The petitioner was fined ten dollars in the police court of St. Louis and imprisoned in the St. Louis city workhouse for carrying on the business of a plumber without having been licensed as required by an ordinance of said city numbered 23007.
Section five provides that upon satisfactory proof of the qualifications and fitness of the applicant for a plumbing license, a board of examiners of plumbers shall issue to him a certificate, which shall entitle him to engage in or work at the business of plumbing for a period of one yeаr. And no person shall be entitled to obtain from said board a certificate of qualification, as master, or employing plumber, or a journeyman plumber, except as in the ordinance provided, who shall not first have passed a satisfactory examination before said board as to his knowledge, experience and skill in practical plumbing, house draining and plumbing ventilation.
Section ten provides a penalty of not less than ten dollars nor more than one hundred dollars for any person who shall engage in the business of plumbing in said.city without having been duly licensed as required by the ordinance.
The petitioner сlaims that this ordinance is founded for its authority on the plumbing act of the Legislature approved March 27, 1903, Laws 1903, pages 82-84, and that said act is an unconstitutional law because it was local and special and in violation of section 53 of article 4 of the Constitution of Missouri. And because the said act was in viоlation of petitioner’s constitutional right to life, liberty and property. He also maintains that the ordinance is outside of the charter and statutory powers of the city of St. Louis and is unreasonable and therefore void. On the other hand, the city insists that the ordinance is a perfectly valid exercise of charter powers of the city of St. Louis, and that the business of plumbing is the proper subject of police regulation.
Clauses of the charter of the city of St. Louis applicable to this discussion are clause 5 of section 26 of article three of the charter, which give the Mayor
I. As already said thе petitioner insists that the ordinance is founded upon the Plumbing Act of March 27,1903, and that act is void because it is not a general law, but is local and special, as it can only be made to apply to cities having fifty thousand or more inhabitants. The title of this act declares it to be a law “to secure the registrаtion of plumbers in all cities within this state having a population of more than fifty thousand inhabitants, and to provide for a board for the examination of plumbers therein,” etc. Thus on its face, it applied to all cities in this state of the population mentioned, but section thirteen of the act provides: ‘ ‘ The рrovisions of this act shall be inoperative until adopted by proper ordinance by the city •or town to which it relates.” In a word, in effect it is a local option statute which can only become a law when a particular city makes it operative therein. Until a city of the class mentioned adopts it, it is a dead law, and it is only when the city by proper ordinance
The language of this Act of 1903 on its face provides that it shall not be operative until it is adopted by the city or town to which it relates, and thus takes it out of the reasoning upon which local option laws have been sustained. And in our opinion, the act is clearly unconstitutional and void, nor can we reject section 13 and thus save the enactment. This section gives character to every part of the act, and in оur opinion the act never would have received the approval of the Legislature without this section in it, and yet there is not the slightest hint of such a radical, change in the character of the bill from that indicated in its title.
It is not deemed necessary to amplify reasons for
In our opinion then the city under its charter had the power to license and regulate the business of plumbing, unless in so doing, it violated the Constitution of the state in interfering with the constitutional right of the defendant to his natural rights to the enjoyment of the gains of his own industry, and deprived him of his property without due process of law. The natural right to health, liberty and pursuit of happiness secured by our Constitution аnd Bill of Rights is not an absolute right. The individual must sacrifice a part of his particular interest if the sacrifice is a necessary one in order that organized society as a whole shall be benefited. The restraint of personal action is justified when it obviously tends to the protection of the health and comfort оf the community and the individual’s constitutional right is not thereby violated. While there may be some cases to the contrary, the great weight of authority in this country is to the effect that the business of plumbing is so intimately connected with the public health, especially in large centers of population where scarlet fever, typhoid fever, diphtheria and other diseases ai~e apt to become epidemic, as to be the proper subject of police regulation. [People ex rel. v. Warden,
In People ex rel. v. Warden of the City Prison,
In State v. Gardner,
We regard the business of plumbing as so intimately connected with the public health and the comfort of the citizens - that there ought not to be any doubt that its regulation falls within the power оf the Legislature in the exercise of its police power. The ordinance does not restrain individuals from working as plumbers; it simply requires that the man who holds himself out to do this important work shall be fitted for it. and the ordinance imposes no unreasonable burden upon him. In this connection it need only be stated that it has been decided in various cases in this court that a charter power of a freehold city, like Kansas City and St. Louis, under our Constitution, has all the
That the fee in this case is a mere license fee, being one dollar per year, we think is too obvious for any discussion. It is not a tax in any sense of the word, nor is it intended as such. Its amount on its face demonstrates that it is simply enough to cover the proper charges for the issuing of the license certificate. The ordinance was not intended as a revenue measure, and hence section 6256, Revised Statutes’ 1899, has no application to it.
The contention that the ordinance conflicts with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United Stаtes, which provides that no state “shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,” etc., is, we think, without basis. The ordinance applied, alike to every person whether master or employing plumber or journeyman plumber and operates equally upon all who come within its provisions. Certainly the ordinance does not operate unjustly against the plumbers of other cities in this State. Section 7 thereof provides for the issue, without examination or examination fee, of a certificate to every plumber desiring to work at or engage in the business of plumbing,, who has been duly licensed by the examining board of any other city in the state. And this right has been accorded them by the city.
In our opinion the petitioner was properly convicted for working at the business of plumbing, without first having been licensed, and accordingly it is ordered that he be remanded to the custody of the lawful keeper of the workhouse of the city of St. Louis.
