Beskin v. City of Chicago

173 N.E. 364, 341 Ill. 489
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 19583. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 364 (Beskin v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beskin v. City of Chicago, 173 N.E. 364, 341 Ill. 489 (Ill. 1930).

Opinions

Appellants, Rudolph Beskin, Nathan Blitzstein and Herman Kaplan, on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated, filed their bill in the circuit court of Cook county to restrain the enforcement by the city of Chicago of an ordinance passed May 19, 1926, regulating and licensing junk dealers. The case was heard upon a stipulation of fact. Appellants offered to prove certain other facts, but objections were sustained to the offer. The chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court, the trial court having certified that the validity of the ordinance is involved.

The sections of the ordinance of which complaint is made are as follows:

"3511. Definitions — The term 'junk,' as used in this chapter, shall be held to mean and include old iron, chain, brass, copper, tin, lead or other base metals, old rope, old bags, rags, waste paper, paper clippings, scraps of woolens, clips, bagging, rubber and glass, and empty bottles of different kinds and sizes when the number of each kind or size is less than one gross, and all articles and things discarded or no longer used as a manufactured article composed of or consisting of any one or more of the materials or articles herein mentioned.

"The term 'junk dealer,' as used in this chapter, shall be held to mean and include every person, firm or corporation that shall engage in the business of buying, selling, *Page 491 bartering or exchanging, or that shall collect, receive, store or hold in possession for sale, barter or exchange, any of the things in and by this section defined as junk, whether dealing at wholesale or at retail, or as a junk peddler.

"The term 'wholesale junk dealer,' as used in this chapter, shall be held to mean and include every person, firm or corporation engaged in the business of buying, selling, bartering or exchanging in large quantities, or that shall collect, receive, store or hold in possession for sale, barter or exchange in large quantities, any of the things in and by this section defined as junk; provided, that dealing in large quantities shall be understood to mean that the customary and usual separate transactions, both of purchases and sales, shall consist of the purchase or sale of car-load lots, or lots of ten tons or more of metals, or lots of ten bales or more of rags, and correspondingly large lots of any other junk dealt in; and, provided, further, that purchasers of old or waste metals in large quantities shall be regarded as wholesale junk dealers unless they actually operate within the city a plant for the smelting or refining of such metals.

"The term 'retail junk dealer,' as used in this chapter, shall be held to mean and include every person, firm or corporation that shall engage in the business of buying, selling, bartering or exchanging, or that shall collect, receive, store or hold in possession for sale, barter or exchange, any of the things in and by this section defined as junk where the usual and customary purchases consist of quantities of less than the amounts customarily purchased by wholesale junk dealers as herein defined, or purchases from junk peddlers; provided, that a junk peddler, as herein defined, who does not occupy premises leased or purchased especially for the purpose of such business shall not be deemed a 'retail junk dealer' under the terms of this ordinance.

"3512. Doing business without a license prohibited — No person, firm or corporation licensed under the terms of this ordinance as a retail junk dealer shall be permitted under his *Page 492 or its retail dealer's license to purchase junk, as defined in this ordinance, from another retail junk dealer, or to purchase junk in car-load lots or in large quantities as defined herein; provided, that any retail junk dealer that desires to purchase junk in such manner or such quantities may secure a separate license as a wholesale junk dealer if the wholesale business is carried on entirely distinct from the retail business, as hereinafter provided.

"3518. License — how granted — Every person, firm or corporation that shall keep, maintain or conduct both a retail junk business and a wholesale junk business shall procure a separate license for each, and if more than one retail junk business, for each such retail business. A separate license shall be procured by every junk dealer for each separate junk store or junk yard located on separate premises and for each junk wagon or junk boat used in the business.

"3520. License fee — The annual license fee for a retail junk dealer shall be $200. The annual license fee for a wholesale junk dealer shall also be $200. Every junk dealer, whether wholesale or retail, who shall operate a junk wagon or junk boat in connection with his business shall pay the sum of $15 annually as a license fee therefor to the city collector. A separate license shall be obtained for each and every junk wagon used in such business. All licenses shall expire on the 31st day of December of the year in which they are issued.

"3524. The annual license fee for junk peddlers shall be $15."

Appellants contend that the ordinance is uncertain, indefinite, unreasonable, discriminatory and confiscatory; that in order to carry on their business they are required to take out licenses to engage in a much more extensive business, which is improperly defined by the ordinance to be junk business; that they are arbitrarily deprived, wholly or to an unreasonable extent, of the market for their merchandise; *Page 493 that their right to contract with respect to merchandise is unduly and illegally interfered with and restricted and they are denied the equal protection of the law; that section 3511 does not define what is meant by "customary and usual separate transactions, both of purchases and sales," which is the qualification prescribed for a wholesale junk dealer, nor does it define what is meant by "the usual and customary purchases," which is the qualification prescribed for a retail junk dealer, nor does it prescribe any way by which to ascertain what constitutes usual and customary separate transactions; that under section 3512, if a retail dealer cannot purchase from a retail dealer, a retail dealer cannot sell to a retail dealer; that there is no provision authorizing a wholesale dealer to purchase in less than the large quantities prescribed in the ordinance even if he takes out a retail license; that he can purchase less quantities only as a retailer, and the ordinance forbids one retailer from purchasing from another retailer; that this provision is not modified by section 3518, which requires every dealer who conducts a retail and a wholesale junk business to procure a separate license for each, or by section 3520, which provides that the annual license fee for retail junk dealers shall be $200 and for wholesale junk dealers shall be the same; that while the ordinance does not expressly prohibit wholesale dealers from purchasing from retail dealers, yet by the terms of the ordinance, whenever the usual and customary separate transactions, both of purchase and sale, are less than car-load lots, or less than ten tons of metal, or less than ten bales of rags, and correspondingly large lots of other junk, the dealer is automatically transferred from a wholesale dealer to a retail dealer, and the ordinance forbids one retailer from purchasing from another retail dealer or from purchasing junk in car-load lots or in large quantities as defined in the ordinance, and that the ordinance is highly penal, carrying a penalty from $10 to $200 for each offense. *Page 494

It was stipulated that there are upwards of 250 dealers in junk in the city.

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Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 364, 341 Ill. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beskin-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1930.