State Ex Rel. McAuley v. York

106 So. 418, 90 Fla. 625
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 28, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 106 So. 418 (State Ex Rel. McAuley v. York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. McAuley v. York, 106 So. 418, 90 Fla. 625 (Fla. 1925).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The petitioner was convicted in the municipal court of the City of Tampa of violating Section 46 of said city '“by having a stand for taxicab for hire on the street within two blocks of Franklin Street, within the city limits of the City of Tampa,” and sued out a writ of habeas corpus in the Circuit Court of Hillsborough County, addressed to the Chief of Police, York, alleging in his petition *627 that the said ordinance was invalid. Return was duly made, and on hearing, the petition was dismissed, the petitioner remanded to custody, and petitioner was allowed and took a writ of error.

The ordinance attacked provides, inter alia, that “no taxicab, hack, bus or other vehicle will be permitted to have a stand within two blocks of Franklin Street. Such stands may be located at other places, provided the written consent of abutting property owners is obtained, after which the limits of said stand will be designated by the Chief of Police so as not to interfere with or obstruct traffic, ’ ’ also prohibiting abutting owners from receiving rents or compensation for the use of the public streets in front of their property, and prohibiting taxi drivers from verbally soliciting business on streets other than at stands.

Petitioner’s counsel contends that this ordinance prohibits the use of taxicabs on certain streets, or within a certain area, whereas the city only has the charter power to regulate such use. We do not so understand the language of the "ordinance. While inartifieially drawn, it clearly intends only to prevent the establishment of taxicab stands within the designated area, and the solicitation of business on the streets at places other than such regular stands as may be established outside such designated area. It is contended that the city has all power necessary to regulate vehicles of all kinds on the streets of the city under Section 1871 of the Revised General Statutes of 1920, and also under chapter 9925 of the Laws of 1923, and other acts conferring corporate powers. This ordinance does not prohibit the use of taxicabs on any of the city streets. The prohibition of taxicab stands, or the solicitation of business, on the streets within certain crowded areas, or areas of heavy and constant traffic, but allowing their free movement and use therein, is in the nature of a regulation, rather than a prohibition, of the use of such vehicles, and hence within *628 the corporate powers of regulation. State v. Barbelais, 101 Me. 512, 64 Atl. Rep. 881; Commonwealth v. Ellis, 158 Mass. 555, 33 N. E. Rep: 651; Shreveport v. Dantes, 118 La. 113, 42 South. Rep. 716; Dillon’s Municipal Corporations (5th ed.) Secs. 712, 1166-7; 19 R. C. L. 846-7, 849. To allow taxicab stands to be located indiscriminately, regardless of the .traffic conditions on the streets, might result in- creating practically continuous obstructions to travel and seriously .limit the area for the passage of traffic on the main arteries of a: city, greatly to the detriment of the public welfare. And to hold.that snch matters are beyond an existing municipal power to,.regulate the use of streets and vehicles, when reasonably and fairly exercised, would be tantamount to holding-that the city could not prevent, obstructions to traffic on its main thoroughfares. In the instant case, we cannot assume that the quoted provision of the ordinance Avas arbitrarily adopted by the governing body of the city without regard to the reasonable requirements of local conditions. Per contra, when the municipal power to regulate is shown to exist, a regulatory ordinance valid on its face, and pursuant to the power, will be presumed to be applicable to and justified by local conditions, unless the contrary is made clearly to appear. Says Judge Dillpn (Yol. 2, Sec. 592, Dillon Munic. Corp.) : “It is of course within the power of the court to declare an ordinance to be unreasonable and void on its face by a mere inspection of the ordinance, if it is clearly of that character because of the inherent nature of its provisions. But the power of the court to declare an ordinance void because it is unreasonable is one which must be carefully exercised. When the ordinance is within the grant of power of the municipality, the presumption is that it is reasonable, unless its tinreasonable character appears upon its face. But the courts will declare an ordinance to be void because unreasonable upon a state of facts being shown which make it unreasonable. If the ordi *629 nance is not inherently unfair, unreasonable or oppressive, the person attacking it must assume the htirden of affirmatively showing that as applied to him it is unreasonable, unfair and oppressive.” State ex rel. Ellis v. Tampa Water Works Co., 56 Fla. 858, 47 South. Rep. 358; Hardee v. Brown, 56 Fla. 377, 47 South. Rep. 834. The petition in this case does not negative the existence of traffic conditions, within the area wherein the ordinance prohibits the location of taxicab stands, which might have justified the passage of the ordinance. Therefore, in the absence off allegations or proof to the contrary, this court must presume that such conditions did exist, and the ordinance therefore reasonable.

It is further alleged in the petition that this section of said ordinance is void because under other sections of the ordinance, automobiles other than taxicabs are permitted to park on streets witidn said area, and, further, that the city has marked off spaces on the pavement and curbing in certain business blocks where automobiles and other, vehicles carrying freight and express for hire may, in the language of the petition, “park and do-business, on said streets,” (though the language of the ordinance, which is made a part of the petition, was that such space was reserved “for the loading and unloading of merchandise from the respective places of business in” such blocks,) and that this constitutes an unjust discrimination against petitioner and denies him the equal protection of the laws. These allegations alone are not sufficient to show an unjust discrimination against petitioner and denies him the equal protection of the laws. These allegations alone are not sufficient to show an unjust discrimination in the exercise of the conceded municipal power of regulation. It is a matter of common knowledge that the general public, or that portion of same using automobiles as a private means of transport, are quite generally permitted to park their vehicles along *630 the sides or in the center of city streets, though in many cases for a limited time only, and in some cases no parking is permitted on certain portions of streets where there is great density of traffic. There is a distinction between allowing the parking of ordinary vehicles by the general public along streets and allowing owners or operators of taxicabs operated for hire to appropriate a certain portion of a busy street as a location for the conduct of their private business, where their vehicles are kept in the intervals when they are not employed in the carriage of persons or property, and while awaiting, or soliciting, such employment. This distinction was long ago made, as to standing-places of more primitive vehicles, to-wit, stage coaches, by Lord Ellenborough in Rex v. Cross, 3 Campb.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 418, 90 Fla. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcauley-v-york-fla-1925.