287 N.W. 313 | Minn. | 1939
On November 10, 1938, a complaint signed by E.S. Hughes was filed in the municipal court of the city of Minneapolis. In substance, it charges that on November 9, 1938, defendant, C.H. Pehrson, sold one pound of butter to the complainant at and from an automobile temporarily parked in the rear of 4238 Portland avenue, Minneapolis; that, contrary to the mandate of a described ordinance, the sale was made without a transient merchant's license.
A plea of not guilty having been entered, the case was tried before one of the judges of said court. Defendant's motion for dismissal was denied. He was adjudged guilty and ordered to pay a fine of $25 and in default thereof to be imprisoned in the workhouse until the fine was paid, not exceeding the term of 30 days. From this judgment, defendant appeals.
The ordinance in question is entitled: "An Ordinance to amend an ordinance entitled, 'An ordinance to license and regulate dealers in natural products of the farm in the City of Minneapolis.' " It provides:
"Section 1. * * * It shall be unlawful for any dealer in farm products, as that term is hereinafter defined, to do business within the limits of the City of Minneapolis without first procuring a license therefor and paying the license fee hereinafter prescribed.
"Section 2. Dealers in farm products shall be classified as follows: (1) Transient merchants or (2) Wholesale commission dealers.
"Section 3. For the purpose of this ordinance a 'transient merchant' is hereby defined to be any person, firm or corporation selling, or otherwise disposing of, or displaying for sale, merchandise, consisting of the farm products as hereinafter defined, except milk, cream, hay, grain or straw, and which person, firm or corporation does not have an established place of business in the City of Minneapolis licensed under the provisions of an ordinance entitled, 'An Ordinance providing for the preservation of health and the prevention and suppression of disease in the City of Minneapolis * * *.' *575
"The words, 'farm products,' are hereby defined to be livestock including cattle, hogs, sheep, veal, poultry and meats; and poultry products, including eggs, butter, fresh and frozen fish, but excepting milk, cream, fruit and vegetables. * * *
"Section 6. The provisions of this ordinance as to license and payment of license fee shall not apply to any person selling or peddling the farm products as defined herein from land occupied and cultivated by him, provided that any such person shall comply with each and all of the other provisions of this ordinance. * * *
"Section 8. Every transient merchant operating within the city of Minneapolis, in addition to the license fee herein specified, shall deposit with the Superintendent of Licenses, Weights and Measures a surety bond in the sum of not less than One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) executed by a surety company * * * conditioned upon the faithful compliance with the terms and requirements of this ordinance, and also conditioned upon indemnifying or reimbursing any purchaser of goods, wares or merchandise in the sum equal to at least the amount of any payments or payment such purchaser may have been induced to make through misrepresentation as to the kind, quality or value of such goods, wares or merchandise. * * *
"Section 10. The license fee for a license as 'transient merchant' shall be the sum of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) per year, which license fee shall be paid to the City Treasurer at the time of the filing of the application for such license. In the event such application is filed after the beginning of the license year, * * *."
Appellant contends that (1) the trial court erred in denying defendant's motion for dismissal on the ground of insufficiency of evidence; (2) the ordinance is unconstitutional because (a) it violates provisions of the state and federal constitutions forbidding class legislation, denial of equal protection of the laws, and deprivation of property without due process of law; (b) the subject of the ordinance is not expressed in its title; and (3) the ordinance tends to encourage monopoly contrary to the public policy of the state.
1. In determining whether or not the refusal of the trial court to dismiss was reversible error, all the evidence in the case is to *576
be considered. State v. Baker,
It is obvious that the evidence was sufficient to support the conclusion that defendant was a transient merchant, within the meaning of the ordinance, selling or displaying for sale "natural products of the farm" without a license. If the ordinance is constitutional, judgment must be affirmed.
