85 So. 527 | Ala. | 1920
Relief against the enforcement of penal ordinances has been most frequently denied on the ground that the proceedings for their enforcement were of a criminal nature, and that equity declines to interfere with the administration of the criminal law. Some cases, however, deny the right to equitable interference on the ground that the complainant's defense to the prosecution affords him an adequate remedy at law. This is substantially the language of 5 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, § 354. In Brown v. Birmingham,
"Where it is manifest * * * that a prosecution and arrest is threatened for an alleged violation of city ordinances for the sole purpose of preventing the exercise of civil rights conferred directly by law, injunction is the proper remedy to prevent injury to the party thus menaced."
And in Deems v. Baltimore, it had been said that —
"Where an ordinance is void and its provisions are about to be enforced, any party whose interests are to be injuriously affected thereby may and properly ought to go into a court of equity and have the execution of the ordinance stayed by injunction."
In Bryan v. Birmingham the bill charged that the ordinance there in question created an arbitrary and unreasonable discrimination; but the court held that the evidence did not sustain the charge. In Greensboro v. Ehrenreich,
Appellant seeks to bring its operations within the protection of the principle stated in the authorities supra. On the averments of the bill it would seem rather clear that the town council has determined that neither the members of the Franklin Social Club nor any one else shall play pool in the town of Phil Campbell. They may be wise in an extralegal way; but by the legislative act of August 25, 1909 (Acts Special Session 1909, p. 193 et seq.) it was provided, in substance, that games of pool and other like amusements named therein might be played in social clubs and societies "where nothing is wagered on such game," and that such clubs and societies, organized and operated for other than pecuniary purposes, shall be exempt from property (to an amount not exceeding $2,000) and license taxes, whether levied by state, county or municipalities. This license tax exemption appears to have been preserved. Revenue Act of 1919, p. 427. Still, the ordinances in question cannot be adjudged as an excess of municipal power, either generally or in their application to the particular case of appellant, in advance of a full hearing, and, considering that appellant is engaged in no useful business, and that it cannot be a matter of great public or private concern in a legal sense whether pool be played in appellant's *261 club or elsewhere in Phil Campbell pending a judicial determination as to the validity of these ordinances, we deem it the better rule and more in accord with the precedents established by this court, that the equity court should not be burdened with an investigation of the issue, but that it should be determined at the end of a prosecution under the quasi criminal prescriptions of the alleged ordinances. This disposes of the cause on its broadest ground; subsidiary questions need not be examined.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and BROWN, JJ., concur.