delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is here on certiorari,
The ordinance, No. 350, of'October 8, 1923, requires that all tanks within the city limits used for the storage of petroleum products or other inflammable liquids shall be buried at least three feet underground. Tanks of a capacity of 500 gallons or less, if used for the storage of crude oil, distillate or fuel oil, and of less than ten gallons, if used for the storage of gasoline, kerosene or naphtha, are exempted from this requirement. Violation of the ordinance is punishable by a fine of ,$25.00 for each day of its continuance. Petitioners, who are dealers in petroleum products licensed under a former ordinance, have each for many years maintained within the city limits two tanks for the storage of gasoline and kerosene of approidmately 12,000 gallons capacity each. They assert that compliance with the ordinance will impose upon them a large and unnecessary expense and that the ordinance is so. arbitrary and eapricióus as applied to them as to deprive them of their property without due process of law. .
At the trial before a master voluminous evidence was .taken, much of it conflicting, speculative and theoretical in character, concerning the relative safety oí the storage *584 of petroleum products above and beneath the surface of the earth and their relative likelihood of ignition, and danger to life and property in the vicinity if ignited, when so stored. The master made elaborate findings of fact from which he inferred generally that it is more dangerous, from the standpoint of public safety, to .store underground than above, ga&.-Jine or kerosene in quantities of ten gallons or more. ÍYom this he drew the legal conclusion, adopted by the district court, that the ordinance was so arbitrary and capricious as not to be a permissible exercise of the police power.
We need not labor the point, long settled, that where legislative action is within the . scope of the police power, fairly debatable questions as to its reasonableness, wisdom and propriety are not for the determination of courts, but for that of the legislative body on which, rests the duty and responsibility of decision.
Zahn
v.
Board of Public Works,
The master found that gasoline and kerosene stored in large quantities are dangerously inflammable substances, as we judicially know,
Pierce Oil Corporation
v.
City of Hope,
The’ objection which petitioners make to the storage of gasoline and kerosene in tanks buried under ground is-that through the effect of electrolysis and corrosion caused by acid in the soil, and the possible “ floating out ” of the tanks, leaks are likely to occur, difficult to discover, by which the gasoline might penetrate through the earth into sewers, wells and basements, contaminating the water and causing explosions. But the master found that conditions which produce electrolysis are not present in the City of Marysville; that only a slight percentage of acid was found in the soil there, and although there was more chance of corrosion of metal under ground at the Standard Oil property than at the Sinclair tanks, it might take a term of years for it to take place. The findings also show that tanks already placed underground in the vicinity in compliance with'the ordinance and which it appeared had been in successful operation for more than two years, had not “ floated out ” during periods of heavy rainfall and the danger of floating could be overcome by proper drainage and by anchoring down the tanks: that the tanks buried *586 in. compliance with the ordinance would rest on a level below the sewers; that there were no wells in the vicinity and that the soil there had been shown by experiment to be impervious to gasoline'. It was also found that the danger from fire or, explosion due to lightning, which causes many fires in gasoline storage, and from static electricity, is less with under ground than above ground tanks and that the base rate of insurance on storage tanks of gasoline and kerosene under ground is 50% of that for tanks above. - .
The facts that the tanks of petitioners within the city limits have been operated successfully above ground; that appliances used by them are of the best type; that fires in connection with their many tanks located elsewhere have' been relatively infrequent, and numerous others found by the master, were properly for the consideration of the city council in determining whether the ordinance should be enacted) but they fall far short of withdrawing the subject from legislative determination or establishing that the decision made was arbitrary or unreasonable. The passage of the ordinance was within the delegated powers of the city council,
City Service Oil Co.
v.
Marysville,
We may not test in the balances of judicial review the weight and sufficiency of the facts to sustain the conclusion of the legislative body, nor may we set aside the ordinance because compliance with it is burdensome.
Chicago & Alton R. R.
v.
Tranbarger,
We have considered but do not discuss other objections to the ordinance which are without merit.
Affirmed.
