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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Poor David Phillips and William Phillips his Son - Dr. Lushington v. Daniel Innes, Barber and Hair-dresser, Dundee [1837] UKHL 2_SM_465 (20 February 1837) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1837/2_SM_465.html Cite as: [1837] UKHL 2_SM_465 |
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Page: 465↓
(1837) 2 S&M 465
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND. 1837.
2 d Division.
No. 15.
[
Subject_Master and Servant — Apprentice — Sabbath — Statute — Acts 157 9, c. 70, and 1690, c. 21 — Construction — Barber — Handicraft. —
Held (reversing the judgment of the Court of Session) that a barber's apprentice, under an indenture which bound him “not to absent himself from his master's business, holiday or week-day, late hours or early, without leave first asked and obtained,” could not be lawfully required to attend his master's shop on Sunday mornings for the purpose of shaving customers, in respect such employment infers a violation of the act 1579 and other statutes enacted for enforcing the observance of the Sabbath.
Opinions of the judges on appeal in regard to the proper interpretation of the exception in the act 1690, c. 21, respecting “the duties of necessity and mercy.”
By an indenture bearing date the 18th day of March, entered into between Daniel Innes, barber and hairdresser in Dundee, the respondent, of the one part, and William Phillips, son of David Phillips, with consent of his said father, and the said David Phillips as cautioner and surety for his said son, the appellants, of the other part, the appellant William Phillips became bound apprentice and servant to the respondent in his trade
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The appellant entered into the service of the respondent on the 1st of July 1833, and attended regularly to the business on Sunday mornings, until Sunday the 4th of May 1834, and the following Sunday, on both of which days he absented himself without the leave of the respondent, who, in consequence, presented the following petition to the magistrates of the burgh of Dundee:—
“That from the nature of the petitioner's trade and business he requires the attendance of his said apprentice on the mornings of Sunday, as on other days, till at least ten o'clock; and accordingly, from the period of his entering the petitioner's service, on 1st July 1833, until Sunday the 4th day of May current, the said William Phillips did attend the petitioner's business on the Sunday mornings; that having absented himself on that morning the petitioner caused his agent to write the said David Phillips, the father and cautioner for the said apprentice, complaining of such absence, and he was in hopes that such would not be repeated; that in this, however, the petitioner was disappointed, as the said apprentice did absent himself again on the morning of Sunday the 11th day of May current, and this, as the petitioner understands, by the order of the said David Phillips. That the
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petitioner suffers considerable loss and inconvenience from the absence of his apprentice on the Sunday mornings, which renders the present application necessary. May it therefore please your honours to grant warrant for service of this petition on the said William Phillips and David Phillips, and appoint them to lodge answers thereto, within a certain short space; and thereafter to find that the petitioner is entitled to the services of the said apprentice at his trade and business on the mornings of Sunday, and until ten o'clock at least, and ordain him to attend to the petitioner's trade and business accordingly, and failing his so attending, to decern and ordain him the said apprentice, and the said David Phillips, as his cautioner, to make payment to the petitioner of the foresaid sum of ten pounds sterling of penalty stipulated by the said indenture; reserving to the petitioner to claim the services of the said apprentice, on the issue of the said indenture, for four days in lieu of the two Sundays before mentioned, as stipulated in the said indenture; and in either event to find the said William Phillips and David Phillips liable in the expenses of this application, warrants, procedure, and decree hereon to follow.”
To this petition the following answer was lodged by the appellants:—
“That the business of the respondent did not require the attendance of the appellant on the mornings of Sunday, and that he was not bound to work for his master on the Sabbath; that it was illegal for any person to carry on his ordinary trade on Sunday; and that it was not in the power of any Court to ordain an apprentice to work for his master, in the
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ordinary labour or employment of the master, on the Sabbath.”
