Lapre v. Kane

36 A.2d 92, 69 R.I. 504, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 92 (Lapre v. Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lapre v. Kane, 36 A.2d 92, 69 R.I. 504, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 5 (R.I. 1944).

Opinions

*505 Flynn, C. J.

This is a petition for certiorari to review the action of the town council of the town of Smithfield in refusing to designate certain premises in that town as a place for keeping swine to be fed on swill, offal or other decaying substances brought from any other town. Pursuant to our citation to show cause why the writ should not issue, the respondents appeared by counsel and produced a certified record of the hearing before the town council and its action. These, by agreement between counsel, were filed as the certified record to be treated as if the writ had issued and they had been returned pursuant thereto. Accordingly, after certain affidavits and counter affidavits were filed, the cause was heard on its merits.

The petitioner, under general laws 1938, chapter 601, §13, filed his application for the designation by the town council, for the keeping of swine to be fed on swill, offal, or other decaying substances brought from any town other than the town of Smithfield, of certain premises thereinafter described. The land in question was not owned but was occupied by petitioner. It consisted of.three parcels, one lying between Lydia Ann Road and Limerock Road, and the other two on the southerly side of Limerock Road. Together they comprised about three hundred acres and were situated in a farming or rural section close to the easterly boundary line of the town of Smithfield and near the town of Lincoln.

After due notice a hearing upon this application was held by the town council at which the petitioner was not present but was represented by counsel. Other persons, who were neighbors or interested residents in the town, appeared and were heard in opposition to the granting of such application. The town council inspected the premises and reported in the record certain observations of conditions which they found there. After considering these and all the facts brought out at the hearing, they rendered a decision refusing to designate such premises for the purposes set forth in the application. That decision and the reasons therefor were given in writing to the petitioner and will be set forth later in this opinion.

*506 The petitioner contends, in substance, that the respondents were biased and prejudiced against him; that for various reasons he had not obtained a full, fair and impartial hearing before them; that their decision refusing to designate the premises described in the application as a place where swine might be kept to be fed on swill brought from any other town was without substantial evidence to support it and was arbitrary and unreasonable; and, finally, that the record which was returned by respondents was erroneous and incomplete in that the stenographic report of the evidence failed to include a full account of all that was said at the hearing. The respondents deny all of these allegations and argue that the record completely refutes the petitioner’s claims.

It is not our purpose to discuss in detail the merits of all these contentions. We have examined them and find that the record before us is substantially a complete and accurate report of the hearing before the town council and of their action; that it does not show that the respondents were biased and prejudiced against the petitioner; that opportunity to examine persons who objected to the granting of the application was not denied to petitioner’s counsel; that he was given opportunity to be heard on all questions; and that, considering the nature of such proceedings, the hearing, on the whole, was fair and impartial.

The petitioner’s chief contention is that the respondents’ action in denying his application was arbitrary in that it was in excess of its jurisdiction under §13 .of the statute. As we understand petitioner’s brief and argument in support of this contention, he claims substantially that: (1) The town council had no authority under §13 to deny the petitioner’s application for designation of these premises as a place where swine could be kept to be fed as described in that section, “unless there is affirmative evidence that the public health, morals, or the general welfare are adversely affected”, and that there was no such evidence before the town council to support its decision; (2) that in any event the decision was *507 arbitrary and unreasonable in that it (a) ignored physical and geographical facts; (b) was discriminatory; (c) amounted to confiscation; and (d) bore no relation whatever to the public health, safety or general welfare but was based solely on complaints by certain objectors concerning conditions and injuries owhich amounted merely to private nuisances.

The answer to the first of these contentions involves to some extent the construction to be given to G. L. 1938, chap. 601, §13, under which the petitioner filed his application. That section of the statute reads: “No swine shall be kept in any town, to be fed on swill, offal or other decaying substances, brought from any other town, except in such place therein as shall be designated by the town council thereof.”

This section was not a part of the law as it appeared in General Statutes 1872, chap. 72. The statute at that time, however, contained a section which now appears as §19, chap. 601, G. L. 1938. It provided: “The town councils of the several towns may make such rules and regulations as they shall deem necessary, to regulate and control the construction and location of all places for keeping swine .. . and may provide for the summary removal or reconstruction of all such as shall be by them deemed prejudicial to the public health . . . .” Notwithstanding that such comprehensive powers were thereby vested at that time in the town councils, the legislature nevertheless thereafter enacted P. L. 1879, chap. 750, thereby adding the two sections which now appear as §§ 13 and 14 of chap. 601, G. L. 1938. Section 14 merely provides a penalty for violation of § 13, which is in question here.

According to petitioner’s construction of the above-quoted §13, it vested no authority in the town council to refuse to designate such a place for keeping swine to be fed on swill, etc., brought from any other town, unless there was evidence that its granting would affect adversely the public health, safety or general welfare.

On the other hand, the respondents chiefly contend that *508 the legislature by §13 made the keeping in any town of swine to be fed on swill, etc., brought from any other town an unlawful business, unless previously licensed by the town council; that it thereby vested in the town council a broad administrative discretion to grant or deny such a license; and that the instant case therefore is governed by principles set forth in cases referred to in Thayer Amusement Corp. v. Moulton, 63 R. 1.182, 189.

In our opinion, the instant case may be decided without necessarily adopting the construction of §13 advocated by the respondents. Assuming, without deciding, that this section submits only to the construction advocated by the petitioner, namely, thát the town council thereby was required to designate such land as a place for keeping swine to be fed on swill, etc.,

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 92, 69 R.I. 504, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapre-v-kane-ri-1944.