Montz v. District of Columbia

20 App. D.C. 568, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5481
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1902
DocketNo. 1237
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 App. D.C. 568 (Montz v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montz v. District of Columbia, 20 App. D.C. 568, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5481 (D.C. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

We fail to find any question of constitutionality or unconstitutionality in this case; and none has been pointed out to us either' in brief or argument, notwithstanding that the instructions requested..by the defendant in the police court allege such unconstitutionality. There is no constitutional or other fundamental right of any kind in the defendant to use the streets of the city of Washington as a place for the sale of his wares. The streets were not intended for any such purpose, except in the most incidental way. It certainly was not intended to give the appellant and others similarly situated the right to convert the streets into a, market house or bazaar for the sale of merchandise, when the citizens generally, who desire to enter into the business of the bargain and sale of such merchandise, are required to- provide their own premises at their own expense for the purpose. Instead of his being deprived of any natural or constitutional right by a restriction of his occupation of the street for the purpose of barter and sale, it would be competent by law to exclude him wholly from the use of the street for any such purpose. In our opinion, the only question in the case is that of reasonableness of the regulation, not that of constitutionality.

Undoubtedly all municipal regulations- should be reasonable, in order to be valid; and unreasonable regulations will not be upheld. But upon him who questions the validity of a regulation it is incumbent to show that it is unreasonable; and this cannot be done by giving to the regulation an unreasonable or forced construction, or by a showing that similar regulations elsewhere are somewhat different in their provisions. It seems to be conceded that some regulation is necessary or proper; and when the act of Congress, within the scope of its legitimate authority, empowers the Commissioners to enact such regulation, it should be made very clear’ by him whp would avoid the effect of it, that the action of the municipal authorities is harsh and oppressive, or in some way tends to work injustice.

[573]*573As we understand the argument on behalf of the plaintiff in error, it is claimed that the regulation in question is unreasonable — first; on account of its vagueness and want of precision in fixing definitely and with exactness the length of time for which a vendor may stop without violation of the requirement of the ordinance; and, secondly; because it undertakes to prohibit a vendor from stopping for any purpose whatever, unless he is approached and stopped by some one who has formed a purpose to buy from him, without reference to any interference with traffic or annoyance to passers-by.

In support of the first proposition the ordinances of the •cities of New York and Boston are cited, in the former of which licensed vendors on the public streets are prohibited from stopping more than thirty minutes at one time on any one block; and in the second of which the permission seems to be for twenty minutes. It is argued that with us also the time should be specifically limited, and not left to the discretion of a police officer, which may be more or less arbitrary. Nor, as it is argued, should it be left to a police officer to determine whether a vendor has been approached for the purpose of sale or to determine at all what the purpose is for which he has been approached.

It is not entirely apparent to us that the purpose, for which regulations of the nature of that here in question have been enacted, could best be subserved by fixing a definite time for the occupation of any one place, or whether it would not be best to limit the time of occupation, as this regulation seeks to do, by the duration of a transaction of the nature of those for which the occupation is authorized. It is hot apparent that the one is any more arbitrary than the other; and on principle, it would seem to be more i*easonable not to molest the vendor in his occupation as long as he is engaged in a bona fide transaction, than to compel him to move on at the conclusion of an arbitrarily selected period of time, regardless of the fact of the completeness or incompleteness of the transaction. It may be that in some cities the one plan may be more expedient, while in others the alternative arrange[574]*574ment may conduce to better results. The failure, therefore, of the regulation to fix a definite limitation of time cannot be regarded as rendering the regulation unreasonable.

Nor, as we understand it, is there any arbitrary discretion reposed by the regulation in the police officer who is charged with its execution. It is not for him to determine the length of time necessary for the making of a sale, or the purpose for which the vendor is approached; and the regulation does not seek to repose any such discretion in him. The regulation must be understood in a reasonable sense. Prima facie any person who approaches a licensed vendor in the street, may be presumed to do so for the purpose of purchase from him, and the circumstances of purchase and sale in such cases are so well known and recognized by the community that there is neither opportunity nor occasion for the police to interpret the law. Of course, in a certain sense, there is always more or less discretion reposed in the police for the execution and enforcement of the law; but the law cannot be held unreasonable because the ordinary custodians of the public peace are required to act in all cases with judgment and discretion.

The case relied on by the plaintiff in error in support of the contention, that of In re Frazee, 63 Mich. 407, does not seem to us to be apposite. There was a municipal or police regulation involved in that case, whereby the arbitrary discretion was left to the police to permit or restrict the movement of processions on the public streets, which, of course, is a discretion that should not be so reposed. The case would be appropriate here if the regulation now in question gave authority to the police to determine how long and on what streets of the city they would permit a licensed vendor to stop for the sale of his wares.

Then, in the second place, it is argued that the regulation is unreasonable because it undertakes to prohibit a licensed vendor to stop for any purpose whatever, unless he is first approached or stopped by some one who has formed a purpose of buying from him. But this construction of the regulation seems to us to be constrained and unnatural. As we have stated, any person who approaches a licensed vendor in [575]*575the street may be presumed to do so for the purpose of buying from him; and such presumption will stand until some different purpose is shown. Nor does the regulation read so as to prohibit any stopping in the street for any other purpose. The provision is that “ no licensed vendor shall occupy a stand * * * for a longer period than may be necessary to make a sale.” Now to " occupy a stand " in the public street is plainly a very different thing from stopping in the street. Any person driving or walking, or going over the public street, may have occasion to stop therein, and he may lawfully do so as long as he does not hinder or impede traffic thereon or the proper use of the street by other persons; but to occupy a stand in the street we all know to be a very different thing, and a thing which it is eminently proper to regulate by municipal ordinance.

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Bluebook (online)
20 App. D.C. 568, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montz-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1902.