Appellees are members of the Orthodox Jewish Faith, whose
religion forbids them to shop on their Sabbath (from sundown on
Friday until sundown on Saturday) and requires them to eat kosher
food; a group of orthodox rabbis and a corporation selling kosher
food mainly to such customers. They sued in a Federal District
Court to enjoin as unconstitutional enforcement of certain sections
of the Massachusetts Sunday Closing Laws which had been construed
as forbidding the corporation to keep its store open on Sundays
(except for the sale of kosher meat until 10 a.m.), though it had
formerly been open for business all day on Sundays and had done
about a third of its weekly business then. It had been closed from
sundown on Fridays until sundown on Saturdays, and it claimed that
it was economically impractical for it to keep open on Saturday
nights and until 10 a. m. on Sundays. The laws in question
generally forbid the keeping open of shops and the doing of any
labor, business or work on Sundays; but they are subject to a great
many detailed exceptions of many different kinds, which are
summarized in the opinion.
Held: the statutes here involved do not violate the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and they are
not laws respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof, within the meaning of the First Amendment,
made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
366 U. S.
618-631.
176 F.
Supp. 466, reversed.
Page 366 U. S. 618
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN announced the judgment of the Court and
an opinion in which MR. JUSTICE BLACK, MR. JUSTICE CLARK, and MR.
JUSTICE WHITTAKER concur.
The principal issues presented in this case are whether the
Massachusetts Sunday Closing Laws [
Footnote 1] violate equal protection, are statutes
respecting the establishment of religion, or prohibit the free
exercise thereof.
Appellees are Crown Kosher Super Market, a corporation whose
four stockholders, officers, and directors are members of the
Orthodox Jewish faith, which operates in Springfield,
Massachusetts, and sells kosher meat and other food products that
are almost exclusively kosher and which has many orthodox Jewish
customers; three of Crown's customers of the Orthodox Jewish faith,
whose religion forbids them to shop on the Sabbath and requires
them to eat kosher food, as representatives of that class
Page 366 U. S. 619
of patrons; and the chief orthodox rabbi of Springfield, as
representative of a class of orthodox rabbis whose duties include
the inspecting of kosher food markets to insure compliance with
Orthodox Jewish dietary laws.
Crown had previously been open for business on Sunday, on which
day it had conducted about one-third of its weekly business. No
other supermarket in the Springfield area had kept open on Sunday.
Since the Orthodox Jewish religion requires its members to refrain
from any commercial activity on the Sabbath -- from sundown on
Friday until sundown on Saturday -- Crown was not open during those
hours. Although there is a statutory provision which permits
Sabbatarians to keep their shops open until 10 a.m. on Sunday for
the sale of kosher meat, Crown did not do so because it was
economically impractical; for the same reason, Crown did not open
after sundown on Saturday.
Those provisions of the law immediately under attack are in a
chapter entitled "Observance of the Lord's Day." They forbid, under
penalty of a fine of up to fifty dollars, the keeping open of shops
and the doing of any labor, business or work on Sunday. Works of
necessity and charity are excepted, as is the operation of certain
public utilities. There are also exemptions for the retail sale of
drugs, the retail sale of tobacco by certain vendors, the retail
sale and making of bread at given hours by certain dealers, and the
retail sale of frozen desserts, confectioneries, and fruits by
various listed sellers. The statutes under attack further permit
the Sunday sale of live bait for noncommercial fishing; the sale of
meals to be consumed off the premises; the operation and letting of
motor vehicles, and the sale of items and emergency services
necessary thereto; the letting of horses, carriages, boats and
bicycles; unpaid work on pleasure boats and about private gardens
and grounds if it does not cause unreasonable noise; the running of
trains and boats; the
Page 366 U. S. 620
printing, sale and delivery of newspapers; the operation of
bootblacks before 11 a.m., unless locally prohibited; the wholesale
and retail sale of milk, ice and fuel; the wholesale handling and
delivery of fish and perishable foodstuffs; the sale at wholesale
of dressed poultry; the making of butter and cheese; general
interstate truck transportation before 8 a.m. and after 8 p.m. and
at all times in cases of emergency; intrastate truck transportation
of petroleum products before 6 a.m. and after 10 p.m.; the
transportation of livestock and farm items for participation in
fairs and sporting events; the sale of fruits and vegetables on the
grower's premises; the keeping open of public bathhouses; the
digging of claims; the icing and dressing of fish; the sale of
works of art at exhibitions; the conducting of private trade
expositions between 1 p.m. and 10 p.m.
These statutes do not prohibit Sunday business and labor by
Sabbatarian observers so long as it disturbs no other person.
However, this has been construed to forbid the keeping open of
shops for the sale of merchandise.
Commonwealth v. Has,
122 Mass. 40. Permission is granted by local option for the Sunday
operation after 1 p.m. of amusement parks and beach resorts,
including participation in bowling and games of amusement for which
prizes are awarded. Special licenses for emergency Sunday work may
be obtained from local officials.
