203 N.W. 449 | Minn. | 1925
The title of the ordinance is: "An ordinance regulating the operation of motor vehicles carrying passengers for hire (except taxicabs, vehicles engaged in livery business and busses operating between Duluth and other municipalities) upon streets where a double track of street railway line is constructed and operated." The ordinance was enacted by a direct vote of the people at a special initiative election, as authorized by the charter of the city. It is attacked on various grounds.
1. Appellant contends that the title indicates a regulatory and not the prohibitory ordinance which it is. Hence there is a fatal variance, for the charter of Duluth provides: "The subject of every ordinance shall be set out clearly in the title thereof."
Chapter 3, § 9, of the Charter. The exercise of nearly every power of regulation includes the prohibition of certain acts at certain times and places. Therefore, when the title indicates the purpose of the ordinance to be the regulation of certain motor vehicles on streets where double track street car lines are operated, we may well expect to find in the body thereof provisions prohibiting such motor vehicles at times and places the use of those streets. And *67
that is all that is found in this ordinance. There are times when all of the streets mentioned are free to any use the owners of those motor vehicles may desire. A part of one street is always open to a limited use. Within such cases as Winters v. City of Duluth,
2. The ordinance is said to be discriminatory as to appellant and void as class legislation. It must be borne in mind that these motor vehicles for hire which operate only within the city stop to take on and to let off all their passengers upon the streets over which they run. Such vehicles carrying intercity passengers usually stop at some terminal point for such purpose, and do not carry local passengers. That the frequent stop of motor vehicles carrying passengers for hire upon streets where street cars are operated upon fixed tracks interferes with traffic, and endangers the safety of travelers upon the streets, must be obvious. There are reasons for placing intracity busses in a class by themselves. Appellant concedes they might well be excluded from the class of taxis and we think they need not be classified with intercity busses. The reasons for the classification as to license fees sustained in Jefferson H.T. Co. v. City of St. Cloud,
3. It is claimed the municipality lacks power to enact the ordinance. The statute, G.S. 1923, § 1271, gives a city of the first class as wide powers in framing a home rule charter as the legislature might give it, did not Article 4, § 33 of the Constitution prohibit special legislation. By the Duluth home rule charter all powers conferred previously were retained. (Chapter 1 of Charter.) Among the powers thus retained was the one to enact ordinances "for the enhancement of the general welfare, for the government and good order of the city, for the protection of public health, comfort and safety" and specifically to license and regulate "persons engaged in carrying passengers" prescribe standing places * * * within *68 the streets "where the same may remain while waiting for business, and to prohibit the same from standing or waiting for business at any other places than the places so prescribed." (Section 64 and subd. 32 of section 64 of previous charter.) Also by section 72 of the previous charter, the council is given the care, supervision and control of all public streets. Of course, if the council has the power to enact an ordinance of this kind, the electors have the same power by means of the initiative election. It is to be noted that appellant may use in his business any of the numerous streets in the city at all times without restriction, save only the streets whereon street cars operate over double tracks. This cannot be held an unreasonable regulation, and the ordinance is not really open to the charge that it is prohibitory. It simply excludes the doing of an intracity passenger traffic for hire upon streets where such business is adequately furnished, and where more public carriers would inconvenience and endanger public travel.
But there is another provision which gives the council power: "To regulate and control in a manner not contrary to any specific provision on the subject contained in this charter, the exercise by any person or corporation of any public franchise or privilege" (subdivision 84 of section 64 of the previous charter retained). This does not conflict with section 80 of the present charter relating to the granting of a franchise. To do business upon public streets is not a matter of right like the right of ordinary travel. Nor is the right to carry on such a business to be placed upon the same basis as that of conducting a lawful occupation upon private property within a municipality. The use of public streets for private enterprise may be for the public good, but even so it is a privilege that may be granted, regulated or withheld. The authorities, without a discordant note, unless it be Curry v. Osborne,
In Ex Parte Dickey,
The following decisions bear on the points herein discussed, and although the various municipalities involved did not have delegated to them the control of their streets or the power to license or grant privileges thereon in the same manner as has the city of Duluth, still there is sufficient similarity to make them pertinent against the various contentions advanced by appellant for the overthrow of this ordinance, viz: Schoenfeld v. City of Seattle (D.C.) 265 F. 726; Lane v. Whitaker (D.C.) 275 F. 476; Davis v. Massachusetts,
4. We cannot concur in the contention that the ordinance is an unlawful exercise of the police power of the city. It does not regulate or interfere with business conducted upon private property within the city as was the case in State v. Houghton,
5. Little need be said as to the claim that the ordinance impairs contract obligations between plaintiff and the city. Many of the above cited authorities deal with that question. Plaintiff holds no *71
franchise on the streets on which are double track street car lines, and, even if he had a license or privilege to operate thereon, it could be revoked and no contract rights affected. Burgess v. Brockton, supra, is particularly in point. Appellant has not shown himself to be in the situation of the plaintiff in Northwestern Tel. Exch. Co. v. City of Minneapolis,
The order is affirmed.