Odd Fellows' Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San Francisco

73 P. 987, 140 Cal. 226, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 582
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1903
DocketS.F. No. 2919.
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 73 P. 987 (Odd Fellows' Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odd Fellows' Cemetery Ass'n v. City & County of San Francisco, 73 P. 987, 140 Cal. 226, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 582 (Cal. 1903).

Opinions

SHAW, J.

This is an action to declare void an ordinance passed by the board of supervisors of the city and county of San Francisco and to enjoin the city and county authorities from enforcing the same by criminal prosecutions against the plaintiffs and others. After the filing of the answer, the court, on motion of the defendants, gave judgment on the pleadings against the plaintiffs, from which the plaintiffs appeal. The determination of the case, therefore, depends on the facts set forth in the complaint, which for the purposes of the decision, and so far as they are properly pleaded and are material, must be taken as true.

The ordinance in question declares that “it shall be unlawful for any person, association, or corporation, from and after the first day of August, 1901, to bury or inter, or cause to be interred or buried, the dead body of any person in any cemetery, graveyard, or. other place within the city and county of San Francisco, exclusive of those portions thereof” belonging to the United States. It further provides that any person violating its provisions shall upon conviction be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, *230 or by imprisonment not exceeding six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.

The two corporations plaintiff each owns a tract of land set apart and dedicated for use as a cemetery, and have been using the same for that purpose for upwards of thirty years. The cemeteries are divided into small lots for sale to private persons, to be used for burial purposes. Many of the lots have been so sold and used, and many others have not been sold or used, and are still held by the respective corporations for sale for such purpose. The plaintiff Plageman is the owner of one of the lots in the Odd Fellows’ Cemetery, sold to him for burial purposes, and yet capable of having one or more bodies interred therein.

The ordinance in question was manifestly passed in the exercise of the police power given to the city and county by the constitution. Article XI (sec. 11) provides that, “Any county, city, town, or township may make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws. ’ ’

The city charter provides (subd. 1, sec. 1, chap. 2, art. II) that “The board of supervisors shall have power: 1. To ordain, make, and enforce within the limits of the city and county all necessary local, police, sanitary, and other laws and regulations.” The insertion of the word “necessary” in the grant of power contained in the charter does not limit or restrict the power given to the city by the constitution. The city charter in municipal affairs is paramount to general laws, but it cannot be superior to the constitution itself, and nothing contained in such a charter can in any way affect a grant of power conferred by the constitution. All the legislative power of the city is by the charter vested in the board of supervisors (art. II, chap. 1, sec. 1). By virtue of this clause the constitutional grant of the police powers of the state to the city goes directly to and vests in the board, which thereby becomes possessed of the right to exercise within the city limits the entire police power of the state, subject only to the control of general laws.

A number of cases are cited by the appellant from other states bearing upon the question of the police powers of cities or towns under special and limited grants contained in their *231 respective charters. Generally speaking, these authorities have no application to the case in hand. The power conferred by the constitution in this respect, subject to the two exceptions, that it is local to the city and that it is subject to general laws, is as broad as that of the legislature itself.

Many cases are also cited upon the proposition contended for by appellant that the power of the board of supervisors to make and enforce police regulations is confined to the regulation or suppression of those things which the law declares to be nuisances in themselves, and that it is not within the power of the board to declare an act or a thing a nuisance which is not so in fact or has not been declared to be such by the decision of some court acting with reference to the particular act or thing. Neither of these cases is authority in this state under the police power granted by the constitution. The exercise of this power is not limited to the regulation of such things as have already become nuisances or have been declared to be such by the judgment of a court. “The power to regulate or prohibit conferred upon the board of supervisors not only includes nuisances, but extends to everything expedient for the preservation of the public health, and the prevention of contagious diseases.” {Ex parte Shrader, 33 Cal. 284.) This was said with reference to a health regulation. The power, however, includes the right to make regulations concerning other things besides those pertaining to health. The decisions of this court show that ordinances have been upheld in many cases prohibiting things which could not be said to be nuisances per se, an.d which had not been declared to be such by any court. As instances of the exercise of such powers, it has been held that it includes the right to prohibit slaughterhouses, the feeding of swill-slop to cows, the throwing of rubbish, garbage, etc., except in certain designated places, the keeping of more than two cows within certain limits, the erection of wooden buildings, and the maintenance of carpet-beating establishments. {Ex parte Shrader, 33 Cal. 284; Johnson v. Simonton, 43 Cal. 242; Ex parte Casinello, 62 Cal. 538; Ex parte Heilbron, 65 Cal. 609; Ex parte Fiske, 72 Cal. 125; In re Linehan, 72 Cal. 114; McCloskey v. Kreling, 76 Cal. 511; Ex parte Lacey, 108 Cal. 326. 1 ) Whenever a thing or act is *232 of such a nature that it may become a nuisance, or may be injurious to the public health, if not suppressed or regulated, the legislative body may, in the exercise of its police powers, make and enforce ordinances to regulate or prohibit such act or thing, although it may never have been offensive or injurious in the past. It is well settled that cemeteries in cities are subject to regulation or suppression by the exercise of these police powers. (People v. Pratt, 129 N. Y. 68; Presbyterian Church v. Mayor etc., 5 Cow. 538; Coates v. Mayor etc., 7 Cow. 585; Kincaid’s Appeal, 66 Pa. St. 411; 1 Sohier v. Trinity Church, 109 Mass. 22; City Council v. Wentworth-Street Baptist Church, 4 Strob. 309; Humphreys v. Front-Street Methodist etc. Church, 109 N. C. 132.)

We do not think the ordinance in question is in conflict with any general law. The provisions of the act of 1859 for the incorporation of rural cemetery associations (Stats.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P. 987, 140 Cal. 226, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odd-fellows-cemetery-assn-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1903.