Court Opinion

ID: 7366598
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:15.301253+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:47.071738
License: Public Domain

SAYRE, J.-
The statutes of the state, with which the quasi legislative acts of inferior municipal bodies must be classed so far as concerns the constitutional requirement of equal laws, are not to be put aside by judicial decree, except upon satisfactory assurance that they do offend against the principle of equality. Classification, or discrimination between classes, is allowed if founded upon distinctions reasonable in principle and having just relation to the object sought to be accomplished. The courts concede a wide discretion to the legislative authority in respect of the grounds of classification, and must be reluctant to disturb even a municipal ordinance enacted in pursuance of a comprehensive grant of power, and designed presumably to promote the public health and comfort, but the power to condemn is more freely exercised in such cases, for, as to municipal ordinances, it was an ancient jurisdiction of judicial tribunals to pronounce upon their reasonableness and consequent validity. It was always the doctrine of the courts that every ordinance or by-law must be reasonable and not inconsistent with the general principles of the law of the land, particularly those having relation to the liberty of the citizen and the rights of private property. — Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U. S. 371, 6 Sup. Ct. 1064, 30 L. Ed. 220.
The ordinance in question is challenged as being unreasonable and violative of that equal protection of the law which is guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States. While, on our common knowledge of the considerations of fact involved and such information as we gather from the sworn bill and the other affidavit upon which the chancellor acted in granting the preliminary injunction, we would not feel justified in declaring unreasonable and oppressive that part of the ordinance which regulates *315the materials with which stalls and pens must he floored and the manner of laying the floors as involving too great expense and as unnecessarily injurious to animals compelled to stand and sleep upon them, though possibly that may appear to be proper on full proof, yet on consideration of the face of the ordinance and those undisputed consequences which will follow its enforcement throughout the territory to which it is applicable, in connection with the aforementioned principles of law, we feel constrained to the opinion that wherein it requires stalls and stables to be connected with the water mains and sanitary sewers of the city the ordinance will work unconscionable hardship to many who fall within its terms, and that wherein it undertakes to divide the owners and keepers of animals into two classes it proceeds upon no sound basis and is unreasonably discriminatory and invalid.
The manifest purpose of the ordinance is to provide for the sanitation of the city and the comfort of its inhabitants. The effort is to exert the police power by which the owner of property may be limited in the exercise of his ownership; and, if thereby he is damaged to some extent, he is nevertheless in contemplation of law compensated and made whole by sharing in the advantages which flow from regulations demanded by the common good. The keeping and housing of animals is peculiarly a business which may or may not be offensive and hurtful according as it is carried on. — 2 Cooley on Torts, 1251. Because of its tendencies it has long been recognized as the proper subject of police regulation, and we are not disposed to any narrow interpretation of the power which may be exercised for the public health and comfort. A reasonable' line of distinction may be drawn between the case of keepers of single animals and that of keepers of many, as, for exam-*316pie, public livery stables and dairies. Tbe presence of aggregations of animals in crowded .quarters, be they never so scrupulously housed and kept, may be cause of annoyance and offense to the neighborhood, and may therefore with good reason be prohibited within areas in which the keeping of single animals is allowed. But if the municipality chooses to tolerate those inevitable disadvantages which attend the collection of animals in groups, it occurs to us that there are no sufficient reasons why similar feasible sanitary conditions should not be required in the case of keepers of single animals as well as in that of the keepers of two or more. If the public health and comfort require that where two or more animals are kept together they shall stand upon concrete floors, their droppings kept in watertight receptacles, their stalls or pens connected with Water mains, drained into sanitary sewers, and thoroughly cleaned at least once each day, all to the good end, no doubt of preventing the diffusion of odors and the breeding of the pestilent fly, it would seem that an impartial imposition of the burdens of police regulation ought to exact similar precautions of the keepers of single animals far more numerous in the aggregate.