On the 13th day of August the magistrates of Dundee pronounced the following decision:—
“Having advised the minutes of debate and whole process, finds, that it is matter of public notoriety that among the great body of mechanics, common labourers, and seafaring men residing in and frequenting this town and its port, a very considerable number are not in the use of shaving their beards with their own hands, but resort to barbers shops in order to be shaved, many on the evenings of Saturday, but some on the mornings of Sunday: Finds, that however desirable it may be that the resorting to shaving shops on the mornings of Sunday should be discontinued, if that could be effected without greater evil, yet it does not appear to be either necessary or expedient for a due observance of the Sabbath to forbid the existing usage, so long as the shops continue, as at present, open early in the morning, and closed before the time fixed for the commencement of divine service; for on no occasion have the authorities of the town seen any cause to regard the conduct of the barbers in their vocation, or the conduct of those resorting to their shops, on the mornings of the Sundays, as other than decent and orderly, or as apt to give reasonable cause of offence to any man; and it appears very obvious that if working men, who are not themselves accustomed to shave, were forbidden the aid of the barbers in their shops on the Sunday mornings, many decently disposed men would be prevented from frequenting places of worship, and from associating in a becoming manner with their families and friends,
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through want of personal cleanness; and the attempt to reduce the minor evil might lead to some more serious: Finds, therefore, that in so far as the defender, the apprentice, is called upon to aid his master in shaving his customers on the mornings of Sunday before ten o'clock, it is not contrary to the spirit of the statutes regarding the Sabbath, nor contrary to the recognized usages under them, that the apprentice should give such aid; but finds that the apprentice is not bound, nor is it lawful for him, to work in the making of wigs, or in similar employment not immediately necessary for the day; and, with this explanation, ordains the defender, the apprentice, to aid his master on the mornings of Sunday, when his master has occasion for his services in shaving his customers, the work not continuing after ten o'clock in the morning.”
This decision having been brought under the review of the Court of Session, the following interlocutor, with the subjoined note, was pronounced by the Lord Ordinary (Jeffrey) on the 14th March 1835:—
“The Lord Ordinary, having heard counsel on the closed record and whole process, advocates the cause; alters the interlocutor of the magistrates complained of; sustains the defences, and assoilzies the defenders from the conclusions of the action, and decerns; finds the advocators entitled to their expenses both in this Court and before the magistrates; allows an account thereof to be given in, and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor for his taxation and report.
Note.—This is the first instance, in so far as the Lord Ordinary is aware, in which a court of law has directly and positively ordained a handicraftsman (without any pretence of necessity or serious urgency)
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to work at his handicraft on a Sunday; and he certainly is in noways anxious to establish such a precedent. The cases of apothecaries shops, Sunday travelling, and others that were cited, are evidently quite inapplicable. These exceptions have been admitted (with more or less scruple and reluctance) on the ground that they may frequently be requisite for purposes of necessity and mercy, and that it would be impracticable to investigate cases of occasional abuse. But it is ridiculous to speak of a public shaving-shop as an establishment of such necessity as not to admit of interruption for a single day in the week. If the advocator had refused to shave the head of a lunatic or one whose skull had been fractured, the cases would have been parallel. The pretence of usage, especially such a partial usage as is alleged, is irrelevant in a question of illegality by violation of a public law. That and the mitigated nature of the offence may account for the connivance of the civil and ecclesiastical authorities, and may raise a doubt as to the wisdom of proceedings for interdict and penalties. But it is impossible to connive when these authorities enjoin what they may have blamelessly permitted, and actually subject a man to penalties for not doing what the law has forbidden.
As to the alleged contract of the parties, it was admitted by the respondent at the bar, that if what was required was illegal the contract must go for nothing. The words are ambiguous, and the whole argument of the respondent imported that his sense of them could not be maintained. If holidays meant Sundays (which is his construction), then the contract must have meant that the apprentice should serve on
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Sundays exactly as he did on week-days, and that there should be no distinction between them. Yet he admits that he could not require him to work even at shaving during divine service, nor at wig-making even on the Sunday morning. If he says he should only work when consistent with law and decency, then the Lord Ordinary is of opinion that he should not work on that day at all.”
This interlocutor was submitted to the review of their Lordships of the Second Division of the Court of Session, who, after hearing counsel, pronounced the following interlocutor on the 19th of May 1835:—
“The Lords having considered this Note, with the other proceedings, and heard counsel thereon, alter the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary; remit simpliciter to the magistrates of Dundee; find, expenses due; allow the account to be given in, and, when lodged, remit to the auditor to tax and report.”
Against this interlocutor the present appeal has been brought.
Appellants.—Upon the subject of the strict observance of the Sabbath there are perhaps more enactments in the Scottish acts than upon any other subject whatever. The legislature appeared to have felt more anxiety for the strict enforcement, both of a religious and decent observance of the Sunday, than they appear to have felt upon any other subject. Baron Hume 1, in his valuable Commentaries on the Criminal Law, remarks:—
“To secure the due observance of the Lord's Day we have a long succession of statutes, most of them passed
_________________ Footnote _________________
1 1 Hume, 522.