Other provisions of the Massachusetts Sunday legislation make
generally unlawful Sunday attendance or participation in any public
entertainments except for those which are duly licensed locally,
conducted after 1 p.m., and are in keeping with the character of
the day observance.
Although there is a general bar of games and sports on Sunday,
professional sports may be played between 1:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.,
and indoor hockey and basketball
Page 366 U. S. 621
any time after 1:30 p.m.; amateur sports may be played between 2
p.m. and 6 p.m.; this is all subject to local option, and no game
may be conducted within one thousand feet of any regular place of
worship except in a public playground or park. There are specific
bans on auto racing, horse racing, boxing, and hunting with
firearms. And there are a number of additional exemptions from the
general proscription. Golf, tennis, dancing at weddings, concerts
of sacred music, and the celebration of religious customs or
rituals are all allowed on Sunday, as are the operation of
miniature golf courses and golf driving ranges after 1 p.m. Motion
pictures may be exhibited after this hour if a local license is
obtained. Parades with music for certain commemorative purposes may
be held on Sunday by veterans', civic, fraternal, policemen's, and
firemen's organizations providing that they are suspended while
passing within two hundred feet of public worship services.
Persons who keep places of public entertainment or refreshment
lose their licenses if they entertain, on Sunday, people other than
travelers, strangers or lodgers. With limited exceptions,
discharging firearms for sport except on one's own land, fishing
for commercial purposes, and fishing with nets or spears are
prohibited on Sunday. The use of gaming devices is not allowed.
Outdoor exercise without the element of contest is generally
permitted, as is the taking of mammals by means of traps. Heavier
penalties are imposed for the willful cutting and destruction of
timber, shrubs, fruits or vegetables on Sunday than on other days
of the week.
Still other statutory sections make it a crime for most
employers to require their employees to engage in ordinary
occupation on Sunday unless the employee is allowed twenty-four
consecutive hours off during the following six days. The sale of
alcoholic beverages by certain
Page 366 U. S. 622
licensees is permitted on Sunday after 1 p.m. by local option.
However, patrons consuming the beverages on the premises must be
seated at tables.
Appellees sought permanently to enjoin the enforcement of the
statute against them, alleging that appellant, Springfield's chief
of police, had previously arrested and prosecuted Crown's manager
for keeping open on Sunday; that, unless restrained, appellant
would continue to enforce the statute against Crown; that the
statute was unconstitutional for the reasons stated above. The
three-judge Federal District Court, one judge dissenting, agreed
with appellees,
176 F.
Supp. 466. On appeal brought under 28 U.S.C. § 1253, we
noted probable jurisdiction, 362 U.S. 960.
I
The equal protection arguments advanced by appellees are much
the same as those made by appellants in
McGowan v.
Maryland, p.
366 U. S. 420.
They contend that the exceptions to the statute are so numerous and
arbitrary as to be found to have no rational basis; [
Footnote 2] that the law permits the sale of
certain food items sold by Crown, but limits this permission to
selected types of stores; that the employees in the exempted
activities are just as much in need of a day of rest as are Crown's
employees. The three-judge District Court described the present
statutory system as an "unbelievable hodgepodge," and sustained
appellees' allegations.
The answers to these arguments are likewise similar to those
given in
McGowan when the contentions are examined under
the standards set forth in that opinion. Many of the exceptions in
the Massachusetts Sunday Laws are
Page 366 U. S. 623
reasonably explainable on their face. Such items as tobaccos,
confectioneries, fruits, and frozen desserts could have been found
by the legislature to be useful in adding to Sunday's enjoyment;
such items as newspapers, milk, and bread could have been found to
be required to be sold fresh daily. [
Footnote 3] It is conceivable that the legislature
believed that the sale of fish and perishable foodstuffs at
wholesale would not detract from the atmosphere of the day, while
the retail sale of these items would inject the distinctly
commercial element that exists during the other six days of the
week. It is fair to believe that the allowance of professional and
amateur sports on Sunday would add to the day's special character,
rather than detract from it. And the legislature could find that
the circumstances attendant to the conduct of professional sports
are sufficiently different from those of amateur sports to justify
different treatment as to the hours during which they may be
played. Furthermore, the legislature could determine that, although
many retailers, including Crown, sell frozen desserts, to permit
only a limited number of innholders, druggists and common
victuallers to sell them on Sunday would serve the public purpose
of providing these items on Sunday and, at the same time, limit the
commercial activities ordinarily attendant to their sale. And, if
such determination requires this limited number of stores to be
open to serve the public interest, the employees of most of the
stores are still protected by the statutory provision giving the
employees another day of rest. To permit all stores which sell the
exempted products to remain open on Sunday, but to limit them to
the sale of the exempted items
Page 366 U. S. 624
might well be believed to impose near insuperable enforcement
problems.
The fact is that the irrationality of these and the many other
apparently reasonable distinctions has not been shown. The
presumption of validity upon which the other classifications stand
has not been dispelled.
