Scranton v. Hollenberg

31 A.2d 437, 152 Pa. Super. 138, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 157
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1943
DocketAppeal, 2
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 A.2d 437 (Scranton v. Hollenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scranton v. Hollenberg, 31 A.2d 437, 152 Pa. Super. 138, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 157 (Pa. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The defendant, Harry Hollenberg, was arrested on October 2, 1941 charged with violating an ordinance of the City of Scranton, approved December 30, 1940, entitled, “An ordinance for promoting the public health, safety, comfort and welfare throughout the City of Scranton by regulating the sale, re-sale, exchanging or disposing in any manner of any used or second-hand plumbing fixtures and providing a penalty for violation thereof.” The complaint was sworn to by the plumbing inspector of the city. The ordinance was enacted under authority of the Act of April 14, 1937, P. L. 313, which, in 'order to promote the public health, safety, morals and general welfare, gave all cities, incorporated towns, boroughs and townships power and authority, inter alia, to enact and enforce suitable ordinances to govern and regulate the construction, alteration, repairs, sanitation, ventilation, water supply, *140 toilet facilities, drainage, etc. of all buildings. It may also be considered in connection with the enforcement of the Act of June 7, 1901, P. L. 493, providing for the examination, licensure, etc. of plumbers in second class cities and prescribing rules and regulations for plumbing, house drainage, etc. therein, as amended by Act of July 31, 1941, P. L. 603, with special reference to sections 19 and 43. 1

The body of the ordinance reads ais follows:

“Section 1. The Council of the 'City of Scranton hereby ordains that from and after the passage and approval of this Ordinance it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, association or corporation to sell, re-sell, exchange or dispose in any manner of any used or second-hand plumbing fixtures, unless the same has securely attached thereto a label or sticker showing it has been approved for installation and the signature or facsimile thereof of the plumbing inspector of the -City of 'Scranton.
“Section 2. The words 'plumbing fixtures, as used in this Ordinance, shall mean and include all receptacles intended to receive and discharge any liquid or water-carried wastes into a drainage system or treatment works with which they are connected.
“Section 3. It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, association or corporation to sell, re-sell, exchange or dispose of in any manner within the City of Scranton any plumbing fixtures as defined in Section 2, unless the same has attached thereto a label or sticker as described in Section 1.
“Section 4. Any person, firm, association or corporation desiring to secure the stickers or labels here-inabove described, shall malee a written application to *141 the plumbing inspector of the City of Scranton upon blanks to be furnished by the plumbing inspector, which application shall show:
(a) 'The name and address of the applicant.
(b) The number and kind of second-hand or used fixtures to be labeled.
(c) ‘Such other information as the plumbing inspector may require.
“When the plumbing inspector is satisfied that the applicant is entitled thereto', such stickers or labels shall be attached to such fixtures of the applicant by the plumbing inspector. It shall he the duty of the plumbing inspector to charge a fee of fifty (50c) cents a fixture for every one of such stickers or labels attached, and to keep a record of all' labels affixed by him to any such fixtures.
“Section 5. Any person, firm, association or corporation, or manager 'thereof, violating any of the provisions of this Ordinance shall, upon conviction thereof before the 'Scranton City Police Magistrate, be fined not less than ten ($10.00) dollar's and not more than fifty ($50.00) dollars, and in default of the payment of any fine imposed by said Magistrate shall be committed to the Lackawanna County Jail for a period not exceeding thirty (30) days.,”
A hearing was had before Peter W. Haas, Police Magistrate of said city, who, after hearing the witnesses sworn for the prosecution and the defendant himself, adjudged defendant guilty of selling second-hand plumbing fixtures, to wit, a second-hand bath tub to Peter 'Siekerskas on May 28, 1941, and a second-hand urinal to John Bonadio on September 4, 1941, without having said fixtures approved for installation by the plumbing inspector of said city, in violation of the provisions of said ordinance, and sentenced the said defendant to pay a fine of $25 in each case, or in default of payment thereof that he be committed to the Lackawanna County jail for thirty day®.

*142 The defendant had the proceedings removed to the court of common pleas toy certiorari.

Defendant assigned eleven errors or exceptions to the proceeding and judgment of the magistrate, ten of which attacked the constitutionality of the ordinance; the eleventh was to the fact that alt one place in the transcript, the magistrate referred to the defendant as George Hollenberg, instead of Harry Hollenberg, as it appeared in the complaint or information and in the caption of the proceedings. This was a clerical error which was amendable.

The court of common pleas, 'after argument, sustained the first exception of the defendant, that the ordinance was an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power by city council to the plumbing inspector in violation of Article II, section 1 of the State Constitution, and set aisdd'e the judgment of conviction.

The other exceptions were not 'sustained or dismissed. We have considered them all, but are of the opinion that if the ordinance is valid in the respect considered toy the court, there is no merit in the rest of 'them.

The subject is one peculiarly within the police power of the city. It affects the public health, safety, comfort and welfare. Nothing is more important — not to say necessary — to the public health and well-being than safe and healthful plumbing, drains, sewage mains and connections, etc. There is no evidence in the record that the fee imposed is unreasonable or excessive or more than will fairly compensate for the inspection and for the keeping of records of the same, making entries, etc., or that it is in fact a revenue measure,. The constitutional provisions entitling a defendant to a jury trial (Art. I, secs. 6 & 9) do not apply to summary convictions, such as this was (Art. V, sec. 14). The right to trial toy jury preserved toy the Constitution is *143 the right as it existed when the provision was first written into our 'Constitution.

The ordinance might have been more skillfully and carefully drawn, but we are of opinion that considered as a whole it should not be condemned as an unconstitutional delegation of power.

The title of the ordinance shows that the purpose of its enactment is to promote the public health, safety, comfort and welfare in the City of Scranton by regulating the sale, re-sale, exchanging or disposing of second-hand plumbing fixtures.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 A.2d 437, 152 Pa. Super. 138, 1943 Pa. Super. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scranton-v-hollenberg-pasuperct-1943.