Ex Parte Broussard

169 S.W. 660, 74 Tex. Crim. 333, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 692
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1913
DocketNo. 2759.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 660 (Ex Parte Broussard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Broussard, 169 S.W. 660, 74 Tex. Crim. 333, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 692 (Tex. 1913).

Opinions

HABPEB, Judge.

The city council of the City of Beaumont passed the following ordinance:

“Article 991. It shall be unlawful hereafter for any person, corporation or association of persons to establish or maintain any slaughter house, bone boiler or soap making establishment, in the City of Beaumont, or any brick yards, livery stable, horse lots and stock pens, within a distance of 300 feet of any hotel or private residence in the City of Beaumont, without first obtaining a permit from the city council.”

Other provisions of the ordinance provided that the term “stock pen” as used in the ordinance should include any lot wherein more than six *335 head of cattle were kept, and the penalty fixed thereto was hy fine not less than $25 nor more than $100.

Appellant was arrested charged with a violation of this ordinance, in that he maintained a stock pen containing more than six head of cows on lots 3 to 6, in block 2, in Blanchette Second Addition to the City of Beanmont, without having obtained a license or permit from the city council.

There is no claim that tire complaint is not a valid one, if the ordinance is valid. When appellant was arrested on the complaint he sued out a writ of habeas corpus before Hon. W. H. Davidson, Judge of the Fifty-eighth District Court, who granted the writ and set the cause down for hearing. When heard the court held the ordinance valid and remanded the relator to custody, from which judgment and order he prosecutes this appeal, assigning the following errors: That the court erred in holding the ordinance valid for these reasons:

1. That the ordinance is not fair, impartial and uniform. 2. That the ordinance delegates to the city council despotic and arbitrary power. 3. That said ordinance is in contravention of section 28 of article 1 of the Constitution of this State. 4. That- said ordinance is in contravention of section 19 of article 1 of the Constitution of this State. 5. That said ordinance contravenes section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

Belator’s counsel have filed a very able brief in which they take up and discuss all of these assignments. That the ordinance is not violative of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, nor any other provision thereof, has been specifically held by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Fischer v. St. Louis, 194 U. S., 361 (48th Law. Ed., 1019). In that case they passed an ordinance which reads as follows: “No. dairy or cow stable shall hereafter he erected, built or established within the limits of this city without first having obtained permission so to do from the municipal assembly.” This- ordinance was assailed upon every ground upon which relator assails this ordinance. The Supreme Court upheld the ordinance, saying:

“Defendant’s main contention, however, is that, hy vesting in the municipal assembly the power to permit the erection of dairy and cow stables to certain persons, a discrimination is thus declared in favor of such person, and against all other persons, and the equal protection of the laws denied to all the disfavored class. The power of the Legislature to authorize its municipalities to regulate and suppress all such places or occupations as, in its judgment, are likely to be injurious to the health of its inhabitants, or to disturb people living in the immediate neighborhood by loud noises or offensive odors, is so clearly within the police power as to be no longer open to question. The keeping of swine and cattle within the city or designated limits of the city has been declared in a number of cases to be within the police power. The keeping of cow stables and dairies is not'only likely to be offensive to neighbors, but it is too often made an excuse for the supply of impure *336 milk from cows which are fed upon unhealthful food, such as the refuse from distilleries, etc. Re Linehan, 72 Cal., 114, 13 Pac., 170; Quincy v. Kennard, 151 Mass., 563, 24 N. E., 860; Love v. Recorder’s Court Judge, 128 Mich., 545, 55 L. R. A., 618, 87 N. W., 785.

“We do not regard the fact that permission to keep cattle may be granted by the municipal assembly as impairing, in any degree, the validity of the ordinance, or as denying to the disfavored dairy keepers the equal protection of the laws. Such discrimination might well be made where one person desired to keep two cows, and another fifty; where one desired to establish a stable in the heart of the city, and another in the suburbs; or, where one was known to keep his stable in a filthy condition, and another had established a reputation for good order and cleanliness. Such distinctions are constantly made the basis for licensing one person to sell intoxicating liquors, and denying it to others. The question in each case is whether the establishing of a dairy and cow stable is likely, in the hands of the applicant, to be a nuisance or not to the neighborhood, and to imperil or conduce to the health of its customers. As the dispensing power must be vested in some one, it is not easy to see why it may not properly be delegated to the municipal assembly which enacted the ordinance. Of course, cases may be imagined where the power to issue permits may be abused, and the permission accorded to social or political favorites and denied to others, who, for reasons totally disconnected with the merits of the case, are distasteful to the licensing power.”

This so clearly expresses the rule of law applicable to this case, we adopt the language there used.

That the council may act arbitrarily under the authority there granted does not render the ordinance void. The presumption of law is that the council will act within the spirit and intent of the law,—that is, in such manner as they deem necessary for the public health and welfare of the city. If they do act' arbitrarily in the premises this would not in and of itself render the ordinance void, but such action would be revised and controlled by the proper tribunal. As said by some of the -courts, the practice of nearly a century that there is little to fear from an abuse of this power. In the government of affairs of a municipality many powers must necessarily be confided to the jurisdiction of its officers, and it can be productive only of mischief in the treatment of such questions to substitute the discretion of strangers in place of that of the officers best acquainted with the circumstances, conditions and necessities of the case. That the law furnishes ample remedies for the .abuse of such discretion, when the action taken is but an arbitrary exercise of power, can hardly be questioned. It is a discretion confided that must be exercised in the interest of the public welfare, in the interest of the public health, and the public peace, and if the facts should show that in the refusal of the permit or license no such incentives or purposes were behind the action of the council, then in application for a writ of mandamus made to the proper tribunal, the council would be compelled to issue the license or permit. The facts as agreed to in this *337

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 660, 74 Tex. Crim. 333, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-broussard-texcrimapp-1913.