Dutton v. Mayor of Knoxville

121 Tenn. 25
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 Tenn. 25 (Dutton v. Mayor of Knoxville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dutton v. Mayor of Knoxville, 121 Tenn. 25 (Tenn. 1908).

Opinion

MR. Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The complainants charge in their bill that they are hucksters, each engaged on his own account in selling from wagons direct to consumers in the city of Knoxville vegetables, butter, eggs, poultry, fruit, and other products of the farm, garden, and orchard; that each has a license from Knox county authorizing him to carry on the trade of a huckster, and has paid to the county the tax fixed by the legislature for' carrying on business of this character; that each is a resident, citizen, and taxpayer of Knox county; that all of the complainants have been engaged in the business referred to for a long period of time, and many of them for years; that this business constitutes their only means of livelihood.

It is further alleged that the complainants buy the articles thus handled by them sometimes direct from the producer, and sometimes on the market; that they do not raise the articles themselves.

It is further alleged that the city of Knoxville affords the principal and practically the only market for the sale of their goods; that, when they took out their licenses-from the county court of Knox county, they did so with a view to, and for the purpose of, selling to the people of the city of Knoxville; that a business of this character has been carried on, not only by themselves, but by others for years in the city of Knoxville without arrest.

It is further alleged that the city refused to permit them, or any of them, to carry on the business referred [28]*28to inside the city limits; that whenever one of complainants begins to sell, or to offer his goods for sale, he is required to cease selling, and, if he persists, he is arrested ; that complainants have offered .to pay the city authorities, and have tendered to them money to pay for a huckster’s license, and not only so, but have agreed to pay any reasonable tax the city might require of them; that the city, however, has refused to accept their money, or to issue licenses to them, and has warned complainants that, if they persist in selling, they will be arrested, and that some of the complainants have been arrested and fined; that the result of this condition of affairs is that the complainants’ business has been destroyed, and they have lost their occupation and means of livelihood.

It is further alleged that the defendant, while refusing to permit the complainants to carry on the trade of hucksters inside the city limits, permits any person who grows his fruit or vegetables or raises his poultry or other produce on his own land to carry on the trade of a huckster from wagons in the city of Knoxville without license, and without hindrance.

It is further alleged that chapter 207, p. 755, Acts 1907, incorporating the city of Knoxville, expressly confers the power upon the city to license hucksters, hawk ers, peddlers, grocers, merchants, etc.

It is further alleged that allowing persons who raise their own produce to sell the same from the wagons without license, and refusing to allow persons who do not raise the produce which they offer for sale the right [29]*29to sell from their wagons without license, is an unlawful and unjust discrimination between the complainants and the citizens last referred to.

It is further alleged that such ordinance of the city is void as in violation of the constitution of this State, and of the United States.

Thereupon the complainants asked for, and obtained an injunction to restrain the execution of the ordinance under which the city is acting.

To this bill the defendant city filed a demurrer, making several points, but we need only notice the following:

That the charter referred to in the bill gave to the city the power “to regulate the inspection of milk, butter and lard, and other provisions and fish and vegetables; to restrain and punish forestalling and regrating of provisions; to establish and regulate markets,” and that the right exercised by the city falls within the provisions of the charter just quoted, particularly within the provision against “forestalling and regrating,” that the complainants and persons who raise their own produce are not in the same class, but are in a different class, and a discrimination between the two is reasonable and natural.

We think the chancellor acted correctly in sustaining the demurrer.

The city had the right under its charter to protect its inhabitants against the unlawful raising of the price of the necessaries of life, such as would naturally result

[30]*30from the practice of forestalling the market by persons who wonld buy from the producers of market products for the purpose of resale within the city. “Forestalling” is defined: “Buying victuals on their way to market before they reach it, with intent to sell again at a higher price.” 1 Bouv. L. Dict., p. 677. “Regrating” is the buying of corn or other dead victual in any market, and selling it again in the same market, since this enhances the price of the provisions, as every successive seller must have a successive profit. 4 Black. Com. In Nightingale’s Case, 28 Mass., 168, an ordinance was sustained reading as follows: “That no inhabitant of the city of Boston, or any town in the vicinity. thereof, not offering for sale the produce of his own farm, or of some farm in his neighborhood, shall at any season of the year, without permission of the clerk of Faneuil Hall Market, be suffered to occupy any stand with cart, sleigh or otherwise; for the purpose of vending commodities in' either of the streets, mentioned in the first section of this ordinance; and every such person, on being so ordered, shall remove from out of said streets.” Responding to the objection that this ordinance was partial because it did not operate upon all of the citizens of the commonwealth equally, but made a distinction between the citizens of Boston and its vicinity and the inhabitants of distant towns in the commonwealth, the court said: “We cannot think that there is any weight in this objection. A regulation of this description could hardly be framed so as to avoid a partial operation arising from local [31]*31■(Situation and other circumstances. But the partial operation of the ordinance can he no objection to its validity, providing it does not infringe private rights, and it is very clear that it does not. The city government had an undoubted right to prohibit the occupation of a stand in the streets by any one, or by any one not having a license or permission for that purpose from the clerk of the market. In the case of Vanderbilt v. Adams, Treasurer of N. Y. Hospital, 7 Cow. (N. Y.), 349, it was decided that an act authorizing the harbor masters to regulate and station vessels in East and North rivers in New York, and imposing a penalty for disobeying their orders, extends to wharves in the hands of private owners, and is not unconstitutional, but is valid as a police regulation. There is certainly nothing contained in the ordinance in question which can be pretended to operate as a violation of private rights; nor does it operate as an improper restraint of trade, but is a wholesome regulation of it, to prevent the market from being unnecessarily thronged and incumbered.” 28 Mass., 168, 171. In Louisville v. Rowpe,

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Bluebook (online)
121 Tenn. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutton-v-mayor-of-knoxville-tenn-1908.