City of Chicago v. Adelman

156 N.E. 791, 326 Ill. 58
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1927
DocketNo. 18129. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 791 (City of Chicago v. Adelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Chicago v. Adelman, 156 N.E. 791, 326 Ill. 58 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Suit was brought by the city of Chicago against Sam Adelman for violating a city ordinance. The complaint charged that on June 17, 1926, Adelman operated and carried on the business of junk dealer on South State street without first having obtained a license, in violation of section 3512 of the Chicago municipal code of 1922. When the case came up for hearing counsel for Adelman moved to quash the complaint. The city was allowed to introduce a certified copy of an ordinance licensing and regulating junk dealers, passed in May, 1926, as an amendment to the municipal code. The court sustained the motion to quash the complaint and dismissed the case. The proper certificate was made by the trial court that the validity of a municipal ordinance was involved, and the city has prosecuted an appeal direct to this court.

Both parties agree that appellant has power to license and regulate junk dealers. Appellant contends that the ordinance is valid as a whole; that it is severable, and that if the provisions here involved are valid, the judgment should be reversed even if some of its sections or provisions not necessary to be considered in determining this case are invalid. Appellee contends that section 3519 of the ordinance makes every provision of it dependent one upon the other, and if one section is invalid the whole ordinance is void. In his brief appellee specifies a long list of objections to the validity of the ordinance, such as that it is unreasonable, unconstitutional, discriminatory, oppressive, confiscatory, invades property rights in violation of the constitution, invades liberty rights, creates double taxation, etc.

The first paragraph of section 3511 defines junk, and appellee says he finds no fault with the definition. The remaining paragraphs define the terms “junk dealer,” “wholesale junk dealer,” “retail junk dealer,” “junk peddler,” “junk store,” “junk yard” and “junk wagon.” Section 3512 forbids any person, firm or corporation to operate as a junk dealer, or keep a junk store or junk yard for the purchase, sale, exchange or other dealings in or storage of junk, or to drive any junk wagon through the streets for collecting, transporting or disposing of junk, without being first licensed to do so. The second paragraph of section 3512 provides that no person, firm or corporation licensed under the ordinance as a retail junk dealer shall be permitted, under license as such, to purchase junk from other retail junk dealers or to purchase junk in car-load lots, provided that any retail junk dealer who desires to purchase junk in large quantities may secure a separate license as a wholesale junk dealer if the wholesale business is carried on entirely distinct from the retail business. The third paragraph of the section provides that no person, firm or corporation licensed as a wholesale junk dealer or as a retail junk dealer shall carry on the business at any other house, place, store, shop, warehouse, building, yard or enclosure than that designated in the license issued to him. The fourth paragraph of the section provides that any person who violates the section shall be subject to a fine of not less than $10 nor more than $200 for each offense. The ordinance fixes the annual license fee to be paid by a retail junk dealer at $200, by a wholesale junk dealer at $200, and $15 annually by every wholesale or retail dealer, or by a peddler who operates a junk wagon. Other sections to which appellee objects will be hereafter noted.

City of Chicago v. Lowenthal, 242 Ill. 404, was a prosecution for keeping a junk shop without a license, in violation of an ordinance. The court held the defendant was not the keeper of a junk shop within the meaning of the ordinance, and said: “It has been held that ordinances similar to the one under consideration are passed in the exercise of the police power, and that such ordinances are enacted because of the likelihood, grounded on experience, that junk is frequently stolen or pilfered, and to insure protection against such larcenies the traffic in junk is regulated in cities by ordinance.” In Smolensky v. City of Chicago, 282 Ill. 131, the court commented on the howenihal case and said: “A junk dealer does not cease to be a junk dealer because of the magnitude of his business or the manner in which it is conducted, whether at wholesale or retail. He is still a junk dealer, and his store or shop or warehouse, of whatever size, is still a junk shop or store or warehouse, and if a yard is used in connection with the business it is a junk yard. The city has power, under the legislative grant, to tax, license and regulate his business and direct its location.”

It is not denied by appellee that appellant has power to license and regulate junk dealers, and that power necessarily implies the power to make a reasonable classification so that the license be uniform as to the class upon which it operates. Banta v. City of Chicago, 172 Ill. 204.

Appellee refers to section 3519, which provides that the applicant for license as a wholesale or retail junk dealer shall set forth, among other things, that the applicant will observe and comply with all ordinances of the city then in force or which may thereafter be adopted respecting wholesale or retail junk dealers. That provision relates to legal and valid ordinances then in force or which may thereafter be adopted, and does not require, as appellee contends, that the applicant waive his constitutional rights.

The third paragraph of section 3511 is also said to be invalid. That paragraph defines what is meant by “dealing in large quantities,” and provides that the purchase or sale of car-load lots or lots of ten tons or more of metals, or ten bales or more of rags, and corresponding lots of any other junk, is dealing in large quantities. It is argued that this section does not legally distinguish retailer and wholesaler. In the first place, that provision is not involved in this prosecution, and if it were invalid, (which we do not concede,) it would not affect the section under which this suit is prosecuted.

The second paragraph of section 3512 prohibits one licensed as a retail junk dealer from carrying on the business of a wholesale junk dealer or from purchasing from another retail junk dealer in car-load lots. This provision is said by appellee to be incapable of enforcement and is in restraint of trade. In addition to that provision not being involved in this prosecution, we cannot agree with the argument of appellee.

The same may be said of the criticism made of section 3513, which provides that every wholesale junk dealer who shall also engage in the retail junk business shall for a period of two days after the receipt, purchase or storage of any junk keep the same separate and distinct from other junk received, purchased or stored, and shall not sell the same for the period of two days. The argument made is that that section of the ordinance is confiscatory.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 791, 326 Ill. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-adelman-ill-1927.