15 N.E.2d 725 | Ill. | 1938
This is an appeal from a judgment of the municipal court of Chicago, imposing a fine upon the R. X. Restaurant, Inc., for conducting a food-dispensing establishment in Chicago without having applied for and obtained a license, in violation of an ordinance regulating such establishments.
The ordinance charged to have been violated is article 3, sections 3013 to 3037, of chapter 61 of the Revised Chicago Code of 1931, pp. 1145 to 1153. The ordinance defines food dispensers and regulates the storage, handling and sale at retail of foods and drinks intended for human consumption. Regulations are provided as to dining rooms, kitchens, storerooms, pantries, refrigerators, plumbing, screens and employees; the manner of cleaning dishes and eating and drinking vessels; cleaning and polishing silverware, kitchenware and utensils; the protection of foods from rats, mice, vermin, insects, flies and dust; the wearing by employees *67 of suitable, clean and washable clothing; the disposition of refuse and garbage and keeping receptacles therefor; the making of orange drinks and their protection from contamination. Regulations are provided for counter ice-cream freezers and the manufacture and handling of ice-cream. It is admitted that the ordinance covers the entire field of regulation of the business of selling to the public at retail foods and drinks for consumption on the premises.
Counsel for the defendant contend that the city has no power to regulate the restaurant business or that of food dispensers. Counsel for the city contend that the ordinance is valid under express powers delegated by specific provisions of the Cities and Villages act.
The authority of a municipality to adopt an ordinance may be derived from a single grant or a combination of enumerated powers. (City of Rockford v. Hey,
The most general of the foregoing provisions are those relating to the licensing and regulation of the keepers of ordinaries, the regulation and inspection of food products "and all other provisions," and the one relating to the promotion of health and the suppression of disease. It is contended that the ordinance could not be based upon the statutory provision relating to licensing and regulating keepers of ordinaries, because while food dispensers include restaurants, ordinaries are not restaurants. The word "ordinary" has been defined to mean a place of eating where the prices are settled. (Webster's New Internat. Dict.; 6 Words and Phrases, p. 5027; Werner v. Washington, 29 Fed. Cas. 705; Talbot v. Southern Seminary,
We have held that if a business sought to be regulated does not tend to injure the public health, public morals or interfere with the general welfare it is not a subject for the exercise of the police power. (Lowenthal v. City of Chicago,
It is contended that even if it be assumed that the city had the power to adopt the ordinance, the annual license fees provided for places having various capacities for service accommodations do not bear a reasonable relation to the burdens placed upon the city because of such regulatory provisions. The power to regulate includes the power to license. (Crackerjack Co.
v. City of Chicago, supra; City of Chicago v. Arbuckle Bros.supra.) The fee is based upon the service accommodation or seating or counter space for each individual customer. It is contended that there is no connection between the seating capacity or space occupied by a customer in a food-dispensing establishment and the difficulty or burden of inspection. This case differs from Ward Baking Co. v. City of Chicago,
It is also contended that notwithstanding the many regulatory provisions imposed upon food-dispensing establishments, the ordinance nevertheless requires the commissioner of health of the city to approve the application made for licenses; that even if the provisions of the ordinance have been complied with the health commissioner may reject an application; that there is not a sufficient definition of what constitutes a sanitary condition or fit and proper place for the conduct of the business, and that too broad a discretion is vested in the commissioner of health of the city. *72
Sections 3014 and 3016 of the ordinance contain certain definite requirements to be met by the applicant. He must supply any information required by the commissioner of health concerning the size and nature of the place to be used for the purpose of the business and the conditions, equipment and facilities provided. The commissioner of health must cause an inspection to be made of the premises to be occupied, the equipment contained therein, the persons to be employed, the sanitary and hygienic conditions and matters necessary to be inquired into from the standpoint of health and sanitation. The commissioner must be satisfied that the place where the business is to be conducted is in a sanitary condition and is a fit and proper place for the business, and that the provisions of the ordinance relative to the conduct of the business have been observed. Provision is made for the revocation of the license upon the recommendation of the commissioner of health, if the licensee violates a State law or municipal ordinance relating to the conduct of the business of food dispenser. Periodical inspections are provided for practically the same purpose as the initial inspection, to assure compliance with the State law and municipal ordinances upon the subjects of health and sanitation.
Under the ordinance here in question the commissioner of health must be satisfied that the provisions of the ordinance have been observed with respect to the premises of an applicant or licensee being in a sanitary condition and a fit place for the conduct of the business, but the various sections of the ordinance define the conditions which must exist to permit an applicant to receive and a licensee to retain, a license to conduct the business of a food dispenser. While there is some general language pertaining to the powers and duties of the commissioner of health, the manifest purpose of the ordinance is that the initial and periodical inspections are to be made in accordance with the ordinance, and particularly the provisions of sections 3018 to *73
3036, inclusive. The regulations provided in these sections are specific and in detail with respect to the place, rooms, equipment, persons, utensils and clothing of employees and for the observance of sanitary requirements to insure cleanliness. The health commissioner's duties are prescribed and are to be exercised in accordance with the definite provisions of the ordinance. He is not authorized to make regulations or exercise arbitrary power in determining whether sanitary conditions exist in a particular place and that it is one fit and proper for the conduct of the business. He may not reject an application or cause a license to be revoked for personal reasons apart from the regulations contained in the ordinance, and legislative powers have, therefore, not been delegated to him. The ordinance does not deny the appellant due process of law. (Gundling v. City ofChicago,
The judgment of the municipal court of Chicago is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.