The opinion of the court was delivered by
Pursuant to an ordinance passed by the defendant board of health, the plaintiffs made application for a license for a trailer camp, but their' application was denied. They thereupon instituted this proceeding in lieu of a prerogative writ, seeking (1) an order compelling the defendant to issue the license; (2) a review of the resolution of the board denying their application, and a determination
Local boards of health are governmental agencies created in every municipality under statutory mandate,
R. S.
26:3 — 1, for the purpose of exercising locally the inherent police powers of the State with respect to matters pertaining to public health. Their powers in this respect are broad and the general grant thereof is to be found in
R. S.
26 :3-64 and
chapter
177,
Laws of
1947
(N. J. S. A.
26:1A-9). The enumeration o’f the specific powers and duties of local boards of health to be found in
R. S.
26 :3-31, as amended by
chapter
211,
Laws of
1946
(N. J. S. A.
26 :3-31), has been held not to be a limitation upon the general powers of such boards, and there is no more reason to consider that the numerous other express grants of particular powers to be found in a number of statutory provisions impose limitations on their general powers. In
Bd. of Health of Weehawken Tp. v.
“The function of these agencies [local boards of health] is to advance and secure the public health by means and measures reasonably appropriate to that end. The preservation of the public health is a vital element of the police power inherent in sovereignty.
The power thus exercised [to regulate and control air pollution by barring excessive emission of dense smoke] is within the grant contained in R. S. 26:3-64 and ch. 177 of the Session Laws of 1947, to be found also in N. J. S. A. 26 :1A-9. The inherent general authority to conserve and protect the public health thereby conferred and recognized is not curtailed by the specific enumeration of R. S. 26:3-31 * * *. The cited act of 1947 is affirmative legislative acquiescence in the judicial finding of the general power in the pre-existing statutes.
The local boards of health in the exertion of the authority thus conferred exercise, not an administrative function, but rather a portion of the police power to servé the public health. They are ‘governmental agencies by which the police law of the state is locally exerted’ * *
Trailer camps, because of their particular nature and relation to the public health, safety, morals and general welfare, have frequently been the subject of special regulation by appropriate local governing bodies, see Edwards v. Mayor, etc., of Borough of Moonachie, 3 N. J. 17 (1949); Michaels v. Tp. Committee of the Tp. of Pemberton, 3 N. J. Super. 523 (1949); Annotation, 22 A. L. R. 2d 774-802 (1952). We have no hesitancy in stating that they are the fit subject and a proper class to be subject to special regulation by local boards of health in matters pertaining to or affecting health. In this regard we are not unaware of R. S. 40:52-1, as amended by chapter 425, Laws of 1948 (N. J. S. A. 40 :52-1), to the effect that:
“The governing body [of a municipality] may make, amend, repeal and enforce ordinances to license and regulate:
* * :|s * ❖ * * ijs
d. Hotels, boarding houses, lodging and rooming houses, trailer camps and camp sites, and all other places and buildings used for sleeping and lodging purposes, restaurants and all other eating places, and the keepers thereof; * *
Being of the opinion, therefore, that local boards of health have the power within 'their particular sphere of activity to regulate trailer camps, we must next examine the question of whether or not the particular ordinance in question is a proper exercise of that power. For this purpose it will be necessary to examine' the rather lengthy ordinance in some detail. Section 1, in part, ánd Sections 2, 3, 23 and 24 in their entirety relate to the licensing of trailer camps and the revocation, suspension and transfer of such licenses, and we are of the opinion that they are
ultra vires
the defendant board of health. The power to license and to levy fees therefor is not inherent in local agencies exercising by delegation a portion of the State’s police power and in the absence of statutory grant does not exist in a municipal corporation or its local board of health,
Edwards v. Mayor,
etc.,
of Borough of
Moonachie, supra, 3
N. J.
17, 21 (1949). Such a statutory grant of power does not here exist.
R. S.
26:3-31, as amended (N.
J. S. A.
26 :3-31), and
chapter
275,
Laws of
1948
(N. J. S. A.
26:3-31.1) provide for the issuance of licenses by local boards of health in certain specified instances which cannot be extended by implication to permit the licensing of trailer camps.
R. S.
26:3-32 provides that local boards of health in cities having a population in excess of 100,000 "may grant and regulate licenses and permits incident to health matters and charge a reasonable fee for any such license or permit.” But the defendant Township of Woodbridge is concededly not a city of over 100,000 popula
Section 2 of the subject ordinance which, among other things, provides for a $100 license fee to be “paid into the Township Treasury as revenue” is invalid for the further reason that the power to tax is wholly statutory and no such power is vested in local boards of health. We are not called upon here to determine whether or not the fee would be excessive if the defendant board of health had had the power to license and had not specifically provided that the fee was for revenue. Cf. Edwards v. Mayor, etc., of Borough of Moonachie, supra, 3 N. J. 17 (1949); Michaels v. Tp. Committee of the Tp. of Pemberton, 3 N. J. Super. 523 (Law Div. 1949); Annotation, supra., 22 A. L. R. 2d 774, 786 (1952).
The validity of Section 3 of the ordinance is also put in question on the ground that it gives the local board of health unlimited discretion to approve or reject licenses. This section provides in part:
“No permits shall be issued unless such tourist, trailer, or ear camp and the site selected therefor, complies with such requirements and meets the approval of the Board of Health and said Board of Health may at its discretion approve or reject any proposed tourist, trailer, or car camp.”
It is contended that there is an absence of standards for the guidance of the board and that it has the unlimited power to
“TVe cannot, of course, construe the ordinance as meaning that the power may be thus exerted; nor may we assume in advance that it 3vill be exercised by the council capriciously, arbitrarily or with inequalit3\ It will be time enough to complain rvhen, if ever, the power shall he thus abused.”
Accordingly, aside from the question of the defendant board’s power to license trailer camps, we are not prepared to say that the ordinance in question is invalid for the lack of adequate standards to guide the board and against which to measure its actions.
The argument is advanced by the plaintiffs that Section 19 of the ordinance is violative of the due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th Amendment to the Eederal Constitution and also of the New Jersey Constitution. Section 19 permits the board of health to exempt from the provisions of the ordinance any trailer camp existing at the time of its passage when in the board’s discretion the deviation will not be detrimental to health. It is to be noted also that similar language is contained in Section 13 of the ordinance which pertains to water closet accommodations. It is so well established as not to require extended citations
By way of summary, it has been shown that Section 1 (in part) and Sections 2, 3, 23, and 24 of the ordinance in question are invalid as an
ultra vires
attempt by the defendant board to regulate by licensing; that Section 2
“If any section, subsection, sentence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance is for any reason held to be unconstitutional, such decision shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this ordinance. It is the intention of the Board of Health that this ordinance would have been adopted irrespective of the fact that any one or more section, sub-section, sentence, clause, or phrase be declared unconstitutional insofar as the remainder of the ordinance is concerned.”
Considering the intention of the board of health as expressed in this section and in view of the fact that the ordinance, stripped of those provisions which are invalid, remains a comprehensive and cohesive regulatory ordinance with appropriate sanctions for its enforcement we are of the opinion that the entire ordinance, need not fall.
In view of the foregoing it naturally follows: (1) that the plaintiffs’ request that the defendant issue them a' license be denied; (2) that the resolution of the board denying the
The judgment appealed from will be modified to conform to the conclusions expressed herein.
For modification — Chief Justice Vanderbilt, and Justices Heíier, Oliphant, Wacheneeld, Burling, .Jacobs and Brennan — 7.
Opposed — -None.
