While the police power of the state cannot be so arbitrarily
exercised as to deprive persons of their property without due
process of law or deny them equal protection of the law, it is one
of the most essential powers of government and one of the least
limitable -- in fact, the imperative necessity for its existence
precludes any limitation upon it when not arbitrarily
exercised.
A vested interest cannot, because of conditions once obtaining,
be asserted against the proper exercise of the police power -- to
so hold would preclude development.
Chicago Alton R. Co. v.
Tranbarger, 238 U. S. 67.
There must be progress, and in its march, private interests must
yield to the good of the community.
The police power may be exerted under some conditions to declare
that, under particular circumstances and in particular localities,
specified businesses which are not nuisances
per se (such
as livery stables, as in
Reinman v. Little Rock,
237 U. S. 171, and
brick yards, as in this case) are to be deemed nuisances in fact
and law.
While an ordinance prohibiting the manufacturing of bricks
within a specified section of a municipality may be a
constitutional exercise of the police power --
quaere
whether prohibiting of digging the clay and moving it from that
section would not amount to an unconstitutional deprivation of
property without due process of law.
This Court cannot consider the contention of one attacking a
municipal ordinance that it denies him equal protection of the laws
when based upon disputable considerations of classification and on
a comparison
Page 239 U. S. 395
of conditions of which there is no means of judicial
determination.
In this case, the charges of plaintiff in error that the
ordinance attacked and alleged to be ruining his business was
adopted in order to foster a monopoly and suppress his competition
with others in the same business is too illusive for this Court to
consider, the state courts having also refuted it.
The fact that a particular business is not prohibited in all
sections of a municipality does not, for that reason, make the
ordinance unconstitutional as denying equal protection of the law
to those carrying on that business in the prohibited section --
conditions may justify the distinction and classification.
In determining whether a municipal ordinance goes further than
necessary to remedy the evil to be cured, this Court must, in the
absence of clear showing to the contrary, accord good faith to the
municipality.
Whether an ordinance is within the charter power of the city or
valid under the state constitution are questions of state law.
An ordinance of Los Angeles prohibiting the manufacturing of
bricks within specified limits of the city
held, in an
action brought by the owner of brick clay deposits and a brick
factory, not to be unconstitutional as depriving him of his
property without due process of law or as denying him equal
protection of the laws.
165 Cal. 416 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality under the due
process and equal protection provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment
of an ordinance of Los Angeles prohibiting brick yards within
certain limits of the city, are stated in the opinion.
Page 239 U. S. 404
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Habeas corpus prosecuted in the Supreme Court of the State of
California for the discharge of plaintiff in error from the custody
of defendant in error, chief of police of the City of Los
Angeles.
Plaintiff in error, to whom we shall refer as petitioner, was
convicted of a misdemeanor for the violation of an ordinance of the
City of Los Angeles which makes it unlawful for any person to
establish or operate a brickyard or brick kiln, or any
establishment, factory, or place for the manufacture or burning of
brick within described limits in the city. Sentence was pronounced
against him,
Page 239 U. S. 405
and he was committed to the custody of defendant in error as
Chief of Police of the City of Los Angeles.
Being so in custody he filed a petition in the supreme court of
the state for a writ of habeas corpus. The writ was issued.
Subsequently defendant in error made a return thereto, supported by
affidavits, to which petitioner made sworn reply. The court
rendered judgment discharging the writ and remanding petitioner to
custody. The chief justice of the court then granted this writ of
error.
The petition sets forth the reason for resorting to habeas
corpus and that petitioner is the owner of a tract of land within
the limits described in the ordinance, upon which tract of land
there is a very valuable bed of clay, of great value for the
manufacture of brick of a fine quality, worth to him not less than
$100,000 per acre, or about $800,000 for the entire tract for
brickmaking purposes, and not exceeding $60,000 for residential
purposes or for any purpose other than the manufacture of brick.
That he has made excavations of considerable depth and covering a
very large area of the property, and that, on account thereof, the
land cannot be utilized for residential purposes or any purpose
other than that for which it is now used. That he purchased the
land because of such bed of clay and for the purpose of
manufacturing brick; that it was, at the time of purchase, outside
of the limits of the city and distant from dwellings and other
habitations, and that he did not expect or believe, nor did other
owners of property in the vicinity expect or believe, that the
territory would be annexed to the city. That he has erected
expensive machinery for the manufacture of bricks of fine quality
which have been and are being used for building purposes in and
about the city.
