Booth v. City of Dallas

179 S.W. 301, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 928
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 1915
DocketNo. 7493.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 301 (Booth v. City of Dallas) 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
Booth v. City of Dallas, 179 S.W. 301, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 928 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

. This is an appeal from the action of the judge of the Sixty-Eighth district court in dissolving a prior temporary injunction. The action of the court as disclosed by the record was based upon substantially the following matters:

Prior to the commencement of this suit appellee the city of Dallas in the manner provided by its charter enacted an ordinance defining a motor bus, imposing a license for the privilege of operating same, regulating its use, declaring the unrestricted use thereof a nuisance, penalizing sárne, and declaring an emergency. A motor bus by the ordinance is declared to be:

“Any automobile, automobile truck or trackless motor vehicle engaged in the business of carrying passengers for hire within the city limits, * * * held out or announced by sign, voice, writing, device or advertisement to operate or run, or which is intended to be operated or run, over any particular street or route or to any particular or designated point or between particular points or to or within any designated .territory, district or zone.”

The ordinance also contains many other provisions, but only those, together with relevant collateral provisions, deemed necessary to a discussion of the issues presented on appeal will be detailed, and those so necessary will be related while discussing the particular issue to which they relate. After the several successive steps necessary for the legal enactment of the ordinance had been observed, and after same had been published in the official organ of the appellee city one of the three required times, appellants, Booth, Cochran, Birthright, and Smith, for themselves and approximately 500 others similarly situated, filed this suit against ap-pellees, the city of Dallas and its commissioners, for the purpose of having said ordinance declared void and unenforceable, and sought pendente lite a temporary injunction restraining appellees from in any manner enforcing same. Upon ex parte hearing temporary injunction was, granted, and appellees cited to appear subsequently and show cause why the temporary injunction should not be continued in force pending trial. At the time set there was a hearing, and the temporary injunction was dissolved.

The evidence adduced by appellants on the hearing tended to show that there was at that time 400 or 500 vehicles as defined by the ordinance being operated upon the streets of the city of Dallas, either by the owners’ or those who rented same, engaged in transporting passéngers for hire from point to point in the city for a fare of 5 cents per passenger.- Those so engaged had a fixed route or termini, but would divert therefrom and make special journeys to any or all portions of the city upon terms agreed upon between the operator and those seeking such service. The operators of these vehicles averaged a gross income of $5.70 per day, with an average expense of $3 per day, leaving approximately a net income of $2.70 per day. Included in such earnings was whatever amount was secured from the special journeys above referred to, and for which special journeys the operators, as a rule, received greater compensation than they did for running over the fixed route. Those operators who testified at the trial gave it as their opinion, based upon their experience in the business, that a license fee of $10 was sufficient, and that the number of vehicles engaged in the business could not successfully operate without being permitted to divert from their fixed route and make special journeys here or there, as demanded by the public.

The evidence adduced by appellees tended to show that the operators of the vehicles defined by the ordinance have greatly congested the .city’s streets with traffic in the downtown sections. Since the operation of such vehicles there have been numerous accidents in which such vehicles were concerned, and as a consequence of which persons have been injured and property damaged and destroyed. Many of the vehicles are old and worn. The operators run irregularly over their selected routes, and do not go to the limit thereof, but return as soon as they secure enough passengers to fill the car, taking them on at any point. Many of the vehicles are operated at a rapid and dangerous speed. Many of them transport passengers in double the number, of their rated capacity, and after filling the body of the car they permit them to stand upon the running board. It tvas also shown that the cost of enforcing the regulatory provisions of the ordinance, including supervision, inspection, and police surveillance, would be in excess of the amount which could be realized from the license fee and other charges provided for in the ordinance.

It was further shown that there are in operation in the city of Dallas 75 or 100 motor vehicles designated by ordinance as “rent cars.” There are two ordinances that regulate the right to operate these rent cars. Such regulations, material to the issues presented on appeal, are that such cars are required to pay a license fee of $10 per annum and may stand upon the streets only at certain places at given hours. The evidence further shows that such cars do not operate over fixed routes, but stand at the places on the city streets fixed by ordinances or in garages from whence they are called by those desiring their services. These vehicles charge a much greater fare for their services than the motor bus, such charges being regulated by the city.

[1] We will consider first the attack on section 6 of the ordinance. Said section *303 fixes an annual license fee of $75 for tlie | privilege of operating a motor bus over tbe | streets of tbe city. This charge is declared j to be void for many reasons; tbe first in' natural order being tbe claim that tbe mcy’s charter did not authorize same. By article 2, section 3, subdivision 24, of its charter, the city has authority, among other things, to license and regulate, in addition to the' businesses and occupations therein enumerated, “all other business or occupations whatever, which in the opinion of the board of commissioners shall be the proper subject of police regulation.” By subdivision 33 of the same article and section authority is conferred upon the city “to regulate the use of automobiles, motor cars, motorcycles, or any motor vehicles. * * * ” By subdivision 4 of section 7 of the same article there is conferred upon the city, in addition to certain enumerated things, the further right “to regulate the use” of its streets. These provisions are specific grants by the state of its police power, intrusted to the city for its exercise and enforcement. From these grants it is clear that the city has complete dominion over the entire subject in controversy in this suit, since it has the right to regulate every conceivable kind of motor vehicle, the right to control and regulate the use of its streets by such vehicles, and the right to license and regulate all occupations. So broad and comprehensive are the specific grants that the right of the city to fix a license fee against those operating the motor bus is not dependent upon the quoted grants as a whole, but, in our opinion, can be sustained by authority of any one thereof. The right to regulate the use of the city’s streets, or the right to regulate the use of all vehicles upon the city’s streets, is broad enough to authorize both the regulation of the motor bus and the imposition of a fee for the privilege of such use. We said as much in Southwestern Tel. & Tel. Co. v. City of Dallas, 174 S. W. 636.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 301, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-city-of-dallas-texapp-1915.