Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur

2 S.W.2d 1001
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1928
DocketNo. 1633.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 1001 (Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bielecki v. City of Port Arthur, 2 S.W.2d 1001 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

WABKER, J.

The city of Port Arthur operates under a special charter authorizing it in specific terms-to “license, tax and regulate, or forbid and prevent, dancé houses * * * and suppress and close same, whenever the preservation of order, tranquillity, public safety or good morals may demand, or when necessary, expedient or advisable.” In general terms it authorizes the city “to define what shall be nuisances in the city, * * * and abate such nuisances by summary proceedings, and to punish the authors thereof by penalties, fines, and imprisonment.” Under authority of its charter, the city of Port Arthur passed an ordinance defining public dance halls operated in residence districts as nuisances, and further providing:

-“By dance hall as used in this ordinance is meant any structure * * * wherein dances are given to which the public are privileged to attend, or for which a fee for admission or participation is demanded or received. And by maintaining same in a residence neighborhood is meant that such public dance hall is located in a block where the majority of the houses are actually used for resident purposes, or that such dance hall is located within 150 feet of the private residence or residences actually occupied by private families.”

Punishment was provided for the violation of the ordinance, and the police department was given power of summary abatement. At the time this ordinance was passed, for three or four years prior thereto, Stanislow Bie-lecki, referred to herein as appellant, owned and operated a public dance hall within the corporate limits of the city of Port Arthur, which was a nuisance under the terms of this ordinance. After the passage of the ordinance, the police department of the city notified him that he would be punished Under the ordinance and his business closed by the police department if he did not cease to operate. Thereupon he presented to the judge of the Sixtieth judicial district of this county his petition praying for an injunction restraining the city of Port Arthur and its police department from enforcing, or attempting to enforce, this ordinance, and, from interfering with his business, and from filing criminal charges against him. He alleged that the ordinance was void on the following grounds:

*1004 (a) The ordinance, while in general terms, was directed specifically against his business alone, and was intended to suppress his business, leaving the other dance halls unmolested; (b) that, while general in its terms, it, in fact, was specific, in that it applied only to his dance hall; (c) in arbitrarily declaring dance halls nuisances whether they were so in fact or not, it was void, in that it provided no rule or criterion by which to determine the character of dance halls, but arbitrarily made them nuisances when operated in any residence district within 150 feet of a private residence ; (d) it did not leave to the courts the issue of nuisances vel non, but arbitrarily made the operation of a public dance hall a nuisance, whether so in fact or not; (e) it unlawfully discriminated against him personally, and also against his business; (f) it violated both the federal and state Constitutions, in that its enforcement would deprive him of his property without due process of law; (g) the enforcement of this void ordinance would result in the filing against him of a multiplicity of. suits and prosecutions, and the destruction of his business and property.

The temporary injunction was issued as prayed for, but upon trial on the merits was dissolved and a permanent injunction refused. The case is before us on assignments and propositions against that judgment, by which appellant brings forward the same contentions advanced in his petition.

On the facts, it was shown that appellant’s dance hall was situated within the residence district of the city of Port Arthur, as that term was defined by the ordinance. It was conceded that the operation of the dance hall would constitute a violation of the ordinance. Appellant had operated his dance hall-" for three or four years prior to the adoption of the ordinance in a manner highly displeasing to the neighborhood where it was situated. To remedy this condition, he employed and paid personally two policemen to assist him in maintaining order, and had been doing this for about two months before the ordinance became effective, and before he was threatened with criminal prosecution and the destruction of his business under the terms of the ordinance. He had an average attendance of about 150 on his dances, which he gave three times per week and from which he netted about $250 per month. About 50 per cent, of his patrons attended in automobiles, and the balance walked. The patrons would begin to arrive about 8 p. m. and the dances closed about 11 p. m. During this time automobiles were constantly arriving and departing. While their owners were attending the dances, the automobiles were parked along the street adjacent to the dance hall. Much noise'was made in starting and stopping the automobiles, and their glaring lights were an annoyance to the neighborhood. The guests greeted each other on their arrival and departure, and there was much loud laughing and talking on the outside of the dance hall. Music was made by a band of three pieces that could be heard two or three block from the dance hall. There was some fighting and drinking, some lewdness, and much noise during the progress of the dances. Since appellant does not controvert the testimony of the chief of police, W. W. Covington, though calling him “a highly prejudiced witness,” we quote from his testimony as follows:

“That dance hall has been there ever since I have been chief of police. * * ⅜ That place has been a source of worry to me ever since I have been chief of police. I have had a great deal of trouble with that place. I have had a great many complaints about that place. * ⅜ * There is more or less a general disturbance down there every night they have a dance down there. » * * They gave a great deal of trouble by fighting, cursing, drinking, and different things. There is just a general complaint' of all kinds, parking cars on the outside, people getting in them, loving up, etc. * * * Mr. Bielecki pays these two policemen for their services down there to keep order around that place, but they haven’t been able to keep order. It would take a whole bunch of officers to corral that bunch down there. Mr. Champaigne and Mr. Ootham have kept as good order down there as they could, but they haven’t been able to keep order by any means. I get a complaint about the place every time they have a dance down there, even though those two officers are there. I have been having these complaints ever since that place has been operated down there. I have attended to these complaints the best I could. * * * We have complaints about the language they use down there. We have also had complaints about the noise,” etc.

Mr. Ootham, one of the appellant’s special policemen, testified:

“I live in Port Arthur. * * * I have been a police officer down there for about three years. I have had occasion to be down there at the Waco Park Dance Hall (appellant’s dance hall) quite a bit during the last few months. I have been down there on the average of three times a week for about three months.
“Q. Do you think, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bielecki-v-city-of-port-arthur-texapp-1928.