That if the ordinance be declared valid, he will be compelled to
entirely abandon his business and will be deprived of the use of
his property.
Page 239 U. S. 406
That the manufacture of brick must necessarily be carried on
where suitable clay is found, and the clay cannot be transported to
some other location; and, besides, the clay upon his property is
particularly fine, and clay of as good quality cannot be found in
any other place within the city where the same can be utilized for
the manufacture of brick. That, within the prohibited district,
there is one other brickyard besides that of plaintiff in
error.
That there is no reason for the prohibition of the business;
that its maintenance cannot be and is not in the nature of a
nuisance as defined in ยง 3479 of the Civil Code of the state, and
cannot be dangerous or detrimental to health or the morals or
safety or peace or welfare or convenience of the people of the
district or city.
That the business is so conducted as not to be in any way or
degree a nuisance; no noises arise therefrom, and no noxious odors,
and that, by the use of certain means (which are described)
provided and the situation of the brickyard an extremely small
amount of smoke is emitted from any kiln, and what is emitted is so
dissipated that it is not a nuisance nor in any manner detrimental
to health or comfort. That, during the seven years which the
brickyard has been conducted, no complaint has been made of it, and
no attempt has ever been made to regulate it.
That the city embraces 107.62 square miles in area and 75% of it
is devoted to residential purposes; that the district described in
the ordinance includes only about three square miles, is sparsely
settled, and contains large tracts of unsubdivided and unoccupied
land, and that the boundaries of the district were determined for
the sole and specific purpose of prohibiting and suppressing the
business of petitioner and that of the other brickyard.
That there are and were at the time of the adoption of the
ordinance, in other districts of the city thickly built up with
residences brickyards maintained more detrimental to the
inhabitants of the city. That a petition was filed,
Page 239 U. S. 407
signed by several hundred persons, representing such brickyards
to be a nuisance, and no ordinance or regulation was passed in
regard to such petition, and the brickyards are operated without
hindrance or molestation. That other brickyards are permitted to be
maintained without prohibition or regulation.
That no ordinance or regulation of any kind has been passed at
any time regulating or attempting to regulate brickyards, or
inquiry made whether they could be maintained without being a
nuisance or detrimental to health.
That the ordinance does not state a public offense, and is in
violation of the Constitution of the state and the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
That the business of petitioner is a lawful one, none of the
materials used in it are combustible, the machinery is of the most
approved pattern, and its conduct will not create a nuisance.
There is an allegation that the ordinance, if enforced, fosters
and will foster a monopoly, and protects and will protect other
persons engaged in the manufacture of brick in the city, and
discriminates and will discriminate against petitioner in favor of
such other persons, who are his competitors, and will prevent him
from entering into competition with them.
The petition, after almost every paragraph, charges a
deprivation of property, the taking of property without
compensation, and that the ordinance is in consequence invalid.
We have given this outline of the petition, as it presents
petitioner's contentions, with the circumstances (which we deem
most material) that give color and emphasis to them.
But there are substantial traverses made by the return to the
writ, among others, a denial of the charge that the ordinance was
arbitrarily directed against the business of
Page 239 U. S. 408
petitioner, and it is alleged that there is another district in
which brickyards are prohibited.
There was a denial of the allegations that the brickyard was
conducted or could be conducted sanitarily, or was not offensive to
health. And there were affidavits supporting the denials. In these
it was alleged that the fumes, gases, smoke, soot, steam, and dust
arising from petitioner's brickmaking plant have from time to time
caused sickness and serious discomfort to those living in the
vicinity.
There was no specific denial of the value of the property, or
that it contained deposits of clay, or that the latter could not be
removed and manufactured into brick elsewhere. There was, however,
a general denial that the enforcement of the ordinance would
"entirely deprive petitioner of his property and the use
thereof."
How the supreme court dealt with the allegations, denials, and
affidavits we can gather from its opinion. The court said, through
Mr. Justice Sloss:
"The district to which the prohibition was applied contains
about three square miles. The petitioner is the owner of a tract of
land, containing eight acres, more or less, within the district
described in the ordinance. He acquired his land in 1902, before
the territory to which the ordinance was directed had been annexed
to the City of Los Angeles. His land contains valuable deposits of
clay suitable for the manufacture of brick, and he has, during the
entire period of his ownership, used the land for brickmaking, and
has erected thereon kilns, machinery, and buildings necessary for
such manufacture. The land, as he alleges, is far more valuable for
brickmaking than for any other purpose."
