Cahill v. District of Columbia

26 App. D.C. 163, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 5345
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1905
DocketNo. 1595
StatusPublished

This text of 26 App. D.C. 163 (Cahill v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cahill v. District of Columbia, 26 App. D.C. 163, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 5345 (D.C. Cir. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McComas

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In the police court, Middleton and Cahill, plaintiffs in error, ■were convicted upon an information which charged them with having in store and keeping for sale gasoline without having first obtained a license. .

[165]*165This case comes to this court upon a writ of error to the police court to review its judgment.

At the trial, the proof was that Middleton and Cahill maintained an automobile establishment at 1319 L street northwest, in Washington, where automobiles are received for storage; that on July 6, 1905, the fire marshal and the building inspector found on the premises a 5-gallon can filled with gasoline, and a like can nearly filled with gasoline; that nearby there was an underground tank of unknown location and dimensions; that pipes leading from the tank had a spigot located in the doorway of the garage, and the spigot, when turned on, yielded less than a gill of gasoline; that one of the plaintiffs in error admitted that the gasoline was drawn from the buried tank to refill the 5-gallon cans mentioned, and from these cans the tanks of the automobiles stored in the building were filled; that the plaintiffs in error had no license to store gasoline in the underground tank, although they had a permit to conduct an automobile storage house, and had made application in due form for a permit to store gasoline in a 50-gallon tank, which application had been approved by the fire marshal and the chief engineer of the District of Columbia, but no such permit had been issued.

It is contended that the 3d section of the 2d article of the police regulations of the District of Columbia, upon which the information in this case rests, is void, because by it the Commissioners of the District delegate to the inspector of buildings and to the chief engineer of the fire department powers delegated by Congress to the Commissioners, because it authorizes prohibition instead of regulation, because it omits rules to govern the inspector and chief engineer in recommending, or refusing to recommend, the issue of a license to store or keep for sale gasoline, and because it seeks to regulate the sale under authority from Congress to regulate the storage only.

The 3d section of the 2d article of the police regulations, the validity of which is denied, is as follows:

“Sec. 3. No person shall store or keep for sale in the District of Columbia any inflammable oil or fluid composed wholly or in part of petroleum or any of its producís, or any other highly [166]*166inflammable fluid, without an annual license therefor as provided in this article. Every person desiring such license shall make application therefor in writing to the fire marshal of the District of Columbia, stating the place, building, or part of building, in which the applicant desires to store or keep such articles or any of them; and the said application shall be referred to the inspector of buildings and the chief engineer of the fire department, who shall examine the place or building described in the application, and transmit the said application, with their recommendation in the case in writing, thereon, to the assessor of said District, who shall, if said officials so recommend, issue the license, unless otherwise ordered by the Commissioners.”

In District of Columbia v. Weston, 23 App. D. C. 363, 366, this court held that this section was a valid police regulation as made by the Commissioners of the District; saying: “It is not a delegation of their authority to commit to the expert agents named the duty of ascertaining and reporting information important to the exercise of their power to issue a license. * * * Applicants for license have no cause to complain that another agent is directed to issue the license if the former agents, upon inquiry into and report upon the necessary conditions, so recommend, and the Commissioners do not order otherwise.”

True, section 3 has been amended since by striking out “Commissioners of the District of Columbia” as the officials to whom application for license shall be addressed, and now provides that “every person desiring such license shall make application therefor in writing to the fire marshal of the District of Columbia,” etc. This amendment does not affect the ruling in Weston’s Case, wherein it was also said “that, in the execution of the powers conferred upon the Commissioners generally, they may appoint executive agents, charged with the performance of ministerial duties under their general supervision and control, where there has been no express authorization thereof.” 23 App. D. C. 366; United States ex rel. Kerr v. Ross, 5 App. D. C. 241.

It is further urged that, while Congress gave power to the Commissioners to regulate the storage of gasoline, under the Sd [167]*167section it is possible for either the Commissioners or their subordinates to prohibit the storage of gasoline. The purpose of the section is to regulate such storage by license; and it provides a mode of application for such license, a reference of such application to appropriate subordinates, who shall make recommendation thereon to another subordinate, who shall, upon a favorable recommendation, issue a license, unless otherwise ordered ¡by the Commissioners.

The officers authorized to examine may report unfavorably upon the application, either because the building is of a character prohibited by other sections of article 2 of police regulations, or because the application states a desire to store a maximum quantity of gasoline, by the same regulations forbidden to be stored in the place or building described in the application for license, or the same subordinate may report favorably, and the assessor may desire to issue the license, but the Commissioners, because of certain reasonable restrictions in this article 2, may order otherwise.

If it were not possible to refuse license to those applicants who failed to fulfil reasonable requirements imposed for safety to life and property, it would not he possible to regulate by a license system the storing and keeping of gasoline.

Nor does section 3, when read in connection with other sections of article 2, fail to provide rules sufficient to guide and control the discretion of the fire marshal and the chief engineer, presumed to have knowledge of the proper methods for the safe storage of gasoline, in reporting upon applications for license.

There is no merit in the objection- that Congress authorized the Commissioners to regulate the storage of gasoline only, but the 3d section regulates the sale of gasoline. Congress authorized the Commissioners to regulate the storage of all gasoline, whether stored for private use or public use, or stored or kept for sale to others. The storage for commercial use is the principal use of gasoline, and, therefore, this police regulation properly provides supervision of gasoline stored or kept for sale.

It is said that section 3 is so inconsistent with section 1 and section 5 as to be void for unreasonableness; that section 1 [168]*168prohibits the storing of gasoline in any place except the interior of a building, while section 5 prohibits the storage of gasoline in any building whatever, and requires tire tank containing it to be 6 feet outside and away from the nearest wall of any building, and therefore gasoline cannot be stored at any place.

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Bluebook (online)
26 App. D.C. 163, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 5345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahill-v-district-of-columbia-cadc-1905.