74 P. 931 | Or. | 1904
delivered the opinion.
This is a suit to enjoin interference with the keeping of a sailors’ boarding house. The complaint states that prior to the passage of an act creating the board of commissioners for licensing sailors’ boarding houses the plaintiffs were engaged in conducting such a house at Portland, Oregon ; that on July 2, 1903, they applied to the board for a license, presented satisfactory evidence of their qualifications and of the suitableness of their accommodations to keep sailors, and offered to comply with the provisions of the act referred to, but the board refused them a license ; that the defendants, the members of the board, the prosecuting attorney for the Fourth Judicial District, the harbor master of Portland, and the peace officers of Multnomah County, threaten to and will, unless restrained, cause the plaintiffs to be arrested and prosecuted if they continue to keep their house without a license ; that the act in ques
Having concluded that the act in question does not violate the constitution of this State, nor the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, we do not deem it necessary to discuss whether or not a court of equity will enjoin the prosecution of criminal actions; and hence the decree appealed from should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.