State v. Schmidt

159 N.W.2d 113, 280 Minn. 281, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1101
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 17, 1968
Docket40632
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 N.W.2d 113 (State v. Schmidt) 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. Schmidt, 159 N.W.2d 113, 280 Minn. 281, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1101 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

Otis, Justice.

This is an appeal from a conviction for violating an ordinance of the city of Brainerd requiring transient merchants to obtain a permit to do business in that city and requiring nonresidents to post a bond. The issue is whether such an ordinance is valid. We hold it is not.

The facts are not in dispute. Defendant, Robert Theodore Schmidt, is a resident of St. Cloud, a city located in Stearns, Benton, and Sher-burne Counties. He is employed by Wearever Aluminum Inc. of New *282 Kensington, Pennsylvania, to solicit orders for the sale of cooking utensils in the city of Brainerd and in ten other Minnesota communities. Defendant was charged by the city of Brainerd with having made sales on October 10, 1964, in violation of Ordinance No. 469, relevant provisions of which are set forth in the footnote. 1 The municipal court of Brainerd found defendant guilty and imposed a sentence of $50 or 15 *283 days. The matter was then appealed to the district court and tried without a jury, the only issue being the validity of the ordinance. Defendant was again convicted in the district court. The ordinance was upheld for reasons set forth in an accompanying memorandum. A sentence of $50 or 10 days was imposed November 7, 1966.

The trial court held that the discrimination between residents and nonresidents of Crow Wing County with respect to the bond requirement was proper because it protected citizens who deal with solicitors not otherwise amenable to suit in the same manner as resident salesmen. The court felt that a $250 bond was nominal and within the police power of the city to exact from nonresident solicitors. Minn. St. 437.02.

Because it denies defendant equal protection of the laws and imposes a burden on interstate commerce, we hold the ordinance unconstitutional. 2 The city of Brainerd argues that the bond required of nonresidents by Section 7 of the ordinance is valid because it provides some financial security for Brainerd citizens in the event a dispute arises over sales consummated by a nonresident solicitor. Local solicitors, it is argued, are amenable to suit for breach of contract or fraud. According *284 to the city, the bond is necessary to protect “the. poor and gullible citizenry” from solicitors who are “generally out of sight or beyond the reach of process when sought.” The fallacy of the city’s argument lies in the assumption that salesmen living in Crow Wing County are necessarily solvent and financially responsible, whereas their counterparts in Benton County and elsewhere are more likely to be without assets from which to satisfy a judgment. The record does not support this assumption.

We have held in a number of cases that ordinances governing itinerant merchants and transient vendors cannot be sustained if they do not apply equally to residents and nonresidents of the municipality. In State ex rel. Greenwood v. Nolan, 108 Minn. 170, 122 N. W. 255, we struck down an ordinance which provided for licensing all solicitors except residents of the municipality. The same result was reached in State ex rel. Mudeking v. Parr, 109 Minn. 147, 123 N. W. 408. There a license fee of $150 was required of transient peddlers, but not of resident merchants, for engaging in house-to-house solicitation. Our court held that the purpose of the ordinance was to prevent peddling from becoming a public nuisance. However, we questioned whether local solicitors were any less a nuisance than those who solicited for a nonresident company. We concluded that the ordinance resulted in an unconstitutional classification which could not be sustained either as a tax measure or as a police regulation.

In so far as the ordinance directs that a bond shall be exacted from all but residents of Crow Wing County, we have no difficulty in applying the rule consistently followed and hold that the classification is arbitrary and unreasonable.

With respect to the effect of the ordinance on interstate commerce, the law is equally well settled. Beginning with Town of Green River v. Fuller Brush Co. (10 Cir.) 65 F. (2d) 112, 88 A. L. R. 177, state and Federal courts have been called on to review the validity of a great many “Green River” ordinances which prohibit or license house-to-house peddling. 3 Prior to Green River, the United States Supreme Court *285 in Real Silk Hosiery Mills v. Portland, 268 U. S. 325, 45 S. Ct. 525, 69 L. ed. 982, held unconstitutional an ordinance requiring a peddler’s bond where the ordinance did not discriminate against nonresidents, but provided for both a license and a bond from all house-to-house solicitors. This, the United States Supreme Court held, imposed an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce. It rejected the argument that the legislation was justified as a means of preventing fraud. The court’s holding was distinguished in Breard v. Alexandria, 341 U. S. 622, note 15, 71 S. Ct. 920, 95 L. ed. 1233, but has not been subsequently overruled or modified. Both the Breard case and California v. Thompson, 313 U. S. 109, 61 S. Ct. 930, 85 L. ed. 1219, indicate that the Portland ordinance singled out interstate commerce for regulation, however. As we see it, the California statute which required Thompson to post a bond to carry on his business as a transportation agent was upheld because it did not suffer from the impediments of a local ordinance. The distinction has been well articulated in Moyant v. Borough of Paramus, 30 N. J. 528, 154 A. (2d) 9. There the New Jersey court passed on the validity of an ordinance which required that solicitors post a $1,000 surety bond unless they were residents of the defendant borough. The court pointed out that the Thompson case did not present the problem of oppression and expense inherent in posting a multiplicity of bonds required if a merchant, engaged in interstate commerce, wished to do business in a number of different communities. The court underscored the problem by quoting from Nippert v. City of Richmond, 327 U. S. 416, 66 S. Ct. 586, 90 L. ed. 760, in the following language (30 N. J. 551, 154 A. [2d] 21):

“* * * The drummer or salesman whose business requires him to move from place to place, exhausting his market at each periodic visit or conducting his business in more sporadic fashion with reference to particular localities, would find the cumulative burden of the Richmond type of tax eating away all possible return from his selling. A day here, a day there, five days now and five days a year or several months later, with a flat license tax annually imposed lacking any proportion to the number or length of visits or the volume of the business or return can only mean the stoppage of a large amount of commerce which *286

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.W.2d 113, 280 Minn. 281, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schmidt-minn-1968.