Laurelle v. Bush

119 P. 953, 17 Cal. App. 409, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 59
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 972.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 119 P. 953 (Laurelle v. Bush) 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
Laurelle v. Bush, 119 P. 953, 17 Cal. App. 409, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 59 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

The plaintiff in the above-entitled proceeding petitioned the superior court for a writ of mandate, requiring and compelling the defendant, as the tax collector and ex officio license collector of the city and county of San Francisco, to issue to plaintiff a license to engage in the moving picture business. The petition for the writ in the main alleged that on the third day of March, 1911, the plaintiff tendered to defendant, in his official capacity as tax and license collector, the sum of $25, the amount fixed by ordinance as a license fee for opening and operating a moving picture exhibition. Thereupon plaintiff demanded of defendant a license to carry on said business at the premises known and designated as number 452 Castro street in said city and county. It was further alleged in the paintiff’s petition that said premises were not within a distance of two hundred feet from the front line of any church or school, or within one *412 hundred feet of the property line of the sides or rear of any church or school; that the defendant refused to issue said license, and that by reason thereof plaintiff is prohibited from engaging in a lawful and useful business.

The plaintiff in his petition, and here, bases his claim of right to the license in question solely upon the provisions of ordinance No. 777 of the city and county of San Francisco, which requires in substance that every person, firm or corporation maintaining or conducting any museum, panorama, cyclorama, kinetoseope or phonograph parlor, wherein an admission fee is charged, and operated for the entertainment or amusement of the public, shall pay a license fee of $25 per quarter. The ordinance provides further that the tax collector shall not issue a license to any person, firm or corporation to conduct such business unless the applicant therefor shall have first obtained from the board of police commissioners a permit to conduct the same, and that the board of police commissioners shall not issue any permit to any person who proposes to maintain said business within a distance of two hundred feet from the front line of any church or school, or within one hundred feet of the property line of the sides or rear of any church or school. Provision is then made that these restrictions shall not apply to buildings already erected or in course of construction, and especially designed to be used for kinetoseope or other similar exhibitions, and that no other restrictions as to the location of such business shall be considered by the board of police commissioners.

Although plaintiff’s petition makes specific reference by title and number to the ordinance just referred to, no mention is made of the fact that the ordinance requires a permit from the board of police commissioners before the defendant is authorized to issue a license. In this connection it appears that ordinance No. 777, which was enacted and approved in 1903, related only to the imposing of a license fee upon the owners of “museums, panoramas or eycloramas or any kinetoscope or phonograph parlor,” and did not purport to regulate the conduct or restrict the location of such business. In the year 1908 this ordinance was amended solely by including within its provisions the clauses which required a permit from the board of police commissioners and prohibited the location *413 of the designed exhibitions within the limits hereinbefore specified.

It should be noted in passing that the board of supervisors in 1909, by a supplementary ordinance known as “No. 761, New Series,” made it unlawful for any person to conduct or carry on any “moving picture” exhibition without first making application for and receiving a permit from the board of police commissioners. The only additional requirement of this ordinance, in so far as the procurement of a permit is concerned, is that the applicant must file his application in writing, which shall be signed by him, give his address, and specify by street and number the place where the proposed “moving picture” exhibition is to be located.

Other provisions of the ordinance give immediate supervision and censorship of all pictures which may be exhibited, after a permit is granted and a license issued, to the police commissioners, and provision is also made for the revocation of permits in the event of a violation of certain prescribed rules not mentioned in the first ordinance, which are intended to keep the moving picture business within the limits of ordinary decency and morality. The validity of those rules is not assailed in this proceeding, and, therefore, they need not be further mentioned or considered.

The answer of the defendant set out in haec verba the original ordinance relied upon by the plaintiff, together with the amendatory and supplementary ordinance just referred to, and then pleaded as a defense to the action that the plaintiff at no time obtained the required permit in writing to engage in the kinetoscope or any similar business, and that for this reason alone the defendant refused to issue a license to plaintiff.

The plaintiff interposed a demurrer to the defendant’s answer upon the ground that the facts therein stated did not constitute a defense. This demurrer was sustained without leave to amend. Thereupon judgment for plaintiff was entered in effect upon the pleadings, and the mandate of the court issued compelling the defendant to grant the license prayed for. The defendant appeals from the judgment.

The trial court, in sustaining the demurrer to the defendant’s answer, proceeded presumably upon the theory advanced by plaintiff that the ordinances in question are uneonstitu *414 tional in this, (1) that they are unreasonable, discriminatory and oppressive, and an unlawful interference with and an unnecessary restraint of a useful and lawful occupation; and (2) that they attempt to delegate legislative powers and functions from the board of supervisors, a legislative body, to the police commissioners, an administrative board.

In support of this theory it is assumed by plaintiff’s counsel that the ordinances under consideration do not attempt in any way or form to regulate or restrict the business of exhibiting moving pictures, and therefore it is argued that the ordinances are but the grant of an arbitrary power to the police commissioners, whereby they are given the sole and unrestricted authority to grant or refuse any application for the permit required by the ordinances.

If the assumption upon which this argument is founded were true, the result contended for might follow as a matter of law; but as we read and understand the several ordinances, they are not susceptible of any such construction. “Moving picture” exhibitions are not specifically designated in the category of amusements required to be licensed by ordinance No. 777, nor is any mention made of “moving pictures” in so many words by the amendment thereto, which purports to regulate “cyeloramas, kinetoseope” and other similar entertainments.

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Bluebook (online)
119 P. 953, 17 Cal. App. 409, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurelle-v-bush-calctapp-1911.