State v. Elofson

90 N.W. 309, 86 Minn. 103, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 2, 1902
DocketNos. 12,908-(19)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 N.W. 309 (State v. Elofson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Elofson, 90 N.W. 309, 86 Minn. 103, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 459 (Mich. 1902).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

This appeal involves the validity of one of the ordinances of the city of Minneapolis. This ordinance provides for the issuance of licenses to venders of milk within the city limits, and, as a condition precedent to the securing of licenses as venders, that the [104]*104animals producing the milk to be sold must be inspected. Such as are located within the county of Hennepin are to be inspected under the direction and supervision of the city health commissioner, free of charge. If the animals from which the applicant for the license obtains his milk are located outside of Hennepin county, they must be inspected by some local veterinarian, acceptable to the city health commissioner, residing in the county where the herds are located, and the inspection must be without expense to the city of Minneapolis. Unless this inspection is had, no license can be issued to the applicant, and he is prohibited from selling.

The defendant kept no cows himself, but secured his milk from about two hundred fifty animals kept by persons in counties other than Hennepin. The owners of these animals refused to bear the expense of inspection themselves, and therefore it devolved upon defendant to pay the charges of the veterinarian, — about fifty cents per animal in this particular case; in the aggregate, about $125. This charge might be much more per head, for no fee is prescribed, nor could there be in this ordinance. The facts were agreed upon, and, among other things, it was stipulated that the defendant had been duly licensed by the state dairy commissioner to sell milk within the limits of the city of Minneapolis, for which he had paid the required fee, in accordance with the provisions of G. S. 1894, §§ 7004, 7005.

It is contended by defendant’s attorney that the ordinance is void as to persons selling milk obtained from dairy herds outside of Hennepin county, for four reasons, as follows:

“1. For the reason that it is ultra vires, unauthorized, and clearly in the teeth of the express prohibition of the enabling act. Laws 1895, c. 203.
“2. For the reason that the provisions of the ordinance complained of come under the inhibition of the enabling act, in that they are in conflict with the spirit and letter of G. S. 1894, §§ 7004, 7005.
“3. For the reason that the said ordinance as amended is unreasonable, arbitrary, and unlawfully discriminates between dairies' and dairy herds located in Hennepin county and those located in adjoining counties.
[105]*105“á. For the reason that the ordinance, as amended, operates in restraint of trade.”

But, as we regard this case, it is unnecessary to consider all of these points. Under that part of the first section of said chapter which empowers city councils to pass milk ordinances, and to authorize their boards of health to enforce all laws and ordinances relating to the production and sale of milk and the inspection •of dairy herds producing milk for sale or consumption within said city limits, it is clear that a city council may, by ordinance, require the inspection of dairy herds outside of the city limits. In fact, •one contention covered by the first of the above objections might .as well be made against that part of the ordinance which requires and provides for inspection of all herds in Hennepin county, whether kept within or without the city limits, for we take judicial ' notice of the fact that the city of Minneapolis does not include all ■of Hennepin county, and that a very large part of the same is outside of the city limits. One branch of this subject is fully discussed and completely disposed of in State v. Nelson, 66 Minn. 166, 68 N. W. 1066, a Minneapolis case, in which was examined the power of its council to adopt such reasonable police regulations as to outside dairy herds as would prevent the sale of unwholesome milk within the city. As was there said, the inspection required ■of herds outside of the city limits is wholly voluntary on the part of the owner of the dairy or dairy herds, and if “he does not choose to submit to such inspection the result merely is that he, or the one to whom he furnishes milk, cannot obtain a license to sell milk within the city.” The conclusion was that the ordinance then in question, since amended and now before us, had no extraterritorial operation, and that there had been no attempt to give it any such effect, the only subject upon which it operated being the sale of milk within the city limits. The right of the council to require inspection of outside herds seems to be settled by the Nelson case.

It is argued by counsel for defendant that indirectly, by reason of this provision of the ordinance, a license fee is actually charged by the city as to herds outside of Hennepin county, which charge is prohibited by the enabling act, and, as a consequence, that there [106]*106is a direct conflict of authority between the statute and the city ordinance.

As before stated, it was stipulated that the defendant had paid the license fee exacted by the state. If this ordinance is in opposition to that part of the statute which prohibits any ordinance which conflicts, it cannot be upheld. ' This was settled in City of St. Paul v. Peck, 78 Minn. 197, 81 N. W. 389. In that case there was involved a St. Paul ordinance which provided for a direct charge of fifty cents for the inspection of each animal, and it was held void, because in conflict with that part of the state law requiring a license from the dairy commissioner. It was then said (referring to the law of 1895) that “the statute expressly provides that ordinances passed thereunder shall not conflict with any of the laws of the state. The state granted defendant a license under the-general statutes for the term of one year, and the city, in effect, annuls it, and destroys the privileges conferred thereby, by refusing him a city license except upon payment of an inspection fee. Here we have a square conflict between the authority of the state and of the city.” It was then distinctly laid down that the 1895 statute withheld from cities the right to impose any fee, either for-inspection or for the license, and, further, that “the inspection is necessary to enable the licensing power to determine whether the-applicant is entitled to a license, and it necessarily follows that the expense of ascertaining this preliminary fact is a part of the-expense of the license.”

The only difference between the St. Paul ordinance and the-present one is that all dealers in milk produced by herds kept outside of Hennepin county, or the owners of such herds, have imposed upon them the burden of paying all charges for inspection to-the veterinarian who does the work, and these charges may exceed in amount fifty cents per animal exacted by the invalid St. Paul ordinance, while owners of herds kept within the limits of Hennepin county, and venders of milk produced by the same, are exempted from this burden. It is borne by the city.

The main question is whether the inspection fee or charge which) must be paid by the owners of, or the venders of milk produced by, herds outside of Hennepin county is, to all intents and purposes,. [107]*107a license fee, or part of the expense of the license. If it is, that part of the ordinance which distinguishes and discriminates between herds inside of the boundary lines of Hennepin county and those outside must be declared void, because in conflict with the statute.

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722 N.W.2d 1 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 N.W. 309, 86 Minn. 103, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-elofson-minn-1902.