97 P. 199 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
Application for a writ of habeas corpus.
Ordinance No. 262, duly adopted by the city of South Pasadena, and entitled, "An Ordinance for police regulation, relating to billiard halls, pool rooms, and places where billiard and pool tables are kept for hire or public use in the city of South Pasadena," provides:
"The Board of Trustees of the City of South Pasadena do ordain as follows:
"Section 1. It shall be, and is hereby made unlawful for any person or persons, individually or by association with others, either as owner, principal, clerk, agent, servant or employee, to establish, open, keep, carry on, or assist in carrying on, or maintain, or assist in maintaining any billiard hall, or pool room, or other place in the City of South Pasadena, where any billiard, pool, or combination billiard and pool table, or tables, is or are kept for hire or public use, and any person or persons opening, keeping, carrying on, or assisting in carrying on, maintaining, or assisting in maintaining, any such place, herein specified, in said City of South Pasadena, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and every act in violation of this section shall separately, or for each day of its continuance, be deemed a separate offense.
"Provided, however, that nothing in this ordinance shall be construed or understood as prohibiting the owner, manager or lessee of any hotel, universally recognized as a hotel, using a general register for guests, and having twenty-five bedrooms and upward, furnished as such, from keeping and maintaining any billiard, pool, or combination billiard and pool table, or tables, for the use of regular guests only of said hotel, in a room provided for that purpose in the building in which said hotel is located, and at no other place, on receiving *442 a permit so to do from the Board of Trustees of the City of South Pasadena. Application for such permits shall be in writing, and filed with the Board of Trustees at least five days before the same is granted. If, on investigation, said Board finds the hotel for which such permit is desired, equipped and conducted as herein specified, it may, in its discretion, grant and issue such permit, without charge, and for such time as desired by the applicant, but in no event to extend beyond the date of the next succeeding municipal election; provided, if said Board of Trustees shall at any time become satisfied that any person to whom any such permit is granted, his clerk, agent, or employee, has permitted any person other than a regular guest of said hotel, or any person who has not in good faith become a regular guest of said hotel, or is guilty of a violation of any provision of this ordinance, they shall cancel, revoke, and withdraw such permit and all rights thereunder, and no other permit shall thereafter be granted to said person."
On January 18, 1908, petitioner was arrested upon a complaint which charged "that on the 17th day of January, 1908, at said City of South Pasadena, in the county of Los Angeles, State of California, the crime of violating Ordinance No. 262 of said City of South Pasadena was committed by J. L. Murphy, who at the time and place last aforesaid, did willfully and unlawfully engage in, establish, open, keep, carry on and assist in carrying on, maintain and assist in maintaining, a billiard hall and pool room and place, by then and there keeping billiard, pool, and combination billiard and pool tables for hire and for public use." An answer was filed controverting certain allegations of the petition regarding the manner in which the business was conducted by petitioner, the character of those who frequent the place, and the fact that the conduct of the business was disassociated from any practice tending to encourage profligacy or injuriously affect the good morals of the community. Inasmuch, however, as, according to our view, the validity of the ordinance is unaffected by such alleged facts, conceding them to be true, it is therefore unnecessary to discuss the issues thus raised.
The sole question relates to the validity of the ordinance, disassociated from any consideration of extrinsic questions affecting its reasonableness. Petitioner contends that the ordinance *443 is unconstitutional and void for the reasons: 1st. That poolrooms are not a nuisance per se; 2d. That it is not within the power conferred upon municipalities by section 11, article XI of the constitution of the state of California; 3d. That it vests arbitrary power in the board of trustees; and, 4th. That it is special and class legislation in that it confers privileges and immunities upon certain citizens which it denies to others, thus creating a monopoly in the one class.
An inspection of the ordinance makes it apparent that it is not a measure adopted for the purpose of raising revenue; hence, not an exercise of the power given cities of the sixth class, to which South Pasadena belongs, under the provisions of subdivision 10 of section 862 of the municipal corporation act [Stats. 1883, p. 270], which authorizes such cities to "license, for the purpose of revenue and regulation, all and every kind of business authorized by law, . . . and lawful games carried on therein. . . ." Its purpose is not to license, but to prohibit. (Merced Co. v. Helm,
We may concede at the outset that the business of conducting a public billiard-hall and poolroom is not per se a nuisance. In the case of Ex parte Meyers,
Cases from other jurisdictions cited by petitioner in support of the proposition that the power conferred by said section 11, article XI, extends only to the right to regulate, are inapplicable to the case at bar, for the reason that the questions involved were under charters containing special and limited grants as to the exercise of police power.
Petitioner insists that the ordinance is obnoxious by reason of its being special and class legislation, in that its provisions do not apply to the proprietors of hotels having twenty-five or more furnished bedrooms and using a general register for guests. There is no merit in this contention. The ordinance is directed at those persons who keep billiard-halls and poolrooms for hire or public use, and its provisions apply to all alike falling within this class. It prohibits every one from engaging in such business. The provisions do not apply to the individual who keeps a pool-table in his house for the use of himself and guests, nor to the hotel-keeper who maintains tables for use ofbona fide guests only. In neither case can it be said to be public, nor that it creates in either a monopoly of the business. All are alike amenable to the law prohibiting them from conducting such place for hire or public use.
Even accepting petitioner's theory as to the effect and operation of the ordinance, there is no force in the objection. As we have seen, the city may prohibit altogether, "and if the governing power can prohibit a thing altogether, it can impose such conditions upon its existence as it pleases." (Ex parte Christensen,
That portion of the ordinance relating to hotels keeping billiard and pool tables provides that the board of trustees may, in its discretion, grant permits therefor to such hotels. It is contended that the ordinance is void by reason of the fact that it vests an arbitrary power in the board. Conceding this to be true, nevertheless, since the governing power can prohibit altogether, it may impose any restrictions deemed proper and necessary as a condition of granting permits to conduct such business. In discussing this point in his opinion, the late Judge Smith of the superior court of Los Angeles county very properly stated, in denying the application of petitioner for a similar writ: "But we have seen that the conducting of a pool room is not a useful occupation and does not come within the purview of any of the authorities *448
quoted by the petitioner upon his proposition. The law is well settled in this state, as has been shown by the authorities already cited, that where a business is not a useful occupation, such as conducting a saloon, and many kindred places, the supreme court has always upheld the power that has been vested in a board or in a person to say whether such person shall have a license or not. Consequently, the many authorities cited by petitioner which involve the right to conduct lawful and useful businesses, such as referred to in the Yick Wo Case,
We find no valid objection to the constitutionality of the ordinance. The writ is denied, and petitioner is remanded to the custody of the city marshal.
Allen, P. J., and Taggart, J., concurred.