Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Bob Turner Chair, Committee on Public Safety Texas House of Representatives P.O. Box 2910 Austin, Texas 78768-2910
Re: Authority of a municipality to regulate or prohibit street vendors (RQ-0070-JC)
Dear Representative Turner:
On behalf of the City of Camp Wood, you request an opinion from this office with respect to a city's authority to regulate or prohibit street vendors. You inform us that the city desires a ruling on the legality of a city ordinance on vendor permits, and you specifically ask us the following questions:
Is it legal for a city to pass a city ordinance that restricts street vendors from selling in a city without a permit? If not, what restrictions can they impose?
May a city pass a city ordinance that requires a vendor to construct a permanent building with restrooms and parking?
May a city impose the above restrictions on a street vendor if he or she is state licensed and has a state tax number?
May a city pass a city ordinance that restricts a vendor from selling on private property?
Letter from Honorable Bob Turner, Chair, Committee on Public Safety, Texas House of Representatives, to Elizabeth Robinson, Office of the Attorney General (May 20, 1999) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter "Request Letter"]. You state: "Basically, I would like an opinion . . . as to what a city can do in regards to vendors on public and private property." Id. We limit our discussion and answers in this opinion to the general law relating to itinerant vendor regulation insofar as a Type A general-law city is concerned, keeping in mind the issues with which your questions apparently are concerned. We cannot in the opinion process determine the legality of any city ordinance regulating street vending or of any particular restriction on street vending.
A Type A city has the general authority to prohibit or regulate the sale of all or certain merchandise on all or certain parts of its city streets and sidewalks by ordinance based on its statutory authority to pass ordinances or police regulations, control streets and public places, and prohibit or regulate hawkers and peddlers. Section
A Type A city may not prohibit the occupation or business of street vending, but it may, in general, prohibit or reasonably regulate by ordinance the sale of merchandise on its city streets and other public places by itinerant vendors. Under its statutory powers to pass ordinances and police regulations for good government, control streets and public grounds, and to control and regulate market places and hawkers and peddlers, in Ex parteHogg,
You ask whether a Type A city may pass an ordinance that (1) requires a vendor to construct a permanent building with restrooms and parking and (2) that restricts a vendor from selling on private property. See Request Letter, supra, at 1. First, we conclude that a city may not require street vendors to construct permanent buildings with restrooms and parking facilities because that would be, in our opinion, tantamount to prohibiting the occupation of street vending. Second, to the extent you ask whether a city may generally restrict the sale of goods on private property, we conclude in the negative given that a city's authority to regulate itinerant vendors extends to city streets and other public places, excluding, by definition, private property.
We note that because of the particular items sold or the particular area involved, a city under its zoning authority might be able to require that the items be sold in a permanent structure or restrict sales from private property. See, e.g., Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. §§
A Type A city has the authority to require vendors to obtain a license as a condition to selling merchandise on its city streets. It is expressly authorized to license, tax, suppress, prevent, or otherwise regulate hawkers and peddlers. Id. § 215.031(1), (2). But see Houston Credit Sales Co. v. City ofTrinity,
Although you do not ask, we understand that the City of Camp Wood is concerned about the amount it may charge for a vendor permit.3 A city may charge an amount reasonably necessary to cover its administrative and regulatory costs or reasonably related to its legitimate licensing objective. See Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. §
A Type A general-law city may charge a reasonable license fee for the primary purpose of regulation. See Harris County OutdoorAdver.,
The authority under section 215.031 to suppress or prevent hawkers and peddlers does not allow a city to charge fees that are so excessive as to preclude an itinerant vendor from engaging in that occupation, although what is excessive depends on the particular facts and circumstances. For instance, in HoustonCredit Sales, the court concluded that an annual "licensing" vendor fee of $1200, irrespective of whether characterized as a tax or license fee, was so large and excessive as to render the ordinance imposing it invalid. "[S]uch oppressive exaction by a town of less than 2,500 population," the court said, "is manifestly prohibitive and confiscatory in its application to the business of appellants." Houston Credit Sales,
Notwithstanding the section 215.031 authority to license, tax, suppress, prevent, or otherwise regulate hawkers and peddlers, a city is not authorized to levy an occupation tax on street vendors, given that the state does not levy such tax. See Tex. Const. art.
