Tucker v. West

29 Ark. 386
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 386 (Tucker v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. West, 29 Ark. 386 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

English, C. J.

Pleasant B. Tucker, as administrator of Edw. M. Crawford, deceased, sued Robert J. West and John Mock, in the Washington circuit court, on an instrument alleged in the amended complaint to be a writing obligatory for $2,267, bearing date about the loth of April, 1861, payable, one day after date, to plaintiff’s intestate, with ten per cent, interest, etc., and in the possession of defendants.

The record is in some confusion as to the answer of the defendants, but it seems to have contained seven paragraphs, to all of which but three (the 5th, 6th and 7th), a demurrer was sustained.

The 5th was, in substance, that the instrument sued on was made, signed, executed and delivered on Sunday, the 14th day of April, 1861, contrary to the first section of the fifth article of the 51st chapter of the Digest (Grould’s) of the statutes of the state of Arkansas, title, Sabbath Breaking.

6th. Payment. 7th. Non est factum.

The issues thus formed were submitted to a jury. The evidence introduced on the trial is conflicting. It seems that in the summer of 1860, Crawford sold to West some land, on which there was a balance of purchase money due. The obligation sued on was executed, according to the testimony of several witnesses, at a house where- Crawford and West were both living, on Sunday, April 14, 1861, for the balance of purchase money. Crawford wrote the note, and West and Mock signed it. It was dated back to the 13th of April. The testimony of some of the witnesses conduced to prove that Mock did not sign the note until Monday, on which day Crawford left for Oregon. There was also evidence conducing to.prove that Crawford left the note with Tucker (who, after his death, became his administrator) for collection; and that in 1862 the note was taken out of Tucker’s hands by a confederate provost marshal, as the property of an alien enemy, to whom West paid it in confederate money, and the note was delivered to him.

Among other instructions, the court charged the jury against the objection of'plaintiff: “3d. That if they found from the evidence that the instrument sued on was made, executed and delivered to said E. M. Crawford, by the defendants, on Sunday, they should find for the defendants,” etc.

The jury returned a special verdict, as follows: “ We, the jury, find that the instrument sued on was made, executed and delivered by the defendants on Sunday.”

Upon this verdict the court rendered judgment discharging the defendants; the plaintiff moved for a new trial on numerous grounds, which was overruled, and he excepted and appealed.

I. Was the note sued on void because executed on Sunday ?

It is a settled principle of the common law that all contracts which are founded on an act- prohibited by a statute under a penalty are void, although not expressly declared to be so. O'Donnell et al. v. Sweeney, 5 Ala., 468 ; 1 Taunt., 135.

By the common law, no judicial act could be done on Sunday. We have statutes making exceptions.

But as to the making of contracts, and all other acts not of a judicial nature, the common law made no distinction between Sunday and any other day. 2 Parsons on Con., 757, notes, and cases cited. Drury v. Defontaine, 1 Taunt., 131.

By statute, 29 Chas. II, it was enacted that “ no tradesman, artificer, or other person whatsoever, should do or exercise any worldly labor, business or work of their ordinary callings upon the Lord’s day, or any part thereof (work of necessity and charity only excepted); and that every person of the age of fourteen years, offending in the premises, should forfeit five shillings.”

Contracts made in violation of this statute were held by the 'English courts to be void. Chitty on Con., 374 and cases cited. But where a man kept a commission stable for the sale of horses by auction, it was held that a private sale made by him on Sunday was not void under the statute, bécause the sale was not in the exereise of his ordinary calling ; though Lord Mansfield said it was a very indecent thing to sell a horse on Sunday, and a thing that no religious man would do. Drury v. Fontaine, 1 Taunt., 135.

In this country, Sunday laws, or “laws for the better observance of the Lord’s day,” as they were generally called, were passed in most of the. colonies, and are now in force in most of the states; and contracts in violation of them have been held void, the decisions varying according to the peculiar expressions of the different statutes. 2 Parsons Con., 757-760, and notes.

Our statute is as follows: “ Every person who shall, on the Sabbath or Sunday, be found laboring, or shall, compel his apprentice or servant to labor or to perform other services than customary household duties of daily necessity, comfort or charity, on conviction thereof, shall be fined one dollar for each separate offense.

“ The provisions of this act shall not apply to steamboats and other-vessels navigating the waters of the state, nor to such manufacturing establishments as require to be kept in continual operation.

“ Persons who are members of any religious society who observe as Sabbath any other day of the week than the Christian Sabbath or Sunday, shall not be subject to the penalties of this act, so that they observe one day in seven, agreeably to the faith and practice of their church or society.

“ Every person who shall, on Sunday, keep open any store, or retail any goods, wares, or merchandise, or keep open any dram shop or grocery, or sell or retail any spirits or wine, shall on conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not less than ten dollars nor more than twenty.

“ Charity or necessity may be shown in justification of the violation of the last preceding section.

“Horse racing, gaming,"hunting with a gun to kill game, or shooting for amusement on the Sabbath, are also prohibited and punished.” Gantt’s Dig., ch. 42, pp. 382-3.

In Alabama. “Worldly business or employment, ordinary or servile work (works of necessity or charity excepted),” on Sunday, is prohibited, under a penalty.

O'Donnell et al. v. Sweeney, 5 Ala., 468, was a suit on a note executed on Sunday for a horse sold on that day, and the note was held invalid. The court said: “ To constitute an offense against 29 Chas. II, one of thé parties to the contract, at least, must be engaged in his ‘ ordinary calling;’ not so under our law, which prohibits all worldly business or employment, or ordinary or servile work, ‘ works of necessity or charity only excepted.’ The term ‘ ordinary,’ in our statute, is equivalent to common or usual work or employment, and beyond all doubt embraces within its ample range the sale of a horse, or any other chattel, whether the sale be public or private; whether the parties engaged in it, or either of them, were in the prosecution of their ordinary employment or not. It is ‘ worldly business or employment,’ and it falls within the letter, as well as within the mischief of the statute.”

In Saltmarsh v. Tuthill, 13. Ala., 390, held, that the indorsement of a bill on Sunday, drawn in substitution of one previously given, was void under the Sabbath act.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

American Accident &Life Ins. v. American Pioneer Life Ins.
445 S.W.2d 896 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1969)
Gantt v. Arkansas Power & Light Co.
74 S.W.2d 232 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1934)
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Wilson
41 F.2d 319 (Eighth Circuit, 1930)
Davis v. Murphy
5 S.W.2d 936 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1928)
McElhannon v. Coffman
292 S.W. 393 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)
Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Reynolds-Davis Grocery Co.
257 S.W. 70 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)
New York Life Insurance v. Mason
235 S.W. 422 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1921)
Planters Fire Insurance v. Ford
153 S.W. 810 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1913)
Kreider v. State
147 S.W. 449 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1912)
Ensign v. Coffelt
145 S.W. 231 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1912)
State ex rel. Temple v. Barnes
132 N.W. 215 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1911)
Compagionette v. McArmick
120 S.W. 400 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1909)
J. B. Bostic Co. v. Eggleston
104 S.W. 566 (Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory, 1907)
Hill v. Hite
85 F. 268 (Eighth Circuit, 1898)
Hill v. Hite
79 F. 826 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas, 1897)
Swann v. Swann
21 F. 299 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1884)
O'Rourke v. O'Rourke
4 N.W. 531 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ark. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-west-ark-1874.