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The appellants will refer your Lordships particularly to the provisions of the act 1579, which are as follows:—
“Item, For sa meikle as it is statute and ordained by a good and godly act, made in the days of King James the Fourth, our Sovereign Lord's grandfather, of worthy memory, that there be no markets nor fairs halden upon halydays, nor yet within kirk or kirkyards upon halydays or other days, under the pain of escheating of the guidis; quhilk act our Sovereign Lord, and his thrie estatis, ratifeis and appreuis, ordainis the same to have effect and execution in time coming. And seeing that the Sabbath dayis are now commonlie violat and brokin, als weill within burgh as to landwart, to the great dishonour of God, be halding and keeping of the saidis markets and fairis on Sondayis, using of handy laubor and working thereon, as on the remanent dayis of the oulk, be gaming and playing, passing to tavernis, to ail houses, and wilfull remaining fra the paroche kirk in tyme of sermone or prayers on the Sonday; Thairfoir his Maiestie, and his thrie estatis, in this present parliament, statutis and ordanis, that thair be na markets nor fairs haldin upon the Sonday, nor yet within kirkis or kirk yairdis that day or ony uther
_________________ Footnote _________________
1 The statutes referred to in the quotation are 1579, cap. 70; 1593, cap. 159; 1594, cap. 198; 1661, cap. 18; 1672, cap. 22; 1693, cap.40; 2695, cap. 13; 1701, cap. 11; 1690, cap. 25; 1696, cap. 31.
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The provisions of that statute are confirmed and corroborated by the other statutes referred to, and, if possible, still more enforced by the statute of 1690, c. 5, by which the confession of faith prepared in the assembly of divines at Westminster was made a part of the common law of Scotland. The observance of the Sabbath required in that confession, which is embodied in the act of parliament, is as follows:—
“This Sabbath is then kept holy unto the Lord, when men after a due preparing of their hearts and ordering of their common affairs beforehand, do not only observe a holy rest all the day from their own works, words, and thoughts about their worldly employments and recreations, but also are taken up the whole time in the public and private exercises of His worship, and in the duties of necessity and mercy.”
In the interpretation of these statutes there would seem to be little room for doubt. The exercise of handicrafts is most specially probibited; and it cannot be doubted that shaving is a handicraft. If we look from the letter of the statute to its spirit, still less doubt, if possible, can be entertained as to its meaning and effect. If we look, above all, to the statute 1690, which sets forth the nature of those avocations which alone are proper for that holy day, can we conceive it for a moment to have been within the contemplation of those by whom it was framed and sanctioned that shops should be open during any part of the day for the exercise of any such trade? The duties of necessity and mercy,
Page: 474↓
Can it be said to come within the exception of necessity? The magistrates find, “that among the great body of mechanics, common labourers, and seafaring
Page: 475↓
It is only some who are in the use of resorting to the shop on the morning of Sunday; the majority finding no difficulty in resorting to it upon the evening of the Saturday. As to these parties there is no necessity. Persons in [the class of life referred to are in use of shaving once in the week only. It can make little difference to them upon which of the seven days of the week the operation is performed, and the time of no one class among them is so wholly occupied as to prevent them from having it performed on a week-day. To talk of necessity as applying to such a case, therefore, is ludicrous. The practice, then, is not within the exception, and, being clearly struck at by the enacting clause, is illegal.
It seems difficult to understand upon what legal principle the Court have proceeded in fixing upon a portion of the Sunday as one in which it is legal to practise the trade, and upon another in which the same practice is to be held as illegal. The Sabbath, by the law, is to be entirely kept sacred. There is no distinction taken in any single statute, except one of very recent date, between the hours of divine service and the hours in which divine service is not usually performed. The ancient law is entirely irrespective of the fact of divine service being or not being performed during the time in which the acts prohibited are to be performed. The rule by which the hour of ten is fixed as the latest at
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It is said that the practice may be justified on the ground of expediency. If the practice were thought to be expedient, that would only justify an application for a change of the law, and not cause the law to be differently interpreted. It is said that the practice tends to cleanliness, and that if the opportunity of shaving upon the morning of Sunday were denied, it would go to encourage the poor man to abstain from attendance on religious worship altogether. It is a sufficient answer to say, that such has never been found to be the case in those numerous places where a contrary practice has prevailed.
