Ex Parte Shaw

1916 OK 179, 157 P. 900, 53 Okla. 654, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 446
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 8, 1916
Docket7630
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1916 OK 179 (Ex Parte Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Shaw, 1916 OK 179, 157 P. 900, 53 Okla. 654, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 446 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

The charter of the city of Tulsa (article 2, sec. 3, par. 30) grants power to the city to “regulate the use of automobiles, * * * and the speed thereof, * * * to issue permits for the use of such vehicles and to require the numbering of said vehicles.”

On August 29, 1915, petitioner was arrested, charged with driving an automobile on the streets of said city in violation of Ordinance No. 1165, as amended by Ordinance No. 1250, the pertinent part of which reads:

“Section 1. That it shall be and is unlawful for any person * * * to use or operate upon any public street * * * of the city of Tulsa * * * any motor vehicle * * * without registering such vehicle in the office of the commissioner of finance and revenue of said city, as hereinafter provided.' Before any vehicle shall be entitled to registration the owner thereof shall pay to said commissioner ■ of finance and revenue a license fee *656 for the operation of such vehicle in said city, to wit: For each motor vehicle * * * the sum of $5.00 per annum.”
“Sec. 2. After payment of the license fee prescribed by section 1 of this ordinance, the owner of such vehicle shall furnish to the commissioner of finance and revenue a brief description of the vehicle to be registered, * * * and it shall' thereupon be the duty of the commissioner to register, said vehicle and the description thereof in a book to be kept for that purpose.”

Whereupon the commissioner was required to deliver to the owner' of the vehicle a number plate, to be attached to the rear of the car. Petitioner had complied with the “general highway law” (chapter 173, art. 4, sec. 1 et seq., Sess. Laws 1915), and had paid a registration fee and taken out a license from the Department of Highways, and the department had issued him a certificate of registration and a number plate, which he had displayed on the rear of his car as required by that act. The ordinance and the act required of him substantially the same thing. In support of his right to be released on habeas corpus he relies on on section 8 of said act, which reads:

“Subject to the express provisions' of this article local authorities shall have no power to pass, enforce or maintain any ordinance, rule or regulation requiring from any owner to whom this article is applicable any tax, fee, license or permit for the free use of the public highways, or excluding or prohibiting any motor vehicle registered in compliance with this article from the free use of the public highways or the accessories used thereon, and no ordinance, rule or regulation in any way contrary to or inconsistent with the provisions of this article, now in force or hereafter enacted, shall- have any force or effect”

*657 —and contends that said section supersedes the ordinance-. In the absence of said section it. might be successfully maintained that, there being no conflict in the requirements of the ordinance and the statute, both might stand together and run concurrently, so as to require the payment of a license or registration fee by petitioner to both the city and the state. But in view of said section, which imposes an express restriction on the city to enforce the ordinance, petitioner’s contention must be sustained. In a valuable note to Brazier v. Philadelphia, 215 Pa. 297, 64 Atl. 508, reported in 7 Ann. Cas. 551, the learned author says:

“The reported case holds that, in the absence of aft expressed or implied restriction imposed by the Legislature, a city, by virtue of its power to protect its citizens in the use of its streets, has the right to pass an ordinance regulating the use of automobiles within the city limits. It also holds that a city ordinance for this purpose is not superseded or annulled by a subsequent statute on the same subject, designated to operate throughout the entire state, unless the two enactments- are so inconsistent that they cannot stand together, -or unless it appears from the terms of the statute that it is intended to supplant the ordinance. This latter holding is merely an application of the well-settled general principle that the right of a city to pass an ordinance in the exercise of its police power is not necessarily taken away by the enactment by the state of a general law on the same subject. If the two enactments conflict, the ordinance must give way; but if- they do not conflict, both should be given effect.”

In the light of which we believe that the Legislature intended by section 8 to deprive the city of the power contained in its charter to pass, or, if passed, to enforce, any ordinance requiring an additional fee for the same privilege afforded by a compliance with the act. Such *658 being intended, and petitioner having registered his motor vehicle in compliance with the act, we are of opinion that he is entitled to the free use of the public highways of the city, and that the ordinance complained of is void.

In City of Newport v. Merkel Bros. Co., 156 Ky. 580, 161 S. W. 549, the city, on June 4, 1909, passed an ordinance in effect levying a license fee on all persons using an automobile on the streets of the city. Later the state passed an act doing substantially the same thing, in which it exempted from the payment of the tax nonresidents who had complied with the law of their domicile in procuring such license. In a suit by such nonresident-to test the validity of the act, and to enjoin a threatened prosecution under the ordinance so far as plaintiff was concerned, the court in effect held that the ordinance, in so far as it required an automobile license for motor vehicles owned by nonresidents, who had complied with the law of their domicile in procuring a license, was in conflict with and was superseded by the act, and hence the ordinance was inoperative and void. Referring to the act, the court said:

“Manifestly this statute was enacted by virtue of the police power of the state, and is designed to regulate the use of motor vehicles. Properly speaking, it is not a revenue measure, though incidentally revenue is derived therefrom. Undoubtedly the state has the right, under the police power, to legislate in the interest of the public health, public safety, or public morals. There can be no question,-therefore, of the right of the Legislature, in the exercise of the police power, to regulate, the driving of automobiles and motorcycles on the public ways of the commonwealth; and, while the city of Newport has the power from the state to tax, and may, under the police power, by ordinance, reasonably regulate the use that may be made of its streets by automobiles and other ve *659 hides, either or both these powers are subject to any statute of the state in force, and may be withdrawn from it by the Legislature of the state. Indeed, it may be said to be a recognized doctrine that the power of the- Legislature with respect to police regulation cannot be delegated by that body, so as to preclude the resumption of the power by it. This rule is stated in 25 Cyc. 501, as follows: ‘The Legislature has the undoubted right by a later act to divest a municipal corporation of its right to impose license taxes and'resume the exercise of the power itself.’ Brazier v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 179, 157 P. 900, 53 Okla. 654, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-shaw-okla-1916.