166 N.E. 583 | Ohio | 1929
The chief question for our determination is whether the ordinance of the city of Cincinnati, as applied to the relator, impinges upon his constitutional rights guaranteed to him by the state and federal Constitutions.
In the case of Yutze v. Copelan, Chief of Police,
Public health and sanitation, and this includes the process of collection and disposal of garbage, have always been recognized by the courts of this country as coming within the proper exercise of the police power of the state, and within the police powers of the city, if such are conferred upon the municipality by the state. In that field of legislation private property and private convenience must give way to the public welfare. Ample power to enact regulations conserving the public health and providing for the collection and disposition of garbage has been conferred upon municipalities by Sections 3646 and 3649, General Code. If the city is a chartered, home-rule city, it also has power to adopt and enforce sanitary regulations not in conflict with the general law, under our Constitution as amended in 1912. The action of the city manager in refusing the relator a permit is challenged, because his refusal was arbitrary and based upon mere whim and caprice; that the city, having prescribed no conditions upon which permits should be granted, left their determination to the city manager, and thereby invested him with legislative power. It is obvious that the city cannot, by ordinance, prescribe all the terms and conditions *506
under which a permit shall be granted for the collection and removal of garbage. The fact that the ordinance did not prescribe the conditions and terms under which a permit should be granted, but left their determination to the city manager, did not confer legislative power upon him in a constitutional sense. Yee Bow v. City of Cleveland,
It is claimed, however, that, because of the fact that the vegetable and animal products commonly called garbage had a monetary value as food for animals, the denial of the privilege to the hotels and restaurants of selling, and to the relator of purchasing, garbage for animal food, was violative of the latter's constitutional right of contract with relation to private property, and amounted to a special privilege and the creation of a monopoly in favor of the city's public contractor; that thereby the relator was denied the equal protection of our laws guaranteed him by the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution. Indeed this is the chief attack upon the validity of the ordinance and its operative effect upon the constitutional rights claimed by the relator. In support of this claimed invalidity of the Cincinnati ordinance, counsel for the relator cite several lower court decisions of this state, and also the case of Iler v. Ross,
The constitutional validity of similar ordinances has likewise been sustained by the following courts:Wheeler v. City of Boston,
We are therefore of the opinion that no rights of the relator, either under the state or federal Constitutions, were violated by reason of the adoption of the city ordinance and the refusal of the city manager to issue him a permit thereunder. Apparently, to safeguard his position in respect to procedure, the relator brought his suit in injunction as well. Although it appears from the journal entry in the trial court that the issues were found generally in favor of the defendants, counsel state that, in fact, the judgment against the relator was rendered in that *510 court for the reason that injunction did not lie. We need not decide this procedural question in the injunction case, since the disposition of the mandamus case upon its merits necessarily disposes of the other.
In each case the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Judgments affirmed.
KINKADE, MATTHIAS, DAY and ALLEN, JJ., concur.