47 La. Ann. 863 | La. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
There is in the record an affidavit of J. G. Broussard, the agent and manager of the plaintiff, do the effect that the business which the plaintiff has been ordered to move is worth considerably over two thousand dollars.
The motion to dismiss is denied. State ex rel. Daboval vs. Police Jury, 39 An. 759.
The town of New Iberia passed an ordinance declaring it to be “ a nu sanee for any person or persons to keep or store in any building or shed, or any other enclosure whatever, within the limits of the corporation, any explosives or other highly inflammable materials, dangerous to the safety of life and property, in any other quantity than that which may be necessary for the supplying of the ordinary or every-day usage, or the demands of retail selling business.”
Before the enactment of this ordinance, the plaintiff company, on its own property, within the corporate limits, had erected buildings and improvements in the way of large iron tanks of such thickness as to render them fire-proof and safe when exposed to great heat. All necessary precautions had been taken to shut off escaping gas. A written notice was served on the plaintiff company to comply with the ordinance.
The company applied for and obtained a writ of injunction, restraining the execution of said ordinance, on the grounds of the illegality and unconstitutionality of the ordinance:
1. Because it makes no provision for an investigation to ascertain if petroleum oil, stored in such tanks, is or is not a nuisance, and arbitrarily declares the storing of petroleum oil in the tanks, provided by plaintiff, a nuisance.
2. That the ordinance is ultra vires in that the charter of the town does not give power to the corporation to enact such an ordinance.
There was judgment for plaintiff, perpetuating the injunction, and the defendant corporation appealed.
That the ordinance makes no provisions for an accusation and trial does not concern the plaintiff, as the company was not proceeded against in order to impose any fine, forfeiture or penalty. Nor does the charge leveled against it, that it is in restraint of trade, concern the plaintiff, if the town had the authority and power to pass the ordinance. The loss of plaintiff’s business is but a necessary consequence of the unlawful act complained of.
That the ordinance of a municipality can not make that a nuisance which is, in fact, not one, is elementary. But even in cases where a particular thing is denounced by the municipality as a nuisance it is not required that the ordinance should provide for an investigation as to the fact, whether or not it is a nuisance.
The facts are disclosed on the trial, and the question of nuisance remains open until decided by the court. The courts are open to the author of the alleged nuisance, and therefore the proceeding by the town authorities to carry into effect its ordinance does not, in itself, constitute the taking of property without due course of law.
From an inspection of the ordinance it will be seen that it does not propose to take private property without compensation, and without due process of law, but only to restrain the private injurious use of property. It is within the power of a municipality to so regulate the use of property that it shall not be pernicious, and inflict an injury upon its inhabitants generally. Corpatt vs. Yonkers, 140 N. Y.; Dillon Municipal Corporation, par. 141.
The State can confer upon municipal corporations the power to establish police regulations. Cooley Const. Limitations, 148.
The act of the General Assembly, No. 16 of 1839, conferred full power upon the corporation to enact all necessary police regulations. This power, by Sec. 5 of the act, is only limited by the restriction that the ordinances shall not conflict with the State and Federal Constitutions.
The corporation, by its charter, was authorized to pass any ordi
“Municipal charters refer most questions of local governments, including police regulations, to the local authorities, on the supposition that they are better able to decide for themselves upon the needs as well as the sentiments of their constituents than the Legislature possibly can be, and therefore are more competent to judge what local regulations are important, and also how far the local sentiment will insist in their enforcement.” Cooley Const. Lim. 149, 150.
The preservation of the public health, the good order of the local community, the protection of the property of its citizens from the danger of fire, and the preservation of their lives from the danger of storing explosive substances in the limits of the corporation in thicMy populated localities, are matters of vital local interest, and are of such character as to invite local sentiment in provoking necessary legislation and its rigid and exact enforcement. Hence, in this case we find in the record a petition numerously signed by property owners “living in the vicinity of the Southern Pacific depot,” addressed to the Mayor and trustees of the corporation, calling their attention to the constant danger from fire from the oil tanks situated near the depot, and “that at any moment an accident may happen, whereby the oil contained in the tank may be ignited and all portions of the town adjacent destroyed by fire.”
The proof sustains the averments in the petition as to the security of the tanks from fire and the prevention of the escape of gas. But we know from the character and constituents of petroleum, as we know from the component parts of gunpowder, that it is a dangerous and inflammable substance, and in defiance of all precautions it will, at times, ignite. There are certain facts known to mankind that are accepted as true, and the record might be replete with evidence to contradict them, yet we would accept the experience of mankind in preference to the isolated facts cited in the record.
No amount of testimony would convince us that steam, electricity and gunpowder, and petroleum, are not dangerous. Due and proper precautions may, under certain conditions, render them harmless. But these conditions may relax, and at unexpected moments they may be let loose from restrictions, and burst forth with immeasurable power and energy. Therefore the legislation, in relation to
In the ease of Fisher vs. McGuire et als., 1 Gray, 27, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts said: “ Gunpowder, an article quite harmless in a magazine, may be kept in a warehouse always exposed to fire, especially in the night; however secreted, a Are in the building would be sure to And it, and the lives and limbs of courageous and public-spirited firemen and citizens engaged in subduing the flames would be endangered by a sudden and terrible explosion.”
Notwithstanding that gunpowder is quite'harmless when stored in magazines, we venture the assertion that no city or town of size and importance permits large quantities to be stored in magazines within the city in thickly settled and populous neighborhoods.
We have not the least doubt, under the clause of the act of corporations quoted, the city of New Iberia had the power of regulating the mode of keeping and the sale of petroleum oil; that is, to prevent the storage of large amounts in a populated part of the city, and to require only such amounts to be kept in said localities as would meet the wants of the retail trade. Dillon Municipal Corporations, 3d Ed., par. 404.
This seems to be the object to be attained by the ordinance.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be avoided and reversed, and R is now ordered that the writ of injunction obtained by plaintiff be dissolved and set aside, and his demand be rejected, with costs of both courts.