163 P. 50 | Cal. | 1917
The petitioner is held in custody on a charge of violating an ordinance of the city of Los Angeles, and seeks his release by means of a writ of habeas corpus.
The ordinance is one "regulating the business of soliciting custom or patronage upon the public streets, boats, railway trains and depots, and providing for the issuance of permits therefor." The provision here in question is contained in section 9 of the ordinance, which, so far as it need be quoted, declares that "it shall be unlawful for any person to solicit *287 custom or patronage upon any boat, . . . or in any depot, . . . for any hotel, . . . or for the transportation of persons or baggage, goods, wares, or merchandise for hire; . . ." The petitioner, E.H. Barmore, is the president of the Los Angeles Transfer Company, a corporation, which has a contract with the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, under which said transfer company and its agents are authorized to enter the cars and the depot of said railroad company to solicit custom and patronage. The complaint under which Barmore is held charges that he solicited custom and patronage for the transportation of persons and baggage, in the Southern Pacific depot in the city of Los Angeles.
The petitioner contends that section 9 of the ordinance is unreasonable and void, and this is the only question presented for decision. Under the direct grant of article XI, section 11, of the constitution, the city of Los Angeles has authority to "make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws." The nature, extent, and limitations of the police power have been so frequently and so exhaustively discussed by this court and others that a mere statement of a few well-settled principles will suffice. It is familiar law that under this power the legislative authority may restrict the use of property, or the conduct of business, to such extent as may reasonably be thought necessary to promote the public health, safety, or comfort. Arbitrary or oppressive restrictions, having no reasonable adaptations to these ends, will be condemned by the courts as in conflict with fundamental constitutional rights. But the legislative determination that a given regulation of the use of property or of the conduct of a business is necessary in the public interest will be given great weight in any judicial inquiry into the validity of the enactment, and the courts will not interfere with the discretion of the law-making body "except where the case be plain that needless oppression is worked and constitutional rights invaded." (In re Smith,
Section 9 of the ordinance under review is designed to regulate the business of transporting passengers or goods, by prohibiting solicitation of patronage therefor in certain public places, including railroad stations. The business is no doubt a legitimate and useful one. But even lawful occupations *288
are subject to reasonable regulation, and one of the recognized modes of regulation is by prescribing the places where a given occupation may or may not be conducted. (Ex parte Quong Wo,
This court has not heretofore had occasion to pass upon restrictions of this precise kind. Similar ordinances and statutes have, however, come under judicial review elsewhere, and the decided weight of authority, particularly that of more recent date, supports the validity of such enactments. (Emerson v. McNeil,
"The legislature clearly has the power to make regulation for the convenience and comfort of travelers on railroads, and this appears to be a reasonable regulation for their benefit. It prevents annoyance from the importunities of drummers. . . .
"This statute is not an unreasonable restriction upon the privilege one should enjoy to solicit for his lawful business, *289
which, it is rightly urged, is an incident to any business. It does not prevent anyone from advertising his business or from soliciting patronage, except upon trains, etc. This privilege is denied him for the public good. It is a principle which underlies every reasonable exercise of the police power that private rights must yield to the common welfare." (Williams v. Arkansas,
We think the sound view is that declared by the cases which we have cited, although there are a few decisions holding to the contrary. (Napman v. People,
The petitioner cites a number of cases in which this court has overthrown municipal ordinances or statutes which sought to prohibit the carrying on of business in a certain place or in a given manner. There is no occasion to review these cases in detail. They dealt with occupations and with restrictions bearing no resemblance to those here involved. The question whether a limitation upon the conduct of a business has a reasonable relation to the accomplishment of a legitimate public purpose is one that must be decided upon a view of the particular legislation and the circumstances to which it is applied. The question presented is largely one of fact.
It is of no importance in this inquiry that the Los Angeles Transfer Company had a contract with the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, under which its agents were authorized to solicit in the depot of the railroad company. If the city was authorized, in the exercise of its police power, to prohibit solicitation within the depot, its right to so legislate could, of course, not be limited by any contract made between private parties. "All contracts are subject to this power, the exercise of which is neither abridged nor delayed by reason of existing contracts." (Seattle v. Hurst,
The writ is discharged and the petitioner remanded.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Lawlor, J., Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred. *290