State Ex Rel. National Oil Works v. McShane

106 So. 252, 159 La. 723, 1925 La. LEXIS 2293
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 2, 1925
DocketNo. 26870.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 106 So. 252 (State Ex Rel. National Oil Works v. McShane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. National Oil Works v. McShane, 106 So. 252, 159 La. 723, 1925 La. LEXIS 2293 (La. 1925).

Opinion

LAND, J.

The National Oil Works operates a filling station, with sidewalk pumps, at the corner of St'. Charles 'avenue and General Pershing street, in the city of New Orleans, and the Muller Service Station operates at the same location, as an adjunct to the oil station, a general automobile accessory business, repair shop, a garage, battery department, and several other branches of the automobile business.

Plaintiffs instituted ,the present suit on April 4, 1924, to compel the city of New Orleans by mandamus to grant them a permit to remodel their building so as to allow the construction of a drive-in filling station in lieu of sidewalk pumps, which are required to be removed under the provisions of Ordi- , *725 nance 7554, Commission • Council Series, effective April 1, 1924.

Plaintiffs pray that the city of New Orleans be enjoined from enforcing the ordinance against sidewalk pumps until the drive-in station is constructed, although they do not attack in any manner the validity of this ordinance.

A preliminary injunction was issued by the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, as prayed for by plaintiffs, pending the decision of the court as to the mandamus proceeding.

On May 1, 1924, an intervention on behalf of certain property owners residing in > the vicinity of' St. Charles avenue and General Pershing street was filed, alleging that the business of plaintiffs was a nuisance in fact, and should be closed immediately, and praying for an injunction permanently restraining plaintiffs from operating the said business, or any kind of business, on the property in question.

The exception of no right or cause of action, pleaded by plaintiffs to the petition of the interveners, was overruled by the court below, and plaintiffs filed as an answer a general denial of the allegations contained in the petition of intervention.

On May 20, 1914, plaintiffs presented a supplemental and amended petition, alleging that, since the filing of this suit, the commission council of the city of New Orleans had introduced an ordinance, calendar No. 8162, providing that no one shall operate any garage or place where automobiles are stored or gasoline and automobile accessories are stored, or parked, on St. Charles avenue, from Jackson avenue to Carrollton avenue, and further providing that, after the date of the introduction of said ordinance, neither the owner, agent, nor operator of any existing business as described in said ordinance shall remodel, rebuild, or reconstruct the building wherein said business is carried on.

Plaintiffs also aver in said supplemental and amended petition that prior to, and at the time of, the institution of this suit, there was no ordinance forbidding the carrying on of a general automobile business, automobile garage, or a business for the sale of .automobile accessories on St. Charles avenue, ñor prohibiting the erection,' or construction, of a place of business theretofore existing on said street.

Plaintiffs further aver that said ordinance was'passed purely for the purpose of denying to them their rights for a permit to erect a drive-in station and to operate an automobile service station at St. Charles avenue and General Pershing street; that, prior to the passage of said ordinance, there was no law or ordinance which prevented plaintiffs from obtaining a permit for the erection and operation of a gasoline filling station at St. Charles avenue and General Pershing street; ' and that other property owners on St. Charles avenue, similarly situated to plaintiffs, have been granted permits for the construction and operation of stations for the sale of gasoline and automobile accessories; and that the action of the commission council of the city of New Orleans, in passing said ordinance, was solely for the purpose of placing plaintiffs in a class by itself.

Plaintiffs attack said ordinance as an unwarranted and arbitrary classification of their business, and allege that said ordinance is unconstitutional, 'null and void, as violating the due process elausq and the equal protection of the law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and section 2, art. 1, of the Constitution of 1921 of the state of Louisiana.

On June 18, 1924, the city of New Orleans filed a petition for an injunction in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, alleging that plaintiffs, while their application for a mandamus for a permit was pending and undecided, were causing their building *727 to be remodeled, .that a building permit for said construction was required by Ordinance No. 6712, N. C. S., particularly section 2 of said ordinance, and that' the construction and operation of a gasoline filling station at the corner of St. Charles avenue and General Pershing street was prohibited by Ordinance No. 7558, C. C. S.

A preliminary injunction was issued on behalf of the city of New Orleans.

In the original and supplemental answer Df the city of New Orleans, it is denied that ■ plaintiffs were entitled to a building permit. It is also denied that the -ordinance was adoiffed by the commission council solely for the purpose of reaching plaintiffs and their business and placing them in a class by themselves. On the contrary, it is averred in said answers that said ordinance was adopted in the interest of the public welfare and is legal, constitutional, and valid in all respects. It is further averred in said answers that plaintiffs’ business was and is prohibited by various ordinances of the city of New Orleans, and expressly by Ordinances No. 7554, C. C. S., and No. 7558, C. C. S.

In the original answer of the city of New Orleans, an injunction is prayed for, prohibiting plaintiffs from maintaining and operating pumps at the corner of St. Charles avenue and General Pershing street for the delivery of gasoline to motor vehicles, and prohibiting plaintiffs from any longer occupying said sidewalk with said pumps.

Interveners also filed original and supplemental answers to the petition of plaintiffs, denying the allegations of the petition, admitting the passage of Ordinance No. 7558, and setting- up other ordinances of the city of New Orleans,- prohibiting plaintiffs’ business.

Judgment was rendered by the court below in favor of the city of New Orleans, prohibiting and enjoining plaintiffs from operating their business on the sidewalk on St. Oharles avenue, corner, of. General Pershing,- and from otherwise violating Ordinance No. 7554, Commission Council Series. The petition of the city of New Orleans for a writ of injunction, filed June 18, 1924, was dismissed as in case of nonsuit, and the preliminary injunction issued was recalled, with reservation of all rights of the city of New Orleans.

Judgment was rendered by the court below in favor of interveners, rejecting the demands of plaintiffs, and recalling the alternative writ of mandamus and the preliminary injunction issued herein on behalf of plaintiffs.

Judgment was also renderéd in favor of interveners, permanently enjoining plaintiffs “from operating the business described in the intervention, or amj kind, of business on the property described in the petition of relators,, and enjoining and compelling them to abate and cease the said public and private nuisance.”

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 252, 159 La. 723, 1925 La. LEXIS 2293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-national-oil-works-v-mcshane-la-1925.