"A classification having some reasonable basis does not offend
against [the equal protection] clause merely because it is not made
with mathematical nicety, or because, in practice, it results in
some inequality."
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U. S.
61,
220 U. S. 78.
Thus, we hold that the Massachusetts Sunday Laws do not violate
equal protection of the laws.
II
Appellees make several contentions that the statutes violate the
constitutional guarantees of religious freedom.
First,
they allege that the statutes are laws respecting an establishment
of religion in that both their original and current purposes are to
enforce the observance of Sunday as the Sabbath.
We agree with the court below that, like the Sunday laws of
other States, the Massachusetts statutes have an unmistakably
religious origin. The first enactment of the Plymouth Colony in
1650 stated simply that "whosoever shall prophane the Lords day by
doeing any servill worke or any such like abusses" shall either be
fined or whipped. The Compact, Charter and Laws of the Colony of
New Plymouth, 92. Eight years later, a ban on Sunday traveling was
enacted with the following preamble:
"Whereas complaint is made of great abuses in sundry places of
this Government of prophaning the Lords day by travelers both horse
and foot by bearing of burdens carrying of packes &c. upon the
Lords day to the great offence of the Godly welafected among
us."
Id. at 113.
Page 366 U. S. 625
And, in 1671, the religious purpose was made clear beyond
doubt:
"9. This Court taking notice of great abuse, and many
misdemeanours, committed by divers persons in these many wayes,
Profaneing the Sabbath or Lord's-day, to the great dishonour of
God, Reproach of Religion, and Grief of the Spirits of God's
People"
"Do therefore Order, That whosoever shall Prophane the
Lord's-day, by doing unnecessary servile Work, by unnecessary
travailing, or by sports and recreations, he or they that so
transgress, shall forfeit for every such default forty shillings,
or be publickly whipt: But if it clearly appear that the sin was
proudly, Presumptuously, and with a high hand committed, against
the known Command and Authority of the blessed God, such a person
therein Despising and Reproaching the Lord shall be put to death or
grievously punished at the Judgment of the Court."
"10. And whosoever shall frequently neglect the public Worship
of God on the Lords day, that is approved by this Government, shall
forfeit for every such default convicted of, ten shillings,
especially where it appears to arise from negligence, Idleness or
Prophaness of Spirit."
Id. at 247.
The Sunday regulations of the Massachusetts Colony were no
different. The 1653 version spoke of the abuses of the Dishonor of
God and the Reproach of Religion which were Grieving the Souls of
God's Servants. Among other things, the statute forbade Drinking
and Sporting on Sunday. The Colonial Laws of Massachusetts 132-133.
In 1665, Neglect of God's Public Worship was made a crime.
Id. at 133. Every person was required to apply himself to
Duties of Religion and Piety on Sunday according to the 1692
statute which continued the ban on
Page 366 U. S. 626
Sunday sports. Charter of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay
in New England 13-14. The preamble to the new statute in 1761
retained the Religion and Piety language and added that Profanation
of the Lord's Day is highly offensive to Almighty God. This statute
retained and strengthened the former prohibitions.
Id. at
392-394.
A change came about in 1782. The preamble added the
following:
"Whereas the Observance of the Lord's Day is highly promotive of
the Welfare of a Community, by affording necessary Seasons for
Relaxation from Labor and the Cares of Business; for moral
Reflections and Conversation on the Duties of Life, and the
frequent Errors of human Conduct; . . ."
Acts and Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts 63. Thus, the
statute's announced purpose was no longer solely religious. But
this statute proscribed the Sunday attendance at any Concert of
Music and Dancing in addition to the previously mentioned
activities.
Ibid. This law was reenacted in 1792. 2 Laws
of Massachusetts 536
et seq.
However, when we examine the statutes now before the Court, we
find that, for the most part, they have been divorced from the
religious orientation of their predecessors. The preambles'
statements, in certain terms, of religious purpose exist no longer.
Sports of almost all kinds are now generally allowed on Sunday. The
absolute prohibition against alcoholic beverages has disappeared.
Concerts and dancing are permitted. Church attendance is no longer
required.
Admittedly, the statutes still contain references to the Lord's
Day, and some provisions speak of weekdays as being secular days.
Although § 2 of c. 136 excepts concerts of sacred music, the
next clause of the section
Page 366 U. S. 627
permits free open air concerts. It would seem that the
objectionable language is merely a relic. The fact that certain
Sunday activities are permitted only if they are "in keeping with
the character of the day and not inconsistent with its due
observance" does not necessarily mean that the day is intended to
be religious; the "character" of the day would appear more likely
to be intended to be one of repose and recreation. We are told that
those provisions forbidding certain activities to be conducted
within a set distance from a place of public worship are especially
devoted to maintaining Sunday as the Sabbath. But because the State
wishes to protect those who do worship on Sunday does not mean that
the State means to impose religious worship on all.
See Everson
v. Board of Education, 330 U. S. 1,
330 U. S. 16.
Although many of the more recently allowed Sunday activities may
not commence prior to 1 p.m., others may be undertaken at any time
during the day. And the contention that evening church services are
being protected cannot be maintained, since most of those
activities that begin after 1 p.m. may continue throughout the
day.