The appellants cannot help thinking that the arguments derived from the expediency are entirely irrelevant,
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One of the learned judges, whose opinion was unfavourable to the appellants, expressed his apprehension lest the judgment might be held to countenance laxity in Sabbath observance. These apprehensions are certainly well founded, for if the pretext be good in a case like this, it would equally justify the baker, the butcher, or the fishmonger for dealing openly on the Sunday. Whatever rule may have prevailed in other parts of the empire, no deviation has hither to occurred in the northern part of the island from the strictest observance of the Sunday in respect of trading. It is believed that there is no example of any tradesman venturing to deal on Sunday in any part of Scotland; yet might it not be urged with much plausibility by those various tradesmen,
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In short, if pretexts of necessity, so lame and so little supported by the facts, are to justify the non-observance of the Sabbath, there seems to be hardly a limit to which it may not be carried.
The interlocutor of the magistrates, now adhered to, proceeds upon a general view of the legality of the practice. It humbly appears to the appellant that no legal judgment can possibly rest upon grounds more vague or less satisfactory. It assumes, as matter of public notoriety, that some of the labourers, mechanics, and seafaring men of Dundee resort to barbers shops upon the morning of Sunday. Upon that basis the interlocutor rests. Notoriety of a general and universal practice may possibly justify an interpretation of a statute which may sanction the practice; but the notoriety of a practice limited to a particular locality, and not universal even within that locality, can give no sanction to any particular interpretation of a law which is applicable to the whole kingdom. It may intimate a persuasion on the part of the magistrates or other local authorities, that the practice is legal, or it may argue an indifference to the mode in which the Sunday is observed, or neglect of the law in that particular municipality, but it can go no farther. If the practice of some of the mechanics of Dundee were to legalize the custom adopted by them, we should find a considerable number of offences justified, which, for all that, were contrary both to the statute law and the moral law. Suppose that an objection were taken to inebriation on the Sunday, would it do to plead in justification that some of the mechanics of
Page: 479↓
It is quite plain that in pronouncing this judgment they confounded their characters of city magistrates and local judges. In their former character it might not have been improper for them to inquire whether the acts were so done as to cause public offence or annoyance. In their latter character, (being that in which the present case came before them,) their inquiry was restricted to the actual state of the law. If the act which the appellants were required to do was truly illegal, it was no matter how quietly or unostentatiously the illegal act was to be done. It would not justify a tradesman in selling his commodities on that day, that the whole was conducted without noise or ostentation,—that the purchaser did not speak above his breath,—or that the whole was so managed as not to come within the notice of their near neighbours. How then can the mode in which the act is done affect the quality of the act, in point of its legality? The act may be more reprehensible if accompanied by a breach of decorum; but that there is no such breach can never render legal an act which is plainly contrary to statute. From these two propositions, each of them separately unsound, the magistrates deduce a third, though by what form of logic they reach the consequence it is somewhat difficult to understand. They “find, therefore, that in so far as the defender, the apprentice, is called upon to aid his master in shaving his customers on the mornings of Sunday before ten o'clock, it is not contrary to the spirit of the statutes regarding the Sabbath, nor contrary
Page: 480↓
No counsel appeared for the respondent, nor was any case printed by him.
My Lords, it appears that an apprentice at Dundee was bound to a person carrying on the business of a barber and hair-dresser. By the terms of apprenticeship he was to serve for a full term of four years after the 1st of July 1833, and during that service he was to serve the petitioner as a faithful and obedient apprentice, and not to absent himself from his master's business, “holiday or week-day, late hours or early, without leave first asked and obtained.”
My Lords, it appears that this party absented himself on a Sunday, and the case was brought before the
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My Lords, this case having been brought before the Court of Session, the Lord Ordinary, Lord Jeffrey, was of opinion, that that which the magistrates of Dundee had considered as not infringing upon the spirit of the statutes for the observance of the Sabbath was not well founded, and his Lordship was of opinion, that that work so directed by the magistrates to be performed by the apprentice was contrary to the statutes. The case was afterwards brought before the Second Division of the Court of Session, which, by a majority of three, against the opinion of Lord Chief Justice Clerk, decided that it was not contrary to the statutes, and that the magistrates of Dundee therefore were justified in the opinion which they had delivered. Under these circumstances it comes before your Lordships, with the authority of Lord Jeffrey and Lord Chief Justice Clerk on one side, and that of the other three judges of that Court on the other, and it is for your Lordships to come to a conclusion upon which side the proper judgment rests.
