97 Mass. 221 | Mass. | 1867
The defendant, who has been convicted of the violation of an ordinance of the city of Springfield, which prohibited the keeping of swine within certain parts of that city, excepts to the ruling at the trial which sustained the validity of the ordinance.
The reasonableness of the ordinance, as applied to the particular territory in question, is not now to be considered! because the facts upon which it would depend are not reported. We may presume that the territory, within which the ordinance operates, is the most populous and thickly settled part of the city; and that particular sanitary regulations are needed there, if anywhere. The objection of the defendant is broader, and denies the power of the city council to pass any ordinance of the kind. But we are of opinion that none of the reasons adduced in support of the objection are sufficient, and that the ordinance is valid.
It is manifestly intended as a sanitary regulation, and to promote the comfort and health of the inhabitants. That it is made to apply only to a part of the city is not material, if that part is so situated as to require peculiar and exceptional pro« visions. This point was taken in Goddard, petitioner, 16 Pick
By the city charter of Springfield, the city is authorized to make all such “ salutary and needful by-laws as towns may make and establish.” St. 1852, c. 94, § 15. Towns “ may make such necessary orders and by-laws, not repugnant to the laws of the state, for directing and managing the prudential affairs, preserving the peace and good order, and maintaining the internal police thereof, as they may judge most conducive to the welfare of the town.” Gen. Sts. c. 18, § 11. The ordinances and by-laws made in pursuance of the authority thus conferred must not be repugnant to the laws of the state; and must be reasonable, that is, not interfering with the liberty, property and business of the citizen more than is requisite to secure the lawfui and proper object in view. The object of the ordinance is manifestly to protect the inhabitants and travellers in a close and populous neighborhood from offensive and unwholesome smells. In England, a by-law of the city of Exeter, which forbade any person to slaughter any beast, or keep any swine, within the walls of the city, or keep any stinking filth, garbage or annoyance within his house, curtilage or backside, was held to be a good by-law. Pierce v. Bartrum, Cowp. 269. To prevent nuisances being an important part of the “ internal police ” of towns and cities, the object of such a by-law is legitimate under the statute. It may indeed be found that the prohibition of offensive trades is not the proper subject of a by-law, because that matter is specially provided for by statute; and to prohibit their exercise in any particular locality in a city by an ordinance, would interfere with the right of appeal to a jury which the statute secures. Gen. Sts. c. 26, §§ 52-60. But the keeping of swine can hardly be considered a trade within the meaning
The ordinance is not unequal, because it applies to all persons doing the act forbidden within the territory designated, whether inhabitants of that locality or not. The suggestion on the part of the defendant that he might have permitted the manure of his stable to become a more offensive nuisance if he had not violated the ordinance, hardly needs consideration.
Exceptions overruled.