51 N.E.2d 546 | Ill. | 1943
Appellants, baking companies situated in St. Louis, Missouri, filed a complaint in the circuit court of St. Clair county seeking to recover certain monies paid as license fees under an ordinance of the city of Belleville. From the order of the court dismissing the complaint the cause *460 is brought here on certificate of the trial judge that the validity of an ordinance is involved and the public interest requires that the case be appealed directly to this court.
Appellee, city of Belleville, in 1937, adopted an ordinance regulating vehicles carrying and delivering foodstuffs for human consumption in the city. By the terms of the ordinance, such vehicles are made subject to daily inspection and a license fee of $50 per year is required for each vehicle except those used to deliver foodstuffs from food-dealing establishments in the city, licensed and inspected as such, and whose vehicles are inspected under other ordinances. The ordinance is essentially identical with those previously considered by this court in American BakingCo. v. City of Wilmington,
Appellants, in their complaint, say they have complied with all the public-health laws of the State of Missouri affecting the manufacture, wrapping and sealing of all products delivered in the city of Belleville. They say also that while the ordinance involved here is presumed to be passed in the interest of public health, it is either a revenue measure or one benefiting the residents of the city of Belleville, only, and is therefore discriminatory, particularly as against nonresidents of the State, and so contravenes the commerce clause and equal protection and due-process clauses of the Federal constitution.
Counsel cite numerous cases of the Federal courts based on the conclusion that the statute there involved laid a *461
direct burden on interstate commerce because such statutes were either inherently void for want of power to enact them, or were repugnant to the commerce clauses because of discrimination, and so illegally affected interstate commerce. Of such were Minnesota
v. Barber,
The rule generally recognized is that ordinances imposed for the purpose of protecting public health cannot be said to have so burdened interstate commerce as to render them repugnant to the Federal constitution if the license fees imposed bear a reasonable relation to the cost of the enforcement of the regulation, and the terms of the ordinance bear a reasonable relation to the purpose for which it was passed and are not discriminatory. In Caskey Baking Co. v. Virginia,
In the earlier case of Armour v. Virginia,
We are of the opinion that there is no unlawful discrimination against appellants and that the requirement that they pay these license fees does not constitute an illegal burden on interstate commerce. The ordinance is therefore not open to the constitutional objections urged. The judgment of the circuit court of St. Clair county was right and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *463