Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Wright

1926 OK 196, 254 P. 41, 124 Okla. 55, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
Docket16176
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1926 OK 196 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Wright, 1926 OK 196, 254 P. 41, 124 Okla. 55, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 572 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

ESTES, C.

An ordinance of Altus, a city of the first class, made it unlawful for any person “to install, maintain, carry on, operate, or run an oil mill, tannery, cotton gin, steam laundry, machine shop, blacksmith shop, or filling station within 200 feet of any church building or schoolhouse” within the limits of said city, and declared the doing of the same “to be a nuisance and subject- to abatement upon suit by any cit> zen or organization affected thereby”.

The church building cost about $100,000, and is cn lots on Main street one block north of the public square and main business section of said city. Immediately west and across said street, which is about 100 feet wide, on its lots, defendant proposed to build and had begun the construction of, a public drive-in oil and gas filling station, to cost about $8,000, same b'eing within 200 feet of said curch. Being in equity, the cause was tried to the court, and from the judgment perpetually enjoining defendant from so constructing and operating such station, th'e latter appeals. Our duty is to weigh the evidence and determine, under the law, whether the judgment is clearly against the weight thereof. The proposition argued is that such ordinance is void and of no effect, for that said city had no authority or power to declare such lawful business a private nuisance and delegate the abatement thereof to those affected by the maintenance thereof.

1. Accordingly, it is first suggested that because Altus is a city of the first class instead of a town, it has not such power. A *57 municipal corporation, being impertan in imperio, has no authority in this behalf, except such as is expressly, or by reasonable implication, delegated to it by the Legislature. By the fourth paragraph of section 4762, O. O. S. 1921, incorporated towns are empowered to declare what shall constitute a nuisance, and to prevent, abate, and remove same, and take such other measures for the preservation of the public health as they may deem necessary. It is contended that a city of the first class has nob.been delegated such power. If true, this were a grievous oversight of the Legislature, since, undoubtedly, the possession of such power by a city, for the purposes for which same may be given, is certainly more important and necessary than by a town. It is evident from the statute, supra, that the delegation therein appertains to the police power possessed by the state. Section 4569, Id., pertaining to cities, is:

“The council may purchase or condemn and hold for the city, within or outside of the city limits, all necessary land for hospital purposes and waterworks, and erect, establish, and regulate hospitals, workhouses and poorhouses, and provide for the government and support of the same, and make regulations to secure the general health of the city, and to prevent and remove nuisances, and to make provision for furnishing the city with water, and water rates shall be fixed annually by the council at their first meeting in June; provided the condemnation o.' such property outside the city limits, shall be regulated in all respects as provided by law. ”

Clearly, this entire section pertains to, and is a delegation of, police power. The power of eminent domain therein granted is incident thereto. The power therein granted to prevent and remove nuisances appertains to such police power, as much so, and as essentially so, as the power therein delegated pertaining to hospitals, waterworks, and regulations to secure the general health. The Legislature thus intended by such delegation of power to prevent and remove nuisances; that a city, even of the first class, could prevent any act or omission of any duty by any one, which act or omission, among other things, annoys, injures or endangers the comfort, lives, health or safety of others, according to the definition of the term nuisance by section 7870, Id. Moreover, section 4547, Id., provides in a plenary fashion, inter alia, that the mayor and council of cities have power to enact any and all ordinances not repugnant to the laws of the United States, and the Constitution and laws of this state, for the preservation of the peace and good order of the inhabitants. The powers thus delegated to a city are not dependent upon the exercise of same through any particular form of government, whether aldermanie, commission, or otherwise. By the tenor of the decisions of this court, it seems that no one heretofore has contended that a city does not have as much power as a town in this behalf. In Walcher et al. v. First Presbyterian Church of Norman, 76 Okla. 9, 184 Pac. 106, Norman being a city of the first class, this court considered the validity of an ordinance, in all essentials identical with that in the instant case, and held:

“That such ordinance is of a regulatory nature and reasonable, and within the police and sanitary powers of a city to enact and enforce. * * *”

In Duncan Electric & Ice Co. v. City of Duncan, 64 Okla. 211. 166 Pac. 1048, it is said:

“That cities have the power to declare and abate nuisances in this state, is no longer an open question.”

The first paragraph of the syllabus of Calkins v. Ponca City et al., 89 Okla. 100, 214 Pac. 188, is:

“The Constitution and statutes delegate to cities power to declare and abate nuisances. ”

The delegation of such power to a municipal corporation vests the corporation, within the sphere of the powers delegated, with a control as absolute as the Legislature would have possessed, if it had never delegated the powers, and the discretion of the municipality, in respect to the exercise of the powers granted, is as widei as that possessed by the government of the state. 28 Cyc. 693, and note to Robinson v. Mayor of Franklin (Tenn.) 34 Am. Dec. 625, 632, citing a formidable array of authorities.

2. In Ex parte Jones, 4 Okla. Cr. 74. 109 Pac. 570, it is held:

“A statutory grant of power to a municipality to declare what shall constitute a nuisance does not empower the municipality to declare a thing a nuisance which is clearly not one; but it does empower the municipality to declare anything a nuisance which is so per se, or which by reason of its location, management, or use, or of local conditions and surroundings, may or does become such within the common law or statutory definition of a nuisance, or those things which in their nature may be nuisances, but as to which there may be honest differences of opinion in impartial minds.
“Where a thing may or may nob be a nuisance depending upon its location, its management, or use. and the conditions ex *58 isting in the municipality, thus requiring judgment and discretion in determining the matter, the determination of the question by a municipality having power to declare what shall be a nuisance is conclusive upon the courts. ”

Thereafter said rules have been followed by this court, a late case being Calkins v. Ponca City et al., supra. In Duncan Electric & Ice Co. v. City of Duncan, 64 Okla. 211, 166 Pac. 1048, it is hedí:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 196, 254 P. 41, 124 Okla. 55, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-wright-okla-1926.