Now, my Lords, of the acts which regulate the observance of the Sabbath there are several, and the two which relate more immediately to the present subject, and which are the most explicit upon the present subject, are, first, an act of 1579, by which it is provided, “For sa meikle as it is statute and ordained by a good and godly act, made in the days of King James the
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The next statute is in 1690, by which it is provided, “This Sabbath is then kept holy unto the Lord, when men, after a due preparing of their hearts and ordering of their common affairs beforehand, do not only observe a holy rest all the day from their own works, words, and thoughts about their worldly employments and recreations, but also are taken up the whole time
Page: 484↓
Now, my Lords, these words “duties of necessity and mercy,” though they are found only in the statute of 1690, and are not to be found in the statute of 1579, have been considered as qualifying the statute of 1579, so that in certain excepted cases, described as “duties of necessity and mercy,” certain acts, which would otherwise fall within the strong prohibition of the act of 1579, have been considered as falling within the rule upon this subject.
My Lords, the English act of Parliament upon this subject, 29th of Charles 2d, chapter 7, has very similar words to those which are to be found in this act. The words are, “that no tradesman, artificer, workman, labourer, or other person whatsoever shall do or exercise any worldly labour, business, or work, of their ordinary callings, upon the Lord's Day, or any part thereof, works of necessity and charity only excepted.”
Now, my Lords, it is not in dispute that the works which by the articles of apprenticeship the apprentice is bound to do are within the prohibitions of the act of 1579, because it has been considered that as a general contract to work on Sundays it would not be in force. It is therefore to be considered, not whether the contract for working on the Sundays be or be not within the terms of the act, but whether the exceptions made by the interlocutor be or not within the exceptions in the act, or whether that act which the apprentice was called upon to do can be considered as an act of “necessity and mercy,” otherwise there would be no
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My Lords, the question therefore for your Lordships to consider is, whether there be ground, and whether there be an authority according to the law of Scotland, for saying that the barber's shop is to be kept open, and his usual occupation, so far as shaving his customers is concerned, is to be carried on before ten o'clock on the Sunday morning.
My Lords, an immediate authority upon the subject has not been produced at your Lordships bar, with one exception, which is the case of Learmouth v. Blackie, on the 13th of February 1828. The point did not then immediately arise for judgment, but an opinion was very distinctly expressed by the Lord Chief Justice Clerk, who in fact puts this identical case. The case was the case of an apprentice who had bound himself by articles precisely similar to the articles in the present case; he had absented himself; and by that contract for every day he had absented himself he was to give two days service to his master. The Lord Chief Justice Clerk expressed himself in these words, “The boy's being absent on a Sunday was no breach of the indenture, and the master cannot make him work on that day.” That same learned judge (who is one of the judges before whom this case came), after referring to the opinion that he had before given, states that he adheres to the opinion then expressed.
Now, my Lords, there appears to have been some attempt in the papers to raise a question as to the meaning of the expression “on holidays or week-days.” If the
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My Lords, if the act in question be an exception to the law of Scotland as to the observance of the Sabbath, it is impossible to say where it will stop. Is it necessity? It cannot be; and mercy it cannot be: then it is convenience; and if your Lordships were acting upon this case as a precedent to lay down a rule in other cases founded upon no more than convenience, I apprehend that your Lordships would be laying down a rule by which the law of Scotland which prohibits parties from carrying on their ordinary labour on the Sundays would be done away with. I find no authority for that exception, and after considering the reasons given by the Lord Chief Justice Clerk and the Lord Ordinary, I coincide in the opinions of those two learned judges, and I cannot find sufficient ground to support the decision of the other three.
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I submit to your Lordships, therefore, that the interlocutor as it now stands cannot be supported, and that the apprentice was justified in absenting himself on the Sunday, and that the master cannot call upon him to work on that day.
