108 So. 481 | La. | 1926
The town of Jonesville is incorporated under the provisions of the general Municipal Corporation Law, Act 136 of 1898, p. 224, commonly known as the "Lawrason Act."
On September 16, 1925, said town adopted its Ordinance No. 6, declaring: (1) That "the giving or holding of public dances * * * at which an admission fee is charged is hereby declared a public nuisance, and is prohibited"; (2) that any violation of the ordinance shall be punished by fine of not less than $25 nor more than $100, "or imprisonment in the town lockup for not more than 30 days"; (3) that, "the public welfare demanding immediate enforcement of this ordinance," it shall go into effect immediately after its first publication in the official town journal.
On February 24th he was tried and convicted before the mayor's court of said town, and sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and costs, from which sentence he appeals.
Nor do we know of any law which, in express terms, delegates to municipal corporations authority to distinguish (unless perhaps for revenue purposes), between public dances at which an admission fee is charged and public dances at which no admission fee is charged; to put the one under the ban of the law as a public nuisance, and exempt the other as not so.
Hence it follows that, if there be any such authority in municipalities, it must be by virtue of some power implied in the law, or else inherent in the very nature of municipal government.
Accordingly, the test, under this act, of whether dance houses and public dances may be prohibited and suppressed is, not whether an admission fee be charged or not charged, but whether said dance houses and public dances be conducted in a decent and orderly manner, or in a manner indecent and disorderly; and there is, therefore, no authority thereunder to prohibit and suppress a public dance merely and solely because an admission fee is charged thereto.
But such power extends no further than is reasonably necessary to secure the end for which it exists; nor can it be used arbitrarily and unjustly, but, "like other governmental authority, is to be used for the common welfare — impartially and without arbitrary or unjust discrimination to the prejudice of private rights and individual liberty." State v. City of New Orleans,
And hence our conclusion is that a municipality cannot prohibit and suppress public dancing on the sole ground that an admission *282 fee is charged to the dance. For "municipalities are not general guardians of the public morals, and therefore may not unduly interfere with the liberty of the citizen by ordinances forbidding acts not unlawful or harmful per se." 28 Cyc. 710, Verbo, Mun. Corp.