DocketNumber: Appeal, 126
Judges: Keller, Cunningham, Baldrige, Stadtfeld, Parker, Rhodes, Hirt
Filed Date: 10/27/1939
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued October 27, 1939. This is a proceeding in equity. Appellees (plaintiffs below) are proprietors of barber shops in the City of Philadelphia. They obtained an injunction in the court *Page 571 below against the enforcement of those provisions of an ordinance regulating the general conduct of barber shops and the business of barbering which restricted the hours during which barber shops might remain open for business. The injunction was directed against appellants, the City of Philadelphia, its Mayor, its Director of Public Health, and their successors.
The ordinance in question was first adopted on June 27, 1935, and was amended on August 15, 1938. Section 10 of the ordinance, as amended, reads as follows: "Barber shops, barber schools and barber colleges shall not be open nor conduct business on any week day prior to eight o'clock ante meridian nor after eight o'clock post meridian; save and except that on Saturday they may continue to be open and conduct business until nine o'clock post meridian: Provided, however, That the Director of Public Health upon application of the proprietor of any barber shop and proof that barber service to the public so requires, may issue a permit for the operation of a particular barber shop at such hours beyond those above prescribed as in the opinion of the said Director of Public Health public necessity may require; such permit shall be for a period not exceeding one month and may be renewed upon further proof of the necessity therefor. On the day preceding a legal holiday, barber shops, barber schools and barber colleges may remain open until nine o'clock post meridian. The hours of opening and closing refer to Eastern Standard Time except during those periods when Daylight Saving Time is in common use in the City of Philadelphia, such hours shall have reference to and be computed as Daylight Saving Time. The Bureau of Police shall assist and co-operate with the Department of Public Health in enforcing the provisions of this ordinance."
Appellees sought restraint upon the enforcement of the prescribed opening and closing hours by a bill in equity. It was therein asserted that the ordinance was unconstitutional, among other particulars, in that it *Page 572 delegated power unconstitutionally to the Director of Public Health, and was an unreasonable exercise of the police power over matters of no real or substantial relation to public health. Preliminary objections were filed to the bill. Hearing was then held on the bill for preliminary injunction, a preliminary injunction was granted, and the preliminary objections were dismissed by the court below, which held the ordinance unconstitutional for both the reasons above stated. A decree was entered granting the preliminary injunction pending final hearing. The parties then stipulated that any answer raising issues of fact be dispensed with, and the preliminary injunction made permanent as if after final hearing and determination, with leave to appellants to file exceptions. Exceptions were filed charging that the court below erred in reaching the conclusions leading to, and in entering, its decree. These exceptions were dismissed, and their dismissal is here made the basis of various assignments of error.
We express no opinion as to the directness of relation between the public health and the provisions of the challenged section of the ordinance, but we are convinced that the court below correctly held the section contained an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power.
Legislative power in Pennsylvania is vested solely in the General Assembly by article 2, section 1, of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, PS Const. art. 2, § 1. The mandatory provision embodied in this section of the Constitution has been many times interpreted by our courts in respect to a variety of enactments of the legislature imposing upon some persons or body of persons duties or powers concerning application or enforcement of the provisions of the particular enactment. Appellants, in support of their contention that the ordinance does not involve a delegation of legislative authority, cite and rely upon the following cases: Locke's Appeal,
In Locke's Appeal, supra, the constitutionality of the Act of May 3, 1871, P.L. 522 (a local option act) was determined, and it was held that the legislature may pass such a law to become effective only upon local option.
In Commonwealth v. Puder, supra, the Supreme Court considered and found constitutional the Act of June 17, 1915, P.L. 1012, providing measures for the regulation of the business of loaning money in amounts not exceeding $300, and authorizing the Banking Commissioner to issue licenses to engage in such business.
In Gima v. Hudson Coal Co., supra, it was held valid for the legislature to provide that the use of explosives in mines shall be regulated by the rules adopted by the manufacturer of explosives.
American Baseball Club of Philadelphia v. Philadelphia etal., supra, was a case involving an ordinance of the City of Philadelphia imposing upon the holding of athletic contests a license fee calculated at the rate of $5.50 per day per policeman reasonably estimated by the Director of Public Safety to be necessary to protect public safety at such gatherings. A decree of the court of common pleas restraining enforcement of the ordinance was reversed by the Supreme Court, which held the vesting of power in the Director of Public Safety to determine the number of policemen necessary not to be a delegation of legislative power. In an opinion by Mr. Justice KEPHART the court said (p. 317): "A rate is fixed, but the application of the rate is dependent upon extraneous facts to be found by an administrative official. . . . . . . In this case while the rate is definite, $5.50 per policeman required for an eight hour day, the base to which the rate is to be applied is left to administrative officers for determination: here the number *Page 574 of policemen necessary to maintain the public order, insure the public safety, protect and incidentally promote appellees' business."
In Commonwealth v. Falk, supra, the power of the Department of Agriculture (State Live Stock Sanitary Board) to adopt and enforce rules for the examination and testing of cattle, and quarantining of diseased cattle was sustained.
Also of pertinence to the present inquiry is Commonwealth v.Sweeney,
We also refer to Rohrer v. Milk Control Board,
The principle for which these decisions stand may be stated thus: The legislature constitutionally may refer to a person or body of persons, within limits, set by the terms, purpose, or policy of the enactment, or by recognized *Page 575 scientific findings in various fields, the independent determination of facts upon which the application or enforcement of the law is to depend.
In every case to which we have referred the actual enforcement of the law was controlled by a standard created by the avowed policy, purpose, or terms of the legislation itself, or adopted by the legislature from fields of exact science, but in any case in some degree extraneous to and independent of the mind and judgment of the enforcing officer. See, also,Buttfield v. Stranahan,
But any legislative enactment which vests in a person or body of persons free of any standard independent of his or their own mind and judgment the power of supplying, or giving force to, or suspending its terms falls beyond the limits of judicial approval evidenced in the foregoing authorities, and is unconstitutional as a delegation of the power reposed exclusively in the legislature. An example of such a law we find in O'Neil v. Insurance Co.,
"We do not see how a case could be stated that would show a more complete and unconstitutional surrender of the legislative function to an appointee than that presented by the Act of 1891. By its provisions the legislature says in effect to its appointee, `Prepare just such a policy or contract as you please. We do not care to know what it is. The governor shall have no opportunity to veto it. File it in your own office and we will compel its adoption, whether it is right or wrong, by the punishment of every company officer or agent who hesitates to use it.'"
This language was quoted with approval in Holgate Bros. Co.et al. v. Bashore et al.,
We think that section 10 of the ordinance must stand or fall in its entirety. The court below in its opinion aptly said: "Since the ordinance contains a severability clause, we might be led to the conclusion that only this proviso of the ordinance is unconstitutional, and that the remainder of Section 10 fixing the hours for opening and closing of barber shops as being between the hours of 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. should remain in full force and effect, were it not for the fact that the right of the City of Philadelphia to pass an ordinance `to fix the days and hours during which barber shops' in the City of Philadelphia *Page 578 may be open for business is granted by the Act of June 5, 1937, P.L. 1689, Section 15a, on the express condition that the proviso in question should be contained in the ordinance."
In Village of Little Chute v. Van Camp,
The Act of June 19, 1931, P.L. 589, and the amendatory Act of June 5, 1937, P.L. 1689,
In Bagley Co. v. Cameron,
When section 10 of the ordinance in question is measured against the authorities to which we have referred, the character of its provisions is apparent. The standard erected for the guidance of the Director of Public Health in the exercise of his discretion to suspend the provision of the ordinance is "public necessity" as "in the opinion" of that officer it may appear. This is not a sufficient standard to properly guide his determinations. He is entrusted with purely discretionary powers. The term "public necessity" has no other meaning than that which may be attributed to it by him in his "unfettered and uncontrolled" judgment upon each application. The power delegated to him is clearly legislative in nature, and unlawful.
We are of the opinion that section 10 of the ordinance of June 27, 1935, as amended on August 15, 1938, is invalid in its entirety.
All the assignments of error are either without merit or immaterial to our decision of this case, and are overruled.
The decree of the court below is affirmed, at the cost of appellants. *Page 580
Commonwealth ex rel. McClain v. Locke ( 1873 )
O'Neil v. Am. Fire Ins. ( 1895 )
Gima v. Hudson Coal Co. ( 1933 )
Rohrer v. Milk Control Board ( 1936 )
Bagley Co., Inc. v. Cameron ( 1924 )
Suermann v. Hadley, Treas. (White) ( 1937 )
Commonwealth v. Sweeney ( 1915 )
Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan ( 1935 )
Buttfield v. Stranahan ( 1904 )
Red "C" Oil Manufacturing Co. v. Board of Agriculture ( 1912 )
J. W. Hampton, Jr., & Co. v. United States ( 1928 )
Commonwealth v. Puder ( 1918 )
Holgate Bros. v. Bashore ( 1938 )
Hernandez v. Frohmiller ( 1949 )
Commonwealth v. Franklin ( 1952 )
Archbishop O'Hara's Appeal ( 1957 )
Chester County Institution District v. Commonwealth ( 1940 )
Obradovich Liquor License Case ( 1956 )
Scranton v. Hollenberg ( 1943 )
Commonwealth v. Reitz ( 1944 )
Commonwealth v. Harrison ( 1957 )