Fernan v. City of Palo Alto

122 P.2d 965, 50 Cal. App. 2d 374, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 941
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1942
DocketCiv. 6636
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 122 P.2d 965 (Fernan v. City of Palo Alto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fernan v. City of Palo Alto, 122 P.2d 965, 50 Cal. App. 2d 374, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 941 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

COMSTOCK, J. pro tem.

Plaintiffs prosecute this appeal from a judgment in favor of defendants in an action for an injunction seeking to restrain the defendants from enforcing an ordinance of the city of Palo Alto requiring the payment of license fees in connection with the conduct of a laundry business.

It was stipulated that all of the allegations in the First Amended Complaint are true, except the allegation that the ordinance in question is illegal and void.

The plaintiffs are copartners engaged in the laundry business. The plant where their washing and ironing are done is located in the city and county of San Francisco. They have *376 customers in various localities in the San Francisco Bay area, including San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties and the city of Palo Alto. Motor vehicles are operated by plaintiffs throughout these localities for the purpose of picking up articles to be laundered, transporting them to the plant in San Francisco, where they are washed and ironed, and then returning them to the customers. Plaintiffs have thirty-five employees at their establishment where the laundering is done. They do a gross annual business of about $900 in Palo Alto and about $60,000 in other localities, including San Francisco.

Appellants contend that the ordinance is beyond the power of the city to enact or enforce and is unequal, unfair, unreasonable, discriminatory, unconstitutional and void.

The provisions under attack are section 215, subsection “ c, ” of Codified Ordinance No. 3 of defendant city, as amended, section 678 of said ordinance, as amended, and section 684 thereof, as amended. The first-mentioned provides that any person, firm or corporation, engaged in the laundry business in the city of Palo Alto, or taking orders for laundering, or washing of any article of clothing, linens, napery, blankets, bed clothing, or fabrics of any kind whatsoever, to be laundered or washed, for hire, whether said work is to be done within or without the limits of the city of Palo Alto, shall pay a license fee to be calculated upon a basis of the number ,of employees at the plant or place of laundering. Where the number of such employees is four or less, the license fee is $15 per quarter, where more than four and less than fifteen, $30 per quarter, and where fifteen or more, $45 per quarter. The second requires any such persons engaging in such business in said city to first obtain a permit from the Board of Public Safety of said city and that no license or permit therefor shall be issued by said board until the plant or place of laundering and the employees engaged therein shall have been inspected by the Health Officer of said city, or his duly authorized representative, under the rules and regulations of the Board of Public Safety, and the sanitary character of the plant and the absence of contagious or infectious disease among its agents or employees shall be certified to by him; provided, that if such laundry establishment is situated outside of the city of Palo Alto, the Health Officer, in lieu of such inspection “may accept a certificate” from the Board of Health, Health Officer or other health authority of the city or town where such establishment is located, certifying to such health conditions. Where the plant is situated in Palo Alto, *377 such inspections are required to be made without charge. Said section 684 provides that whenever any laundry seeking to do business within the city of Palo Alto is located without the city limits of said city “and is unable from any cause to produce a satisfactory certificate from the health authority” in the town or city where it is located, certifying to the health conditions at such establishment, it may, before a permit is granted, be required to submit to an inspection by the Health Officer of the City of Palo Alto, for the making of which he shall charge mileage at the rate of 15c per mile for each mile actually traveled by him from his office in the city of Palo Alto to the place where inspection is made, and return therefrom, and in addition is required to charge a fee for such inspection at the rate of $2.50 per hour for each hour actually spent in making such inspection, from the time of his departure from his office in the city of Palo Alto until the time of his return thereto; provided, that where two or more laundries are inspected on the same trip, the time occupied in traveling to and from such establishments “may be pro-rated and charged proportionately to such establishments.”

There is no serious disagreement between the parties as to the principles underlying the doctrine of equal protection and uniform application of the law. These principles have been exhaustively dealt with in numerous decisions of our supreme and appellate courts and it will serve no useful purpose to reiterate here general principles so well established and understood. The difficulty arises in attempting to apply those principles to any case possessing unusual circumstances.

A well-established rule of construction which must always be borne in mind when approaching the solution of a problem such as that before us has frequently been quoted from Ex parte Haskell, 112 Cal. 412, 416 [44 Pac. 725, 32 L. R. A. 527], wherein the court said: “It is urged . . . that the particular provision in question is unreasonable and oppressive, and that it is unequal and unlawfully discriminating . . . A municipal ordinance must be very clearly obnoxious to such objections as those made, or some one of them, before it will be declared invalid by the courts. Every intendment is to be indulged in favor of its validity, and all doubts resolved in a way to uphold the law-making power; and a contrary conclusion will never be reached upon light consideration. It is the province and right of the municipality to regulate its local affairs—within the law, of course,—and it is the duty of the courts to uphold such regulations, except it manifestly appear *378 that the ordinance or by-law transcends the power of the municipality, and contravenes rights secured to the citizen by the constitution, or laws made in pursuance thereof. ’ ’

In respect to the provisions of the ordinance basing the license fee to be charged upon the number of employees at the laundry plant, appellants, while conceding the general proposition that license charges for revenue purposes on business or occupations transacted within a municipality may properly be based upon the volume of business done therein and that various means have been lawfully employed for measuring the volume, including gross receipts, number of vehicles employed and number of employees, insist that under the circumstances here to base the license fee on the number of employees at their plant outside the city operates extra-territorially and exceeds the power of the city, unlawfully discriminates against them and in favor of laundries doing their washing within the city, and violates the principle that an ordinance may not be devised solely for the purpose of erecting a protective tariff for the benefit of businesses located within the city. No case has been cited by either the appellants or the respondents which is strictly analogous on its facts.

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Bluebook (online)
122 P.2d 965, 50 Cal. App. 2d 374, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernan-v-city-of-palo-alto-calctapp-1942.