The complainant is now, and for some time has been, engaged in the sale and distribution of crude petroleum and its products for fuel purposes in the city of Portland. Prior to June 27, 1911, it had a storage and distributing plant on East Water street, which, on the day named, was destroyed by fire under such circumstances and with such results as to cause public discussion of the question whether the storage of oil for sale should be permitted
Fifteen days before the committee made its report, or the ordinance had been drafted, the complainant secured an option to purchase a tract of land in South Portland, subsequently described in the ordinance, and soon after its passage and approval took up such option, obtained a building permit from the city authorities, and purchased a portion of the material for its plant. When, however, it began grading the ground preparatory to the erection of its buildings an.d tanks, the citizens residing in the neighborhood first learned that the land purchased by it was one of the. permitted districts, and were very much'agitated thereby. They immediately brought the matter to the attention of the council, and it, after due consideration, repealed the ordinance and revoked the building permit previously issued to the complainant. At the same time one of the standing committees was directed to prepare and report to the council a new ordinance regulating the storage of oil within the city. This committee, after considering the matter and giving interested parties an opportunity to be heard, reported an ordinance which was adopted in January, 1912, and is known as Ordinance No. 24,652. This ordinance permits the storage of oil for fuel purposes in buildings for the use of such buildings, and the then existing storage facilities maintained for private use by railroad, gas, and power companies, to the extent of the reasonable requirements of such companies for "the operation of their respective railroads and plants, but prohibits storage for the purpose of distribution, except by special permit of the council, and then not within 500 feet of any adjacent building, or within 3,000 feet of the harbor line, or 1,000 feet of any other distributing plant. The property purchased by complainant, and upon which it proposed to erect its plant, is within the restricted district, and it therefore seeks to enjoin the city from enforcing the ordinance repealing the districting ordinance and Ordinance No. 24,652, on the ground that they deprive it of its property without due process of law and deny it the equal protection of the law.
By its charter the city is given authority to regulate or prohibit the storage, manufacture, of sale of oil within the city limits'. Section 73, subd. 36. The storage of fuel oil and its products is therefore ■vvithin the police power of the city, and a proper subject for municipal regulation or prohibition. The determination of the city as to ' what- is a proper exercise of its powers in this respect is, of course, not final or conclusive, but is subject to the supervision of the courts.
“The question in eacli case is whether the Legislature has adopted the statute in exercise of a reasonable discretion, or whether its action be a mere excuse for an unjust discrimination, or the oppression or spoliation of a particular class.”
There was evidence tending to show that there is no more danger to the public from the storage of oil for sale and distribution than for private use; but whether such storage and the use made of the oil differs in degree to such an extent as to require different regulations is, in my judgment, a question of fact, and of public policy, which belongs to the legislative, and not the judicial, department. If the regulations adopted by the city are unwise,- or unnecessarily oppressive to those engaged in the sale and distribution of oil, their appeal must be to the legislative branch of the government, and not to the courts. Jacobson v. Mass., 197 U. S. 11, 25 Sup. Ct. 358, 49 L. Ed. 643, 3 Ann. Cas. 765.
The complaint is dismissed.