City of Fort Worth v. Atlas Enterprises

311 S.W.2d 922, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1898, 1958 WL 95386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1958
Docket15891
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 311 S.W.2d 922 (City of Fort Worth v. Atlas Enterprises) 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
City of Fort Worth v. Atlas Enterprises, 311 S.W.2d 922, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1898, 1958 WL 95386 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Atlas Enterprises is a business which manufactures and distributes fireworks. It is located in Tarrant County, outside the county seat, City of Fort Worth. Incident to the shipment of fireworks so manufactured, transportation thereof passes at times through the corporate limits of the City of Fort Worth.

Sometime prior to the occasion which is the subject of this suit, the City of Fort Worth, a home rule city, passed its Ordinance No. 3099. By its provisions, fireworks were prohibited. It declared as unlawful the storing, using, manufacturing, assembling, handling, transporting, receiving, etc., any fireworks of any description. It further provided that “the presence of any fireworks zvithin the jurisdiction of the City of Forth Worth in violation of this ordinance is hereby declared to be a nuisance.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Article 1175, sec. 19, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., provides in the enumerated powers of home rule cities that each shall have the power to define all nuisances and prohibit the same within the city and outside the city limits for a distance of 5,000 feet.

This court has heretofore had occasion to pass upon the validity of the aforesaid in two instances. Stoughton v. City of Fort Worth, Tex.Civ.App.1955, 277 S.W.2d *924 150; Parker v. City of Fort Worth, Tex.Civ.App.1955, 281 S.W.2d 721. In the first of these cases a part of the question was whether the City could enjoin a person from storing fireworks outside the city limits but within 5,000 feet thereof. This court held that as applied to the question the provisions of the statute were not void but were effective and that such storing could be enjoined by the City. In the second of the cases, an additional element of question was injected, to wit, whether the City could enjoin a person from transporting fireworks within the corporate city limits and the area outside thereof but within 5,000 feet of the City. This court held that the person could be so enjoined.

The City relies in large measure upon said two prior opinions of this court. It contends that they operated to establish the validity of the entire ordinance. This was not intended. What was intended was to pass upon the validity of only those parts of the ordinance necessary to be passed upon in view of the facts of the particular controversy requiring such. While the part of the ordinance relating to transport of fireworks was in part passed upon in the Parker case, the transportation in question was from place to place within the area in question, and from points without to points of destination within such area.

In the instant controversy, Atlas Enterprises was transporting and threatening to transport fireworks from a point without the city limits (plus 5,000 feet) to points of destination other than within the City. The transportation was by private carrier, common carrier, and by use of its own equipment, in any and all events pursuant to the movement of fireworks in intrastate and interstate commerce. In the course of such transportation, the fireworks moved through the city limits of Fort Worth and through the area outside such city limits but within 5,000 feet thereof, or were delivered into the hands of the intrastate or interstate carrier for purposes of carrier transport at their points for receiving the same, which lay within the city limits. The same thing was true as to fireworks which were shipped or transported in intrastate and interstate commerce to Atlas Enterprises, which received as well as dispatched fireworks.

Such was the subject of the instant controversy. The City of Fort Worth sought an injunction prohibiting such usage by Atlas Enterprises in transporting, sending and receiving fireworks. Declaratory judgment was additionally prayed for in declaration of the validity, applicability and enforceability of the provisions of Ordinance No. 3099 as against Atlas Enterprises.

Upon a full and complete hearing, judgment was entered in favor of Atlas Enterprises and against the City. Injunction was denied. Judgment declared that in so far as Ordinance No. 3099 purported to prohibit transport of fireworks within the city limits (plus 5,000 feet exterior thereto) such was beyond the constitutional powers of the City.

From this judgment in favor of Atlas Enterprises the City of Fort Worth appealed. We are of the opinion that the judgment of the trial court was proper and! is to be affirmed.

A municipal ordinance may be void' as to some of its provisions and valid as to-others. Where the ordinance is severable, so that invalid provisions may be eliminated and a valid ordinance left, the invalidity of a part will not invalidate the whole. 30-A Tex.Jur., p. 303, “Municipal Corporations,” sec. 308, “Partial Invalidity.” By the same token the converse may be true, as in the Stoughton and Parker cases previously passed upon by this court, by which the majority of the court held Ordinance No. 3099 valid as applied to the controversies of the parties in litigation. The declaration of validity as to the severable parts in controversy and under consideration did not inhibit a subsequent holding that another severable part was void. Such was the holding of the trial court in the case before us on appeal.

*925 There is no question about the authority to enact the ordinance falling within the police power. In so far as the ordinance operates as a legitimate exercise of the police power it is to be upheld. Such an ordinance can, ordinarily, absolutely prohibit a use which is a nuisance, for that is a legitimate object of the City’s jurisdiction in such respect. However, if it is not in fact a nuisance it cannot be effectively declared to be one by ordinance (see authorities cited in the case of Parker v. City of Fort Worth, supra) and the City’s authority in respect to it is limited to that of reasonable regulation to the extent of the requirements of necessity, for it cannot be prohibited.

Upon the matter of the power of a municipal corporation to declare and define nuisances, it is noticed in McQuillin, Municipal Corporation, 3rd Ed., sec. 24.84, that classification of the subject matter may be made as follows: First, those which in their nature are nuisances per se, or are so denounced by the common law or by statute; second, those which in their nature are not nuisances but may become so by reason of their locality, surroundings, or the manner in which they may be conducted, managed, etc.; third, those which in their nature may be nuisances, but as to which there may be honest differences of opinion in impartial minds. Governing bodies of municipal corporations are entitled to denounce conclusively articles and acts falling within the first and third classifications, but as to those falling within the second classification the prevailing judicial view is that the power possessed is only to declare such of them to be nuisances as are in fact so.

It is to be kept in mind that there is no controversy posed in the instant situation about whether the keeping, storing, using, etc., of fireworks is a nuisance. Both litigants concede that such constitutes ah abatable nuisance. It is, essentially, the matter of transport and passage in commerce through the city, as differentiated from pickup and delivery within the city, which is the matter in controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
311 S.W.2d 922, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1898, 1958 WL 95386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fort-worth-v-atlas-enterprises-texapp-1958.