Judges: Daly
Filed Date: 12/15/1855
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
By the Court.
By the Montgomery charter the common council were authorized to make and ordain such law, statutes or ordinances as to them, or the greater part of them, should seem to be good, useful or necessary for the good rule and government of the body corporate, provided they were not repugnant to the laws of the province or to the laws of England. (Kent’s charter, 93.)
Under this very general power the ordinance in question was passed, which provides that the owner or occupant of any store or building in which there is a hoistway, shall er-
There is nothing in this ordinance depriving the citizen of the free and full enjoyment of his property. It is simply a public regulation, useful and necessary for the protection'of the persons or lives of those upon whom the duty is imposed of entering buildings in the case of fire, for the purpose of extinguishing it. It merely imposes upon the owners or occupants of buildings the duty of so constructing them, or of keeping them in such a condition that those who shall have occasion to enter them in time of fire shall be exposed to no unnecessary risk or peril. Instead of interfering with the rights of property, or impairing the use and enjoyment of it, it is a regulation for the protection and preservation of the property of every citizen. A man may be unwilling so to construct his building, or to keep it in such a state as to render it impossible to adopt the most efficacious means for its preservation in case of fire. He may be indifferent as to its preservation, or be content to take the chance of its destruction ; but the consequence of his so doing, in a compactly built city, may not be visited upon him alone, but lead to a conflagrationinvolving in destruction thebuildings of his neighbors eontigxxous or adjoining. Any public regulation, therefore, designed as a precautionary measure against accident dxxringfire to those engaged in the performance of a public duty, which facilitates the discharge of that duty by rendering less hazardous its performance, is a regulation for the public benefit. Such is the nature of this ordinance; it imposes common duties upon all, for the security and safety of the property bf each, and, as a municipal regulation, is both useful and necessary. The statutes of the state which regulate the stracture of buildings in this city, the materials of which they shall be composed, the due separation of beams, the thickness of walls, &c., (Law of 1830, p. 343,) are public regulations of the same general character
Judgment overruling the demurrer affirmed.