Opinion
Decided February 1, 1939.
Municipal corporations — Ordinance regulating collection and hauling of garbage — Section 3649, General Code — Constitutional law.
An ordinance of a municipality providing that "no person other than the duly authorized employees of the city" shall collect and transport garbage over the streets of the municipality is not in conflict with Section 3649, General Code, does not constitute a taking of property without due process, and is constitutional.
APPEAL: Court of Appeals for Stark county.
Mr. Donald L. McCarroll, for appellee.
Mr. H.H. Emmons, for appellant.
The defendant, appellant here, was arrested by the police officers of the city of Canton, Ohio, tried in the Municipal Court of that city upon an affidavit which alleged that the defendant did unlawfully collect and remove garbage, by means of an automobile truck, over the streets of the city of Canton in violation of an ordinance prohibiting the same. The trial court returned a verdict of guilty as charged, and sentenced the defendant to pay a fine of $25 and the costs of prosecution.
From the finding of the Municipal Court, appeal was taken to the Common Pleas Court of Stark county, and upon a review of the proceedings of the Municipal Court, the Common Pleas Court affirmed and sustained the finding of the Municipal Court, to which the defendant excepted and gave notice of appeal to this court.
The sole question presented in this case is whether Sections 60 and 61 of the revised ordinances of 1930 of the city of Canton, Ohio, are valid and constitutional and within the power of the city to enact.
Section 60 of the ordinances provides as follows:
"No person other than the duly authorized employees of the city of Canton shall collect, remove, appropriate, convey or transport any garbage which has heretofore been placed or put in such garbage can."
Section 61 provides as follows: "No person shall collect, remove, convey or transport any garbage by any means whatsoever in, over or upon any street or public highway in the city of Canton."
Under Section 3, Article XVIII of the Constitution, we find that cities and municipalities have authority to exercise all powers of local self government and to adopt and enforce within their limits such local police, sanitary and other similar regulations as are not in conflict with general laws.
It has frequently been held by the Supreme Court of Ohio that, pursuant to this Article of the Constitution of Ohio, cities now derive their authority from the Constitution and not from acts of the General Assembly and that this authority is subject to no limitation whatsoever except that an ordinance or regulation shall not be in conflict with general laws.
The only statute delegating power to cities or municipalities concerning the collection and disposition of garbage is Section 3649, General Code, which is as follows:
"To provide for the collection and disposition of sewage, garbage, ashes, animals and vegetable refuse, dead animals and animal offal and to establish, maintain and regulate plants for the disposal thereof."
So that in this case we are face to face with the proposition: With what general law does this ordinance in question conflict? We are of the opinion that it does not conflict with Section 3649, General Code, hereinbefore quoted, but on the other hand, the ordinance is in compliance with that section.
In the case of Murphy v. City of Toledo, 108 Ohio St. 342, 140 N.E. 626, the court held that municipalities have full power to regulate or control the use of their streets.
It is quite clear to this court that the hauling of garbage over city streets is not an ordinary and customary street use, but rather a special use which the city of Canton has a legal right to entirely prohibit if it so feels inclined.
The courts of this country have been uniform in holding that ordinances passed for the collection and disposition of garbage, based upon reasonable grounds as a means for the protection of the public health, are not a taking of private property for public use without compensation within the meaning of the federal Constitution, even though such garbage and refuse may have some elements of value for certain purposes. California Reduction Co. v. Sanitary Reduction Works, 199 U.S. 306, 50 L. Ed., 204, 26 S. Ct., 100.
"Property rights of individuals must be subordinated to the general good and if the owner of garbage suffers any loss by its destruction he is compensated therefor in the common benefit secured by the regulation requiring all garbage to be destroyed." Gardner v. Michigan, 199 U.S. 325, 50 L. Ed., 212, 26 S. Ct., 106.
The Supreme Court of Ohio, in the case of State, ex rel. Moock, v. City of Cincinnati, 120 Ohio St. 500, 166 N.E. 583, held:
"The adoption of regulations pertaining to health and sanitation, including the process of collection and disposal of garbage, is within the proper exercise of the police powers of the state and of its municipalities."
We therefore find that the Common Pleas Court was right in affirming the finding and judgment of the Municipal Court and it follows that the finding and judgment of the Common Pleas Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
MONTGOMERY, P.J., and SHERICK, J., concur.