54 Kan. 757 | Kan. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only question in this case requiring consideration is as to the validity of ordinance No. 1718, providing for the appointment of city scavengers. By the terms of the ordinance, as amended by ordinance 1744, it is made the duty of the mayor, with the consent of the council, to appoint two or more suitable persons to act as city scavengers. The duties of the scavengers are prescribed at some length, and include a removal of the contents of privy vaults and cesspools, dead animals, garbage, and offal. The ordinance fixes the compensation to be paid by private persons for the cleaning of privy vaults and cesspools, and for the removal of dead animals, but not for any other scavenger work. By § 6, it is rendered unlawful for any person to engage in the business of a scavenger without having a license as prescribed by the ordinance, and a penalty is imposed for a violation of the ordinance. The right of the city council to pass this ordinance is claimed under subdivision 11 of § 11 of the act to incorporate and regulate cities of the first class, being chapter 18 of the General Statutes of 1889, which provides that the mayor and council shall have power
“Eleventh. To make regulations to secure the general health of the city; to prevent and remove nuisances; to regulate or prohibit the construction of privy vaults and cesspools, and to regulate or suppress those already constructed; to*761 compel and regulate the connection of all property with sewers; to suppress hogpens, slaughterhouses, and stock yards, or to regulate the same, and prescribe and enforce regulations for cleaning and keeping the same in order; and the cleaning and keeping in order of warehouses, stables, alleys, yards, private ways, outhouses, and other places where offensive matter is kept, or permitted to accumulate, and to compel and regulate the removal of garbage and filth beyond the limits of the city.”
It is said that the ordinance is a reasonable regulation, enacted for the preservation of the health of the people of the city; that, of necessity, a large measure of discretion is reposed in the mayor and council in selecting the means necessary to preserve the health of the inhabitants; and that in enacting this ordinance the mayor and council have kept within the limits of their powers. That accumulations of filth, decaying carcasses, fermenting garbage, are not only offensive to the senses, but endanger the health of the community, must be conceded. It must also be admitted that the legislature may properly delegate to the mayor and council the power to make all necessary regulations for preserving the cleanliness of the city, and to prevent the accumulation of nuisances. This was the subject under consideration when the provision last quoted was incorporated in the statute. Have the mayor and council exceeded the limits of their authority? In support of the validity of the ordinance, The Slaughterhouse Gases, 16 Wall. 36, are cited. In these cases, the act of the legislature of Louisiana granting a corporation the exclusive right to maintain slaughterhouses in the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard, and prohibiting all other persons from maintaining and using slaughterhouses within those limits, was upheld, the chief justice and three of the associate justices dissenting.
In the case of Butchers’ Union Slaughterhouse Co. v. Crescent City Live Stock Landing Co., 111 U. S. 746, it was held that the exclusive privilege given to the slaughterhouse company for the term of 25 years, by the act under consideration in the case first cited, was not binding on the lawmaking
In the cases of Rendering Co. v. Behr, 7 Mo. App. 345, Alkers v. San Francisco, 32 Fed. Rep. 503, and Louisville v. Wible, 84 Ky. 290, the power of a city to make a contract with a person or corporation for the removal of dead animals, not slaughtered for food, from the city, and granting to such person or corporation the exclusive privilege of using the streets of the city for such purposes, was upheld as a proper police regulation. The cases of Boehm v. Baltimore, 61 Md. 259, and Vandine, 6 Pick. 187, merely uphold city ordinances requiring licenses and regulating the business of scavengers.
