Stevens v. City of Louisville

511 S.W.2d 228, 1974 Ky. LEXIS 483
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 31, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 511 S.W.2d 228 (Stevens v. City of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. City of Louisville, 511 S.W.2d 228, 1974 Ky. LEXIS 483 (Ky. 1974).

Opinion

VANCE, Commissioner.

This is an appeal from a judgment upholding the validity of an ordinance of the City of Louisville, Kentucky, which prohibited horseback riding upon public ways and park property (with certain exceptions) in *229 the City of Louisville and which dismissed appellant’s claim for an injunction to prohibit the city from interfering with their alleged right to ride horses upon the public ways of the city and in particular upon and along a bridle path located on Southern Parkway.

The pertinent part of the ordinance in question reads as follows:

“505.10 (1) No person shall ride a horse within the City upon any public way or park property, except upon property which has been duly designated for that purpose by the Director of the Metropolitan Park and Recreation Board. This section shall not apply to persons riding in recognized horse shows or civic events.
“(2) Persons taking horses to places where they may be legally ridden shall either transport them thereto in vans, trailers or motor vehicles from the premises whereon they are stabled.”

The ordinance is attacked upon the following grounds: (1) The city does not have a right to stop a lawful activity which is not a nuisance per se; (2) the ordinance is discriminatory and constitutes special legislation because horseback riding cannot properly be singled out as a subject for legislation; (3) the ordinance grants an arbitrary power to the Director of the Metropolitan Park and Recreation Board because no standards are prescribed therein to control the exercise of his discretion; (4) the city has no right to regulate legitimate park uses of park property — that power residing solely in the Metropolitan Park and Recreation Board.

A threshold question is presented as to whether the ordinance purports to authorize the Director of the Metropolitan Park and Recreation Board to designate certain public ways upon which horses may be ridden or whether his discretion is limited to park property. We construe the ordinance to prohibit all horseback riding upon public streets and ways and to grant discretion to the director to designate bridle paths upon park property only.

The ordinance, insofar as it relates to public ways and streets, does not fall victim to the attacks made upon it. We consider it a valid exercise of the police power of the city and reasonable in view of the interest sought to be protected.

Appellants’ brief assaults the ordinance as being discriminatory in that it applies only to horses as follows:

* * * We, therefore, assume that kangaroo riders can employ bridle paths for their purposes but horse riders cannot. An elephant can be ridden on the bridle path, but a horse cannot. If a tiger could be trained, it could be ridden. Is a donkey or a jackass a horse? What about a mule? Does this relate to live horses only or does it forbid a child rocking on a hobbyhorse? What about a mechanical horse? Could a merry-go-round be set up? The ordinance forbids none of these but only relates to the valiant steed who is such a major part of Kentucky's heritage. The trial Court’s finding that this ordinance is not discriminatory because it treats all horse riders the same is misfoundéd. If a horse rider cannot ride his horse but can ride an animal which is not legally a horse, but similar to a horse, then the ordinance discriminates against not only the horse but the horse rider. * * *.
“Saddling the descendents of Pegasus, Man O’War, Traveler, Silver, Dan Patch, Widow Maker, Trigger, Champion, Black Beauty, Bucephalus, Rosinante and Black Bess, to name only a few, with this asinine canon is to denigrate the legacy of the courser and the charger, the gigster and the stepper, the hunter and the racer, the clipper and the cob, the padnag and the palfrey and capitulate at last to the gasoline powered conveyance which has contributed little to *230 our history but much to our. ecological turning point.”

The evidence in this case clearly indicated that horseback riding in areas in which vehicular traffic was heavy presented a serious safety problem which did not exist with respect to riders of pigs, goats, cattle, elephants or kangaroos. Thus there is a valid basis, relating to horses, and not to other animals, for treating horses as a separate classification for the purpose of this ordinance.

We also note that the ordinance does not define the term “horse”. That term is therefore subject to judicial interpretation.

The extent to which the term “horse” could possibly be extended to other animals by statutory construction and thus allay the fears of appellants that kangaroo and elephant riders may go unpunished under the ordinance and that donkeys, mules, jackasses and hobbyhorses may not be horses in the legal sense is aptly illustrated in Regina v. Ojibway, 8 Criminal Law Quarterly 137 (Toronto 1965) 1 in which the question presented was whether a pony was a small bird under the provisions of the Small Birds Act. The decision by Blue, J., held as follows:

“This is an appeal by the Crown by way of a stated case from a decision of the magistrate acquitting the accused of a charge under the Small Birds Act, R.S.O., 1960, c724, s. 2. The facts are not in dispute. Fred Ojibway, an Indian, was riding his pony through Queen’s Park on January 2, 1965. Being impoverished, and having been forced to pledge his saddle, he substituted a downy pillow in lieu of the said saddle. On this particular day the accused’s misfortune was further heightened by the circumstance of his pony breaking its right foreleg. In accord with current Indian custom, the accused then shot the pony to relieve it of its awkwardness.
“The accused was then charged with having breached the Small Birds Act, s. 2 of which states:
‘2. Anyone maiming, injuring or killing small birds is guilty of an offense and subject to a fine not in excess of two hundred dollars.’
“The learned magistrate acquitted the accused, holding, in fact, that he had killed his horse and not a small bird. With respect, I cannot agree.
“In light of the definition section my course is quite clear. Section 1 defines ‘bird’ as ‘a two-legged animal covered with feathers’. There can be no doubt that this case is covered by this section.
“Counsel for the accused made several ingenious arguments to which, in fairness, I must address myself. He submitted that the evidence of the expert clearly concluded that the animal in question was a pony and not a bird, but this is not the issue. We are not interested in whether the animal in question is a bird or not in fact, but whether it is one in law. Statutory interpretation has forced many a horse to eat birdseed for the rest of its life.
“Counsel also contended that the neighing noise emitted by the animal could not possibly be produced by a bird. With respect, the sounds emitted by an animal are irrelevant to its nature, for a bird is no less a bird because it is silent.

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Bluebook (online)
511 S.W.2d 228, 1974 Ky. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapphigh-1974.