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My Lords, it is perfectly clear that we are here upon the dry question of the construction of an act of parliament; and it must be great satisfaction to your Lordships to think that in reversing the decision come to by the Court below (though by a narrow majority, yet by a majority, of the learned judges below) without hearing what could be urged in support of that judgment, that you are not called upon to decide against the Court below upon a question involving principles of practice peculiar to the law of Scotland, but that this case depends simply upon the construction of a statute, which might have arisen upon an English bond, and which might have come before your Lordships as a writ of error. The same principles of construction are to be applied to this case which you would then have been
Page: 489↓
Now, my Lords, it is perfectly clear that the statute prohibiting handy labouring and working prohibits the handy labouring and working here in question; and it is not denied even by the learned judges who have come to the decision in the Court below, that but for the argument which brings or which seems to bring the working in question within the exception of works of necessity or mercy, that this working would have been within the statutory prohibitions, and that consequently the interlocutor of the magistrates of Dundee was ill founded which compelled the apprentice to do that which the statute has forbidden him to do. The question then before the Court below appears to have been, whether the working in question could come within that exception or not. Now, it appears to me absurd to contend that this was in any strictness of construction or in any reasonable construction a work of necessity or mercy. “Mercy” is the word used in the Scotch statute; “charity” in our statute of the 29th of Charles the Second; and as my noble and learned friend has observed, there is no constriction in the Scotch acts to ordinary calling, upon which the questions in our courts have generally arisen, but handicraft and labour in general is prohibited, without regard to its being in the ordinary calling of a party or not. I incline to think that the sort of necessity which alone is contemplated in this exception must be the necessity originating in
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It is said, (and that is one of the observations of some of the judges of the Court below, or one of the arguments urged by the parties below,) that unless the labouring classes, who can have themselves shaved only once a week, are allowed to resort to the barber's shop on Sunday morning, they will not be in a condition to attend divine service, or to associate with their families on the Sabbath-day. The answer to that (and which I think is given in the proceedings below) is, that there is no necessity for that shaving being performed on the Sunday morning, that it can be very well performed on the Saturday evening; and in many towns in Scotland, for instance in Glasgow, that is known to be the practice, and the magistrates have prohibited the barbers shops from being kept open on the Sunday.
The case of accident does not apply, for the answer of my noble and learned friend who last addressed your Lordships is decisive, and meets that without any possibility of reply,—that no person who on the Sabbath shaves an individual who had a contusion on the brain, or who had been seized with madness,—that no person so called upon to lend his assistance would lie under prohibition of the statute, and he could not be said under the statute to have done an unlawful act. But
Page: 491↓
Then another consideration totally differs this from the case of necessity contemplated in one of those statutes. One very material difference is this;—gain is the object of the master; he keeps his shop open for hire; and I have never seen yet a decision (though I know the practice is to gain by those operations which are performed on the Sunday in certain kinds of shops),—but I have yet to know that this comes within the description of an act of necessity and mercy, where the shop is kept open for the gain of the party opening it. When such a case arises for decision it may be time enough to deal with it: there certainly has been no decision yet.
My Lords, something has been said before the magistrates of Dundee, and I think was also said in the Court of Session, with respect to holidays; but I take it to be quite clear that the word “holidays” which is used in the indenture does not mean Sundays, but that it means fast days and saints days; not Sundays, because, if it means Sundays, then the apprentice bound himself to work equally on Sundays and on week-days, making no distinction as to his working on the two
Page: 492↓
My Lords, to say one word more with respect to necessity, I think that it puts out of Court at once the argument upon which the decision of the Court below was founded. They say that personal convenience, and the power of attending divine service, and the comfortable associating with the families of the working classes, is obtained by allowing a shop of this sort to be kept open for those who have no other means of having this operation performed. My Lords, it is not a grade more necessary for a person to appear shaved on the Sunday than it is for a person to be decently clothed, or to be fed with convenient food; yet can it be contended that a tailor keeping his shop open on a Sunday morning would be within the statute, or a butcher or even a baker keeping his shop open would be within the statute? Assuredly not. The answer would be,—Let the party who wishes to be decently clothed, and ought to be so, provide himself with clothing on the Saturday before the Sunday; or, let the party who wishes to provide himself with a supply of food for the Sunday lay in his provision on the day before, and let him resort to the market or the shop for that purpose. But the same
Page: 493↓
My Lords, I consider that this decision is one in many respects of very considerable importance, and I am sure that it will be one of very considerable interest in that part of the United Kingdom; and I am perfectly clear that it would have been a most unfortunate circumstance had your Lordships felt that you were bound to give your support to the judgment of the Court below, which appears for the first time to have decided, that that which has been prohibited by the statute, namely handy labour and working on the Sunday, can be enforced by the decision of a court of justice under indenture of apprenticeship.
My Lords, I am clearly of opinion that the judgment of the Court below is erroneous, and ought to be reversed; and the course that your Lordships will, I suppose, take, will be to remit the case back to the magistrates of Dundee to alter the interlocutor, in fact, to restore the judgment of the Lord Ordinary.
The House of Lords ordered and adjudged, That the several interlocutors complained of in the said appeal be, and the same are hereby reversed: And it is further ordered, That the said cause be remitted back to the Court of Session in Scotland, to do therein as shall be just and consistent with this judgment.
Solicitors: Johnston and Farquhar, Solicitors.