Salt Lake City v. Revene
Decision Date | 17 April 1942 |
Docket Number | 6330 |
Citation | 124 P.2d 537,101 Utah 504 |
Court | Utah Supreme Court |
Parties | SALT LAKE CITY v. REVENE |
For opinion on rehearing, see 101 Utah 512, 127 P.2d 254.
Appeal from District Court, Third District, Salt Lake County; M. J Bronson, Judge.
Andrew Revene was charged with the violation of a Salt Lake City ordinance relating to the closing of barbershops. From a judgment sustaining a demurrer to the complaint, Salt Lake City appeals.
Affirmed.
Gerald Irvine, A. Pratt Kesler, E. R. Christensen, and Clarence M Beck, all of Salt Lake City, for appellant.
Clifford L. Ashton, of Salt Lake City, for respondent.
OPINION
Appeal from the District Court to determine the validity of a Salt Lake City ordinance.
Defendant, Andrew Revene, was charged with the violation of a city ordinance on May 18, 1937. There is no dispute as to the facts of this case. The defendant, operator of a barbershop at 266 East 2nd South Street in Salt Lake City, Utah, remained open for the purpose of barbering after the hours for closing designated by the city ordinance.
The lower court sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and plaintiff appeals.
The pertinent sections of the ordinance in dispute read as follows:
The plaintiff city maintains that such an ordinance is valid under the police power granted it by the Legislature by Sections 15-8-39, 15-8-84, and 15-8-61, reading as follows:
etc. (Italics added.)
etc.
It is plaintiff's position that the above ordinance regulating the hours of a barber shop is a valid exercise of the police power delegated by the Legislature to the city to "regulate" for the safety and preservation of health of the community. The plaintiff introduced evidence taken at a previous time in the form of testimony by barbers and health officials to the effect that a "tired barbed was a negligent barber," tending to afford an opportunity for the spread of diseases associated with the profession. Further, that from an administrative standpoint it was impossible to inspect a barber shop after 6 o'clock P. M.
Defendant contends that the "ordinance in question is an invalid exercise of the delegated power to license, tax and regulate barber shops" and that it is unconstitutional as a direct contravention of the due process clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions.
It has been repeatedly stated by this court "that a municipal corporation possesses and can exercise the following powers, and no others: First, those granted in express words; second, those necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted; third, those essential to the accomplishment of the declared objects and purposes of the corporation,--not simply convenient, but indispensable." 1 Dillon Municipal Corporations, 5th Ed., p. 448, § 237; Walton v. Tracy Loan & Trust Co., 97 Utah 249, 92 P.2d 724; Salt Lake City v. Kusse, 97 Utah 113, 93 P.2d 671; American Petroleum Co. v. Ogden City, 90 Utah 465, 62 P.2d 557; Utah Rapid Transit Co. v. Ogden City, 89 Utah 546, 58 P.2d 1; Wadsworth v. Santaquin City, 83 Utah 321, 28 P.2d 161; Salt Lake City v. Sutter, 61 Utah 533, 216 P. 234; City of Ogden City v. Bear Lake & River, etc., Co., 16 Utah 440, 52 P. 697, 41 L.R.A. 305; 37 Am. Jur. 722.
The municipality being a creature of the state with delegated powers, the question arising here is whether this ordinance is within the police power delegated under Section 15-8-39; to "license, tax and regulate."
The word "regulate" is difficult to define in other terms because it involves a conception for which it stands more accurately than any synonym. It involves the making of a rule in reference to the subject to be regulated. Webster's International Dictionary, (2nd Edition), defines the word to mean The rule making power given to cities in reference to barber shops does not mean any rule but such rules reasonably related and designed to protect the health of the public.
In Ogden City v. Leo, 54 Utah 556, 182 P. 530, 532, 5 A. L. R. 960, this court after defining regulation, said, "the foregoing illustrations are quite sufficient to show that, where the power 'to regulate' a particular calling or business is conferred on a city, it authorizes such city to prescribe and enforce all such proper and reasonable rules and regulations as may be deemed necessary and wholesome in conducting the business in a proper and orderly manner."
The question resolves itself to this: It the fixing of closing hours a reasonable regulation within the scope of the delegated police power, i. e. has it a reasonable relationship to the protection of health of the public?
It is said that when shops are open long hours the operators tire and that a "tired barber is a negligent barber." A tired barber may be a careless barber but it does not follow that all shops which remain open more than a certain number of hours engage the same barbers throughout the entire period. Barbers can work in shifts. If the object of the law was to prevent barbers from getting tired the simple way would have been for the legislature to have given power to regulate the working hours of barbers in shops rather than the hours of barbershops. If limiting the hours of barbers is encompassed within the phrases "regulate barbershops" the city would need no other power from the...
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