satisfied by immediate payment thereof the person so fined shall be committed to prison for the nonpayment of the same and the time of such imprisonment shall be deemed to discharge the same at the rate of One Dollar per day.

“Section 3. This Ordinance shall take effect from and after its passage and publication.”

The defendants submit that if the ordinance were a sincere attempt to guard the public health and not a covert blow at Chinese laundrymen or based on merely sentimental and frivolous considerations its operation would have been confined to the actual danger of clothes spraying from the mouths of diseased persons and would prohibit every kind of laundering and the handling of laundry things by diseased persons. No one, the argument continues, has ever heard, and there is no evidence, of harm from the practice; on.the contrary there is undisputed evidence that none has been known.

It is often the duty of the court to consider not only the ostensible object of police ordinances of this kind but their real motive and when it is apparent that they are based on anti-Chinese grounds and are a device for removing the competition or the presence from the community of persons of Chineso nationality who in common with all others are under the protection of the United States Constitution, it is the duty of the court, which we should not hesitate to perform, to declare them to be void.

“Though the law itself be fair on its face and impartial in appearance, yet if it is applied and administered by public authority with an evil eye and an unequal hand, so as practically to make unjust and illegal discriminations between persons in similar circumstances, material to their rights, the denial of [334]*334equal justice is still within the prohibition of the Constitution.” Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U. S. 356. Thus an ordinance was held to be invalid which provided that every male convict imprisoned in the county jail should have the hair of his head cut or clipped to an uniform length of one inch from the scalp, Field, J., saying: “The class character of this legislation is none the less manifest because of the general terms in which it is expressed. * * * Where an ordinance, though general in its terms, only operates upon a sjiecial race, sect or class, it being universally understood that it is to be enforced only against that race, sect, or class, we may justly conclude that it was the intention of the body adopting it that it should only have such operation and treat it accordingly.” Ho Ah Kow v. Nunan, Fed. Cas. 6546. Again, a health ordinance was held to be unreasonable, and therefore void, which prohibited the sale of secondhand clothing and bed furniture, the court saying: “The sale of second-hand clothing is not a nuisance per se, but is on the other hand a lawful business, and under proper regulations may be so conducted as to be without danger to the health of the community, and at the same time to be a great benefit to a large portion of the people. There is nothing dangerous to health in articles of second-hand clothing of themselves; they can only become noxious by reason of prior use, of having been worn or possessed by persons themselves infected, or living in infected communities.” State v. Taft, 118 N. C. 1190.

Undoubtedly the ordinance in question stops far short of being a thorough and undiscriminating attempt to remove causes of infection from laundry work and in beginning with Chinese laundries it m'ay be, although we hope not, that harrying Chinese was in the minds of those who urged or made it, but this is not a case in which to apply the saying, “First cast out the beam which is in thine own eye,” for the thing sought to be prevented is undoubtedly an unwholesome and unsanitary practice. The facility with which germs of disease are communicated by the saliva is common knowledge. It is impossible [335]*335to guard against the danger of infection from this spraying process by anything less than its absolute prohibition, hence rve cannot say that the ordinance is unreasonable or because of its application to Chinese only that it is class legislation. The 14th Amendment is not intended to secure immunity from such practice on the sole ground that it is indulged in by Chinese only.

The first and second objections to the ordinance are not sustained.

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17 Haw. 331, 1906 Haw. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-hawaii-v-ah-choy-haw-1906.