Furthermore, the long list of exemptions that have been recently
granted evidences that the present scheme is one to provide an
atmosphere of recreation, rather than religion. The court below
pointed out that, since 1858, the statutes have been amended more
than seventy times. It would not seem that the Sunday sales of
tobacco, soda water, fruit,
et cetera, are in aid of
religion. It would seem that the operation of amusement parks and
beach resorts is in aid of recreation.
An examination of recent Massachusetts legislative history
bolsters the State's position that these statutes are not
religious. In 1960, a report of the Legislative Research Council
stated:
"In general, Sunday laws protect the public by guaranteeing one
day in seven to provide a period of
Page 366 U. S. 628
rest and quiet. Health, peace, and good order of society are
thereby promoted. Such provision is essentially civil in character,
and the statutes are not regarded as religious ordinances."
Report of the Legislative Research Council relative to Legal
Holidays and their Observance, Mass.Leg.Docs., Sen.Doc. No. 525
(1960), 24. [
Footnote 4]
The earliest pronouncements of the Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts are further indication of the religious origin of the
Sunday Laws. In
Pearce v. Atwood, 13 Mass. 324, 348
(1816), it was stated that the statute's sole object was
"ensuring reverence and respect for one day of the week, in
order that religious exercises should be performed without
interruption from common and secular employments."
In Bennett v. Brooks, 9 Allen 118, 119, 91 Mass. 118,
119 (1864), the day was characterized as one "set apart for
religious services and observances."
In 1877, a case arose in which a charge of violation of
religious freedom was made. The Supreme Judicial Court relied on
the Pennsylvania case of
Specht v. Commonwealth, 8 Pa.
312, and stated clearly:
"It is essentially a civil regulation, providing for a fixed
period of rest in the business, the ordinary avocations and the
amusements of the community. If there is to be such a cessation
from labor and amusement, some one day must be selected for the
purpose, and even if the day thus selected is chosen because a
great majority of the people celebrate it as a day
Page 366 U. S. 629
of peculiar sanctity, the legislative authority to provide for
its observance is derived from its general authority to regulate
the business of the community and to provide for its moral and
physical welfare. The act imposes upon no one any religious
ceremony or attendance upon any form of worship, and anyone who
deems another day more suitable for rest or worship may devote that
day to the religious observance which he deems appropriate. That
one who conscientiously observes the seventh day of the week may
also be compelled to abstain from business of the kind expressly
forbidden on the first day is not occasioned by any subordination
of his religion, but because, as a member of the community, he must
submit to the rules which are made by lawful authority to regulate
and govern the business of that community."
Commonwealth v. Has, 122 Mass. 40, 42 (1877).
The court below characterized this decision as an
ad
hoc improvisation by the Massachusetts court. Of course, the
court below was correct in deciding that it was not bound by the
Massachusetts characterization of the statutes.
See Society for
Savings v. Bowers, 349 U. S. 143,
349 U. S. 151.
But ten years later, in
Commonwealth v. Starr, 144 Mass.
359, 361, 11 N.E. 533, 534 (1887), another religious charge against
the statute was made; it was rejected on the authority of
Has.
As the court below pointed out, there have been several cases
[
Footnote 5] between 1877 and
1923 which gave a religious characterization to the statute. But in
none of these cases was there a contention regarding religious
freedom, and
Page 366 U. S. 630
none of the cases stated the statute's purpose to be exclusively
religious. [
Footnote 6]
Finally, in the only recent case passing on the Massachusetts
Sunday Closing Laws,
Commonwealth v. Chernock, 336 Mass.
384,
145
N.E.2d 920 (1957), the court summarily dismissed the
complainant's religious contention, relying on
Has.
The relevant factors having been most carefully considered, we
do not find that the present statutes' purpose or effect is
religious. Although the three-judge court found that Massachusetts
had no legitimate secular interest in maintaining Sunday closing,
we have held differently in
McGowan v. Maryland, supra.
And, for the reasons stated in that case, we reject appellees'
request to hold these statutes invalid on the ground that the State
may accomplish its secular purpose by alternative means that would
not even remotely or incidentally aid religion.
Secondly, appellees contend that the application to
them of the Sunday Closing Laws prohibits the free exercise of
their religion. Crown alleges that, if it is required by law to
abstain from business on Sunday, then, because its owners' religion
demands closing from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday, Crown will
be open only four and one-half days a week, thereby suffering
extreme economic disadvantage. Crown's Orthodox Jewish customers
allege that, because their religious beliefs forbid their shopping
on the Jewish Sabbath, the statutes' effect is to deprive them,
from Friday afternoon until Monday of each week, of the opportunity
to purchase the kosher food sanctioned by their faith. The orthodox
rabbis allege that the
Page 366 U. S. 631
statutes' effect greatly complicates their task of supervising
the condition of kosher meat because the meat delivered on Friday
would have to be kept until Monday. Furthermore, appellees contend
that, because of all this, the statutes discriminate against their
religion.
