Owens v. Owens, Mayor

8 S.E.2d 339, 193 S.C. 260, 1940 S.C. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1940
Docket14050
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 8 S.E.2d 339 (Owens v. Owens, Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owens v. Owens, Mayor, 8 S.E.2d 339, 193 S.C. 260, 1940 S.C. LEXIS 52 (S.C. 1940).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. E. H. Henderson, Acting Associate Justice.

Columbia is the capital of South Carolina, and is situated near the geographical center of the State. A number of highways enter it from all directions. With the growth of the city, and the great increase in automobile travel, the regulation of traffic on the streets of the city has, for many years, presented a serious problem to its law enforcement officers.

Of even greater moment has become the matter of the regulation of the parking of automobiles on the streets, especially in the congested business district.

For some time ordinances have been in force limiting the time allowed for parking, but enforcement of these regulations has been most difficult. The city has assigned members of the police to' make chalk marks on the tires of parked cars, and to note the time, so that they may see, on making their rounds an hour later, if the cars remain parked beyond the permitted time.

This method has proved to be quite unsatisfactory, as the chalk marks are very easily removed, and differences of opinion between the officers and the owners of automobiles are hard to settle.

As a result, on August 26, 1939, the City of Columbia, pursuant to an ordinance duly adopted by the city council, entered into a contract with an electric company for the installation of automatic parking meters on certain streets of the city.

These meters are devices about the size of a mantel clock, containing a clock mechanism, and mounted on iron stands installed along the curbing, one to each parking area. The parking areas are marked off on the street by white painted lines. The motorist who parks in one of these spaces is required to deposit into the nearest meter a penny for twelve minutes of parking time in some area, and a five-cent coin for one hour in other areas. The placing of the coin in the *264 meter starts the clock mechanism. The dial of the clock is visible from either side, so that the number of minutes of parking time used is at all times apparent to the police and to others.

When the legal parking time has elapsed a red marker shows on the meter. When a second coin is inserted the meter reverts to that time. If a motorist has not used all of his parking time and moves away, another motorist parking his car in the same space does not have to place a coin in the meter in order to use the remaining time as indicated upon the face of the clock.

The contract with the electric company provides that the company will furnish 1,000 to 2,000 mechanical parking-meters, at a price of $57.50 each for one kind of meter, or $59.50 each for another. Seventy-five per centum of the revenue accruing from the meters is to be .paid monthly to the electric company until the purchase price is paid in full. The revenue collected is to be kept in a special fund. A trial period of six months is provided for. The city has the right within fifteen days after the expiration of the trial period to terminate the proposed contract. If the contract is thus terminated the electric company is obligated to remove the meters at its own expense, and all obligations between the parties cease.

Pursuant to the ordinance and contract, the electric company proceeded to place the meters on six blocks of Main Street, and on one block of each street intersecting Main Street to the east and west, from the southern side of Laurel Street to Gervais Street. There are no meters on Sumter Street or Assembly Street, and there is no limit for the parking of cars on those streets.

There are two cases, and they were heard together by this Court.

On November 1, 1939, the plaintiff, H. F. Owens, on behalf of himself and others similarly situated, brought an action in the Court of Common Pleas for Richland County, *265 seeking a permanent injunction against the operation of the meters. Mr. Owens is a traveling salesman, and resides at the Jefferson Hotel. A large proportion of the meters had been installed before the suit was begun. Temporary restraining orders have been issued, and the meters are not now in use, awaiting the determination of the case by this Court.

On January 16, 1940, the case was heard on its merits by his Honor, Judge Philip H. Stoll, and he made a decree providing that the permanent injunction be denied and the complaint dismissed.

The Owens appeal is from this judgment.

The other case, that of Maxwell & Quinn Realty Company, Inc., was brought February 10, 1940, in the Court of Common Pleas for Richland . County. The plaintiff is the owner of property located at Number 1425 Main Street, and abutting thereon, and within one of the parking meter zones. Flis Honor, Judge J. Strom Thurmond, signed a consent order, on February 24, 1940, setting forth that the issues in this case and in the Owens case áre substantially the same, with the exception that in the Maxwell & Quinn case the rights of an abutting property owner are involved; and he ordered that the cases be consolidated so that they could be heard together by this Court. Pie ordered that the temporary restraining order granted by him continue in force until it is properly vacated by the Supreme Court.

The question is raised by the appellant, Owens, under his fifth exception, that the ordinance is palpably a revenue-raising act.

We think that it is clearly the law that a regulatory measure of this kind may produce only such revenue as is reasonably necessary to defray the expense connected with its operation, and that an ordinance passed for the real purpose of raising revenue, under the guise of obtaining funds for the enforcement of a police regulation, is invalid.

*266 The question is: Does it appear that the amount to be derived from the meters is so clearly in excess of the necessary expense of enforcing the ordinance as to indicate a purpose to raise revenue, and will that be the probable result of the operation of the meter system?

The plaintiffs allege no facts showing that the revenue collected will be in excess of the expenses. In the very nature of the case there can be no certainty as to the amount to be derived. It is impossible to know in advance how many of the parking areas will be used, or whether every motorist will use a full hour for his five cents or whether he will leave in less time. No doubt many people who now park their cars on Main Street will use other streets outside the meter zones. The entire matter, for the first six months, is in the nature of an experiment. Neither the cost incident to the operation of the system, nor the amount of income, can be forecast with any degree of accuracy prior to this trial. It should be noted that the penalty for overtime parking is only 50‡ to $2.50. The installation of 2,000 meters at $57.50 each will cost the city $115,000.00 and this will have to be repaid. The coins used are the two lowest ones in general use.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.E.2d 339, 193 S.C. 260, 1940 S.C. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-owens-mayor-sc-1940.