Higgins v. Lacroix

137 N.W. 417, 119 Minn. 145, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 442
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 9, 1912
DocketNos. 17,761 — (191).
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 417 (Higgins v. Lacroix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. Lacroix, 137 N.W. 417, 119 Minn. 145, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 442 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Holt, J.

At the suit of plaintiffs the court enjoined the defendants, as officers of the village of Deer River, from prosecuting plaintiffs for conducting a moving picture show without a license in the village. The defendants appealed from the judgment.

Under the statute empowering village councils “to prevent or license and regulate the exhibition of circuses, theatrical perform *147 anees, or shows of any kind,” the village council of Deer River, a village of about one thousand inhabitants, duly passed an ordinance fixing a license fee of $200 per annum for “every permanent theater, theater comique, vaudeville theater, electric theater, variety show, moving picture show, or other show of similar nature.” The fee prior thereto had been $20 per annum. Plaintiffs are the owners of a leasehold in a building in the village wherein they conduct a permanent picture show. Although they applied for a license, they refuse to pay the fee fixed by the ordinance. Por running the show without a license plaintiffs have been subjected to unsuccessful criminal prosecutions, and these defendants threaten to continue to prosecute them. The prosecutions have affected plaintiffs’ business injuriously and interfere with their enjoyment of the leasehold mentioned. The court also found that plaintiffs always conducted the picture show in a quiet, orderly, and inoffensive way, and that it has always been of a clean, moral, and instructive nature, and that no disturbance or disorder of any kind has ever occurred; that the expenses of conducting the show, including therein a fair living for the one who runs it, equal the receipts; that it could not be carried on if the license fee fixed is exacted; and the ordinance was held unreasonable, excessive, prohibitive, adopted for revenue, and invalid. In the answer defendants, in addition to a denial of the invalidity of the ordinance, attempted to set up a counteraction asking that plaintiffs be enjoined from operating their show until they paid for and obtained a license. The court sustained plaintiffs’ demurrer to defendants’ cause of action.

The errors assigned may be considered under three heads: (a) Rulings on the admission of evidence; (b) the validity or invalidity of the ordinance; and (c) the ruling on the demurrer to defendants’ attempted cause of action.

Against the objections of- defendants, testimony was received of admissions by individual members of the village council tending to show that their motive in fixing the license fee was to obtain funds for a depleted village treasury. The findings clearly indicate that this evidence, in a large measure, influenced the conclusions of the learned trial court against the validity of the ordinance. We think *148 evidence of the motives of the individual members of the village council in passing the ordinance was erroneously received. Legislative acts would rest on insecure ground, indeed, if admissions of the individual legislators that the attainment of a nonpermissible or unlawful end was the motive and purpose in enacting a law are to be received in evidence and be considered by the courts when called to pass on tbeir validity. Discussions of lawmaking bodies when considering and enacting a law may, when the language is obscure and doubtful, be considered by the courts for the purpose of arriving at the true intent and meaning of the act, but manifestly it ought to be beyond the power of one who has been intrusted with authority to enact a law to impeach the same by any subsequent statement of secret or avowed motives entertained at the time of its passage that would work its invalidity. 28 Cyc. 375, 376.

In Soon Hing v. Crowley, 113 U. S. 703, 710, 5 Sup. Ct. 730, 28 L. ed. 1145, it is said:

“Tbe rule is general with reference to the enactments of all legislative bodies that the courts cannot inquire into the motives of the legislators in passing them, except as they may be disclosed on the face of the acts, or inferable from tbeir operation considered with reference to the condition of the country and existing legislation.” An exception to this general rule may be found where an act or ordinance relates to a private contract and was passed to defraud. We conceive that the general rule just stated applies to ordinances of a municipality when they relate solely to the good order and government of the same. State v. City of Lake City, 25 Minn. 404.

We are also of opinion that it was error to receive evidence as to the manner in which these plaintiffs carried on tbeir business, and to let that influence the conclusion upon the validity of the ordinance. On the issue of the reasonableness of the ordinance it was proper to receive evidence as to the number and character of the inhabitants, floating population, and frequenters of the village; as to crowds attracted to amusements that come under the general designation of picture shows, the policing of the same, the kind of exhibition usually staged at moving picture shows in villages situated and made *149 up of a population similar to this village. For this ordinance is general in its application and was not enacted specially for these plaintiffs. It can therefore be of no consequence how they conduct their show, or with what result to themselves. Because the pictures heretofore shown by them have been clean, moral, and instructive, there is no assurance that they will continue so to be. Others may open moving picture shows in the village of a tone different from plaintiffs’ and may meet with better pecuniaiy result.

The main question is the validity of the ordinance, for, even if the evidence above referred to was erroneously received and given effect in the decision, still the judgment is right if the ordinance be invalid. The ordinance is a general enactment covering a number of licensed occupations. However, separate license fees are fixed for the different pursuits, so that the ordinance may be unreasonable as to the fee fixed for one business and proper and valid as to that fixed for another. Therefore the license fee fixed for auctioneers, peddlers, bowling alleys, etc., need not be considered because it can have no. bearing on the reasonableness of the license fee here involved. The sole attack is that the license fee of $200 per annum is excessive and a tax upon a business such as a permanent moving picture show in a village the size of Deer River.

Certain propositions are established by decisions of this court which seem to indicate and control the proper determination of the status of this ordinance. A village council may fix a fee for a licensed calling or business which shall include the necessary cost of issuing the license, and the reasonable expense of supervision and police control over the conduct of the calling or business licensed. It has no right to exact or levy a tax under the guise of a license. However, in fixing the license fee the municipality is accorded a wide discretion. Courts are not to usurp the functions of village or city authorities in the matter. Hnless the amount is so manifestly unreasonable that there is no escape from the conviction that the power given has been abused or exceeded in fixing a license fee, is the.court authorized to declare the ordinance illegal.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

FRANKLIN THEATRE CORPORATION v. City of Minneapolis
198 N.W.2d 558 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1972)
Merrelli v. City of St. Clair Shores
96 N.W.2d 144 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1959)
State v. Red Owl Stores, Inc.
92 N.W.2d 103 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1958)
Starkweather v. Blair
71 N.W.2d 869 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1955)
Central States Theatre Corporation v. Sar
66 N.W.2d 450 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1954)
Arens v. Village of Rogers
61 N.W.2d 508 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1953)
Oscar P. Gustafson Co. v. City of Minneapolis
42 N.W.2d 809 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1950)
Miller v. Minneapolis Underwriters Assn. Inc.
33 N.W.2d 48 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1948)
Anderson v. City of St. Paul
32 N.W.2d 538 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1948)
Ex Parte Davis
1946 OK CR 79 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1946)
Hollywood Theatre Corp. v. City of Indianapolis
34 N.E.2d 28 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1941)
Thayer Amusement Corp. v. Moulton
7 A.2d 682 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1939)
State Ex Rel. Rose Brothers Lumber & Supply Co. v. Clousing
268 N.W. 844 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1936)
Crescent Oil Co. v. City of Minneapolis
225 N.W. 904 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1929)
Kentucky State Board of Dental Examiners v. Payne
281 S.W. 188 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)
City of Ames v. Gerbracht
194 Iowa 267 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1922)
Power v. Nordstrom
184 N.W. 967 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1921)
Xydias Amusement Co. v. City of Houston
185 S.W. 415 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)
Brown v. Stubbs
97 A. 227 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1916)
Mutual Film Co. v. Industrial Commission
215 F. 138 (N.D. Ohio, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 417, 119 Minn. 145, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-lacroix-minn-1912.