From a temporary injunction against the City of Fort Worth enjoining it from enforcing within its corporate limits an ordinance prohibiting the keeping and displaying of “pinball machines” or “marble boards”, the City appeals.
Affirmed.
The ordinance (No. 3434) was passed on February 22, 1956. Within five days suit was filed. The petitioner for injunctive and declaratory relief was Ben McDonald, an individual whose occupation is that of operating coin machines, including “pinball machines” and “marble boards”. A number of special exceptions were leveled at McDonald’s petition, the overruling of which furnishes the basis of eight of the thirteen points of error very capably briefed by the City’s attorneys.
In answer to the points of error presented, McDonald’s counsel lists three counterpoints, as follows:
“1. Fort Worth City Ordinance No. 3434 is inconsistent with Articles 7047a-2 and 7047a-3, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes ; hence, is denounced by section 5 of Article 11, Constitution of Texas.
“2. McDonald, being in jeopardy of prosecution and property loss under color of the void ordinance, was entitled to have its enforcement enjoined.
“3. There was no procedural error to avoid the injunction.”
Since we are of the opinion that the argument of McDonald’s attorneys is sound and correct, our discussion will follow the order of the counter-points.
*258 The First Counter-Point
The ordinance defines marble boards as a nuisance per se; makes their ownership, operation, or exhibition a misdemeanor; prescribes a fine up to $200 for each day of violation; and provides for summary seizure by any police officer.
Fort Worth is a Home Rule city. Authority for its charter is section 5, Article 11, Constitution of Texas Vernon’s Ann. St. The section has the proviso: “no charter or any ordinance passed under said charter shall contain any provision inconsistent with the Constitution of the State, or of the general laws enacted by the Legislature of this State”.
Articles 7047a-2 and 7047a-3, V.A.T.S., levy occupation taxes on owners of “ ‘skill or pleasure coin-operated machines’ ”. Article 7047a-2, sub. (e) provides in part: “The following are expressly included within said term: marble machines, marble table machines, marble shooting machines, * * * ff
From time to time, Texas courts have held that municipalities have no power to prohibit pursuit of occupations regulated by State law. Chronologically cited, the following decisions are in point: Ex parte Powell, 1902,
It was upon “fact” findings by the Fort Worth City Council that pinball machines encourage idleness, loafing, vagrancy and gambling that the City Council based the ordinance. It was upon semi-analogous fact findings that this Court sustained ordinance No. 1937 in the Berry case. The Supreme Court reversed, holding provisions of the ordinance void as in conflict with general law.
It is no better argument that the City has power by charter and statute to define and prevent a nuisance. It is axiomatic that no legislative body may “by an arbitrary standard, declare that to be a nuisance which is not so in fact.” Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur, supra [
None of the cases cited for the
City
as distinctive mitigate the general rule. Cannon v. City of Dallas, Tex.Civ.App.El Paso, 1953,
Xydias Amusement Co. v. City of Houston, Tex.Civ.App.Galveston, 1916,
No municipal ordinance was questioned in Adams v. Antonio, Tex.Civ.App. Waco, 1935,
In Brown Cracker & Candy Co. v. City of Dallas, 1911,
The City’s citation of the pool hall statute, V.A.T.S. Article 4668, is not in point. It is true that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held in Commonwealth v. Klucher, 1937,
The Second Counter-Point (that McDonald showed a right to his injunction)
McDonald alleged the ordinance and imminence of its enforcement against him. He described and located his marble boards; alleged that they were legal, tax-paid machines, not gaming devices; that the ordinance was inconsistent with State' law; and that its enforcement would cause him irreparable injury for which he would have no adequate remedy at law.
It was shown by the evidence that the ordinance had been duly published, and that the Chief of Police had directed immediate enforcement; that McDonald had seven machines at particular ■ locations in Fort Worth which produced him revenue of $100 per week; that he had paid the taxes on fourteen such machines; 'that none of the machines in operation was equipped with any device to allow a payoff of even free games; and that McDonald knew of no collateral gambling in connection with operation of the machines.
“It is a generally accepted rule that injunctive relief may be granted to prevent the enforcement of an unconstitutional statute when its enforcement will result in irreparable injury to property rights.” State v. Ferguson, 1939,
Enforcement of void municipal ordinances has been enjoined often. Brown Cracker & Candy Co. v. City of Dallas, supra; Crossman v. City of Galveston, 1923,
The City disputes that McDonald proved threat of irreparable injury or defect of adequate remedy at law. If his marble boards had been seized by the City police, he would have lost $100 per week per machine revenue. Who would have *260 responded in damages for the loss of income? If he had been convicted of seven or more—or fewer—misdemeanors, there was no “adequate remedy” in his right to appeal (each conviction) and to test by such appeal(s) the validity of the ordinance.
“An unconstitutional statute is no statute at all * * State v. Ferguson, supra. The Commission of Appeals in Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur and this Court in Murphy v. Wright enjoined criminal prosecution under a void ordinance.
The City questions the quantum of McDonald’s proof that his marble boards are not gambling devices. They would burden him to prove “that bets are not made by and between the players of the machines * * * that the proprietors of the establishments in which his machines are located do not make payments or awards to players * * * who should achieve a high score.”
McDonald was not required to prove more than that his marble boards were not gambling devices per se. The burden was on the City to prove them so in fact. Crossman v. City of Galveston, supra; see also Hightower v. State, Tex.Civ.App. Dallas,
1941,
The point is made by the City that at the time oí trial the Comptroller had issued no license to McDonald for the current year. That was not McDonald’s fault. It is reasonably clear that he paid his taxes on these machines, with seven others, before passage of ordinance No. 3434. Besides, if these marble boards are “nuisances” under Article 7047a-5, or if they are, indeed, “pool halls” or gaming devices, there is no injunction against their seizure. The injunction order was specific: “This order is applicable only to proceedings by the City of Fort Worth or its officers taken under color of or in the enforcement of Ordinance No. 3434 of the City of Fort Worth, and is in no way intended to, nor does it apply to actions taken by the City of Fort Worth or its police officers against the plaintiff or any of its marble boards in the enforcement of any other valid ordinance or state law.”
The Third Counter-Point
(that there was no procedural error)
As stated heretofore, eight of the City’s “points” are attacks upon McDonald’s pleading and reception or sufficiency of evidence to support the pleading. These have been covered by the preceding analysis to the contrary of the City’s contentions; hence, will not be further noticed. But the City’s “Point Five” is unique and sui generis. The City invokes T.R.C.P. 683 as applied by the Austin Court of Civil Appeals in Hodges v. State, Tex.Civ.App. Austin, 1946,
The order recited “that Ordinance No. 3434 of the City of Fort Worth is void and that a temporary injunction is warranted for reasons stated in the petition.” The “reasons stated in the petition” were the imminence of irreparable injury and multiplicity of criminal prosecution. Both were good reasons. This was not a case such as Hodges v. State, supra [
T.R.C.P. 683 does not forbid reference to the petition in the statement of reasons for an injunction; the prohibition of the rule is against such reference for definition of the acts enjoined. The injunction order is in literal accord to the rule. The “unless” clause of the opinion in Gonzalez v. Rodriguez would protect the order of the *261 court below, for “the record affirmatively shows that no harm resulted” by reference to the petition for the grounds of injunction. In Hodges v. State, supra, it was also recognized that the rule of “harmless error” would obviate any reason for reversal in a proper case.
The judgment is affirmed.