The court considered the business one which could be regulated,
and that regulation was not precluded by the fact "that the value
of investments made in the business prior to any legislative action
will be greatly diminished," and that no complaint could be based
upon the fact that
Page 239 U. S. 409
petitioner had been carrying on the trade in that locality for a
long period.
And, considering the allegations of the petition, the denials of
the return, and the evidence of the affidavits, the court said that
the latter tended to show that the district created has become
primarily a residential section, and that the occupants of the
neighboring dwellings are seriously incommoded by the operations of
petitioner, and that such evidence,
"when taken in connection with the presumptions in favor of the
propriety of the legislative determination, is certainly sufficient
to overcome any contention that the prohibition [of the ordinance]
was a mere arbitrary invasion of private right, not supported by
any tenable belief that the continuance of the business . . . was
so detrimental to the interests of others as to require
suppression."
The court, on the evidence, rejected the contention that the
ordinance was not in good faith enacted as a police measure, and
that it was intended to discriminate against petitioner, or that it
was actuated by any motive of injuring him as an individual.
The charge of discrimination between localities was not
sustained. The court expressed the view that the determination of
prohibition was for the legislature, and that the court, without
regard to the fact shown in the return that there was another
district in which brickmaking was prohibited, could not sustain the
claim that the ordinance was not enacted in good faith, but was
designed to discriminate against petitioner and the other brickyard
within the district. "The facts before us," the court finally
said,
"would certainly not justify the conclusion that the ordinance
here in question was designed, in either its adoption or its
enforcement, to be anything but what it purported to be;
viz., a legitimate regulation, operating alike upon all
who come within its terms."
We think the conclusion of the court is justified by the
evidence, and makes it unnecessary to review the many
Page 239 U. S. 410
cases cited by petitioner in which it is decided that the police
power of a state cannot be arbitrarily exercised. The principle is
familiar, but in any given case it must plainly appear to apply. It
is to be remembered that we are dealing with one of the most
essential powers of government -- one that is the least limitable.
It may, indeed, seem harsh in its exercise, usually is on some
individual, but the imperative necessity for its existence
precludes any limitation upon it when not exerted arbitrarily. A
vested interest cannot be asserted against it because of conditions
once obtaining.
Chicago & Alton R. Co. v. Tranbarger,
238 U. S. 67,
238 U. S. 78. To so
hold would preclude development, and fix a city forever in its
primitive conditions. There must be progress, and if, in its march,
private interests are in the way, they must yield to the good of
the community. The logical result of petitioner's contention would
seem to be that a city could not be formed or enlarged against the
resistance of an occupant of the ground, and that, if it grows at
all, it can only grow as the environment of the occupations that
are usually banished to the purlieus.
The police power and to what extent it may be exerted we have
recently illustrated in
Reinman v. Little Rock,
237 U. S. 171. The
circumstances of the case were very much like those of the case at
bar, and give reply to the contentions of petitioner, especially
that which asserts that a necessary and lawful occupation that is
not a nuisance
per se cannot be made so by legislative
declaration. There was a like investment in property, encouraged by
the then conditions; a like reduction of value and deprivation of
property was asserted against the validity of the ordinance there
considered; a like assertion of an arbitrary exercise of the power
of prohibition. Against all of these contentions, and causing the
rejection of them all, was adduced the police power. There was a
prohibition of a business, lawful in itself, there as here. It was
a livery stable there; a brickyard here. They differ in
Page 239 U. S. 411
particulars, but they are alike in that which cause and justify
prohibition in defined localities -- that is, the effect upon the
health and comfort of the community.
The ordinance passed upon prohibited the conduct of the business
within a certain defined area in Little Rock, Arkansas. This Court
said of it: granting that the business was not a nuisance
per
se, it was clearly within the police power of the state to
regulate it, "and, to that end, to declare that, in particular
circumstances and in particular localities, a livery stable shall
be deemed a nuisance in fact and in law." And the only limitation
upon the power was stated to be that the power could not be exerted
arbitrarily or with unjust discrimination. There was a citation of
cases. We think the present case is within the ruling thus
declared.
