This matter comes before the court on a rule to show cause why a peremptory or alternative writ of mandamus should not issue commanding the city council of Clifton to issue to the relator a permit authorizing him to install a gasoline tank and pump to be used for the sale of gasoline for retail purposes on premises located at No. 37 Madison avenue. He has had a permit for private use in his coal business for years.
The site is in an industrial zone. An ordinance of the city as amended October 19th, 1926, so far as pertinent, provides as follows: "No person, firm, or corporation shall install any gas tank or pump upon private property in the city of Clifton to be used for the sale of gasoline for retail purposes without first obtaining a permit therefor. Application for such permit shall be made through the office of the city clerk who shall bring it before the police and fire committee for investigation, and if the application is approved by them, permission to install such tank or pump may be granted by the city council." *Page 391
The chief of police approved the permit but the city council, when the matter was brought before it, after a full hearing afforded to both the applicant and objecting property owners in the vicinity, refused the permit on the grounds, among others, that the installation would create a fire hazard and a dangerous traffic condition.
A somewhat similar ordinance was before the Supreme Court in the case of Silvester v. Princeton,
There is nothing in the record before us to indicate either fraud upon the part of the city council or abuse of discretion. The premises abut the right of way of the Erie Railroad. Across the way is a public plot of land upon which a war memorial had been built. Beyond the premises is a lumber yard. The traffic conditions seem to be unusually heavy at the point. Proofs indicate that if the permit were granted the insurance rates on the buildings of many other owners of property in the vicinity would be considerably increased. The refusal was well within the exercise of a sound discretion. The relator relies on Hirschorn
v. Castles,
The rule will be dismissed. *Page 392