These allegations are similar, although not as grave, as those
made by appellants in
Braunfeld v. Brown, ante, p.
366 U. S. 599.
Since the decision in that case rejects the contentions presented
by these appellees on the merits, we need not decide whether
appellees have standing to raise these questions. [
Footnote 7]
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE HARLAN concur in a
separate opinion.
Accordingly, the decision below is
Reversed.
[For opinion of MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, joined by MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN,
see ante, p.
366 U. S.
459.]
[For dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS,
see
ante, p.
366 U. S.
561.]
[For dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR. JUSTICE
STEWART,
see ante, p.
366 U. S.
642.]
[
Footnote 1]
The statutory sections immediately before the Court are
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. c. 136, §§ 5 and 6. The Massachusetts
Sunday Closing Laws in their entirety may be found in Mass.Gen.Laws
Ann. c. 136; c. 131, § 58; c. 138, §§ 12 and 33; c.
149, §§ 47 and 48; c. 266, §§ 113 and 117.
Those sections considered particularly relevant are set forth in an
366
U.S. 617app|>Appendix to this opinion.
[
Footnote 2]
A similar argument made is that the exemptions from the
statutes' proscription "eat up the rule," bear no rational
relationship to the alleged interest of the State, and therefore
violate due process.
[
Footnote 3]
It may be noted that, contrary to the interpretation of the
court below, since there is no restriction on the sale of milk,
Crown may vend it at any time on Sunday.
[
Footnote 4]
A 1953 report concluded:
"The wave of materialism which is sweeping the country makes it
most important that one day be set aside for worship, rest, and to
give all persons an opportunity to strengthen the bulwark of our
American civilization-the home."
Report of the Unpaid Special Commission to Investigate and Study
the Provisions of the Laws Relating to the Observance of the Lord's
Day, Mass.Leg.Docs., H.Doc. No. 2413 (1954) 9.
[
Footnote 5]
Davis v. City of Somerville, 128 Mass. 594 (1880);
Commonwealth v. Dextra, 143 Mass. 28, 8 N.E. 756 (1886);
Commonwealth v. White, 190 Mass. 578, 77 N.E. 636 (1906);
Commonwealth v. McCarthy, 244 Mass. 484, 138 N.E. 835
(1923).
[
Footnote 6]
E.g.,
"The Legislature intended by this statute to keep the ordinary
places of traffic, business, and work closed on this day, so that
those persons who desired to relax from labor and business, and
attend to private and public worship might not be disturbed by
persons pursuing their worldly business and avocations in open
shop."
Commonwealth v. Dextra, 143 Mass. at 31, 8 N.E. at
759.
[
Footnote 7]
Appellants have advanced several procedural arguments. Since
these were briefed only as ancillary issues and were not orally
argued, and since their determination is not necessary to the
disposition of the major questions presented, we deem it
inappropriate to pass upon them now.
|
366
U.S. 617app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE
MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL LAWS ANNOTATED, c. 136.
§ 1.
Lord's day, definition. The Lord's day shall
include the time from midnight to midnight.
§ 2.
Presence at games, sports, plays or public
diversions on the Lord's day; exceptions. Whoever on the
Page 366 U. S. 632
Lord's day is present at a game, sport, play or public
diversion, except a concert of sacred music, a public entertainment
duly licensed as provided in section four or a free open air
concert given by a town, or by license of the mayor or the
selectmen, upon a common or public park, street or square, or
except a game of golf conducted on an open air golf course, or
except a game of tennis or dancing at a wedding or celebration of a
religious custom or ritual if no charge is made for being present
or for dancing, or except after one o'clock post-meridian a game of
outdoor lawn bowling or the playing of golf or driving on an
outdoor golf driving range or playing on a miniature golf course,
so called, shall be punished by a fine of not more than five
dollars. Whoever on the Lord's day takes part in any game, sport,
play or public diversion, except as aforesaid, shall be punished by
a fine of not more than fifty dollars. This and the following
section shall not apply to amusement enterprises lawfully conducted
under section four A or four B or to sports or games conducted in
accordance with sections twenty-one to twenty-five, inclusive, in
any city or town which accepts said sections or in accordance with
sections twenty-six to thirty-two, inclusive, in any city or town
in which said sections twenty-six to thirty-two are then in
force.
§ 3.
Establishing and maintaining public entertainment
on the Lord's day. Whoever offers to view, sets up,
establishes, maintains, or attempts to set up, establish or
maintain, or promotes or assists in such attempt, or promotes, or
aids, abets or participates in offering to view, setting up,
establishing or maintaining any public entertainment on the Lord's
day, except as provided in section two, unless such public
entertainment shall be in keeping with the character of the day and
not inconsistent with its due observance and duly licensed as
provided in section four, or whoever on the Lord's day acts as
proprietor, manager or person in charge of a game, sport, play or
public
Page 366 U. S. 633
diversion, except a public entertainment licensed under section
four and except as provided in section two, shall be punished by a
fine of not more than five hundred dollars.
