89 N.J.L. 402 | N.J. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
.The power of the legislature to authorize niunicipal corporations to .regulate the use of the streets by vehicles, even to the extent of excluding vehicular traffic, is established. Barnes v. Essex County Park Commission, 86 N. J. L. 141. The power to regulate the use by automobiles and motor vehicles is also settled. Unwen v. State, 73 Id. 529; affirmed, 75 Id. 500; Cleary v. Johnston, 79 Id. 49; Kane v. State, 81 Id. 594; Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U. S. 610.
The only questions open in the ease are—first, whether the city has been authorized by the legislature to regulate the use by auto buses, commonty called jitneys, in the manner prescribed by the ordinance now in question; second, whether the attempted regulation is so discriminatory as to deprive the owners of the equal protection of the laws.
The act of 1916 requires the owner of an auto bus to obtain the consent of the board having control of public streets for the operation of the auto bus and the use of the streets; it enacts that no such consent shall become effective and no such operation shall bo permitted until the owner has filed with ilie chief fiscal officer of the city an insurance policy of a company duly licensed to transact business, in the sum of $5,000, insuring against loss from liability imposed by law upon the owner of the auto bus for bodily injury or death, as the result of accident occurring by reason of the ownership, niaintenance or use of the auto bus on the streets. The statute also requires that the owner shall execute a power of attorney to the fiscal officer of the city to acknowledge service of process. Secfion 3 requires the payment lo the city of five per cent, of the gross receipts as a monthly franchise tax for revenue for the use of the city.
The ordinance provides that the hoard of commissioners of the city may determine the reasonable seating capacity of an auto bus, the routes, hours of service and terminal points, and makes it unlawful to omit to operate an auto bus over the designated route during the hours prescribed in the consent of the city; to omit to display a sign to indicate that
We think all the provisions we have recited are well within the express powers given to the council or within the powers necessarily inferred from the general clause. That like powers may be implied from the general control of streets has long been settled. We need refer only to the leading case of Commonwealth v. Stodder, 2 Cush. 562.
The stress of the argument was upon other points. It is urged that the requirement of a bond from the owners of auto buses when it is not required from the owners of other vehicles, and the imposition of a tax of five per cent, on the gross receipts, when no such tax is imposed upon others, is such an unjust discrimination as to deprive the owners of auto buses of the equal protection of the laws. The ordinance in these respects simply follows the act of 1916, and if that act is within the power of the legislature, this objection to the ordinance falls. As we have no provision in our state constitution securing in express terms the equal protection of the laws, the question thus raised is a question arising solely under the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution. The rule in questions of this kind is now so well settled by
As we have said, the question raised in this case is to he determined by the legal rules established by the federal courts. It is gratifying to find that in the application of those rules to the peculiar circumstances of the case, our views coincide with those of other courts where similar or identical legislation and ordinances have been brought in question. As far as the decisions of other courts have been brought to our aitention by the defendants’ brief or discovered by us, they are unanimous. It would serve no useful purpose to cite them.
The writ is dismissed, with costs.