Allinder v. City of Homewood

49 So. 2d 108, 254 Ala. 525, 22 A.L.R. 2d 763, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 417
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 26, 1950
Docket6 Div. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 49 So. 2d 108 (Allinder v. City of Homewood) 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
Allinder v. City of Homewood, 49 So. 2d 108, 254 Ala. 525, 22 A.L.R. 2d 763, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 417 (Ala. 1950).

Opinion

*529 FOSTER, Justice.

The appellant in this case filed suit in the circuit court, in equity, to enjoin the ¡City of Homewood, a municipal corporation, in Jefferson County, from enforcing certain features of an ordinance numbered 334 adopted by said city. Upon application for temporary injunction, it was set down for hearing, notice given, and both parties appeared. The city demurred to the bill, but filed no answer. No proof was submitted except the bill sworn to. The court granted the application for temporary injunction in respect to some features of the ordinance and denied it in respect to other features. From that decree the complainant appeals and the City of Homewood has cross assigned errors.

The bill of complaint alleges that the appellant owns and operates a tourist court in the City of Homewood, Alabama, known as Bob’s Tourist Court and has been so operated for the -past fourteen years, providing sleeping - accommodation for transients and therefore occupies the relation of innkeeper to those seeking such accommodations.

The bill alleges that those features of the ordinance,' which the court refused to-en join, violated his constitutional rights and arbitrarily deprived him of the power to conduct his business in his own way, alleging that he has always conducted it free from unsanitary, illegal or immoral conditions.

The particular matters contained in said ordinance involved in the assignments of error by appellant -are specifically set out in said assignments, each separately.

The City of Homewood has cross assigned error with respect to those features of the ordinance, as to which the trial court ordered a temporary injunction. They are set out in cross assignments from one to seven, both inclusive.

*530 The right and power of the City of Homewood in respect to such ordinance must rest upon its police power. That power so far as at present material is contained in section 455, Title 37, Code, wherein all municipalities in this State are authorized to provide by ordinance “for the safety, preserve the health, promote the prosperity, improve the morals, order, comfort, and convenience of the inhabitants of the municipality, and enforce obedience to such ordinances”.

We are not here dealing with the “police jurisdiction” of the City of Homewood, for the allegation is made that the tourist court is within the City of Homewood which of course means within the corporate limits of the city. We do not find any specific law directly applicable to the City of Home-wood granting a different or more extensive police power than that expressed in the Code as applicable to all municipalities in the State. It must be governed by such police power as is granted to the municipalities by legislative enactment. There is no reason, however, to doubt that the power contained in the statute quoted above is broad enough for all reasonable purposes there defined and to secure the object sought to be accomplished by the ordinance here involved. It is the same police power which the State has in respect to those particular matters, not to say now that the. State does not possess in other respects a larger police power which it has granted to the City of Birmingham, — Title 62, section 654, 'Code, — but it has not been granted so far as we know to the City of Home-wood. We think that situation is not important with respect to the question here involved.

We note that by Act approved August 12, 1947, General Acts 1947, page 176, Title 62, pocket part, section 330 [101 et seq.j, the Legislature passed a law applicable to counties having a population of 400,000 or more, and therefore operative in Jefferson County, providing for t!he regulation of tourist courts and containing in many respects the salient features of ordinance 334, supra. Such Act of the Legislature does not seem to have been questioned by any court proceeding or its constitutionality considered. It is apparent that it was the opinion of the legislature that such regulation of tourist courts was within its police power in respect to the safety, health, morals, order, comfort and convenience of the inhabitants of the counties in which it has operation. It is not limited to such portions of the counties involved as are not within a municipality and, therefore, 'has operation within all the municipalities of the counties the same as it has in areas not under the police jurisdiction or the corporate limits of such municipalities. The ordinance in question is somewhat more restrictive than the State law. This is of course permissible if such restrictions do not conflict with State law and are not unreasonable.

With respect to the general power of the cities under their “police power” to adopt regulations, we have had many cases in this Court. The fact that some of them relate to the City of Birmingham should not make any material difference so far as the question here at hand is concerned, resulting from the fact that a more extensive police power is given to the City of Birmingham than to other cities because, in so far as the question here involved is concerned, the 'City of Homewood is granted ample police power and equal to that of the City of Birmingham.

We refer to some of the expressions of this Court with respect to the broad authority whidh cities have under such granted police power. We said in the case of City of Homewood v. Wofford Oil Co., 232 Ala. 634, 169 So. 288, that such powers extend to all appropriate ordinances for the protection of the peace, safety, health and good morals of the people affected thereby. Tire general welfare is a generic term often employed in this connection.

The right to conduct one’s business in a way and manner agreeable to him is subject to such regulations as may be reasonably imposed under the police power. If the regulation may be supposed to be helpful in exercising such power and is not discriminatory or unduly burdensome, the courts do not nullify it. Whether it is wisely conceived, or whether purposes *531 sought to be accomplished by education, an exercise of patience, or some other means, is not for the courts to determine. We only pass on its constitutionality as written and not its wisdom or lack of it. Barton v. City of Bessemer, 234 Ala. 20, 173 So. 626.

The city authorities are responsible for determining the propriety of such regulations within the scope of the police power and the courts cannot invade such field. Such power is not limited to protection of public health, but extends to matters of public convenience and matters pertaining to public wellbeing or welfare. Alosi v. Jones, 234 Ala. 391, 174 So. 774.

The attack made on the various features of the ordinance in question, separately considered, is that each such aspect is unreasonably anbitrary and oppressive. Such attack raises a judicial question and will take into consideration the circumstances affecting it. .To justify annulling it or some features of it on such ground, it must be demonstrably shown that it is unreasonable. City of Birmingham v. Louisville & Nashville R. R., 216 Ala. 178, 112 So. 742.

The foregoing cases are merely typical of others as to what is required, and it is not necessary to cite the great number of cases which are to that effect and which are referred to in those cases, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 2d 108, 254 Ala. 525, 22 A.L.R. 2d 763, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allinder-v-city-of-homewood-ala-1950.