Court Opinion

ID: 3650330
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:05:12.213558+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:12.977827
License: Public Domain

The ordinance, for a violation of which the defendant was convicted, is as follows: "No. 47. That it shall be unlawful for any person, merchant or dealer to import into the town of Louisburg, for the purpose of selling or offering for sale, any secondhand clothing, garment, cloth or bed furniture; and any person, merchant or dealer who shall import any such article into said town, with the purpose aforesaid, or shall sell or offer the same for sale, shall for every such act be subject to a fine of $25."
It is enacted in chapter 142, Private Laws 1887, that the general laws in regard to cities and towns (in The Code) shall apply to the town of Louisburg; and it is provided in that chapter of The Code that the commissioners of towns "may pass laws for abating or preventing nuisances of any kind and for preserving the health of the citizens," and that "they may enforce their by-laws and regulations by imposing penalties on such as violate them." The preamble sets forth that the object of the ordinance was the protection of the health of the community. Beyond question, the General Assembly has power to authorize the commissioners of towns to pass by-laws intended to prevent the introduction of infectious or contagious (1192) diseases and to preserve the public health; and the powers conferred, under the statutes above referred to, are admitted to be sufficient for those purposes. Such ordinances are regarded as police regulations, are of the utmost consequence to the general welfare, and, if they be reasonable, impartial and not against the general policy of the State, must be submitted to by individuals, for the good of the public. In truth, the public health and the peace and good order of the community ought to be the chief concern of the authorities of cities and towns; and the courts are quick to encourage watchfulness in this respect on their part, will always presume that they have acted from a sense of propriety and necessity, and will never interfere with or set aside their ordinances, unless it appears clearly that they are unreasonable or beyond the scope of their authority. It is not to be doubted, however, that the courts have the right to inquire into any alleged abuse of their powers, and to restrain them when they transcend the limits of their authority.
The question presented in this case for our consideration is whether the commissioners can, under the powers given them by law, in their discretion, absolutely prohibit a lawful business, not in itself necessarily a nuisance, but which may be conducted without danger to the community, when properly regulated. The sale of secondhand clothing is not a nuisance, perse, but is, on the other hand, a lawful business, and under proper regulations may be so conducted as to be *Page 758 
without danger to the health of the community and at the same time to be of great benefit to a large portion of the people. There is nothing dangerous to health in articles of secondhand clothing of themselves; they can only become noxious by reason of prior use, of having been worn or possessed by persons themselves infected or (1193) living in infected communities. The town authorities would have the right to compel fumigation and disinfection of secondhand clothing; they might require proper assurance before such articles were imported or offered for sale, that they have not been bought in or bought from markets or places where epidemics of contagious or infectious diseases were or had been recently prevailing, or they might prohibit the further sale of such stocks from which articles had been sold and had communicated disease. In the case of Greensboro v. Ehrenrich, 80 Ala. 579, the ordinance was not as prohibitory as the one before us, and the Court there, in passing upon its validity, said: "Municipal authorities, having power to abate nuisance, cannot absolutely prohibit a lawful business, not necessarily a nuisance, but may abate it when so carried on as to constitute a nuisance. They cannot, under the claim of exercising the police power, substantially prohibit a lawful trade, unless it is so conducted as to be injurious or dangerous to the public health. If they can declare it unlawful to import, sell or otherwise deal in secondhand or cast-off garments, blankets, bedding and bedclothes, without regard to the circumstances or necessity, they may, under the same power, declare it unlawful to import or sell meat because at some time and in some places it is infected with trichina." The same principle is also decided in Weil v.Ricaud, 24 N. J., Eq., 169.
We are of the opinion that the commissioners transcended their powers in the passing of this ordinance; that it is unreasonable, in that it is prohibitory of a business lawful in itself, and that it is void.
Error.
Cited: Rosenbaum v. New Bern, ante, 100; S. v. Higgs, 126 N.C. 1025;Paul v. Washington, 134 N.C. 371.
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