There is a distinction between
Reinman v. Little Rock
and the case at bar. There, a particular business was prohibited
which was not affixed to or dependent upon its locality; it could
be conducted elsewhere. Here, it is contended, the latter condition
does not exist, and it is alleged that the manufacture of brick
must necessarily be carried on where suitable clay is found, and
that the clay on petitioner's property cannot be transported to
some other locality. This is not urged as a physical impossibility,
but only, counsel say, that such transportation and the
transportation of the bricks to places where they could be used in
construction work would be prohibitive "from a financial
standpoint." But upon, the evidence, the supreme court considered
the case, as we understand its opinion, from the standpoint of the
offensive effects of the operation of a brickyard, and not from the
deprivation of the deposits of clay, and distinguished
Ex Parte
Kelso, 147 Cal. 609, wherein the court declared invalid an
ordinance absolutely prohibiting the maintenance or operation of a
rock or stone quarry within a certain portion of the City and
County of San Francisco.
Page 239 U. S. 412
The court there said that the effect of the ordinance was
"to absolutely deprive the owners of real property within such
limits of a valuable right incident to their ownership,
viz., the right to extract therefrom such rock and stone
as they may find it to their advantage to dispose of."
The court expressed the view that the removal could be
regulated, but that "an absolute prohibition of such removal under
the circumstances" could not be upheld.
In the present case, there is no prohibition of the removal of
the brick clay -- only a prohibition within the designated locality
of its manufacture into bricks. And to this feature of the
ordinance our opinion is addressed. Whether other questions would
arise if the ordinance were broader, and opinion on such questions,
we reserve.
Petitioner invokes the equal protection clause of the
Constitution, and charges that it is violated in that the ordinance
(1) "prohibits him from manufacturing brick upon his property while
his competitors are permitted, without regulation of any kind, to
manufacture brick upon property situated in all respects similarly
to that of plaintiff in error," and (2) that it
"prohibits the conduct of his business while it permits the
maintenance within the same district of any other kind of business,
no matter how objectionable the same may be, either in its nature
or in the manner in which it is conducted."
If we should grant that the first specification shows a
violation of classification -- that is, a distinction between
businesses which was not within the legislative power --
petitioner's contention encounters the objection that it depends
upon an inquiry of fact which the record does not enable us to
determine. It is alleged in the return to the petition that
brickmaking is prohibited in one other district, and an ordinance
is referred to regulating business in other districts. To this,
plaintiff in error replied that the ordinance attempts to prohibit
the operation of certain
Page 239 U. S. 413
businesses having mechanical power, and does not prohibit the
maintenance of any business or the operation of any machine that is
operated by animal power. In other words, petitioner makes his
contention depend upon disputable considerations of classification
and upon a comparison of conditions of which there is no means of
judicial determination, and upon which, nevertheless, we are
expected to reverse legislative action exercised upon matters of
which the city has control.
To a certain extent, the latter comment may be applied to other
contentions; and, besides, there is no allegation or proof of other
objectionable businesses being permitted within the district, and a
speculation of their establishment or conduct at some future time
is too remote.
In his petition and argument, something is made of the ordinance
as fostering a monopoly and suppressing his competition with other
brickmakers. The charge and argument are too illusive. It is part
of the charge that the ordinance was directed against him. The
charge, we have seen, was rejected by the supreme court, and we
find nothing to justify it.
It may be that brickyards in other localities within the city
where the same conditions exist are not regulated or prohibited,
but it does not follow that they will not be. That petitioner's
business was first in time to be prohibited does not make its
prohibition unlawful. And it may be, as said by the supreme court
of the state, that the conditions justify a distinction. However,
the inquiries thus suggested are outside of our province.
There are other and subsidiary contentions which, we think, do
not require discussion. They are disposed of by what we have said.
It may be that something else than prohibition would have satisfied
the conditions. Of this, however, we have no means of determining,
and besides, we cannot declare invalid the exertion of a power
which the city undoubtedly has because of a charge that it does
Page 239 U. S. 414
not exactly accommodate the conditions, or that some other
exercise would have been better or less harsh. We must accord good
faith to the city in the absence of a clear showing to the contrary
and an honest exercise of judgment upon the circumstances which
induced its action.
We do not notice the contention that the ordinance is not within
the city's charter powers, nor that it is in violation of the state
constitution, such contentions raising only local questions which
must be deemed to have been decided adversely to petitioner by the
supreme court of the state.
Judgment affirmed.