It will be observed that the ordinance under consideration authorizes the appointment of two or more persons as scavengers. It therefore places it in the power of the mayor to grant to two persons a monopoly of the scavengers’ business within the limits of the city. While monopolies of any ordinary legitimate business are odious, we have seen that monopolies are upheld when deemed necessary in executing a duty incumbent on the city authorities or the legislature for the pro-tection of the public health. It is sometimes a matter of great nicety and difficulty to determine whether a particular business or calling is in its nature so directly connected with the public welfare that the performance can only be safely intrusted to some one acting under public authority. So much of the business of the scavenger as consists in removing dead animals, it would seem, under the authorities, may properly
“Sec. 2. All political power is inherent in the people, and all free governments are founded on their authority, and are instituted for their equal protection and benefit. No special privileges or immunities shall ever be granted by the legislature which may not be altered, revoked or repealed by the same body; and this power shall be exercised by no other tribunal or agency.”
This section of the bill of rights clearly prohibits the legislature from delegating the power to a city to grant to any individual the special privilege of carrying on any ordinary business or calling.
The eleventh subdivision of § 11 of the act concerning cities of the first class, above quoted, it will be observed, authorizes the city council to regulate or prohibit the construction of privy vaults and cesspools, and to regulate and enforce the cleaning of all places where offensive matter is permitted to accumulate. By the third subdivision of the same section,
The business of a scavenger may not be nice or attractive, but the removal of garbage and filth is a necessary work, which has been ordinarily performed through any agency the party interested might select. If the term “garbage” includes all refuse from the kitchen, then the waste, which ordinarily is used, when practicable, to feed swine, can only be removed from the premises by the person appointed under this ordinance. Privies and cesspools are not ordinarily deemed nuisances per se. They are not so regarded by the statute under consideration. They may be permitted or not by the city authorities, according as the circumstances and surroundings of the particular place or portion of the city render it more or less dangerous to the health of the inhabitants. When constructed, they are on private property, and in order to remove their contents, or to remove garbage not deposited in the streets or alleys, it would be necessary to enter private premises. We are not cited to any case holding that a monopoly of this business may be created.
In Gregory v. City of New York, 40 N. Y. 273, it was held that the board of health has not power to assume in advance that all the sinks and privies in the city of New York are or will become nuisances, or dangerous to the public health, and contract for the removal of their contents indefinitely until they or the common council order otherwise, and bind the defendant to pay for them. In the case of Nicoulin v. Lowery, 20 N. J. Law, 391, the defendant was charged with having in the nighttime carted, carried and taken into the township a load of night soil, in violation of an ordinance duly passed by the township committee. It was held that, in the absence of any
“The scavenger, with the use of improved methods of protection, may use the public streets without injury or offense to others; and cautious as courts are in declaring an ordinance void as being unreasonable, they would hold this ordinance to be so when its penalties were sought to be enforced against anyone making a use of the public streets which was harmless in fact. The town cannot deny to citizens the use of its streets to cross the township on any business that is inoffensive. It cannot by merely declaring an act to be a nuisance make it such.”
In City of Richmond v. Dudley, 29 Ind. 112, it was held:
“A city ordinance placing restrictions upon the keeping and storing of inflammable or explosive oils is invalid which fails to specify the rules and conditions to be observed in such business, and which does not admit of the exercise of the privilege by all citizens alike who will comply with such rules and conditions, but which does admit of the exercise of an arbitrary discrimination by the municipal authorities between citizens who will so comply.”
In In re Nash & McCracken, 33 U. C. Q. B. 181, it was held that a by-law that “no person shall keep a slaughterhouse within the city without the special resolution of the council,” was void, because it permitted favoritism, and might be used to grant a monopoly. In Regina v. Johnston, 38 U. C. Q. B. 549, it was held that a city by-law providing that no person other than chimney inspectors appointed by the municipal council (of whom there were to be three) should sweep, or cause to be swept, for hire or gain, any chimney or flue in the city, was beyond the power of the corporation, under the authority given to it to enforce the proper cleaning of chimneys, and a conviction under it was quashed. The case of City of Richmond v. Dudley and the one last cited are in principle much like the case under consideration, for the power of the city authorities to prevent fires is everywhere regarded as of prime importance, and admits no delay in their execution. (Horr & Bemis, Mun. Pol. Ord., § 221.)