Alabama Law Enforcement Officers, Inc. v. City of Anniston

131 So. 2d 897, 272 Ala. 319, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 22, 1961
Docket7 Div. 497
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 So. 2d 897 (Alabama Law Enforcement Officers, Inc. v. City of Anniston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alabama Law Enforcement Officers, Inc. v. City of Anniston, 131 So. 2d 897, 272 Ala. 319, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 460 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

*320 STAKELY, Justice.

The Alabama Law Enforcement Officers, Inc., a corporation (appellant), filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Calhoun County, Alabama, in Equity, seeking a declaratory judgment whereby Ordinance No. 2457, adopted by the Board of Commissioners of the City of Anniston, Alabama, on the 11th day of August, 1959, be declared unconstitutional and void and seeking a temporary and permanent injunction restraining and enjoining the respondents, the City of Anniston, Alabama, and George T. Morris, as Chairman of the Board of Commissioners of the City of Anniston, Claude Dear, Jr. and William Weatherly, as Associate Members of the Board of Commissioners (appellees), from interfering with the complainant in the solicitation of advertising in the City of Anniston, Alabama, under the authority of Ordinance No. 2457.

For the purposes of this decision the material part of Ordinance No. 2457 is set out as follows:

“Section 1. The use of any telephone in the City of Anniston, Alabama, or in the police jurisdiction thereof by any solicitor, peddler, hawker, itinerant merchant, or transient vendor, not having been requested or invited so to do by the person called over the telephone, for the purpose of soliciting such person called to make a donation, or to subscribe to or for advertising, or to give or to pay money or other thing of value for any ticket, flag, tag, badge, flower, token, or symbol, or the use of any telephone in the City of Anniston, Alabama, or in the police jurisdiction thereof by any such person as a means of arranging an engagement for such solicitation for any such purpose, is hereby declared to be a nuisance and unlawful.”

It is provided in the ordinance that violation of its terms shall be a misdemeanor and punishable as provided in the ordinance.

Judge DeBardelaben set the application for a temporary writ of injunction for hearing within ten days from the filing of the bill upon notice to the respondents pursuant to § 1054, Title 7, Code of 1940. The application for a temporary writ of injunction was heard on August 20, 1959. On January 18, 1960, Judge DeBardelaben entered an order denying the application for a temporary writ of injunction. This appeal is from the order of January 18, 1960.

The appellant in general complains that the ordinance of the City of Anniston which seeks to prohibit the solicitation of advertising by telephone, is unconstitutional and void, in that it violates the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and the first amendment which by the 14th amendment was made applicable to state statutes.

The appellant also contends that the ordinance violates §§ 4 and 6 of Article 1, Constitution of Alabama of 1901.

On the other hand the appellees contend that under statutes to which we shall later refer, the City of Anniston through its Board of Commissioners has the power and authority to declare the use of telephones in the City of Anniston, as described in the ordinance, a nuisance and to prohibit such use.

The appellees further contend that while they insist that the ordinance is valid, the lower court was correct in denying the appellant’s application for a temporary injunction since there is great doubt as to appellant’s right to have the ordinance declared unconstitutional and void.

Only the ex parte affidavit of Thomas L. Smiley, the Secretary of the Alabama Law Enforcement Officers, Inc., was filed in the case in support of the bill. He was also their attorney of record in this case. The affidavit showed in substance the following. For many years appellant has been engaged in the solicitation of advertising in its mag *321 azine in the State of Alabama and in the City of Anniston. During the year 1959 and for many years prior thereto the appellant had a license from the City of Anniston which entitled it to sell advertising in its magazine. On August 11, 1959, the City of Anniston adopted Ordinance No. 2457 to which we have heretofore referred. Appellant obtained its license with respect to soliciting advertising in the City of Anniston for 1959 and was informed at that time by the Chief of Police that an ordinance was being considered by the City of Anniston to prohibit the soliciting of advertising by telephone. The appellant through its secretary attended the meeting of the commissioners of the City of Anniston and protested the passage of the ordinance. The license paid by the appellant to the City of Anniston each year in order to solicit advertising was the sum of $25.50.

This is the way in which appellant practiced the soliciting of advertising. (1) It sends a letter to each prospect, setting out the function of the organization and telling him that one of its solicitors will contact him. (2) The organization contacts the prospect by telephone and tells him of its mission and offers to make space available to his company for his advertising in the organization’s official journal. (3) If the prospect says he is interested in taking an advertisement, then the organization has a canvasser to take one of its previously published journals by the prospect’s office for him to see a previous advertisement, if he so desires, and to pick up the prospect’s copy and check for the next publication. (4) The organization then publishes his advertisement in a forthcoming issue of the organization’s magazine and sends the prospect the copy of the magazine with his advertisement therein. By this method the organization is able to complete its work in the City of Anniston in one week. If the organization is not allowed to use the telephone, as is set out in the ordinance under attack, then it will take the organization about one month to cover the City of Anniston and the organization would be precluded from covering the State of Alabama in one year and the organization’s income would be diminished to where it could not operate. The affidavit further showed that after affiant (the said Thomas L. Smiley) had been notified that the ordinance had been passed, he asked Commissioner William S. Weatherly whether the ordinance prevented the appellant from soliciting advertising contrary to the ordinance and was advised that such was his opinion, but that he could appear before the Commission.

William S. Weatherly testified in substance that he was one of the members of the Board of Commissioners of the City of Anniston, that he was in his third term as member of the board, that he was the Police Commissioner of the City of Anniston and had served as police commissioner for approximately nine years, that it was his intention to enforce Ordinance No. 2457 without discrimination as to all persons to whom it applies.

I. Ordinance No. 2457 of the City of Anniston declares to be a nuisance and makes unlawful: (A) The use of any telephone in the City of Anniston, Alabama, or in the police jurisdiction thereof by any solicitor, peddler, hawker, itinerant merchant, or transient vendor, not having been requested or invited so to do by the person called over the telephone, for the purpose of soliciting such person called to: (1) make a donation or (2) to subscribe to or for advertising, or (3) to give or to pay money or other thing of value for any ticket, flag, tag, badge, flower, token, or symbol; or (B) The use of any telephone in the City of Anniston,.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 2d 897, 272 Ala. 319, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alabama-law-enforcement-officers-inc-v-city-of-anniston-ala-1961.