Tugman v. City of Chicago

78 Ill. 405
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 78 Ill. 405 (Tugman v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tugman v. City of Chicago, 78 Ill. 405 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a prosecution, originally instituted before a police magistrate by the city of Chicago, to recover from Chas. H. Tugman a penalty of $10, for the violation of a regulation or ordinance adopted on the 12th day of December, 1871, by the board of health of the city of Chicago, which reads as follows:

“That from and after the first day of January, A. D. 1872, no distillery, slaughter house, rendering establishment or soap factory shall be erected or put into operation in any building not now used for such purpose, within the territory in the city of Chicago bounded as follows, to-wit: Fullerton avenue on the north, Thirty-fifth street on the south, Lake Michigan on the east, and Western avenue on the west.”

The cause was taken by appeal from the police court to the criminal court of Cook county, where, upon a trial, judgment was rendered against appellant, for the sum of $10.

It is conceded that appellant owned a slaughter house within the limits designated by the ordinance, which was. erected and put into operation after the 1st day. of January, 1872, and at the time, and prior to the commencement of the action, he was engaged in slaughtering cattle therein, both, for packing and city consumption.

It is also conceded, by both parties, that at and prior to the commencement of the suit, several other slaughter houses were in operation in said city, within the limits designated in the regulation, which.were erected and in operation prior to the adoption of the ordinance.

There being no dispute as to the facts, the only question presented by the record is, whether the regulation or ordinance adopted by the board of health is valid or void.

The first position of appellant is, that the regulation is void, because it is unreasonable and oppressive.

Where power is conferred upon the legislative department of a municipal corporation to enact by-laws and ordinances for the better government of the inhabitants of the municipality, the body intrusted with that power, in its exercise, can not enact ordinances that are unreasonable, oppressive, or such as will create a monopoly.

Each member of a municipal corporation is required to share the burdens incident to such an organization; but, at the same time, all are entitled to share and participate equally in all benefits to be derived from such a government.

An ordinance, therefore, which would make.an act done by one penal, and impose no penalty for the same act done, under like circumstances, upon another, could not be sanctioned or sustained,because it would be unjust and unreasonable. Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sec. 256.

In the case of the City of Chicago v. Rumpff, 45 Ill. 90, where the validity of an ordinance was called in question, which provided that all slaughtering for city consumption should be done at the establishment of a particular firm, and prohibited, under a penalty, slaughtering at any other place, it was said : “All by-laws should be general in their operation, and should bear equally upon all the inhabitants of the municipality. When privileges are granted by an ordinance, they should be open to the enjoyment of all upon the same terms and conditions. That the common council had the right, under the large powers conferred by the charter, to so regulate the business of slaughtering animals as to prohibit its exercise, except in a particular portion of the city, leaving all persons free to erect slaughtering houses, and to exercise the calling at the place designated, can not be controverted. * * * * When that body have made the necessary regulations required for the health or comfort of the inhabitants, all persons inclined to pursue such an occupation should have the opportunity of conforming to such regulations, otherwise the ordinance would be unreasonable, and tend to oppression.”

The same principle was clearly and forcibly enunciated in the case of Mayor v. Thorne, 7 Paige, 261, in the following language : “As all by-laws must be reasonable, the common council can not make a by-law which permits one person to carry on the dangerous business, and prohibit another, who has an equal right, from pursuing the same business. Neither have they the right to permit the dangerous manufacture to be carried on in buildings already erected, and to prohibit these defendants, whose buildings were destroyed by an incendiary, from rebuilding the same for the purpose of carrying on a manufacture which is permitted to others.” See, also, Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 200.

It will be observed, that the regulation, to enforce which this suit was instituted, prohibits the use and operating of slaughter houses which should be erected after the first day of January, 1872, while those that were erected prior to that time are left perfectly free tobe operated as the owners thereof may desire.

If the health or comfort of the city required the prohibition of new slaughter houses within a designated part of the city, the same reason would surely demand that old ones should be discontinued.

If one of the citizens of Chicago is permitted to engage in the business of slaughtering animals in a certain locality, an ordinance which would prevent, under a penalty, another from engaging in the same business, would not only be unreasonable, and, for that reason, void, but its direct tendency would be to create a monopoly, which the law will not tolerate.

The fact that certain persons were engaged in the business within the district designated in the ordinance at the time of its adoption, gave them no right to monopolize the business, nor would such fact authorize the board of health to provide that such persons might continue the avocation, while others should be deprived of a like privilege who should engage in the business at a later period.

If the board of health had any power to adopt an ordinance on the subject, the ordinance, to be valid, should not discriminate in favor of any citizen. If it prohibited one from carrying on the business, that prohibition should extend to all, regardless of the time the business may have been commenced.

A regulation of this character, to be binding upon the citizen, must not only be general, but it should be uniform in its operation.

It is also urged, that it was incompetent for the legislature to confer upon the board of health legislative powers, and for that reason the regulation adopted by the board is void.

The board of health derives its power, whatever it may be, from an act of the legislature, approved March 9, 1867, “An act to amend the charter of the city of Chicago.” Private Laws of 1867, page 754.

The first section of chapter four of the act provides, that the mayor of the city, with six other persons, to be appointed by the judges of the Superior Court, shall constitute the board of health of the city.

Section two, of the same chapter, is as follows:

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