173 Mich. 611 | Mich. | 1913
This case has been brought to this court on certiorari to review the action of the circuit court in refusing to grant a peremptory mandamus. The relator is the city attorney of the city of St. Joseph. The respondent, a justice of the peace, having refused to issue a warrant upon the complaint of the relator filed with him, charging one David J. Stewart with a violation of the peddler ordinance of the city of St. Joseph, the relator petitioned the circuit court for the county of Berrien for a peremptory writ of mandamus, compelling the respondent so to do. An order to show cause having been issued, the respondent made his answer and return thereto, and the circuit court denied the peremptory mandamus on the ground that the ordinance was void, because the license fee imposed was excessive, exorbitant, and unreasonable, and the case has been brought here.
The city of St. Joseph is a city of the fourth class. The authority for the making of the ordinance is supposed to be found in sections 3107 to 3110, 1 Comp. Laws (2 How. Stat. [2d Ed.] § 5629 et seq.), relating to cities of the fourth class. The first section named empowers the council to pass such ordinances in relation to licenses as it may deem proper. Subdivision 11 of said section empowers the council to license peddlers, etc., and to regulate, license, or prohibit the sale or peddling of goods, etc., by persons going about from place to place in the city for that purpose. By section 3108 the council is empowered to prescribe the terms and conditions upon which licenses may be granted, and may exact and require payment of such reasonable sum for any license as it may deem proper. It will thus be seen that the charter leaves the fixing of the sum to the discretion of the council, and, unless it clearly appears that the legislative discretion has been abused, the courts will not attempt to interfere.
Section 1 of the ordinance provides that no person shall
“ The amount to be paid for the license provided for in this ordinance shall be as follows, viz.: * * * For flour, bran, middlings, ground corn or oats, $4.00 for one day, and $100.00 for one year.”
It was the opinion of the circuit judge that this fee was excessive, exorbitant and unreasonable, and that therefore the ordinance is void. It is the claim of the relator that the man Stewart has, for a number of years, made a business of taking orders in the city for car load quantities of flour, and has sold and delivered a great number of car loads of flour every year to the citizens of St. Joseph ; that his method is to go around and take orders for sacks of flour from 100 pounds up, from various families, and, when he received sufficient orders to fill a car, to have the car shipped and consigned to him at St. Joseph, there being nothing upon the sacks indicating who they were respectively for, and that after the arrival of the car to take from it and deliver to the citizens as many sacks as the latter had ordered, and that his sales of flour have amounted to many thousands of dollars a year. It is the further contention that the fee of $100 a year is hardly sufficient to compensate the officials for time spent in seeing that the people purchasing receive wholesome goods and full weight.
Can we say as matter of law that an ordinance that
In discussing this subject, Mr. Tiedeman, in his work on Municipal Corporations (section 123), says:
“Although it isa judicial question whether the sum exacted is a reasonable one, a wide latitude is given to the exercise of legislative discretion, in the determination of the amount of the license fee. The license may be required as a police regulation, for the purpose of insuring the proper police supervision, whenever the character of the trade or business is such that the absence of the police supervision would occasion injury to the public, dealing with those engaged therein, * * * because it furnishes abundant opportunities for the perpetration of frauds, which without police supervision will very likely prove successful. On these general grounds, it is competent for a municipality to require licenses, and subjection to police supervision of * * * peddlers and itinerant venders, and others, upon whose honesty and care the public have to depend, often without previous acquaintance with them, and usually without opportunities for investigation.”
The supreme court of Minnesota has held that a license fee of $3 a day for peddling is not excessive. Neither is a fee of $5 a day, $60 for six months, or $100 a year excessive. In re White, 43 Minn. 250 (45 N. W. 232); Duluth v. Krupp, 46 Minn. 435 (49 N. W. 235). In the first case above cited it was said:
“ What is a reasonable fee must depend largely upon the sound discretion of the city council, having reference to all the circumstances and necessities of the case; and unless the amount is manifestly unreasonable, in view of its purpose as a police regulation, the court will not adjudge it a tax.”
We understand the rule to be that every presumption is indulged in favor of the reasonableness of such an ordinance. The above Mihnesota cases are cited with approval by this court in People v. Baker, 115 Mich. 201
“ The very object of a charter is to empower them (the council) to provide for the well-being of the city, by such regulations and ordinances as their daily observation of what is going on around them will qualify them to enact more judiciously than a body, constituted as a State legislature ordinarily is, could be expected to do.”
In City of Grand Rapids v. Braudy, 105 Mich. 670 (64 N. W. 29, 32 L. R. A. 116, 55 Am. St. Rep. 472), the validity of an ordinance licensing and regulating pawnbrokers, junk dealers, and dealers in secondhand goods, was attacked on the ground that the license fee of $50 and a bond of $5,000 for pawnbrokers, and the fee of $25 and bond of $2,000 for junk and secondhand dealers, was so unreasonable that the ordinance should be declared void. This court, in an opinion by Justice Grant, said:
“The charter expressly confers upon the common council the power to license and regulate pawnbrokers, junk dealers, and dealers in secondhand goods. Courts cannot interfere with legislative discretion, and are slow to declare' ordinances invalid because unreasonable, when the power to legislate upon the subject has been conferred upon the common' council. The council’s discretion, and not the court’s, must control. In such matters the city authorities are usually better judges than the courts ” — citing many cases.
See also, City of Grand Rapids v. Norman, 110 Mich.
We are o£ opinion that the council did not exceed its authority in passing this ordinance, and that we should not say that the license fees therein mentioned are unreasonable, excessive, or exorbitant.
This leads us to the conclusion that the order and judgment of the learned circuit judge denying the mandamus should be reversed.