§ 4.
License to hold public entertainment on the Lord's
day; application; fee; suspension; revocation; hearing. Except
as provided in section one hundred and five of chapter one hundred
and forty-nine, the mayor of a city or the selectmen of a town may,
upon written application describing the proposed entertainment,
grant, upon such terms or conditions as they may prescribe, a
license to hold on the Lord's day a public entertainment, including
musical entertainment provided by mechanical or electrical means,
in keeping with the character of the day and not inconsistent with
its due observance, whether or not admission is to be obtained upon
payment of money or other valuable consideration, and, if the
proposed entertainment described in the application is solely for
the exhibition of motion pictures, for the benefit of patrons in a
public dining room or for the use of television, the use of radio,
or musical entertainment provided by mechanical or electrical
means, the mayor or selectmen may grant an annual license therefor;
provided, that no such license shall be granted to have effect
before one o'clock in the afternoon, nor shall it have effect
unless the proposed entertainment shall have been approved in
writing by the commissioner of public safety as being in keeping
with the character of the day and not inconsistent with its due
observance. The application for the approval of the proposed
entertainment by the commissioner shall be accompanied by a fee of
two dollars, or, in the case of an application for the approval of
an annual license, as herein provided, by a fee of fifty dollars.
Any such license may, after notice and a hearing given by the mayor
or selectmen issuing the same, or by said commissioner, be
suspended, revoked or annulled by the officer or board giving
Page 366 U. S. 634
the hearing. The foregoing provisions, insofar as they authorize
any person to refuse to grant, or to suspend, revoke or annul a
license upon the ground that the proposed entertainment is not in
keeping with the character of the Lord's day or not consistent with
its due observance, and insofar as they require written approval of
the proposed entertainment by said commissioner, shall not apply to
any person making an application for a license to exhibit motion
pictures or for the use of radio or television on said day, nor to
any license issued upon such application.
§ 4A.
Maintenance and operation of enterprises at
amusement parks, beaches or resorts on the Lord's day; licenses;
suspension; revocation. The mayor of a city or the selectmen
of a town, upon written application therefor, and upon such terms
and conditions as they may prescribe, may grant licenses for the
maintenance and operation upon the Lord's day at amusement parks or
beach resorts, so called, in such city or town, of any enterprise
hereinafter described, for admission to which or for the use of
which a payment of money or other valuable consideration may or may
not be charged, namely: -- bowling alleys, shooting galleries
restricted to the firing therein of rifles, revolvers or pistols
using cartridges not larger than twenty-two calibre, photographic
galleries or studios in which pictures are made and sold, games,
and such amusement devices as may lawfully be operated therein on
secular days; provided, that no such license shall be granted to
have effect before one o'clock in the afternoon, nor shall it have
effect unless the proposed enterprise shall, upon application
accompanied by a fee of two dollars, have been approved in writing
by the commissioner of public safety as provided in the case of
public entertainments under section four. Any licensee hereunder
may distribute premiums or prizes in connection
Page 366 U. S. 635
with any game or device lawfully maintained and operated by him
under authority hereof. Any such license may, after notice and a
hearing given by the mayor or selectmen issuing the same, or by
said commissioner, be suspended, revoked or annulled by the officer
or board giving the hearing. So much of this section as relates to
the maintenance and operation of bowling alleys shall not apply in
any city or town which shall have accepted the provisions of
section four B.
§ 4B.
Licenses for operation of bowling alleys on the
Lord's day. In any city which accepts this section by vote of
its city council and in any town which accepts this section by vote
of its inhabitants, the city council, with the approval of the
mayor, or the selectmen, as the case may be, may grant licenses for
the operation of bowling alleys on the Lord's day between the hours
of one and eleven post meridian; provided, that no such license may
authorize the operation of bowling alleys on Easter, or on
Christmas day if such day falls on the Lord's day. Every license
granted hereunder shall specify the location of the place of
business in which the license is to be exercised, and the license
shall not be valid in any other place. Bowling alleys operated
under such licenses shall be operated subject to such regulations
and restrictions as shall be prescribed from time to time by the
city council, with the approval of the mayor, or by the selectmen.
Said regulations and restrictions shall be stated in the license.
Said licensing authorities may at any time and without previous
notice revoke licenses issued under this section if they have
reason to believe that any provision of this section, or of any
regulation or restriction prescribed thereunder, is being or will
be violated.
§ 5.
Keeping open shops or warehouses and conducting
business or doing work on the Lord's day. Whoever on the
Lord's day keeps open his shop, warehouse or workhouse,
Page 366 U. S. 636
or does any manner of labor, business or work, except works of
necessity and charity, shall be punished by a fine of not more than
fifty dollars.
§ 6.
Limit of operation of section 5. The
preceding section shall not prohibit the manufacture and
distribution of steam, gas or electricity for illuminating
purposes, heat or motive power; the distribution of water for fire
or domestic purposes; the use of the telegraph or the telephone;
the manufacture and distribution of oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen,
acetylene and carbon dioxide; the retail sale of drugs and
medicines, or articles ordered by the prescription of a physician,
or mechanical appliances used by physicians or surgeons.
