109 So. 916 | La. | 1926
The question in this case is whether a certain so-called zoning ordinance of the city of New Orleans is valid. The ordinance prohibits the establishment of any of certain specified businesses, including private meat markets, in or on any of the city blocks or squares between Carrollton avenue and Audubon street and bounded on any side by Jeanette street.
The relator applied to the municipal authorities for a permit to establish a private market for the sale of meat on his lot designated as 1419 Burdette street, in the square bounded by Jeanette, Poplar, and Adams streets. Being refused a permit because of the ordinance, he brought this mandamus proceeding to compel the city engineer and city architect to grant him the permit. He contended that the ordinance discriminated arbitrarily against him and the other owners of the property within the described area, and that it deprived them of the equal protection of the laws, and deprived them of the use of their property without compensation and without due process of law, and that the ordinance was therefore violative of both the Constitution of the state and the Constitution of the United States. The judge of the civil district court sustained the relator's contention and gave judgment in his favor; from which judgment the defendants took this appeal.
The judgment appealed from was based upon the decision in Calvo v. City of New Orleans,
"In so far, therefore, as those decisions [meaning the decision in the Calvo Case and in the Blaise Case] maintain that a municipal ordinance prescribing business establishments generally in a designated residence street or district is essentially only a matter of æstheticism, and cannot be sustained upon considerations of public health, safety, comfort, or the general welfare, the two decision's are now overruled."
In the Civello Case, we disposed of the propositions which are advanced again by the relator in this case, thus:
"A municipal ordinance, proscribing business establishments in designated residence street or district, does not necessarily rest on æsthetic considerations, but may be sustained on considerations of public health, safety, comfort, or general welfare, in view of better police protection, economy in street paving, lessening of fire hazard, and likelihood of business establishment being a genuine nuisance, and hence does not take property without due process of law, or without just compensation, or deny the equal protection of the law."
The ruling was affirmed in State ex rel. Dubos et al. v. City of New Orleans,
The judgment appealed from is annulled, and the relator's demand is rejected, and his suit dismissed at his cost.