2. Appellant has premised his claim that the ordinance is discriminatory on four grounds: (1) "Transient merchants" who buy from the farmer and resell to the public must obtain a license and deposit a surety bond while others selling the same products in the same manner are excused from these requirements if the commodities sold are from land occupied and cultivated by them; (2) those selling the products covered by the ordinance in an established place of business are required to pay, in addition to an initial application fee of two dollars, only six dollars annually for a license, while "transient merchants," as defined by the ordinance, must pay $50 for a license and post a surety bond in the amount of $1,000; (3) "transient merchants" who sell or display for sale *577 cattle, hogs, sheep, veal, poultry, eggs, butter, and fresh or frozen fish must be licensed and file a bond, while those who sell milk, cream, fruit, vegetables, hay, grain, or straw need not be; and (4) the license fee charged and the bond required are the same in amount regardless of how many vehicles are owned and used by licensees.
The general principles to be applied are well established. Class legislation is forbidden by Minn. Const. art.
It is clear that the ordinance with which we are here concerned imposes burdens on the class "transient merchants" to which others generally are not subjected. The question to be determined is whether the classification made is reasonable.
It has been judicially affirmed in this state that a law which forbids the sale of commodities from house to house but exempts from its operation farmers who sell their own produce is unreasonably discriminatory. In State ex rel. Luria v. Wagener,
"In the same manner as the act here in question attempts to distinguish between peddling by the manufacturer and his servant and peddling by the purchaser from such manufacturer, it attempts to distinguish between peddling by the farmer or nurseryman and peddling by the purchaser from such farmer or nurseryman; * * * *579 These distinctions are arbitrary and no proper basis forclassification."
This decision was approved in State v. Jensen,
Subsequently there was added to Minn. Const. art.
The conclusion that the ordinance is unconstitutional having been reached, an exhaustive discussion of the other claims of appellant is not necessary to a disposition of the case. However, brief expression of our present view relating to these arguments may not be amiss. The claim that the ordinance discriminates against "transient merchants" and in favor of persons with established places of business is made in light of another Minneapolis ordinance *580
entitled: "An ordinance providing for the preservation of health and the suppression of disease in the City of Minneapolis, and for the inspection, regulation and licensing of hotels, restaurants, cafes, boarding houses, inns, taverns, meat markets, mercantile establishments, and all places offering for sale and selling any food or drink," which provides, in part, that those covered by the ordinance must apply for and obtain a license, paying two dollars as an application fee and six dollars annually as a license fee. A classification which distinguishes between those who sell commodities from an established place of business and those who vend the same articles from door to door is not arbitrary. The latter are more likely to become a nuisance because the nature of their business requires encroachment, to some extent at least, on the privacy of the home. Difficulties of inspection are enhanced by the fact that they are constantly moving from place to place. Since they use comparatively little capital goods in conjunction with their business, their tax burden is relatively light and more easily evaded. These differences are sufficient to justify distinguishing between the two classes of merchants. See Singer Sewing Machine Co. v. Brickell,
The business of a transient merchant is legitimate but may become a nuisance and is subject to reasonable regulation under the police power. City of St. Paul v. Traeger,
While it would seem wise to vary the amount of the license fee with the magnitude of the business licensed, the fact that the fee *581
charged does not thus vary is not, of itself, sufficient to render an ordinance unconstitutional. See City of Los Angeles v. Los Angeles Ind. Gas Co.
The claim that the title does not embrace the subject of the ordinance is premised on the theory that the term "natural products of the farm," the class of objects which according to the title is affected by the ordinance, does not include butter. While it is true that cream is transported to creameries for the purpose of being made into butter and that very little churning is now done on the farm, it would be overly technical to say that butter is not a natural product of the farm. The terms are connected in popular significance, and that is sufficient. Sverkerson v. City of Minneapolis,
3. The claim that the ordinance encourages monopoly does not, in view of the record in this case, impress us. Any license fee tends to limit the number of people who engage in a business. Yet the power of the state and municipalities to license private enterprise is so well recognized as to make citation of authorities superfluous.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE HILTON, being incapacitated by illness, took no part. *582