Sherman, Clay Company v. Brown

252 P. 137, 142 Wash. 37, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1019
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1927
DocketNo. 20178. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 252 P. 137 (Sherman, Clay Company v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman, Clay Company v. Brown, 252 P. 137, 142 Wash. 37, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1019 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Main, J.

Sherman, Clay & Company, a corporation, brought this action to restrain the enforcement of a city ordinance which sought to regulate the sale of secondhand goods. After the action was instituted, *38 Hopper-Kelly Company intervened. The cause was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment dismissing the action, from which the plaintiff and intervener appeal.

The appellants for many years have been engaged in the sale of musical instruments in the city of Seattle. Neither of them purchase and pay cash for a secondhand instrument, but both of them take such instruments in exchange on the purchase price of a new instrument. Approximately five per cent of the business is of this character. The secondhand business of Sherman, Clay & Company during the year prior to the trial of the action amounted to approximately $65,000. On the first day of December, 1924, the city council passed ordinance No. 48022, which had for one of its purposes the regulation of the purchase, sale, trade, barter or exchange of secondhand goods. Section 199 of this ordinance provides:

“Any person who, within the city of Seattle, shall as a business, engage in the purchase, sale, trade, barter, or exchange of secondhand goods, other than ‘junk’ as defined in this ordinance, or any person who shall keep any store, shop, room or place where secondhand goods of any kind or description, other than ‘junk’ as defined in this ordinance, are bought, sold, traded, bartered or exchanged, is hereby defined to be a secondhand dealer, within the meaning of this ordinance.”

Section 200 makes it unlawful for any person to engage in the business of secondhand dealer without first having obtained a license so to do. Section 202 requires every secondhand dealer to keep a book in which he shall at the time of purchase of any secondhand goods enter a description of the same together with the name, apparent age, signature and residence of the vendor. Section 203 provides that secondhand goods of any description bought or received by a secondhand *39 dealer must be held ten days, before they can be sold or offered for sale? except when the goods have been inspected by the members of the police department designed for that purpose, and they have authorized the dealer to dispose of them within a less period than ten days. Section 204 requires the secondhand dealer to make out and deliver to the chief of police, before the hour of noon oh each day, a copy of the entries and transactions contained in the books of records relating to the business of the previous day.

In the case of Sherman, Clay & Co. v. Brown, 131 Wash. 679, 231 Pac. 166, it was held that the prior ordinance regulating secondhand dealers was void because it exempted from its operation dealers in stoves, furniture or the total contents of any room or house. After that decision, the present, ordinance was passed, and, as indicated, the purpose of the present action is to test its validity.

The first question is whether the city had power to pass such an ordinance. Section 11 of art. XI of the constitution of this state, among other things, provides that any city “may make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws. ’ ’ With reference to that provision in Detamore v. Hindley, 83 Wash. 322, 145 Pac. 462, it was said:

“This is a direct delegation of the police power as ample within its limits as that possessed by the legislature itself. It requires no legislative sanction for its exercise SO' long as the subject-matter is local, and the regulation reasonable and consistent with the general laws.”

Under the constitutional delegation of authority, the city had power to pass the ordinance. The regulation of the sale of secondhand goods in a municipality comes within the proper exercise of the police power. *40 In Ex parte Holmes, 187 Cal. 640, 203 Pac. 398, it is said:

“Secondhand goods, wares, and merchandise have always been deemed the proper subjects of police regulation by municipalities.”

In City of St. Louis v. Baskowitz, 273 Mo. 543, 201 S. W. 870, it is said:

“Under these provisions of the charter the city was empowered to enact such police regulations as would insure the safety, health, comfort, and welfare of its citizens, and the protection of their persons and property ; and it might be said that the city, independent of those charter provisions, has the inherent authority to enact such police regulations as may be necessary for the good government thereof and for the protection of its inhabitants. The authorities so holding are numerous. It has ever been held that the business of junk and secondhand dealers, as well as that of pawnbrokers, is of such character as to warrant police regulation. The reason for this is much stronger than it is for the regulation of ordinary merchants, brokers and commission men. Eegarding the latter, their goods, merchandise, and securities are new and generally securely stored in some sanitary building or warehouse which largely keeps or protects them from disease germs and reduces the opportunities for theft to a minimum; whereas the junk or secondhand dealer purchases goods and personal property which is distributed among individuals throughout the inhabited world, and used for all purposes in the various avocations or walks of life, whether sanitary or not. This wide distribution and universal use of such property, in the very nature of things, makes it an easy object of theft, and is readily contaminated with the deadly germs of contagious and infectious diseases. I can conceive of nothing which would be more detrimental to the public health and good morals or render property more insecure, than the unregulated purchase, barter, and sale of such property.
“The foregoing observations somewhat differentiate the character of the two businesses or occupations, and *41 clearly show why the junk or secondhand dealer should be subjected to police regulations, and why such regulations are encouraged by the law, and upheld by the courts.”

If it be assumed, however, that the power of the city council must be derived from the charter the same result would follow. The charter provides among other things, that the city council shall have power within the corporate limits of a city to regulate the carrying on of occupations which are of such a nature as to affect the “public health or good order of the city . . .” The regulation of the business of dealing in secondhand goods has a direct relation to the good order of the city, as pointed out in the excerpt quoted from City of St. Louis v. Baskowitz, supra. In Sherman, Clay & Co. v. Brown, supra, with reference to the ordinance then before the court which was similar in its general purposes to that which we are now considering, it was said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 137, 142 Wash. 37, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-clay-company-v-brown-wash-1927.