Barber's Super Markets, Inc. v. City of Grants

458 P.2d 785, 80 N.M. 533
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1969
Docket8762
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 458 P.2d 785 (Barber's Super Markets, Inc. v. City of Grants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber's Super Markets, Inc. v. City of Grants, 458 P.2d 785, 80 N.M. 533 (N.M. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

WATSON, Justice.

Defendant Town (now City) of Grants adopted Municipal Ordinance No. 160 on September 28, 1961. This ordinance granted an exclusive franchise to defendant O. L. McMains, Jr., to collect, remove, and dispose of garbage from premises located within the corporate limits and set the rates he could charge for his services. It defined “garbage” as including “waste paper, trash, rubbish, and waste or unwholesome materials of every kind and character.” The ordinance, by § XV, made it unlawful for owners and occupants to dispose of garbage and to accumulate garbage, except for periods of time between pickups by McMains and made it unlawful to

“(c) Burn inflammable rubbish except where such burning is in strict compliance with the terms and provisions of an Ordinance of the Town of Grants, New Mexico for the controlled burning of rubbish within the Town of Grants.”

Section XXVIII of the ordinance provided :

“The Board of Trustees shall, prior to adopting any Ordinance providing for controlled burning of rubbish or other similar materials within the Town of Grants, obtain the Company’s [McMains’s] written approval of such Ordinance; provided, however, the Company shall not arbitrarily refuse to give such written consent, but may do so only for good cause.”

Plaintiff Bai'ber’s Super Market, Inc., in the operation of its market in Grants, accumulated daily large quantities of combustible waste material, such as empty packing cartons and cases, paper, packing material, trash, and other refuse. It made application to defendant City for a building permit to allow the installation of an incinerator upon its premises. The permit was denied on the sole grounds that its operation would be in violation of paragraph (c) of § XV above quoted. A declaratory judgment action was then filed by Barber’s against the City and McMains; after trial without a jury, judgment was entered in favor of Barber’s requiring the City to issue the permit for the installation and use of the incinerator. From this judgment the City and McMains appeal.

The trial court found that the use of the incinerator as proposed by Barber’s would promote public safety by reducing a fire hazard and promote public health by reducing the breeding of insects, rats, and other vermin to a degree greater than the disposal of rubbish by the pickup service of McMains. It also found that the proposed incinerator would not contribute to pollution of air to a degree to constitute a nuisance or affect public health, and that the City’s failure to pass a controlled burning ordinance as mentioned in paragraph (c), § XV, of Ordinance No. 160 was unreasonable, arbitrary, and capricious and amounted to an invalid and unconstitutional abuse of the City’s police power.

In addition, the trial court found that the City permitted a competitor of the plaintiff to install and maintain upon its premises in Grants an incinerator comparable to the one for which plaintiff sought a permit.

From the above findings of fact and because of § XXVIII of the ordinance above quoted, the court concluded: (1) That so far as Ordinance No. 160 prohibits the burning of rubbish in an incinerator of the type proposed by plaintiff Barber’s it had no relation to public health or safety, and defendant City was arbitrary and unreasonable in denying the permit; (2) that § XXVIII of the ordinance requiring McMains’s approval of any controlled burning ordinance was invalid as an alienation of the City’s police power and rendered the ordinance void, and that the failure of the City to enact a controlled burning ordinance was an unreasonable and an unconstitutional abuse of the City’s police power; and (3) that to permit the installation and use of a similar incinerator by a competitor and to refuse the same to Barber’s was denying it equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and under Article II, § 18, of the New Mexico Constitution.

There is no contention that Ordinance No. 160 is not authorized by Municipal Code, §§ 14-19-1 through 14-19-7, N.M.S.A. 1953, nor that the City could not give the exclusive garbage franchise to McMains. But here the court has found that the use of the incinerator proposed by Barber’s is better for the public health and safety than the pickup service offered by McMains and has permitted the installation of the incinerator.

The City, however, is the sole judge as to what is best for the public health and safety of its inhabitants. Gomez v. City of Las Vegas, 61 N.M. 27, 293 P.2d 984 (1956). If there is a relationship between its ordinance and its purpose, then unless its determination of the best method is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to be equivalent to fraud it will not be set aside. Martinez v. Cook, 56 N.M. 343, 244 P.2d 134 (1952); Mitchell v. City of Roswell, 45 N.M. 92, 111 P.2d 41 (1941); City of Hobbs v. Chesport, Ltd., 76 N.M. 609, 417 P.2d 210 (1966); Oliver v. Board of Trustees of Town of Alamogordo, 35 N.M. 477, 1 P.2d 116 (1931); Fowler v. City of Santa Fe, 72 N.M. 60, 380 P.2d 511 (1963).

The findings clearly indicate that public health and safety would be involved in the burning of the rubbish, as well as in its removal and disposal; certainly there is .a relationship between this requirement of the ordinance and its purpose, which is to protect the health and safety of the inhabitants of the city. There is no finding that the City’s original determination incorporated in Ordinance No. 160 to require pickup and disposal by McMains rather than incineration was even the result of arbitrary, unreasonable or capricious actions, much less fraudulent ones.

An incinerator need not contribute to pollution of the air to such a degree as to become a nuisance before the city can prohibit it. See Town of Gallup v. Constant, 36 N.M. 211, 11 P.2d 962 (1932). The City must consider the overall effect of all possible applications for incinerators when it adopts an ordinance which would control Barber’s activities. Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111, at 127 and 128, 63 S.Ct 82, 87 L.Ed. 122 (1942).

It seems to be Barber’s contention that the failure to pass a controlled burning ordinance with which its proposed incinerator would comply was because of the necessity of securing McMains’s consent under § XXVIII of the Ordinance. There is no finding of fact to this effect, only the conclusion that § XXVIII is invalid, and that the failure to enact a burning ordinance amounts to an invalid and unconstitutional abuse of the City’s police power. Such a conclusion is in effect holding that because one part of the ordinance is bad, not only is the entire ordinance void but that the City must pass another ordinance.

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Bluebook (online)
458 P.2d 785, 80 N.M. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbers-super-markets-inc-v-city-of-grants-nm-1969.