Carey v. Corporation of Washington

5 F. Cas. 62, 5 D.C. 13, 5 Cranch 13

This text of 5 F. Cas. 62 (Carey v. Corporation of Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carey v. Corporation of Washington, 5 F. Cas. 62, 5 D.C. 13, 5 Cranch 13 (circtddc 1836).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.,

delivered the following opinion, (Moiisell, J., observing that he concurred only in that part of it which denied the power of the corporation to prohibit free colored persons from selling perfumery.)

This action is founded on the by-law of the 28th of October, 1831, entitled, an act providing additional revenues for the corporation.” ■

This by-law is very badly expressed ; but we can understand the intention of the corporation to be, to raise a revenue by granting licenses to sell, or by imposing fines for selling, without license, the articles, for the sale of which licenses were to be granted.

But it is saidthatthe defendant tendered the price or tax,for a license to sell perfumery, and demanded a license, from the mayoiywhich he refused to grant, because he was forbidden by the by-law of the 29th of October, 1836, § 3, to grant such a license to a colored person.

The defendant’s counsel contend that this by-law is void, because the corporation had no power to forbid the mayor to grant the license ; nor to discriminate between white and colored persons ; nor to forbid any free colored person to carry on the trade of selling perfumery, which was a trade lawful to white persons.

The third section of the by-law of the 29th of October, 1836, says, “ It shall not be lawful for the mayor to grant a license, for any purpose whatsoever, to any free negro or mulatto, except licenses to drive carts, drays, hackney-carriages, or wagons.”

This clause, taken in connection with the act of the 28th of October, 1831, requiring a license, and imposing a penalty of from 10 to 50 dollars for selling without license, amounts, in effect, to a prohibition to free colored persons to carry on the business of selling any of the articles, for the sale of which a license is required by the by-law of the 28th of October, 1831.

The by-laws must not be repugnant to the general law of the land, further than such by-laws are justified by the express provisions of the charter.

By the general law of the land, free colored persons have a right to exercise any lawful trade or calling which white persons may exercise; a by-law forbidding them to do so, is contrary to the general law of the land, and void, unless authorized by the charter.

/ The selling of perfumery is a lawful business, or occupation. No express power is given to the corporation, by the charter, to [16]*16prohibit or restrain it, or to license it, or to require a license to use or pursue it. The exercise of it is not, in itself, a nuisance. The corporation has no authority, under the power to lay and collect taxes ” to require the person, exercising it, to obtain a license to do so ; for the power, given by the charter, to lay and collect taxes, is only “ to lay and collect taxes on real and personal property.”

The licenses, which the corporation may require, are expressly designated; and are confined to auctions, retailers, ordinaries and taverns, hackney-carriages, wagons, carts, and drays, pawnbrokers, venders of lottery tickets, money changers, hawkers and peddlers, and theatrical and other shows and amusements.

Their express power of restraining and prohibiting, is confined to tippling-houses, lotteries, and all kinds of gaming, and nightly and oi her disorderly meetings of slaves, free negroes, andmulattoes.

They have also an implied power to restrain or prohibit whatever may be inconsistent with such reglations as may be necessary to prevent the introduction of contagious diseases, and for the preservation of the health of the city; whatever may be a common nuisance; whatever may injure the navigation of the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers adjoining the city; and, in short, whatever may be inconsistent with the regulations which they have any express power to make.

But the right to sell perfumery is not real or personal property which can be taxed as such. It is not within the list of licenses authorized by the charter, nor is it one of the matters which may be restrained or prohibited by any express provision of the charter; nor can it injure the health of the city, or be in itself a nuisance.

I think, therefore, that it cannot be prohibited.

But is is said that colored persons are a distinct class, not entitled to equal rights with the white ■ population, and that they may be prohibited, although the whites may not. Such is not the general law of the land in regard to a right of this kind; the right to get a living by an honest, lawful, and harmless occupation. The corporation cannot make it the law of this city, unless they are authorized to do so by the charter; and I cannot find, in the charter, any such authority. I think, therefore, that neither the Act of the 28th of October, 1831, nor the Act of the 29th of October, 1836, so far as they prohibit, or require a license for the selling of perfumery, is warranted by the charter.

But if the by-law of the 28th of October, 1831, should be justified or supported by the clause of the charter authorizing the corporation “ to lay and collect taxes upon the real and personal property within the said city,” so far as it requires a [17]*17license to be paid* for, as a means of raising a revenue, yet a by-law to prohibit a certain class of citizens from, exercising a lawful business or occupation, cannot be justified by the same clause of the charterfor the prohibition is not a means of raising a revenue.

The cases, in which licenses may be required under the charter, have been already enumerated, and are cases in which the public is concerned in the character of the person to be licensed; and therefore a discretion is given to the corporation to grant or refuse the license. The drivers of hackney-carriages, carts, and drays, are a kind of public servants, or common carriers, in whose honesty and fidelity the public is interested, as they have the carriage of property to a large amount, and must, in a great measure, be trusted ; and they derive a credit and character from their license. In the other enumerated cases the necessity or expedience of giving a discretion to the corporation is sufficiently obvious. But the coporation has no power to prohibit or restrain the exercise of a' common right, unless that power be expressly given, or be necessary fo the exercise of some expressly given power.

But it has been suggested that the corporation derives its power, to tax a person who sells perfumery, from the clause of the charter which authorizes them “ to provide for licensing, taxing, and regulating auctions, retailers, ordinaries, and taverns, hackney carriages,” &c.

The person who sells perfumery, it is said, is a “ retailer,” and therefore liable to be taxed and regulated, and to be prohibited from selling without a license.

The word, “ retailers,” in the charter, as I apprehend, means, exclusively, retailers of “ wine, rum, brandy, whiskey, or other distilled spirituous liquor, strong beer, or cider.”

These were the only retailers known in the Maryland statutes at the time of the • separation of this part of the district from that State, to whom a license could be granted.

They were always, colloquially, and in various statutes, called “ retailers,” without designating them as retailers of liquors.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 62, 5 D.C. 13, 5 Cranch 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-corporation-of-washington-circtddc-1836.