20 N.E.2d 287 | Ill. | 1939
A complaint in the municipal court of Chicago charged that the Ingersoll Steel Disc Division of Borg-Warner Corporation operated a machine shop in that city without a license, in violation of section 3834a of the revised Chicago code of 1931, as amended. The court overruled appellant's motion to dismiss the complaint. The grounds of that motion were: (1) The power granted in the Cities and Villages act to regulate machine shops relates to the machine-shop business and does not cover a manufacturing establishment which, incidental to its manufacturing business, operates a machine or tool shop for its own purposes; (2) the power to regulate machine shops, contained in that act, does not give the city authority to license manufacturing *185 establishments using metal, or manufacturing metal products or using machinery similar to that found in machine shops, and (3) the ordinance shows on its face that it is, in fact, a revenue measure, and not a regulatory measure. The appellant was found guilty and was fined $50 and costs. The trial judge certified that the validity of a municipal ordinance was involved and that, in his opinion, the public interest required a direct appeal to this court.
The appellant has a factory at 1030 West One Hundred Twentieth street, in Chicago, where it operates rolling mills, stamps metal containers, fabricates metal parts for agricultural implements, passenger cars and trucks, and makes various other stampings and forgings. Its plant is equipped with hydraulic and mechanical presses, steel hammers, grinding machines, upset forging machines, and furnaces for heating products which are fabricated while hot. The plant covers a square block and consists of separate buildings all of which are joined by passageways. The appellant repairs its machinery and makes about half the tools and dies it uses in its manufacturing processes in its own tool room or machine shop, located near the center of the plant. It does no such work for any one else. This shop contains lathes, planers, boring mills, grinding machines and other equipment. No one is admitted to the plant except employees and those persons who have business at the office. Approximately six hundred fifty people are employed at the plant, and, of this number, sixty-five work in the shop.
The Cities and Villages act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 24, art. 5, sec. 82, par. 65.81) confers on cities the power "to direct the location and regulate the use and construction of breweries, distilleries, livery, boarding or sales stables, blacksmith shops, foundries, machine shops, garages, laundries and bathing beaches, within the limits of the city or village." Under the claim that it was exercising the power so granted, the city of Chicago passed sections 3834(a) to 3834(h) of its revised municipal code. The first of these *186 sections defines a machine shop as "a work shop in which machines are made or metal parts thereof are repaired, or where parts of machines, or tools, implements, gears, dies, screws or other metal articles are cut, filed, shaped or repaired by means of a lathe or other machinery." This section forbids all persons to operate machine shops as thus defined without having obtained a license so to do but provides that the ordinance shall not apply to any class of machine shops specifically licensed under other ordinances of the city. Section 3834(b) provides for application for licenses; 3834(c) for investigations by the commissioner of health, the commissioner of buildings and the chief fire prevention engineer; 3834(d) names the license fee payable based on the number of employees in the machine shop; 3834(e) fixes sanitary requirements; 3834(f) prohibits night operations in certain localities, and 3834(h) provides penalties for violations of the ordinance.
By its motion to dismiss and the points relied on for reversal, appellant challenges the validity of the ordinance. For this reason, and by virtue of the certificate mentioned above, we have jurisdiction of this direct appeal.
Municipal corporations derive their existence and all their powers from the General Assembly. They possess no inherent powers. If they desire to legislate upon a particular subject or occupation they must be able to point out the statute which authorizes this to be done. Statutes conferring powers upon municipal corporations are strictly construed and any fair or reasonable doubt that an asserted power exists is resolved against the municipality. Municipal corporations only possess such implied powers as are necessarily incident to the powers expressly granted. (Crerar Clinch Coal Co. v. City of Chicago,
In Barnard Miller v. City of Chicago,
Section 82 of article 5, of the Cities and Villages act authorizes and empowers the appellee to regulate machine shops. The business of conducting a machine shop has been a recognized commercial enterprise for many years. In conferring upon cities the power to regulate machine shops, the General Assembly must be held to have intended that this power would be exercised with respect to separate places of business known as machine shops, and not with respect to shops which are incidental to manufacturing establishments and do no work for the public.
The appellant is not engaged in the machine-shop business but it is a manufacturing concern that has a repair or machine shop which admittedly comes within the definition contained in the ordinance. However, the city has no authority to license and regulate factories generally, and it cannot do indirectly the thing it cannot do directly. The appellee's contention that there is no essential difference between appellant's shop and the ordinary machine shop conducted to serve the public, is beside the point. It is not a question as to whether machine shops need inspection, regulation and safe, healthful working conditions. The question here is whether the city had the power to regulate machine shops such as appellant's. The city had no such power and to the extent that appellee included such shops by definition in the ordinance it is illegal and void.
Since the judgment against the appellant must be reversed, it is not necessary to pass on the further contention that this ordinance shows on its face that it was only a revenue measure in the guise of a regulatory one.
For the reasons stated the judgment of the municipal court of Chicago is reversed.
Judgment reversed. *190