Duncan v. City of Des Moines

268 N.W. 547, 222 Iowa 218
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 31, 1936
DocketNo. 43475.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 268 N.W. 547 (Duncan v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. City of Des Moines, 268 N.W. 547, 222 Iowa 218 (iowa 1936).

Opinions

Parsons, C. J.

The Forty-sixth General Assembly of Iowa enacted House File 173 as Chapter 61. This now appears in the Code of 1935 as Chapter 292-G1 under the title “Personal Service Trades”. Section 1 of the act (Code 1935, section 5786-gl) declares a state and national emergency productive of widespread unemployment and disorganization of trade, and declares among the trades particularly affected are those in which the services are rendered upon the person or persons without necessarily involving the sale of merchandise, and that in such trades there is ruinous price-cutting, widespread unemployment and economic distress, and for the purpose of ameliorating such conditions, it is necessary and desirable to authorize the adoption of ordinances providing for fair competition applicable to such trades in the various cities and towns of the state. The second section of the act (Code 1935, section 5786-g2) applies only to those trades where personal services are rendered a person or persons without the sale of merchandise, as such, which are referred to as service trades. In the third section (Code 1935, section 5786-g3) it is provided that in all cities or towns under 2,500 population, the owners, operators or managers of not less than 65%, and in all cities and towns of 2,500 population or over, the owners, operators and managers of not less than 70% of the business establishments in any such service trade in any city or town may apply to the governing body of such city or town for the enactment of an ordinance providing for fair com *220 petition for such trade within such city or town. The councils of the cities and towns shall have jurisdiction within such cities and towns to carry out within their respective jurisdictions the provisions of the chapter. Section 5 of the act (Code 1935, section 5786-g4) holds that any violation of the provision of any ordinance adopted under the provisions of this chapter shall constitute a misdemeanor. That each and every day’s violation shall constitute a separate offense, and each offense is punishable by a fine of not more than one hundred dollars or imprisonment for not more than thirty days. The sixth section (Code 1935, section 5786-g5) provides as follows:

“The application for an ordinance providing for fair competition shall state the number of business establishments in the city or town engaged in the trade petitioning for such ordinance, and signature of only one person respectively signing on behalf of a business establishment, shall be counted in determining the percentage of establishments making application. The application shall set forth the provisions of the requested ordinance. Such ordinance may contain any other fair trade practice provisions which are not unlawful.”

The seventh section (Code 1935, §5786-g6) provides for the approval, rejection or repeal of such application for such an ordinance, and provides:

“and thereafter such adopted ordinance shall regulate as to matter contained therein the conduct of every person engaged in such service trade within its jurisdiction.”

The questions in this case arise under the passage of an ordinance in the City of Des Moines, No. 4278, which contains eight sections, the first section being applicable to barbering services, and contains 22 sub-sections, one of which sub-sections contains sub-sections a, b, and c, all regulating the operation of barber establishments. The seeond section provides the following:

“Section 2. The following are the minimum prices which may be charged for the rendering of the barber services hereinafter named, either singly or in combination, when such services have been rendered by a practitioner of barbering licensed in this state:
Hair Cut . Forty Cents (40c)
*221 Shave . Twenty-Five Cents (25c)
Shampoo . Thirty-Five Cents (35c)
Facial Massage Thirty-Five Cents (35c)
Tonic Twenty-Five Cents (25c)
Singe Twenty-Five Cents (25c)
Facial Steam Twenty-Five Cents (25c)”

Other sections provide that the State Health Officer shall enforce the provisions of the ordinance; that there shall be an annual inspection fee of Three ($3.00) Dollars. Section 6 provides that one resisting the enforcement of any of the provisions of this ordinance shall upon conviction be fined not more than 100 dollars, or be imprisoned not to exceed thirty days, and that each day’s violation is to constitute a separate offense.

This ordinance was evidently aimed to control the practice of barbering in the City of Des Moines, Iowa, by Chapter 124-B2 (section 2585-bll et seq.) first appearing in the Code of 1927, having been passed by the 42d General Assembly as Chapter 48, dealing with the trade of barbering. The Chapter 124-B1 (section 2585-bl) dealing with cosmetology, passed at the same general assembly as chapter 49. All these appear in the Code of 1927 and in the Code of 1935 under Title VIII, headed "Practice of Certain Professions affecting the Public Health”. Included in Title VIII is Chapter 114-G1, Basic Science Law; Chapter 115, General Provisions; Chapter 116, Practice of Medicine and Surgery; Chapter 117, Practice of Podiatry; Chapter 118, Practice of Osteopathy and Surgery; Chapter 119, Practice of Chiropractic; Chapter 120, Practice of Nursing; Chapter 121, Practice of Dentistry; Chapter 122, Practice of Optometry; Chapter 123, Practice of Pharmacy; Chapter 124-C1, Embalming; Chapter 124-B1, Cosmetology; Chapter 124-B2, Barbering.So that on the face of it, the city council is apparently endowed with pretty wide jurisdiction over many professions; that it would be clearly within the power of such bodies to so regulate, if the regulation as to barber shops is to be upheld.

It is true, and it cannot be disputed, that many of these enumerated subjects come, to a certain extent, within the police powers of the state for certain purposes. It is the duty of the state to guard the public health, but the question arising under this legislation would be: May the legislature and the city council regulate the practice of these professions, or various char *222 acters of service rendered thereunder, by providing a scale of prices that may be charged?

This case was brought by the plaintiff, a barber by profession, or occupation, to enjoin the enforcement of ordinance No. 4278. No question was raised as to this being a proper proceeding, so involved in this action is not only the act of the Iowa Legislature passed by the 46th General Assembly, and now Chapter 61 of the Code of 1935, but there is also involved the validity of the ordinance 4278 of the City of Des Moines. The particular part of the ordinance struck at in this action is that portion of Section 2 fixing the minimum charges to be made for service. The charge as to the validity of the ordinance is that it is inimical to the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and of the provisions of the Constitution of the State of Iowa, particularly the provisions of Section 2 of the ordinance.

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Bluebook (online)
268 N.W. 547, 222 Iowa 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1936.