Nor shall it prohibit the retail sale of tobacco in any of its
forms by licensed innholders, common victuallers, druggists and
newsdealers whose stores are open for the sale of newspapers every
day in the week; the retail sale of bread, before ten o'clock in
the forenoon and between the hours of four o'clock and half past
six o'clock in the afternoon by licensed innholders and by licensed
common victuallers authorized to keep open their places of business
on the Lord's day and by persons licensed under the following
section to keep open their places of business as aforesaid; the
retail sale of frozen desserts and/or frozen dessert mix, soda
water and confectionery by licensed innholders and druggists, and
by such licensed common victuallers as are not also licensed to
sell alcoholic beverages, as defined in section one of chapter one
hundred and thirty-eight, and who are authorized to keep open their
places of business on the Lord's day; the sale of frozen desserts
and/or frozen dessert mix, soda water, confectionery or fruit by
persons licensed under the following section or the keeping open of
their places of business for the sale thereof; the sale of live
bait for use by fishermen for noncommercial purposes.
Page 366 U. S. 637
Nor shall it prohibit work lawfully done by persons working
under permits granted under section nine; the sale by licensed
innholders and common victuallers of meals such as are usually
served by them, consisting in no part of alcoholic beverages, as so
defined, which meals are cooked on the premises but are not to be
consumed thereon; the operation of motor vehicles; the sale of
gasoline and oil for use, and the retail sale of accessories for
immediate necessary use, in connection with the operation of motor
vehicles, motor boats and aircraft; the making of such emergency
repairs on disabled motor vehicles as may be necessary to permit
such vehicles to be towed or to proceed under their own power, and
the towing of disabled motor vehicles; the letting of horses and
carriages or of boats, motor vehicles or bicycles; the letting on
trains of equipment or accessories for personal use in connection
with outdoor recreation and sports activities; unpaid work on
pleasure boats; the running of steam ferry boats on established
routes; the running of street railway cars; the running of
steamboat lines and railroad trains or of steamboats.
Nor shall it prohibit the preparation, printing and publication
of newspapers, or the sale and delivery thereof; the wholesale or
retail sale and delivery of milk, or the transportation thereof, or
the delivery of frozen desserts or frozen dessert mix, or both, or
the wholesale or retail sale of ice or of fuel; the transportation
of general commodities by motor truck or trailers, then engaged in
interstate commerce before eight o'clock in the forenoon and after
eight o'clock in the evening or in the event of an emergency
between the aforesaid hours; the transportation of petroleum
products by motor truck or trailers then engaged in intrastate
commerce before six o'clock in the forenoon and after ten o'clock
in the evening; the transportation of livestock, farm commodities
and farm equipment
Page 366 U. S. 638
for participation in fairs, exhibitions and sporting events and
veterinary purposes; the handling, transportation and delivery of
fish and perishable foodstuffs at wholesale; the sale at wholesale
of dressed poultry, and the transportation of such poultry so sold,
on the Lord's day next preceding Thanksgiving day, and on the
Lord's day next preceding Christmas day except when Christmas day
occurs on Saturday, the Lord's day or Monday; the making of butter
and cheese; the keeping open of public bathhouses; the making or
selling by bakers or their employees, before ten o'clock in the
forenoon and between the hours of four o'clock and half past six
o'clock in the afternoon, of bread or other food usually dealt in
by them; whenever Rosh Hashonah, or the Day of Atonement, begins on
the Lord's day, the retail sale and delivery of fish, fruit and
vegetables before twelve o'clock noon of that day; the selling or
delivering of kosher meat by any person who, according to his
religious belief, observes Saturday as the Lord's day by closing
his place of business during the day until six o'clock in the
afternoon, or the keeping open of his shop on the Lord's day for
the sale of kosher meat between the hours of six o'clock and ten
o'clock in the forenoon.
Nor shall it prohibit the performing of secular business and
labor on the Lord's day by any person who conscientiously believes
that the seventh day of the week ought to be observed as the
Sabbath and actually refrains from secular business and labor on
that day, if he disturbs no other person thereby; the carrying on
of the business of bootblack before eleven o'clock in the forenoon,
unless prohibited in a city or town by ordinance or by-law; the
digging of claims; the icing and dressing of fish; the cultivation
of land, and the raising, harvesting, conserving and transporting
of agricultural products during the existence of war between the
United States and any other nation and until the first day of
January following the termination
Page 366 U. S. 639
thereof; such unpaid work in or about private gardens or private
grounds, adjacent to a dwelling house, as shall not cause
unreasonable noise, having regard to the locality where such work
is performed.
Nor shall it prohibit the sale of catalogues of pictures and
other works of art in exhibitions held by societies organized for
the purpose of promoting education in the fine arts or the exposure
of photographic plates and films for pleasure, if the pictures to
be made therefrom are not intended to be sold and are not sold.
