155 Iowa 671 | Iowa | 1912
In the attempted exercise of the authority conferred by Code, section 700, “to regulate, license and tax peddlers,” the plaintiff city enacted an ordinance describing as -a misdemeanor and providing a penalty for plying the vocation of a peddler within the city limits “without first procuring a license and paying the license fee and tax, which license fee and tax shall be, in addition to the mayor’s fee of one dollar, the sum of
It seems to us plain, on the face of the ordinance itself, that it was not passed in any reasonable attempt to regulate the business of peddling. It is impossible to conceive of any conditions involved in the pursuit of such business which would justify the exaction as a mere license fee of $5 per day or $350 per year for a peddler on foot or a correspondingly greater amount for a peddler using á one-horse or a two-horse conveyance. The court can certainly take judicial notice of the fact that no reasonable
The general rule is that, when a question is raised as to the reasonableness of a city ordinance which has reference to a subject-matter within the corporate jurisdiction, the ordinance will be presumed to be reasonable, unless the contrary appears on the face of the ordinance itself or is established by proper evidence. Commonwealth v. Patch, 97 Mass. 221; Van Hook v. Selma, 70 Ala. 361 (45 Am. Rep. 85); Gamble v. Montgomery, 147 Ala. 682 (39 South.
But on the other hand, if it is evident that the ordinance is not calculated nor intended in fact to accomplish a purpose within the legitimate scope of the particular power conferred upon the city, it is invalid. With reference to an ordinance exacting a license fee of $10 per month for selling or offering for sale fresh meat on the streets, which it was attempted to justify under a grant of authority to license and regulate hawkers, hucksters, and peddlers, the Supreme Court of Michigan used this language: “It is evident that it (the ordinance) was simply an exercise of arbitrary and unauthorized class legislation for the benefit of a few shopkeepers, and an unjust discrimination against those who desired to sell from carts or wagons about the village. It is difficult to perceive how such a by-law could be of public benefit. Its tendency would be, if enforced, to increase the price of fresh meat to the consumer, while it could serve no useful or beneficial purpose as an offset to this increased cost of an article of daily and necessary food.” Chaddock v. Day, 75 Mich. 527 (42 N. W. 977, 4 L. R. A. 809, 13 Am. St. Rep. 468). In Peoria v. Guggenheim, 61 Ill. App. 374, involving the validity of an ordinance imposing a license fee of $200 per month on itinerant merchants and transient vendors of merchandise, the court said: “The ordinance clearly shows that its aim and intent was to prevent competition with the city merchants by transient merchants, to the detriment of the public generally. The license fixed by the ordinance is out of all reason too high. ... It could not have been intended for revenue, for very few could or would pay it, an'd it would be an unreasonable fax and all out of proportion to other taxation.” In Harrodsburg v. Renfro (Ky.) 58 S. W. 795 (51 L. R. A. 897), it was held that an ordinance fixing the amount of a license for the sale of intoxicants at $300 per year more for a place on the main
Looking to the ordinance itself, we find that it imposes upon peddlers a minimum tax of $5 per day or $350 per year without regard to any period greater than one day .and less than one year during which the business may bo pursued; and, looking into the evidence, we discover that the business in which defendant -was engaged was that of selling from house to house fruit and vegetables which he had -purchased in car load lots or in smaller quantities; that he could not profitably carry on his business for more than about six months in the year; and that his gross profits on sales did not exceed on the 'average $3 or $4 per day. It appears from the evidence that the profits thus testified to by defendant were substantially as large as those of others engaged in the same kind of business. It further
The judgment of the lower court sustaining defendant’s conviction under the ordinance is — Reversed.