Again, the affidavits show that there are wide, though thinly populated, areas of the outlying territory within three miles of the corporate limits, known as the police jurisdiction of the city of Mobile, over which its police and sanitary regulations, prescribing fines and penalties for violations thereof, have force and effect (Code, § 1230), and similar areas within the city proper, far removed from either the water mains or the sanitary sewers of the city, so that, practically speaking, persons keeping animals within these areas will be unable to comply with the requirements of the ordinance. The ordinance, however, without qualification or limitation. *317is applicable to the keepers of two or more animals within this territory. Ordinances are to be construed benevolently, it has been said, and the terms of ordinances and statutes alike are subject to certain practical limitations. Such is the case with most laws couched in comprehensive terms. We would find no difficulty, therefore, in holding that a practical exception must be grafted on the ordinance in favor of the keepers of stables far removed, say, a mile, from any sanitary sewer of the city. But cases might arise under the ordinance in question in which it might be a matter of great difficulty to determine whether a stable should in reason be required to have connection with a sewer, and that possibility tends strongly to shake the authority of the ordinance. Where exceptions are to be determined, not upon consideration of the nature of the thing required, but upon conditions which furnish just ground of classification, the legislative will of the municipality ought to find expression in the definite and discriminating language of the ordinance. It is not the business of the courts to amend municipal ordinances or lick them into shape on their own notions of convenience, feasibility, and justice, to meet the exigencies of particular cases. It is for the legislative authority, not the judicial, to classify. So, then, without holding that the ordinance under consideration would be so unreasonable as to be void if it were limited to particular districts of the city and made applicable alike to all keepers of animals within the district, on the case presented we have reached the conclusion that within • large areas of the city and its police jurisdiction the ordinance in its present shape is practically impossible and unreasonable, and that everywhere it is discriminatory, without reasonable basis for discrimination.— *318Chicago v. Cunning System, 214 Ill. 628, 72 N. E. 1035, 70 L. R. A. 230, 2 Ann. Cas. 892.
But appellant denies the right of the chancery court to interfere. It is a plain proposition of law that equity will not exert its powers merely to enjoin criminal or quasi criminal prosecutions, “though the consequences to the complainant of allowing the prosecutions to proceed may be ever so grievous and irreparable.” — Brown v. Birmingham, 140 Ala. 600, 37 South. 174. “His remedy at law is plain, adequate, and complete by way of establishing and having his innocence adjudged in the criminal court.” — Id. To the same unquestionable effect are Old Dominion Telegraph Co. v. Powers, 140 Ala. 220, 37 South. 195, 1 Ann. Cas. 119, and other cases cited there and in Brown v. Birmingham, supra. As for multiplicity of prosecutions, it is said in the last-mentioned case that: “The occasion and necessity for such suits may be avoided by his simple desistance from repeated violations of the ordinance while its validity is being tested in one prosecution.” But this court has with equal clearness recognized the power and duty of the equity courts to interfere by injunction where quasi criminal prosecutions under municipal ordinances will destroy or impair property rights. — Brown v. Birmingham, supra; Bessemer v. Bessemer Water Works, 152 Ala. 391, 44 South. 663; Bryan v. Birmingham, 154 Ala. 447, 45 South. 922, 129 Am. St. Rep. 63; Town of Cuba v. Mississippi Oil Co., 150 Ala. 259, 43 South. 706, 10. L. R. A. (N. S.) 310; Mobile v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 84 Ala. 115, 4 South. 106, 5 Am. St. Rep. 342; Montgomery v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 84 Ala. 127, 4 South. 626. Now, in the case made by the bill, the city of Mobile, acting through its duly constituted officers, is seeking to enforce a void municipal ordinance which would impose serious financial burdens upon complainant both by rea*319son of the expenditure of money necessary to put his property in the required condition and by reason of losses which will be necessarily caused by the interruption of his perfectly legitimate and. highly useful business, which is also his property and entitled to some measure of protection. The ordinance provides that any violation shall be punished by a fine for each day the ofíense continues after notice has been given by the health officer of the city, and the averment is that the health officer has publicly stated and intends to cause the arrest of complainant, if he fails to comply, and to continue to have him arrested constantly and repeatedly until he does comply, or until the ordinance is declared null and void by the courts of the land. Complainant could not adequately and completely meet the situation here shown by desistance from repeated violations of the ordinance while its validity is being tested in one prosecution. Mere inaction will not avail him, nor, under the circumstances alleged, is it to be expected that one prosecution will be allowed to determine his rights. He must either go to very considerable expense to comply with the ordinance, though void, or he must submit to the vexation of repeated prosecutions without warrant, though under color of law. And herein we think the present case is to be distinguished from Forcheimer v. Mobile, 84 Ala. 126, 4 South. 112. This situation of the complainant, we think, also takes his case without the controlling influence of Brown v. Birmingham and Old Dominion Telegraph Co. v. Powers, supra, where no property rights were involved, and brings it fairly within that class of cases in which equity will intervene for the prevention of oppressive and vexatious litigation affecting property rights where it takes, or is about to take, the form of an effort to enforce a void municipal ordinance by means of repeated *320prosecutions thereunder. To our own cases, which have been cited above, we may add Baltimore v. Radeche, 49 Md. 217, 33 Am. Rep. 239, which was cited in Mobile v. L. & N. R. R. Co., supra, and Davis v. Fasig, 128 Ind. 271, 27 N. E. 726.
The chancellor’s decree, ordering a preliminary injunction, will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Dowdell, C. J., not sitting.