Woolf v. Fuller

174 A. 193, 87 N.H. 64, 94 A.L.R. 1067, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 28, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 174 A. 193 (Woolf v. Fuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolf v. Fuller, 174 A. 193, 87 N.H. 64, 94 A.L.R. 1067, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 16 (N.H. 1934).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The objection to the form of the proceeding is that the plaintiffs have adequate remedy at common law. The statute requires itinerant vendors to pay a state license fee and to deposit a specified sum with the secretary of state for specified purposes. Violation of the statute is made a misdemeanor. ' It also requires the payment of a local license fee in the place where the business is conducted, under penalty of a fine for each day of neglect or refusal. The bill alleges irreparable damage to the plaintiffs’ business and credit if the defendants should carry out their threat to prosecute unless the store was closed.

Any right the defendants may have had to seek the closing of the business no longer exists. The plaintiffs are not now itinerant vendors. If they were such before or when the bill was brought, lapse of time since then has terminated a business of that character. Their business as established storekeepers may not be interfered with for a wrongful conduct of it before, as the defendants say, they became such. The defendants now seek no such interference.

No injunction against the collection of the state license fee is sought. Nor is any allegation made of the need of protection against the city of Manchester by reason of the opening of the store without payment of the local license fee. Neither the city nor its tax collector, upon whom the statute imposes the duty of collecting the local fee, is a party to the bill. The right of relief in equity from paying an illegal state tax or a state or local license fee, not recoverable if paid without statutory provision for recovery, is therefore not relied upon in support of the bill. Nor is it alleged that there was any existing demand when the bill was filed for the deposit with the secretary of state to be made.

In consequence, no irreparable damage may now result unless from the prosecution of the plaintiffs as misdemeanants. Authority is to be found for enjoining the prosecution of an unconstitutional statute when the prosecution involves a direct invasion of property rights resulting in irreparable loss. 32 C. J. 282, s. 447, and cases cited. Such an invasion of rights from prosecution alone is not here alleged, and may not be asserted upon any facts pleaded.

*67 But if the plaintiffs may not now be entitled to injunctive relief, the bill may be amended by transforming it into a suit for a declaratory judgment. The procedural situation is in all respects like that in Tirrell v. Johnston, 86 N. H. 530. The plaintiffs make a claim of “a present legal... right” (Laws 1929, c. 86) not to be prosecuted. The essential issue relates to the validity of the statute as an exercise of the police power, either generally or in application to the plaintiffs, and such an issue may be determined under the declaratory judgment act. Faulkner v. Keene, 85 N. H. 147, 152-157. The issue has been argued and is to be considered. Tirrell v. Johnston, supra.

Upon the question whether the plaintiffs come within the statutory definition of itinerant vendors, the act and its amendments which deal with such persons in terms include them. No distinction, if one might be valid, is made between residents and non-residents either of the state or of the town or city where the business is carried on. Nor, in the amendments, is any difference expressed between those opening a store for temporary occupancy and those opening one for a period intended to be more than temporary. In their literal language, their effect is to eliminate intent in the test of a temporary character of the business opened. They are silent in respect thereto and the exceptions therein of storekeepers engaging in business for defined lengths of time indicate that external and physical facts are alone to control in determining whether the business is temporary within the meaning of the word as the legislation employs it. Since it defines a temporary business, there is no inconsistency in either of the amendments because of the fact that the definition is not that usually given such a business. Unless by force of a special rule of construction available in passing upon the constitutionality of legislation, to be later stated, the plaintiffs are within no exception of the act.

With reference to the state constitution, itinerant vendors are a subject of the exercise of the police power in some promotion of the general welfare. “The object of the statute would seem to be to protect the public from the imposition hable to be practised upon it by itinerant vendors who are not hawkers or peddlers because hiring, leasing or occupying a building for their business, but who sell temporarily or transiently in one place, or in travelling from place to place, goods, wares, or merchandise, and who might naturally be supposed to be free, to some extent at least, from the restraints and influences inducing fair and honest dealing which apply to persons *68 established permanently in trade in a given locality.” Commonwealth v. Crowell, 156 Mass. 215, 216.

That the legislation may be of some public benefit is not enough, under the state constitution, to give it validity. In addition, it must not impair or destroy private rights guaranteed by the constitution. While in its valid exercise the police power may either forbid conduct or permit it under regulation (State v. Roberts, 74 N. H. 476, 479, and cases cited), and while it is said that “The court does not inquire into the expediency or wisdom of such legislation” (Ib., 480, and cases cited), yet it is “subordinate to the equality of privilege and of burden secured by the bill of rights and guaranteed by the constitution” (State v. Jackman, 69 N. H. 318, 332). “And although the reasonableness of a statute relating to public welfare is not ordinarily a question on which the court can properly pass (State v. Jackson, 71 N. H. 552, 554; Sundeen v. Rogers, 83 N. H. 253, 256, 257, and cases cited), the right of acquiring and possessing property is guaranteed to all persons by the constitution (Bill of Rights, art. 2) . ... ” State v. Company, 84 N. H. 322, 323. “... an equal property right is so specifically guaranteed in the bill of rights that it necessarily limits all subsequent grants of power to deal adversely therewith.” Eyers &c. Co. v. Gilsum, 84 N. H. 1, 21. “The true view is that both of these provisions of the fundamental law [one granting legislative power and one reserving individual rights] are to be considered together as interdependent, the one qualifying and limiting the other; otherwise it would result that due effect could not be given to both at the same time. Neither is supreme in a sense that would deprive the other of its effectiveness as a part of the fundamental law.” State v. Ramseyer, 73 N. H. 31, 34.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 193, 87 N.H. 64, 94 A.L.R. 1067, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolf-v-fuller-nh-1934.