delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a case of the fifth class, brought by the city of Chicago in the municipal court of that city against Elias Drogasawacz for operating and maintaining a bakery without first obtaining a license under section 2 of a certain ordinance for regulating and licensing bakeries. Upon motion of defendant in error the summons was quashed and the suit dismissed, the trial court holding that the city authorities had no power to pass the ordinance. The validity of a municipal ordinance being involved, the trial judge certified that in his opinion the public interests required that the case should be brought directly to this court.
The ordinance in question defines a bakery as “any place used for any purposes of mixing, compounding or baking, for sale or for purposes of a restaurant, bakery or hotel, any bread, biscuits, pretzels, crackers, buns, rolls, macaroni, cake, pies, or any food product of which flour or meal is a principal ingredient,” etc. A license fee of five dollars wras required, and the ordinance further provided, among other things, for ventilation; light'; cleanliness of the premises, employees and machinery; plumbing and screens; that no persons afflicted with certain diseases should be employed; that basement bakeries must have cement or other impervious material for floors; that storage rooms must be kept dry; that no person should sleep in a bakery or in rooms where the flour and meal were stored; that the use of tobacco or spitting on the floor in the bakery was not permitted. Additional requirements as to the size of buildings and rooms of new bakeries are also found in the ordinance.
The principal contention in this case is whether the city of Chicago has been given the power, under the Cities and Villages act, to enact this ordinance. A city possesses no inherent power to license any occupation. That power must be expressly granted in its charter or be a necessary incident to the powers so granted. (Wilkie v. City of Chicago,
The contention that the passage of the bread ordinance, the constitutionality of which was upheld by this court in City of Chicago v. Schmidinger,
Plaintiff in error has the power, under section 78 of paragraph 62 of the Cities and Villages act, “to do all acts, make all regulations which may be necessary or expedient for the promotion of health or the suppression "of disease.” One of the most important of police powers is that of caring for the health of a community. Not only under sections 50 and 53, but also under this provision of the Cities and Villages act, plaintiff in error was authorized to pass the ordinance in question. Kinsley v. City of Chicago, supra; City of St. Louis v. Liessing,
It is contended by defendant in error that cities do not have authority to pass the sanitary provisions provided for in the ordinance here in.question, as that subject is fully covered by paragraphs 40 to 49, inclusive, of chapter 1276, (Hurd’s Stat. 1911, p. 2225,) with reference to the inspection of establishments where food is prepared, manufactured, packed, stored, distributed or sold. Municipal ordinances' must be in harmony with the general laws of the State, (City of Chicago v. Union Ice Cream Manf. Co.
The further contention is made that the ordinance is void because it delegates to the commissioner of health the power to determine whether the license should be granted, and to the mayor the power to revoke the license if the provisions of the ordinance are not complied with. This same argument was made with reference to similar provisions of an ordinance in Gundling v. City of Chicago, supra, and this court in that case held that such a provision did not render the ordinance void, as did also the Supreme Court of the United States in Gundling v. City of Chicago,
The ordinance in question was within the powers granted to the city authorities under the Cities and Villages act and does not contravene any provision of the State or Federal constitution. The judgment of the municipal court of Chicago will therefore be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in harmony with the views herein stated. Reversed and remanded.
