Billings Hotel Co. v. City of Enid

1916 OK 30, 154 P. 557, 53 Okla. 1, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 11, 1916
Docket7816
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1916 OK 30 (Billings Hotel Co. v. City of Enid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billings Hotel Co. v. City of Enid, 1916 OK 30, 154 P. 557, 53 Okla. 1, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 358 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

This is an original proceeding for a writ of prohibition. The record discloses that on October 22, 1915, the city of Enid, a municipal corporation, as plaintiff, and on the relation of its city attorney, filed in the district court of Garfield county a petition alleging that the Billings Hotel Company, Walter Billings, manager, and seven others, petitioners here, were maintaining a place within the corporate limits of the city, and were there selling intoxicating liquors contrary to law, that the place was known as - the Billings Hotel, but, in fact, was a mere rooming house, that the same was a nuisance as' defined by an ordinance of the city, and prayed for a temporary injunction restraining petitioners from operating the-same, and that the sheriff of Garfield county take possession and lock it up. All of which the court did, without bond or notice, to petitioners, on October 10, 1915, and' in said order set November 10, 1915, at Cherokee, as the time and place when and where said temporary injunction ■would come on for final hearing. On November 4, 1915, came petitioners and moved the court to dissolve the -temporary injunction, for certain reasons stated in the motion, and when the court in chambers heard the same and refused so to do, and overruled the motion, this proceeding was commenced.

Assuming the things were done as charged in the city’s petition, and that the place where done was a public *3 nuisance within the contemplation of section 13, c. 70, Sess. Laws 1911, yet, as the act further provides-: "

¡“The .Attorney General, county attorney, or any officep .charged with the enforcement of any.of the provisions of this act. of the county where such/nuisance exists, ..or is kept, or is maintained, may maintain.’an.,.action in the name of the state to abate and perpetually enjoin the same” .

: — it is contended that the court was without jurisdiction to entertain the city’s suit, for the reason that the same was not brought in the name of the state on relation of the. Attorney General, as required by the act, but. was brought by the city on relation of its city attorney. On the other hand, the city attorney disclaims any intention of proceeding under said act. Instead, he says the city relies on its right to maintain the action, “as a body politic, under the authority conferred by law upon the municipal corporation through the charter granted to the city of Enid by the State of Oklahoma.” Quoting his entire contention, it is:

“That the city of Enid has the power under the authority delegated to the city by the state to proceed .in equity, by way of injunction, to abate a public nuisance. It will be contended that this authority is to be found in the city charter, wherein authority is delegated to the city, by section 28, of article 3 of the Enid city charter, ‘to define what shall be nuisances in the city, and within three thousand feet of the corporation lines, outside of the city limits, and to abate such nuisances by summary proceedings and to punish the authors thereof by penalties, fines and imprisonment,’ together with the further grant of power in section 3 of article 3 of said charter ‘to prohibit dramshops,, drinking saloons, and other places where intoxicating liquors are sold.’
*4 “That, pursuant to this authority, the city of Enid has, by section 4 of Ordinance 677, art. 84, re-enacted a transcript of the state law relative to nuisances resulting from the wrongfül acts of any person who may engage in the manufacture, sale, barter, giving away, or otherwise furnishing of intoxicating liquors contrary to law in a given place. There is no method provided in the city ordinance for the summary abatement of any such nuisances existing within the city of Enid, and neither is there any state law authorizing the summary abatement of this class of nuisances by any state officer. By the laws of Oklahoma (section 4257, Harris-Day Code) the remedies against a public nuisance are: (1) Indictment or information; (2) a civil action; (3) abatement. And by section 4260, Harris-Day Code, a public nuisance may be abated by any public body or officer authorized thereto by law. Therefore it must appear that the city of Enid, being a body politic, and having the authority conferred upon it by the State of Oklahoma, through its charter, to abate, by summary proceedings, any nuisance within the city of Enid, would have the right to appeal to the courts of equity in its corporate name to abate, by injunction, a summary proceeding, any nuisance wholly within the city and particularly offensive'to the citizens thereof, and this authority seems clear without any discussion of any state laws relative to the liquor question.”

In other words, if we catch the point, it is the contention of the city attorney that the city, pursuant to section 28, art. 3, of its charter, by section 4 of Ordinance 677, re-enacted the state law defining a nuisance as contained in section 13, supra, that the place in question falls within its terms, and that, having so declared it to be, the city has the right to abate it by injunction pursuant to its grant of power contained in said section 28, authorizing the city, “ * * * to define what shall be nuisances in the city, * * * and to abate such nuisances by *5 summary proceedings, and to punish the authors thereof by penalties, fines and imprisonment.” Not so. A grant of power to abate a nuisance by summary proceedings confers no power on the city to proceed to abate it by injunction in a court of equity. This for the reason that a suit in equity is not a summary proceeding.

A summary proceeding is defined by Bouvier to be:

“A form of trial in which the ancient established course of legal proceedings is disregarded, especially in the matter of trial by jury, and, in the case of the heavier crimes, presentment by a grand jury. In no case can a party be tried summarily, unless when such proceedings are authorized by legislative authority, except perhaps in cases of contempts; for the common law is a stranger to such a mode of trial.”

27 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law (2d Ed.), at page 375, says:

“A common use of summary proceedings is in the enforcement of city ordinances. Both in England and the United States statutes have been enacted conferring the power upon municipal tribunals sitting within the bounds of the municipal corporation of enforcing the ordinances or by-laws of the corporation in summary proceedings. These proceedings for the punishment of offenders against the ordinances, which are made in virtue of the implied or incidental power of the corporation, or in the exercise of its legitimate police authority, for the preservation of peace, good order, safety, and health, and which relate to minor acts and matters, are not usually or properly regarded as criminal, and hence are not in contravention of the constitutional guaranty of trial by jury in criminal cases.”

From all of which we learn that the city, under its charter, can abate the alleged nuisance within its borders by proceeding against its authors in its municipal courts *6 in a summary way, and, when convicted for a violation of its ordinance defining a nuisance, may impose on them the penalty prescribed thereby.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City and County of Honolulu v. Cavness
364 P.2d 646 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1961)
New Hampshire Fire Insurance v. Scanlon
362 U.S. 404 (Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 30, 154 P. 557, 53 Okla. 1, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billings-hotel-co-v-city-of-enid-okla-1916.