Lockwood v. Baird

231 N.W. 851, 59 N.D. 713, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 189
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 851 (Lockwood v. Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockwood v. Baird, 231 N.W. 851, 59 N.D. 713, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 189 (N.D. 1930).

Opinion

*716 ChbistiaNSON, J.

The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. In his brief plaintiff says:

“This action was brought by W. L. Lockwood, proprietor of the Lockwood Automobile Tourist Camp at Yalley City, to test the validity or applicability to his tourist camp of certain provisions of Chapter 144 of the Laws of 1929 entitled: ‘An Act providing for the inspection of hotels, lodging houses, boarding houses, and restaurants; prescribing sanitary requirements therefor; providing for licensing, payment and disposition of license fees; providing for the revocation of licenses; defining the duties of the state food commission and chemist with regard to the act; providing for penalties for violation thereof and repealing existing laws relating thereto.’ ”

Baird, the state food commissioner and Shipley, an inspector of hotels appointed by him, are named as defendants in the action. These defendants demurred to the complaint on the ground that it “does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The demurrer was sustained. Subsequently judgment of dismissal was entered and the plaintiff has appealed.

• In his complaint the plaintiff alleges that he owns and operates a tourist camp in Yalley City in this state, consisting of four small cabins and one larger cabin; that such cabins are furnished with bed-frames, bed springs, straw mattresses, etc. That the plaintiff charges tourists for the accommodations furnished the sum of $1,25 per day for two or more persons for the use of the smaller cabins and $2.00 or more per day for the use of the larger cabin,— which charges include *717 tbe use of the community kitchen of the camp for the preparation and serving of meals, etc. That in September, 1929, the defendant Ship-ley, hotel inspector, appeared at said camp and claimed that the same was a hotel within the meaning of chapter 144, Laws 1929, and claimed the right to inspect, and did inspect, the said camp and claimed, and received, from the plaintiff an inspection fee for inspecting pach of the said cabins. That at said time said Shipley gave notice to the plaintiff that inasmuch as he (plaintiff) was charging more than fifty cents per night for each person for lodging in the camp that the mattresses furnished by him failed to comply with the provisions of § 6 of said chapter 144, and that he would be required to replace the same with mattresses complying with the requirements of said statute. That thereafter the plaintiff received through the mail a notice from Baird, state food commissioner, calling his attention to the provisions of § 6, chapter 144, Laws 1929 and stating that the beds in the cabins operated by the plaintiff were not in compliance therewith and requiring plaintiff to discontinue the use of straw mattresses and to furnish upon the beds of said cabins mattresses complying with the provisions of said statute; and “that if he failed to do so he would not be allowed to continue the operation of said tourist camp.” It is further alleged that to furnish the mattresses so required would involve the expenditure of a large sum of money without any prospect of sufficient return and would result in depriving the plaintiff of his property without due process of the law. It is farther alleged that chapter 144, Laws 1929 has no application to an automobile tourist camp such as that operated by the plaintiff and that in any event § 6 of said act, relating to mattresses to be furnished in rooms where a price exceeding fifty cents per person is charged per night, is not a proper exercise of the police power of the state but is an arbitrary and unlawful interference with plaintiff’s property rights and tends to deprive him of his property and business without compensation and without due process of law, in violation of the guarantees of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and § 13 of the constitution of North Dakota; that the plaintiff, through his attorney, has notified the defendants that such requirements are void and unenforceable'as against him. It is further alleged: “that the said defendants nevertheless and notwithstanding the plaintiff’s said claims still continue to threaten to enforce the *718 provisions of Section 6 of said Act as to the matter of the kind and weight of the mattresses to be used in the operation of plaintiff’s said tourist camp and still threaten that if plaintiff fails to comply with their said requirements as to the matter of mattresses, to prevent the plaintiff from continuing the operation of his said camp and will do so unless they are enjoined and restrained from so doing by a court of competent jurisdiction and will thereby do plaintiff irreparable harm, injury and damage to his said business and property.” Plaintiff demands the judgment of this court that “the said defendants and each of them and each of their deputies, servants, agents and employees, be forever restrained and enjoined from attempting farther to enforce the said provision of § 6, of chapter 144, of the Laws of 1929 with reference to the material and weight of the mattresses used in the plaintiff’s said tourist cabins or to interfere in any way with plaintiff’s use of the straw mattresses now in use in said tourist cabins as herein described, and for such other and farther relief as to the court may seem just and equitable.”

The hotel inspection act (Laws 1929, chap. 144) provides for the inspection of hotels, lodging houses, restaurants and boarding houses by the state food commissioner and by inspectors appointed by him. The act further provides that an inspector, who “shall find after examination of any hotel or lodging house that the law has been fully complied with shall issue a certificate to that effect to the person operating the same,” and that such certificate shall be kept posted in a conspicuous place in the inspected building. Section 6 of the Act contains the following provision:

“In all hotels or lodging houses where fifty cents or more per night is charged for lodging the sheets and pillow cases shall be changed after the departure of each guest and it shall be unlawful to have upon a bed of any such hotel or lodging house any mattress of a lower grade than that commonly known to the trade as cotton felt combination; each mattress shall weigh at least thirty-five pounds unless it be a hair mattress; in which case it shall weigh thirty pounds or moré.”

This is the provision that gave rise to the controversy here. It is the contention of the plaintiff that the hotel inspection act is not applicable to an automobile tourist camp; that this is especially true of the above quoted provision, but, that if such provision is applicable, it *719 is imconstitu.tion.al and void. In our opinion a determination of tbo ease does not require or permit consideration of the questions thus raised. “The mere fact that a law is alleged to be unconstitutional does not confer jurisdiction on courts to interfere with tbe acts of executive officers while proceeding in pursuance of its requirements.” 14 R. C. L. p. 435. The judicial power vested in the courts extends only to the determination of actual controversies properly before the courts and does not authorize a court to act in an advisory capacity and to give its opinion on mooted questions or abstract propositions. 14 R. C. L. p. 435.

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Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 851, 59 N.D. 713, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockwood-v-baird-nd-1930.