This is an action to enjoin the city of Sierra Madre from enforcing an ordinance that forbids, in the residence district of the city—defined by ■ the ordinance—any livery-stable or corral for the keeping therein of hprses, mules, jennies, jacks, or burros for hire, and which likewise forbids, in the business district—defined in the ordinance—any such livery-stable or corral without a permit from the city board of trustees, on written application specifying the number and kitid of animals desired to be so kept, the period of time and the place of keeping and the kind of business to be transacted. Plaintiff is engaged in the business of furnishing burros and mules for hire. For that purpose he has ten burros and four mules, keeping them in a corral within the residence district of the city.
*523 The appeal is upon the judgment-roll. The lower court found that appellant has kept and maintained his corral “in a cleanly, wholesome (sic) and sanitary manner”; but that, priоr to the passage of the ordinance, there were, in the vicinity of appellant’s corral, two other corrals, wherein such animals were kept for hire, in which there was “an accumulation of manure and other filthy substаnces of various kinds, generating noxious odors and breeding and attracting flies and other vermin; that said corrals and the business conducted therein and thereupon were the source of many loud, disagreeable, and discordаnt noises from the braying of the animals, their footbeats on the street and sidewalk, the cries and loud talk of their attendants, and otherwise; and that said businesses were the cause of much dust, dirt and discomfort to the inhabitants of the residential district described in the ordinance.”
Appellant claims that the ordinance is unreasonable and unjustly discriminatory, and that its enforcement will deprive him of his constitutional rights.
“. . . a sound so fine there’s nothing lives ;
’Twixt it and silence.”
We fear that, until nature evolves the whispering burro or man invents some harmless but effective mule-muffler] we shall oft “in the dead vast and middle of the night,” even in such corrals as appellant’s, kept “in a cleanly, wholesome, and sanitary manner,” hear the loud, discordant bray of this sociable but shrill-toned friend of man, filling the air “with barbarous dissonance,” and drowning even that shout that
“. . . . tore hell’s concave, and beyond
Frightened the reign of Chaos and old Night.”
It should not be a matter for surprise, therefore, that the noisome smell frоm these animals, and their loud, strident cacophonies bring the keeping of them in a populous city or town “within the legal notion of a nuisance.”
(Ex parte Foote,
The ordinance does not absolutely forbid the maintenance of a corral in the business district, but provides that no corral of the kind interdicted by it shall be maintained in the business section without a permit from the city trustees. Appellant claims that the ordinance does not merely regulate, but that, by requiring a permit for the maintenance of such a corral in the business district, it confers upon the trustees a power that is susceptible of abuse, that the applicant for a permit may be unfairly discriminated against, and that, therefore, in the practical application of the trustee’s discriminatory power, the right to maintain such a corral in any part of the city may be unjustly prohibited. We cannot subscribe to this criticism of the ordinance. The proposition that a man has a natural, innate, inviolate, common-law, or constitutional right to maintain, in a populous community, a place where foul-smelling, loud-braying animals are kept, has no foundation in reason or authority.
(In re Flaherty,
There is absolutely nothing to indicate that the ordinance was intended in any of its features to operate peculiarly against appellant or against any other particular person or persons or class of persons. It is fair on its face, applying equally and uniformly to all engaged in keeping, in corrals, horses, mules, or burros for hire; and it is not to be presumed that the trustees will exercise their power wantonly or for purposes of noppression, or accord permission to social or political favorites and deny it to others. ,
*527
The fact that appellant may have kept his corral as clean as is possible in such eases, and has carried on his business in the most approved manner, is not material.
(City of Burlington
v.
Stockwell,
We see no force in any of appellant’s objections to the ordinance. ;
Judgment affirmed.
Sloane, J., and Thomas, J.. concurred. i
