Mister Softee of Illinois, Inc. v. City of Chicago

192 N.E.2d 424, 42 Ill. App. 2d 414, 1963 Ill. App. LEXIS 607
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 29, 1963
DocketGen. 49,023
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 192 N.E.2d 424 (Mister Softee of Illinois, Inc. v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mister Softee of Illinois, Inc. v. City of Chicago, 192 N.E.2d 424, 42 Ill. App. 2d 414, 1963 Ill. App. LEXIS 607 (Ill. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE BURKE

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs are in the business of dispensing soft ice cream by trucks on the streets throughout the City of Chicago. As a means of attracting the attention of prospective customers to their approach, each truck owned by one of the plaintiffs, Mister Softee of Hlinois, Inc., is equipped with an electrically operated sound device which plays a jingle entitled “Here comes Mister Softee.” An ordinance of the City, Section 99-56, prohibits persons on or proximate to a public way from making “distinctly and loudly audible upon such public way, any noise of any kind” by various means set forth, including sound amplifiers or similar mechanical devices. On July 3, 1962, the Superintendent of Police, in a memorandum, alerted police personnel to this ordinance and to complaints received with respect to noise being made by mobile frozen dairy dispensers in order to stimulate trade on the public ways, and directed the police to take necessary action to remove further cause for complaint.

Some of Mister Softee’s truck operators received tickets and summonses for violating the noise ordinance, Section 99-56. On July 12, 1962, plaintiffs filed a complaint naming the city, the Mayor and Superintendent of Police as defendants and seeking temporary and permanent injunctions against enforcement of Section 99-56 of the Municipal Code. The cause was referred to a Master in Chancery, who, after taking testimony, recommended that a temporary injunction issue. The Chancellor accepted the recommendation of the Master and directed the issuance of a temporary injunction restraining the defendants until the further order of the court from enforcing or attempting to enforce the ordinance as applied to the plaintiffs, their agents, licensees, franchise holders and employees in the business of dispensing from mobile vehicles ice cream and ice cream products. Defendants appeal from an order denying their motion to dissolve the temporary injunction.

Each of the trucks is equipped with two freezers, a generator and a hardening cabinet, making the truck a mobile ice cream and soda bar. One of the plaintiffs, Mister Softee, owns 53 of the trucks and has 60 franchised individual dealers who purchased the trucks from it. These dealers also purchase their supplies and receive services from Mister Softee. Each truck unit possesses an electrically operated music box chime, which plays the tune. The tune plays for 30 seconds. Formerly the chimes were timed to play the tune automatically once every minute. Under present operations the tune may be played by pushing a button on the front of the cab, which is to be played, under company regulations, once in each block. Although the jingle may be played as loud as twelve decibels through the amplifying device, there is a company directive that it be played at five decibels.

Only one witness testified before the Master, the President and General Manager of Mister Softee, who described the business of that corporation, the equipment used, the business arrangement made with franchised dealers and the fact that based upon a two-day test, one day in an area on the north side of Chicago and the other day in an area on the south side, the gross sales were reduced as much as 40% when the truck operated without playing the jingle as compared with sales made when it was played. He testified that Mister Softee’s gross sales in Chicago amount to $2,500,000. He stated that some of Mister Softee’s operators had received tickets for violating the sound ordinance of Chicago, but that none was ever issued to the corporation itself. He said that the corporation has an arrangement to provide legal services for the operators. No evidence was offered by the defendants. They say that the ordinance must be read so as to prohibit only unreasonable noises.

Plaintiffs maintain that the ordinance, on its face, is unreasonable, discriminatory and incapable of intelligent application, that it does not merely prohibit distinct and loudly audible noise but any noise of any kind without defining its terms and therefore cannot reasonably be enforced. They say that the ordinance prohibits (1) any noise of any kind to be made on a public way, and (2) noises made elsewhere if they are distinctly and loudly audible upon the public way. The plaintiffs say that according to the ordinance the following sounds, among many others normally heard on city streets, are subject to prosecution: whistling, honking of horns, playing of radios, Salvation Army solicitors, and men dressed as Santa Claus spreading good cheer during the holiday season by ringing bells. They also point out that the Master found as additional examples, the police traffic safety sound squad car, traffic policemen’s whistles and church bells. Plaintiffs urge that the ordinance cannot be intelligently applied and is void for vagueness, citing, Mayhew v. Nelson, 346 Ill 381, 178 NE 921. Plaintiffs assert that because it is impossible to distinguish what noises are prohibited and what noises are permitted, the ordinance leaves to the defendants unlimited discretion to pick and choose which sounds they wish to restrain and which they seek to permit, citing, Saia v. New York, 334 US 558; People v. J. O. Beekman & Co., 347 Ill 92, 179 NE 435; Parks v. Libby-Owens-Ford Glass Co., 360 Ill 130, 195 NE 616.

It cannot be doubted that the Illinois Municipal Code empowers the city to adopt Section 99-56. Under Section 11-1-1 of the Municipal Code (Ill Rev Stats 1961, c 24), the corporate authorities may “pass and enforce all necessary police ordinances”; and under Section 11-5-2 of the Code, these authorities may “prevent or suppress riots, routs, affrays, noises, disturbances, and disorderly assemblies in any public or private place”; under Section 11-42-5 of the Code, the corporate authorities may “license, tax, regulate, or prohibit hawkers, peddlers, pawnbrokers, itinerant merchants [and] transient vendors of merchandise”; under Section 11-60-2 of the Code, may “define, prevent and abate nuisances”; and under Section 11-80-20 of the Code may “regulate traffic and sales upon the streets, sidewalks, public places and municipal property.” An ordinance may derive its validity from several different grants of power and its validity does not necessarily depend upon any single clause or section of the statute concerning the power of the Municipality to legislate upon the subject covered by the ordinance. Goodrich v. Busse, 247 Ill 366, 369, 93 NE 292; Gundling v. City of Chicago, 176 Ill 340, 52 NE 44.

We agree with, the contention of the defendants that only distinctly and loudly audible noises upon the public streets are prohibited under a reasonable construction of Section 99-56. It is apparent from the wording of the ordinance that peddlers in alleys are given greater leeway with respect to “crying or calling for the purpose of advertising goods” than those who wish to advertise their wares upon the public streets. This difference is one of degree and does not render the ordinance unconstitutional. Section 99-56 does not discriminate as to persons, but regulates activity with respect to places upon which they are to operate. The well established rule applicable to the analysis of a statute or ordinance to determine its constitutionality is that it should be given the most reasonable interpretation which will remove it farthest, from constitutional infirmity. Kovacs v. Cooper, 336 US 77, 85; Cox v. New Hampshire, 312 US 569, 575. The Illinois Supreme Court in Goodrich v.

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Bluebook (online)
192 N.E.2d 424, 42 Ill. App. 2d 414, 1963 Ill. App. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mister-softee-of-illinois-inc-v-city-of-chicago-illappct-1963.