delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to restrain the City and County of San Francisco and its officers from enforcing an ordinance forbidding the burial of the dead within the City and County limits. The allegations of the complaint are lengthy, but the material facts set forth are as follows: ' The plaintiff was'incorporated in 1867 as a rural cemetery under a general- act. The land in question had been dedicated as a burying ground, béing at that' time outside the city limits and a mile or two away from dwellings • and-, business. It was conveyed to the plaintiff, and-later a grant of the same was obtained from the city in consideration of $24,139.79, which sum the city retains. The land has been used as a cemetery ever since: forty thousand lots have been sold and over two million dollars have been spent by the lot owners and other large sums by the plaintiff in preparing and embellishing the grounds. By the terms of the above-mentioned general statute the lots, after a burial in them, are inalienable and descend to the heirs of the owner, and the plaintiff is bound to apply the proceeds of sales to the improvement, embellishment and preservation of the grounds. There is land still unsold estimated to be worth $75,000. There now are many dwellings near the cemetery, but it is alleged to be in no way-injurious to health, or offensive, or otherwise an interference with the enjoyment of property or life. There also is an allegation that there are within the city large tracts, some of them vacant and some of them containing several hundred acres, in several of which interments could be made more than a mile distant from any inhabitants or highway. The ordinance in question ■ begins with a recital that “the burial of the dead-within the City and County of San Francisco is dangerous to life and detrimental to the public health,” and goes on to forbid such burial under a penalty of fine, imprisonment, or both. The complaint sets up that it violates Article I, § 8, and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.
The'only question that needs to b.e answered/ if not the only one before us, is whether the plaintiff’s pi’operty. is taken contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment. In considering it, the allegation as to the large tracts available for burying purposes may be laid on one side. The plaintiff has no grievance with regard to them.
The Winnebago,
To aid its contention and in support of the averment that its cemetery, although now bordered by~many dwellings, is in no way harmful, the' plaintiff refers to opinions of .scientific men who have maintained that the popular belief is a. superstition. Of these we are asked, by implication, to take judicial
But the propriety of deferring a good deal to the tribunals on the spot is not the only ground for caution. • If every member óf this Bench clearly agreed that burying grounds were centers of safety and thought, the Board óf Supervisors and the Supreme Court of California wholly wrong, it would not dispose of the case. There arc other things .to be considered. Opinion still may be divided, and-if,.on the hypothesis that the danger Is real, the ordinance would be valid, wé should not overthrow it merely.because of our adherence to the. other-belief. Similar arguments were pressed upon ' thiswourt with regard to vaccination, but they did not prevail. On'the contrary, evidence that vaccination was deleterious Avas held properly to have been excluded-.
Jacobson
v.
Massachusetts,
Judgment affirmed.
