5 A.2d 41 | N.H. | 1939
Ordinances, like statutes, should be construed so as to effectuate their evident purpose. Young v. Bridges,
The authority to enact ordinances of this sort is expressly given to cities by P. L., c. 54, s. 12, par. VII, and the constitutional right of a city under its police power to exercise this authority is beyond question. State v. Noyes,
The ordinance itself makes no explicit provision upon this subject and we cannot interpolate into it any definite minimum interval of time between successive uses of the same or nearby parking spaces. However, in order to effectuate the purposes of the ordinance there must be some interval, and since we cannot assume that the city government intended an unreasonable result, (Sauriolle v. O'Gorman,
Applying this test to the facts presented it seems evident that the defendant violated the parking ordinance in spite of his maneuvers. By his successive uses of the same parking space he, as a practical matter, appropriated a place at the curb to the exclusion of others for a period of time in excess of an hour. His reason for doing this was not to serve his own successive needs but to attempt the defeat of the purposes of the ordinance. His attempt was to evade the ordinance, not to comply with its terms. While there may be circumstances under which intervals of time of five or ten minutes between successive uses of the parking privilege could be found to be reasonable, we are of the opinion that the circumstances in the case at bar make such short intervals clearly unreasonable.
The question transferred is answered affirmatively.
Case discharged.
All concurred. *130