Nor shall it prohibit the conduct of any enterprise lawfully
conducted under section four A or section four B.
Nor shall it prohibit the necessary preparation for and the
conducting of private industrial trade expositions which are not
open to the general public; provided, that said expositions shall
be kept open only between the hours of one and ten o'clock post
meridian.
Nor shall it prohibit the sale of fruit and vegetables by the
person who raised the same, or by his agent thereunto duly
authorized, on premises owned or leased by him.
§ 7.
Sale of frozen desserts, frozen dessert mix or
confectionery on the Lord's day. In Boston, and in any other
city or town which accepts this and section eight or has accepted
corresponding provisions of earlier laws, in a city by its city
council or in a town by the voters of the town at an annual town
meeting, the licensing board or officer in such city or town, or if
there is no such board or officer the aldermen of a city, or if
there are no aldermen the city council, with the approval of the
mayor, or the selectmen of a town, may grant, to any reputable
person who on secular days is a retail dealer in frozen desserts
and/or frozen dessert mix, confectionery, soda water or fruit and
who does not hold a license for the sale of alcoholic beverages, as
defined in section one of chapter one hundred and thirty-eight, a
license to keep open his place of business on the Lord's day for
the sale of frozen desserts
Page 366 U. S. 640
and/or frozen dessert mix, confectionery, soda water or
fruit.
§ 9.
Permit for performance of necessary work or labor
on the Lord's day. The police commissioner of Boston, or any
member of the police department having a rank not lower than that
of captain and designated by said commissioner, or the chief of
police or other officer in charge of the police department of any
other city or of any town, or the chairman of the board of
selectmen of any town, upon such terms and conditions as he deems
reasonable, may issue a permit for the performance on the Lord's
day of necessary work or labor which in his judgment could not be
performed on any other day without serious suffering, loss, damage
or public inconvenience. Such permit shall cover not more than one
day and shall not be issued more than six days prior to the day for
which it is issued.
§ 21.
Athletic outdoor sports or games. In any
city which accepts sections twenty-one to twenty-five, inclusive,
by vote of its city council, or in any town which accepts said
sections by vote of its inhabitants, it shall be lawful on the
Lord's day to take part in or witness any athletic outdoor sport or
game, as hereinafter provided, between the hours of one thirty and
six thirty post meridian and, in the case of a baseball game
commenced before the hour of six thirty post meridian, for such
further time beyond said hour as may be necessary to complete said
game; provided, that said game had been scheduled to commence at or
before the hour of three post meridian, or is the second of two
successive games to be played on the same day, the first of which
had been scheduled to commence at or before the hour of two post
meridian. In any such city or town it shall be lawful on the Lord's
day to take part in or witness, as hereinafter provided, any indoor
hockey or basketball game between the hours of one thirty post
meridian and twelve midnight.
Page 366 U. S. 641
§ 22.
Licensed playgrounds or parks for athletic
outdoor sports or games. Such sports or games shall take place
on such playgrounds, parks or other places as may be designated for
that purpose in a license or permit issued by the city council,
with the approval of the mayor, or by the selectmen; provided, that
if, under any statute or ordinance, a public playground or park is
placed under the exclusive charge and authority of any other
officials, such officials shall, for that playground or park, be
the licensing authority; and provided, that no sport or game shall
be permitted in a place, other than a public playground or park,
within one thousand feet of any regular place of worship.
§ 26.
Athletic outdoor sports or games not involving
pecuniary reward, remuneration or consideration. In any city
or town wherein the corresponding provisions of this and the six
following sections were in effect on the sixth day of December,
nineteen hundred and twenty-eight, and which has not voted against
said sections on resubmission as provided in section thirty-one,
and has not accepted the provisions of sections twenty-one to
twenty-five, inclusive, as provided in section twenty-one, it shall
be lawful to take part in or witness any athletic outdoor sport or
game, in which the contestants do not receive and have not been
promised any pecuniary reward, remuneration or consideration
whatsoever directly or indirectly in connection therewith, on the
Lord's day between the hours of two and six in the afternoon as
hereinafter provided.
§ 27.
Licensed playgrounds or parks for athletic
outdoor sports or games not involving pecuniary award, remuneration
or consideration. Such sports or games shall take place on
such playgrounds, parks or other places as may be designated for
that purpose in a license or permit issued by the city council,
with the approval of the mayor, or by the selectmen; provided, that
if, under any statute or ordinance, a public playground or park is
placed under
Page 366 U. S. 642
the exclusive charge and authority of any other officials, such
officials shall, for that playground or park, be the licensing
authority; and provided, that no sport or game shall be permitted
in a place, other than a public playground or park, within one
thousand feet of any regular place of worship.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR. JUSTICE STEWART dissent. They are of
the opinion that the Massachusetts statute, as applied to the
appellees in this case, prohibits the free exercise of religion.
See their dissenting opinions in
Braunfeld v. Brown,
ante, pp.
366 U. S. 610,
366 U. S.
616.