Larsen v. Salt Lake City

141 P. 98, 44 Utah 437, 1914 Utah LEXIS 45
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1914
DocketNo. 2529
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 141 P. 98 (Larsen v. Salt Lake City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larsen v. Salt Lake City, 141 P. 98, 44 Utah 437, 1914 Utah LEXIS 45 (Utah 1914).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

The substance of the complaint is: The plaintiffs are proprietors of a rooming house of 114 rooms known as the St. Cecile Hotel, in Salt Lake City, in which they have invested $16,000. As alleged, they conducted the business '“in a proper, orderly, and lawful manner.” Two ordinances •of the city are alleged, one passed in December, 1903, by the then.mayor and city council, by which a license fee •of fifty dollars is provided for a rooming house of forty rooms or over, the other passed by the board of commissioners of the city in July, 1912, which provides for a license fee of $200 for hotels and rooming houses of one hundred rooms or over. It is alleged the latter is invalid, and that the prior is still in force. On December 30, 1912. the plaintiffs applied to the board of commissioners for a license from January 1, 1913, to January 1, 1914. The board referred the application to the chief of police, who reported that he had inspected plaintiff’s rooming house ■and recommended that ¡.he license be not granted. The board thereupon notified plaintiffs to appear before it “and ■show cause why their license should be granted.” At the [441]*441appointed time the plaintiffs appeared, “and said board proceeded to a pretended and mock hearing of said matter,” and that “at said pretended hearing the board violated almost all rules of evidence, denied the plaintiffs’ right by cross-examination or otherwise to test the credibility of witnesses testifying against them, and refused to hear or consider pertinent and relevant evidence, and admitted incompetent and hearsay evidence against them, all in keeping-with their predisposed intent ánd fixed purpose to deny them said license.” Other charges are made that at the hearing some of the commissioners held “whispered conversations with the complaining witness, a detective of the city and confidential agent of the chief of police,” and that the detective, without the consent or knowledge of the plaintiffs, caused and induced women of ill repute to procure lodging in the plaintiffs’ rooming house, employed men of low character and ill repute tp visit the house, and “to commit violations of the law” therein, and then caused the arrest of the plaintiffs, and that the detective personally visited the house and attempted “by various arts, means, and devices to induce plaintiffs’ servants to. violate the law and commit crimes therein, and conspired with women of ill repute and immoral men to enter plaintiffs’ hotel” for immoral purposes, and by such means, and by. circulating ill reports, attempted to injure the good name of the plaintiffs’ house. It is further alleged that the board, “without any legal investigation of the facts or knowledge of the facts,” and “arbitrarily, unlawfully, and capriciously, refused to grant plaintiffs a license, and that, unless restrained, the commissioners and chief of police under the direction of the board will arrest the plaintiffs in the conduct of their business, and will greatly annoy and harrass them,” to their great and irreparable loss and damage.

The prayer is: (1) That the order of the commissioners denying the plaintiffs a license be annulled and vacated; (2) that the ordinance requiring the payment of a $200 fee for a license be declared void; (3) that, pending a hearing of the matters presented by the complaint, the board [442]*442be required to issue plaintiffs a license, subject to tbe final disposition of tbe case, and that in tbe meantime tbe commissioners and tbe chief of police be restrained from in any manner interfering witb tbe plaintiffs’ rooming bouse business “on tbe claim tbat they are conducting a rooming bouse business without license”; and (4) for general relief.

We have thus set forth tbe substance of tbe complaint, for it is somewhat difficult to ascertain its exact character, whether a complaint or petition for a writ of mandate, cer-tiorari, or, as denominated by counsel, a complaint or bill in equity.

Upon this complaint tbe court, on plaintiffs’ application, granted a temporary restraining order and directed tbe commissioners, upon payment of fifty dollars, to grant tbe plaintiffs a license, subject, however, to the final disposition of tbe case. Tbe order was complied witb, and such a license granted, and tbe commissioners and chief of police, pending tbe action, restrained from interfering witb tbe plaintiffs’ business upon tbe ground or claim tbat they were conducting tbe business without a license.

Tbe city and tbe commissioners, answering, pleaded tbe ordinance of 1912, under which they claim power and authority to grant and refuse licenses, and averred tbat when the plaintiffs filed their application for a license—

“tbe application was, as required by said ordinance, duly referred to tbe chief of police of Salt Lake City, who thereafter reported tbat plaintiffs’ place bad been inspected and recommended tbat a license be not granted; tbat thereupon said plaintiffs were notified to appear before said board to show cause why their application should be granted, which tbe plaintiffs did, both in person and by their attorney; tbat a bearing was duly bad upon tbe question of whether or not a license should issue, at which bearing evidence was introduced and admissions made by plaintiffs, from which evidence and admissions said board held and decided that such application for a license should be denied; tbat such bearing was within ■ tbe power of such board as conferred upon it by law and said decision was based upon [443]*443tbe evidence and admissions aforesaid, and was neither arbitrary or unlawful or capricious.”

Tbe matter came on for bearing before tbe court. Tbe plaintiffs were unprepared to go to trial on. tbe ground, as asserted by tbeir counsel, of tbe serious illness of one of tbe plaintiffs wbo personally conducted tbe business, and wbo, and not tbe other plaintiff, was cognizant of tbe facts. To avoid a continuance, counsel for tbe defendants stated that a written statement by plaintiffs’ counsel would be accepted as tbe testimony of tbe absent plaintiff. Such a statement was prepared and submitted. Defendants’ counsel then admitted that tbe plaintiff, if present, would so testify, and consented that tbe statement be received in lieu bf bis testimony, subject otherwise, to objections as to competency, relevancy, and materiality. Tbe plaintiffs offered tbe statement in evidence. Portions of it were received, and portions, on defendants’ objections, excluded. Tbe plaintiffs adduced no other evidence and rested. Tbe court thereupon, on tbe defendants’ motion, granted a nonsuit. In ruling upon it, tbe court observed:

“Tbe plaintiff has probably shown that be comes within tbe class of persons that are entitled to a license; that is to say, if tbe court were sitting as a board for tbe bearing" of applications for license, be has probably shown that be has made proper application, and is willing to pay tbe fee, and is not disqualified from having a license. But be has not shown, or attempted to show, that- tbe exercise of discretion of tbe board of commissioners was exercised arbitrarily, or without evidence, or that they abused tbeir discretion in any respect. Tbe motion for nonsuit will be granted.”

Pending tbe appeal the court, on plaintiffs’ application,, continued in force tbe restraining order and tbe license theretofore issued upon tbe condition that tbe plaintiffs pay tbe additional sum of $150.

[444]*4441 [443]*443Tbe plaintiffs appealed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P. 98, 44 Utah 437, 1914 Utah LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larsen-v-salt-lake-city-utah-1914.