Ritchhart v. Barton

193 Iowa 271
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 Iowa 271 (Ritchhart v. Barton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ritchhart v. Barton, 193 Iowa 271 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Stevens, C. J.

— I. It is alleged in. plaintiff’s petition, and admitted in the answer of defendants, that appellant is a resident of the city of Des Moines, and engaged in the business of operating taxicabs for hire, soliciting passengers for transportation, and transporting them from place to place in said city.

1. Municipal CORPORATIONS I police regulations : taxicab license: consent oí property owner. Section 1 of Ordinance No. 2958, enacted by the city council on or about April 30, 1920, declares that it shall be unlawful “for any owner, operator, or driver of any taxicab to use any part of the streets, alleys, or other public places of the city of Des Moines for a taxicab stand, or to stand 'any taxicabs on any street, alley, or other public place in Des Moines for the solicitation of patronage, except and unless such taxicab or cabs have the name of the owner of the taxicab or cabs painted on both rear doors in easily read legible [273]*273letters not less than one and one-half inches in height, nor except and unless the owner of such taxicab or cabs, as the case may be, and the drivers or operators of such taxicabs have paid and secured the necessary licenses, both from the city and the state, and have secured the permission in writing of the owner, lessee, or manager of the property in front of which said taxicab or cabs stand.”

Section 2 thereof states that:

"No license or permit to operate or drive a taxicab in the city of Des Moines shall be granted until a written application therefor is made and filed with the city council, and all applications for licenses as drivers or operators of taxicabs as defined in the ordinances of the city shall have indorsed thereon the approval and recommendation of the chief of police and superintendent of the department of public safety, and in case said application includes a request fo<r the right to use the space in and about any hotel or depot, such application shall, in addition to the approval and recommendation of the chief of police and superintendent of the department of public safety, have indorsed thereon the approval of the owner, lessee, or manager of such hotel or depot, # * *”

The portion of the ordinance complained of is printed in italic.

Appellant further alleged in his petition that the provision of said ordinance requiring applicants for a license or permit to engage in the business of operating taxicabs in the city of Des Moines who desire to use space in and about any hotel or depot for a taxicab stand, to have indorsed upon their written application the approval of the owner, lessee, or manager of such hotel or depot is arbitrary, unreasonable, and unnecessary to the protection of either the life or safety of the citizens of said city; that the said city did not have power or authority to enact and enforce said provision of said, ordinance; that same is an attempt to delegate the power of determining where and under what circumstances taxicab owners and drivers may use the streets, alleys, or other public places of Des Moines to hotel and depot owners, lessees, and managers; that same attempts to grant a franchise in the streets, alleys, and other public places in the city of Des Moines without submitting the same to. a [274]*274vote of the people; and that it grants the power to the owner, lessee, or manager of hotels and depots to unlawfully and unfairly discriminate between taxicab owners and drivers in the city of Des Moines, and is, therefore, unreasonable and void.

The legislative authority for the enactment of the provisions of Ordinance No. 2958 complained of, if any exists, is found in Section 754 of the Code of 1897 and Chapter 275, Acts of the Thirty-eighth General Assembly. Section 754, so far as material, is as follows:

“They [cities and towns] shall have power to regulate, license and tax all carts, wagons, street sprinklers, drays, coaches, hacks, omnibuses, and every description of conveyance kept for hire; fix the rate and prices for the transportation of persons and property from one part of the city to another in the vehicles above named, and to require such persons to keep exposed to view, in or upon such vehicle,‘a printed table of the rates and prices so fixed; to establish stands for hackney coaches, cabs, omnibuses, drays and express wagons, and to enforce the observance and use thereof; * * *”

Section 28, Chapter 275, Acts of the Thirty-eighth General Assembly, is, in part, as follows:

“The powers now or hereafter vested in local authorities to license and' to regulate the operation of ■ vehicles offered to the public for hire, and to regulate the use of the highways for processions or assemblages, shall remain in full force and effect, and all ordinances, rules and regulations which may have been or which may be hereafter enacted in pursuance of such powers, shall remain in full force and effect. ’ ’

The power to regulate the business of all forms of conveyance for hire on the streets of cities and towns, delegated by Section 754, is very broad and comprehensive. The validity of the present ordinance is assailed only upon the theory that the power to enact the provision already referred to is not specifically delegated to cities and towns, and does not exist by implication. Whatever the legislature may itself do in the matter of regulation and control of streets in cities and towns, it may delegate to such municipality. Huston v. City of Des Moines, 176 Iowa 455. The term “to regulate,” as used in the statute, includes the power to prescribe all reasonable rules, regulations, [275]*275and conditions upon which the business of taxicab owners and drivers shall be licensed or permitted upon the streets of municipalities. It is a very broad import of power. City of Madison v. Southern Wisconsin R. Co., 156 Wis. 352 (146 N. W. 492). The ordinance does not, upon its face, discriminate against licensed taxicab owners, nor does it attempt to delegate to hotel owners, lessees, or depot managers the power to fix or determine where and under what circumstances those engaged in the business of operating taxicabs in the city of Des Moines may use the streets thereof in the conduct of such business, as claimed by appellant. What the ordinance does, in effect, provide is that no owner or driver of a taxicab shall be licensed to use any portion of the street in front of any hotel, or depot as a stand for the solicitation of business without the consent of the owner or lessee of such hotel, or the manager of such depot. The power of municipalities to determine and fix the location of taxicab stands upon the streets thereof is clearly, if not specifically, delegated by Section 754 of the Code. If the provision of the ordinance assailed by appellant is invalid, it is because the written approval of the hotel owner or lessee or depot manager in front of whose property the applicant for a license or permit desires to establish a taxicab stand, must be indorsed on such application before a license or permit will be granted. The ordinance recognizes the universal rule that the owner of property abutting upon a street has rights therein not shared by the public at large, — for example, the right of unobstructed ingress and egress. Long v. Wilson, 119 Iowa 267; Ridgway v. City of Osceola, 139 Iowa 590; Western Newspaper Union v. City of Des Moines, 157 Iowa 694; Wendt v. Incorporated Town of Akron, 161 Iowa 338, 343; Bryan v. Petty, 162 Iowa 62, 64; Bradford v.

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Bluebook (online)
193 Iowa 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritchhart-v-barton-iowa-1922.