Court Opinion

ID: 7363267
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:49:08.913671+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:41.661082
License: Public Domain

HARALSON, J.
The jurisdiction of equity is purely and exclusively civil and such courts are without power to enjoin or restrain threatened crimes or threatened •prosecutions, and this rule applies to prosecutions under municipal ordinances as well as state laws. — Brown v. Birmingham, 140 Ala. 590, 37 South. 173, and cases there cited. Applying this rule, the courts should not lose sight of the fact, that a court of equity can and should interfere by injunction to restrain any act or proceeding, whether connected with crime or not, which tends to the destruction or impairment of property or property right. — 5 Pom. 635; Austin v. Austin, 87 Tex. 330, 28 S. W. 528, 47 Am. St. Rep. 114; Atlanta v. Gate City Co., 71 Ga. 106; Deems v. Mayor of Baltimore, 80 Md. 164, 30 Atl. 648, 26 L. R. A. 541, 45 Am. St. Rep. 339.
The bill in the case at bar avers, that the existence and threatened enforcement of the ordinance will not only greatly diminish the value of his property, but will practically destroy its value, by forbidding the use to which it is better or exclusively adaptable. In fact, the facts averred put the case at bar almost on all fours with the case of Austin v. Austin, supra, where the court, speaking through Gaines, O. J., says: “As long as the ordinance remains undisturbed it acts in terrorem and *451practically accomplishes a prohibition against the burial of the dead within the limits of the city of Austin, save in the excepted localities. Under these conditions, who would venture to bury, or to be concerned in burying, a dead body in appellees’ ground, or who would purchase a lot in the cemetery?”
The bill also avers that the ordinance is void; and is not wanting in equity.
Whatever may be the rule in other states, witli reference to the use of land for burial purposes, our court, speaking through Brickell, C. J., says: “Burial places for the dead are indispensable. They may be the property of the public, devoted to the use of the public; or the owner of the freehold may devote a part of his premises to the burial of his family or friends. It is but a just exercise of his dominion over his own property. Neither adjoining proprietors, nor the public, can complain, unless it is shown that, from the manner of burial, or some other cause, irreparable injury will result to them. It is quite an error to suppose, that of itself a burying ground is a nuisance to those living in its immediate vicinity.” — Kingsbury v. Flowers, 65 Ala. 479, 89 Am. Rep, 14.
The Legislature, in the exercise of its police power, has the right to provide for the establishment or discontinuance of cemeteries, and to regulate their use, and this authority can be delegated to a municipal corporation ; but in the exercise of the power, it must not be for the purpose of discriminating against any citizen in favor of the municipality or of another citizen, or create in the city or in others a monopoly, but the health and well-being of the city is to be the prime consideration in attempting to regulate the burial of the dead. That a municipality can prohibit the opening or the continuation of a cemetery in case it is or will likely become a *452nuisance, there can he no doubt; and that it cannot prohibit the owner from devoting his land to cemetery purposes in a sparsely settled locality, although within the corporate limits or police jurisdiction, there can be no doubt, unless the burials are calculated to impair the public health. So the question is, does the cemetery in this case amount to a nuisance or will it become one if permitted to continue, or was the enactment of the ordinance an arbitrary,’ unreasonable and capricious abuse of the authority conferred upon the city? When an ordinance is not void upon its face, but its validity is dependent upon facts, it is incumbent upon the party relying upon the invalidity to aver and prove the facts which make it so. — Austin v. Austin, supra; Marion v. Chandler, 6 Ala. 902. The presumption therefore is, that the ordinance'is reasonable and wras enacted as a sanitary measure for the protection of the health of the city or certain parts thereof. The complainant attempted tp show, that the continuation of his cemetery would not impair the health of the community but most of his witnesses merely testified that drainage from the cemetery did not run over their lots and that they did not personally object to same. The water may not run over their lots and they may not object to the cemetery, but this is not of itself sufficient to show that the public health would not be impaired or that the ordinance was unreasonable. Complainant contends that there are other cemeteries near his land and closer to the city, which are permitted, and that he has been discriminated against and that the ordinance is therefore void. It would seem that if conditions were similar as to locations, surroundings, drainage, etc., and the other cemeteries were as close or closer to the populous parts of the city, and the complainant’s cemetery -was conducted with an equal degree of precaution as to burials, to prohibit the use to *453one and permit it in others, would be an arbitrary and unreasonable discrimination. But these facts have not been established in the case at bar. While the bill avers that the other cemeteries are closer to the city, the proof shows that complainant’s is nearer. The proof also fails to show that the one in question joins any of the others, but that it is separated by a public highway and that there are houses between it and said highway. For all we know, this road or highway may have been adopted as a line of demarcation for the purpose of separating cemetery and noncemetery area, and sanitary conditions may have made it all right on one side and dangerous on the other. There was proof that many houses were built up, and being built, near to this cemetery, and no proof that any existed at. or near the others. At any rate, it was incumbent upon complainant to show that the ordinance was an arbitrary discrimination against him, which we think he has failed to do.
The decree of the chancery court is affirmed.
Tyson, C. J., and Simpson and Anderson, JJ., concur.