Whyte v. City of Sacramento

224 P. 1008, 65 Cal. App. 534, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 581
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2616.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 224 P. 1008 (Whyte v. City of Sacramento) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whyte v. City of Sacramento, 224 P. 1008, 65 Cal. App. 534, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 581 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiffs, five in number, are either co-partnerships or corporations, and are engaged in the general trucking business in the City of Sacramento, carrying and hauling, by means of motor-trucks, articles of merchandise, commodities, materials, and other personal property of every kind and description, “which may be offered to plaintiffs generally to be carried and hauled,” over, upon, and across the streets of said city, “both to and from points entirely within the territorial limits of said city and to and from points outside of the territorial limits of said city to and from points therein, ’ ’ and for that purpose the plaintiffs own and operate over, upon, and across the streets of said city motor-trucks “having a carrying capacity of one ton and of more than one ton.” In other words, the plaintiffs are, and for several years last past have been, engaged in the business of transporting freight from point to point within the limits of said city and from points outside of said limits to points within said limits and vice versa and for that purpose have used and are now using motor-trucks of a ton and of more than a ton carrying capacity.

The defendants, other than the City of Sacramento, are members of the city council or governing board of said city, and certain other city officials directly charged with the duty of enforcing the local ordinances and regulations adopted or passed by said governing board.

On the twenty-second day of June, 1922, said city council regularly passed an ordinance for said city, known as ‘ ‘ Ordinance No. 80, Fourth Series,” the object of which is, as its title indicates, to regulate “travel, traffic and parking upon the streets and other public places laid out for the use of vehicles and pedestrians in the City of Sacramento,” etc., also prescribing a penalty for the violation of the provisions thereof. Said ordinance, among others, contains the following provisions:

“Section 2. All vehicles having a carrying capacity of one ton or over, when engaged in the business of hauling *538 or conveying goods, wares, freight or merchandise of any description to any place in Traffic Districts Nos. 2 and 3, must travel either on ‘I’ Street or on ‘L’ Street to the cross street nearest the destination of such load; and such vehicles must depart from a place within said Traffic Districts Numbers 2 and 3 after loading, by the nearest intersecting street running in a northerly or southerly direction.
“Section 3. It shall be unlawful for any truck of more than one ton capacity to travel on ‘J’ or ‘K’ Streets in Traffic Districts Numbers 2 and 3 for more than one block consecutively, and then only for the purpose of loading or unloading in the block traversed.
“Section 4. All motor trucks of over one ton capacity operating as eárriers of freight, rock, sand, gravel, asphaltic mixtures or other dead weight materials to and from points within or within and without the City of Sacramento, whether operating on a regular schedule or intermittently or occasionally, shall enter and leave and while within the old city limits use the following streets and routes only:
“West of 31st and south of the center line of M. Street all east and west traffic shall be upon Q Street or Y Street only, except within such single block upon any other east and west streets upon which such truck may have freight to deliver or receive, and any traffic entering or leaving the old city limits south of the center line of M Street shall proceed to or from the line of such old city limits by the most direct route to or from Q or Y Street, or if stops are to be made on any other streets in the old city limits other than Q or Y Street, trucks shall proceed to or from the line of the old city limits or Q or Y Street to or from the point of such loading or unloading by the most direct north and south street.
“Such trucks shall cross Traffic District Number 2 only upon 6th Street.
“In like manner, west of 31st Street and north of the center line of M Street all east and west motor truck traffic of the kind in this section above defined shall be upon E Street or IT Street only.”

The penal clause of the ordinance makes the violation of the above provisions a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars or by imprisonment in *539 the city jail for not more than six months or by both such fine and imprisonment.

The complaint is a lengthy document and many of its averments involve (and in the nature of the ease necessarily so) legal conclusions. The complaint, however, first admitting that the plaintiffs herein, in the conduct of their trucking business within the limits of the City of Sacramento use and operate trucks of more than one-ton capacity, proceeds to set out in detail the character and extent of the carrying business of each of the plaintiffs and in effect alleges that it is necessary to the convenient, proper, and successful carrying on of said businesses, that the plaintiffs should have the free, unrestricted, and unobstructed use of all the streets of said city, over, upon, and across which to operate their motor-trucks, subject, of course, to such reasonable regulations of such use as are general and uniform or applicable to all persons of the same class or making like use of said streets. It is alleged that sections 2, 3, and 4 of article IX of said ordinance, as hereinabove set forth, are unreasonable in that they are discriminatory against the plaintiffs for the reason that the latter are prohibited from making use of their motor-trucks of more than a ton capacity " over and upon the same streets and highways and in the same method, manner and under the same circumstances that is permitted other persons, copartnerships, firms and corporations similarly situated and using said streets and highways for similar purposes and imposing upon said streets and highways traffic of similar weight and character; that said sections are unreasonable and invalid in that said sections or parts thereof make, or attempt to make, it unlawful for plaintiffs to exercise and pursue a lawful business, to wit, the operation of their said motor trucks in a lawful manner and to make legitimate use of their property; . . . and also in that said sections restrict, or attempt to restrict and burden, the operation of said motor trucks by plaintiffs so as to compel said trucks to be operated over and along a circuitous route to and from their destinations within said City of Sacramento and unnecessarily and unreasonably increases the distance necessary to be traveled in the operation of said motor trucks in the conduct of the respective businesses of plaintiffs in said city,” etc.; that said sections are invalid because they place a greater burden upon motor- *540 trucks of over one-ton capacity operating as carriers of rock, sand, gravel, asphaltic mixtures, or other deadweight materials while entering, leaving, and operating within “the so-called old city limits of said City of Sacramento,” than is placed upon vehicles of the same carrying capacity by section 2 of said article IX.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 P. 1008, 65 Cal. App. 534, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whyte-v-city-of-sacramento-calctapp-1924.