Again, notwithstanding the broad statutory authority to "license, tax, suppress, prevent, or otherwise regulate hawkers and peddlers" discussed above, a city may regulate but not prohibit
the going in and on private property by persons to sell merchandise. See Ex parte Luehr,
In Faulkner, the court, while acknowledging a city's power to prohibit hawkers and peddlers, and solicitors on its city streets and other public places, invalidated as going beyond that authority an ordinance prohibiting any uninvited person from going in and upon private residences to solicit the sale of goods or sell any goods as a nuisance. See id. at 526-27. The court questioned that a city could justifiably determine that all goods presented or sold in this manner should not be so sold or are always a nuisance. Although the court did not expressly delineate what it meant by "regulation" and "prohibition," its statement regarding a city's appropriate authority is telling:
It is sufficient that the municipality be given the power to establish an available agency with facilities for looking into the merits of all goods to be sold and the responsibility and methods of the parties selling them, and, therefore, be able to say whether or not they should be permitted to operate within the bounds of such municipality.
Id. at 527; see also Luehr,
A city may not adopt an ordinance regulating a business activity that is in conflict with a state statute. See Dallas Merchant's Concessionaire's Ass'n v. City of Dallas,
No statute specifically authorizes or licenses "street vending." But, if the state has authorized or licensed a particular occupation or activity that is the subject of street vending, a city might be precluded from requiring a permit as a condition of engaging in that activity within the city. See Combined Am. Ins.Co. v. City of Hillsboro,
Although you do not specify, the City of Camp Wood is apparently concerned that it may be precluded from licensing street vendors who have a sales tax permit from the state.4 A person engaged in the business of making sales of taxable items subject to the sales and use tax under chapter 151 of the Tax Code must obtain a permit from the Comptroller of Public Accounts for each place of business in the state. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§
The sales tax permit provisions do not license or authorize street vending and, therefore, cannot present a conflict with a city ordinance regulating by permit such activity. See Utter,
In short, if the state has authorized or licensed a particular occupation or activity that is the subject of street vending, a city might be precluded from regulating that activity by requiring a permit as a condition of engaging in it within the city. Issuance of a sales tax permit to a vendor, however, is not such state authorization or license as to preclude a city from requiring the vendor to obtain a permit in order to sell in the city.
An ordinance regulating street vending must comport with the equal protection provisions of the state (article I, section 3) and federal (Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment) constitutions. It may, consistently with these provisions, reasonably classify persons according to their business and apply different rules to different classes — as long as persons in the same class are treated the same — to further legitimate purposes of the city. See, e.g., City of New Orleans v. Dukes,
But an ordinance regulating street vending may not, as a general matter, impinge on fundamental personal rights or classify persons based on inherently suspect distinction such as race, religion, or alienage. See Dukes,
Further, a regulatory ordinance affecting fundamental rights such as those of free speech or free press may violate the First Amendment of the United States or article
Lastly, an ordinance regulating street vending may not interfere with interstate commerce. A regulatory ordinance violates the Commerce Clause of the federal constitution (article I, section 8) if it (1) affirmatively discriminates against out-of-state merchants, or (2) regulates evenhandedly but incidentally burdens interstate commerce and the burden is clearly excessive in relation to the local benefits. See Hispanic Taco Vendors v. Cityof Pasco,
In short, a city may not, broadly speaking, unreasonably discriminate against persons, infringe on personal fundamental rights, or interfere with interstate commerce when regulating street vending.
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
ELIZABETH ROBINSON Chair, Opinion Committee
James E. Tourtelott Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
