Boyd v. City of Louisville

198 S.W. 927, 178 Ky. 354, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 730
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 11, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 927 (Boyd v. City of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. City of Louisville, 198 S.W. 927, 178 Ky. 354, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 730 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

William Bogees Olay, Commissioner

Affirming.

T. L. Boyd, doing business under tbe firm name of Boyd, Lunliam. & Company, brought this suit against tbe City of Louisville and Dr. W. E. Grant, health. [355]*355■officer, to enjoin the enforcement of “An ordinance for the inspection of animals slaughtered for Meat Supply in the city of Louisville. ’ ’ A demurrer was sustained to the petition and the petition dismissed. Plaintiff appeals.

The pertinent provisions of the ordinance in question are as follows:

“Section 1. The sale, offering, exposing or having for sale of any meat within the city of Louisville, which has not been inspected by federal, state or municipal authority at the time of slaughter is hereby prohibited, as well as the bringing of any such meat into the city of Louisville for the purpose of sale, except as otherwise provided in section 7. It shall further be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to sell, expose or offer, or have in possession for sale for human consumption,^ any meat which is in anywise not fit for such purpose.
“Section 7. It shall be unlawful to sell, or offer, ex-, pose or have in possession for sale, any meat in the city of Louisville which has not been inspected and stamped at the time of slaughter by federal, state or municipal authority, except carcasses of meat slaughtered by farmers or others not regularly engaged in the slaughtering-of animals.....And provided, further, that nothing herein shall exempt federal and other inspected meat from inspection as to fit condition for food when arriv-. ing for sale, or when exposed for sale in the city of Louisville.
“Section 10. The city shall collect the sum of fifteen cents as an inspection fee for inspection of each carcass of beef, and five cents for inspection of each carcass of swine, sheep and veal at the time of slaughter, and shall collect the sum of five cents for each carcass of-beef and three cents for each carcass- of swine, sheep and veal, and proportionate fractional fees for each part of such carcasses, of all animals which have been inspected elsewhere at the time of slaughter, but which are required to be reinspected to determine subsequent spoilage or fitness for food before offering for sal.e in the city of Louisville. The health officer shall devise-such method as may be deemed bést for the time and manner of the collection of said fees and for checking up and accounting for same; and the sum so collected under the provisions of this ordinance shall be paid into the hands of the city treasurer and set apart solely for [356]*356the purpose of carrying out the inspection provided for in this-ordinance-and-paying the expenses thereof.”

The- petition t and amended petition allege in-substance the following facts: Appellant is -engaged in the business of packing and selling meats and food products in the city of Chicago, ■ and has a large number of customers’ in the city of Louisville. Sales to these customers are made by an agent on orders- which are transmitted to the Chicago office for acceptance- by appellant. Upon the acceptance of these orders, the sales are completed. 'Thereupon, the. appellant delivers the- goods ordered to a common carrier which acts as his agent in carrying the-goods to the city of Louisville. Upon the arrival' of the goods in the city of Louisville, they are •delivered to a' transfer company which acts as appellant’s agent' in’ completing the delivery. At no time after making of said orders, and before said goods are actually and in fact delivered to said customers, are- they offered or -exposed or in appellant’s possession for sale. Nor do any of said meats arrive for sale in the city of Louisville before the actual delivery thereof to Said customers. Prior to their arrival in Louisville-, all said meats -are- regularly inspected and stamped by federal-authority. Upon their arrival in Louisville, the inspection agents of the city refuse to permit appellant’s ageut to receive said meats and to deliver them to his customers until they are inspected pursuant to the ordinance above1 set out. Unless the -inspection fees are paid at once, the city agents threaten to notify appellant’s customers that they can not lawfully offer said meats and products for sale until the- same shall have been inspected and approved by said inspectors." The petition-concludes with a prayer that the city and its -officer's' be enjoined from inspecting said meats and collecting fees therefor, and from- notifying appellant’s-customers that they can not lawfully sell said meats, until inspected by said officers.

It will be observed that section 1 of the ordinance in question, prohibits the sale and the offering, exposing, of having in possession, for sale, of any meat within the city' of' Louisville, which has not been inspected by federal, state, or municipal authority at the time of the slaughter,'as well as the bringing of any such meat into the city for the purpose of sale except as otherwise pro-' vided in" section 7. The same section makes it unlawful for any’person, firm or corporation, “to sell, expose, or [357]*357offer, or have in possession for sale for human consumption any meat which is in anywise not fit for such purpose.

Section 7 makes it unlawful to sell or offer,, expose or have in possession for sale, any meat in the city" which has not been inspected and stamped at the time of slaughter by federal, state, or municipal authority with certain exceptions not material to this controversy. The same section provides that nothing therein “shall; exempt federal or other inspected meat from inspection as to fit condition for food when arriving for sale, or. when exposed for sale in the city of Louisville.”

The principal contention of appellant is, that the ordinance does not apply to him under the circumstances set out in the petition as amended. In support of this position he argues as follows: The sales made by him were completed in Chicago. The goods were there inspected and passed by federal authority. "When they reached Louisville, they did not arrive for sale, nor were they in his possession for the purpose of sale. On the contrary they had already been sold and were in his possession solely for the purpose of delivery as alleged in the petition as amended. "While it is true that the petition as amended so alleges, these allegations must be construed in the light of the further allegation that the goods were carried from Chicago to Louisville by a common carrier acting as appellant’s agent and there delivered to a transfer company, which, acting as appellant’s agent, delivered them directly to the customers to whom they were consigned, and that these deliveries were made in compliance with the terms and, conditions of the orders of sale. In other words, appellant’s pleadings clearly show that, notwithstanding the acceptance of the "orders for the goods, the duty of delivering the goods devolved upon appellant. The ordinance makes it clear that nothing therein shall exempt federal or other inspected meat from inspection as fit for food, either when arriving for sale or when exposed for sale in the city of Louisville. Had it been intended to confine the local inspection to meats thereafter to be sold, the words “when exposed for sale,” would have been sufficient. Some effect, therefore, must be given to the words “when arriving for sale.” It was the evident purpose of the framers of the ordinance to. provide for the inspection of such meats upon their [358]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 927, 178 Ky. 354, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1917.