The defendant was charged in the district court of Honolulu with conducting a public dance house known as Liberty Dance Hall without first having obtained a license so to do, contrary to the provisions of section 494 of the Revised Ordinances of the City and County of Honolulu. Defendant demurred on the grounds (among others) that the ordinance alleged to have been violated is invalid and unconstitutional; that sections 492 to 503 inclusive of the Revised Ordinances of the city and county are invalid and unconstitutional in (a) that said sections attempting to regulate dance halls provide no standard upon which licenses may be issued; (b) that said sections constitute an invalid delegation of arbitrary authority to regulate dance halls to the hall inspectors; that said sections delegate arbitrary authority to the dance-hall inspectors to refuse licenses without conforming to any standard under said ordinances.
The demurrer was overruled and, after a hearing, defendant was adjudged guilty as charged. Defendant has appealed to this court on points of law, urging that the demurrer interposed should have been sustained on the grounds above enumerated.
Under sections 492 to 503 inclusive of the Revised Ordinances of the City and County of Honolulu, the board of supervisors has attempted to regulate the places where and the conditions under which public dancing-halls may be conducted. This authority is expressly granted to the board by section 1738, R.L. 1925.
Section 493 of the ordinance relating to public dance halls provides for the appointment by the mayor of three persons as dance-hall inspectors, "whose duty it shall *Page 536 be to enforce the provisions of sections 492 to 503 inclusive." Section 494 of the ordinance makes it unlawful for any person to keep or conduct a public dance house unless licensed so to do. Section 495 prescribes the steps that one desiring a license shall take in order to secure the same, namely, that the applicant shall make a written application to the clerk of the city and county, stating in the application various matters and things enumerated in the section. Upon compliance with these provisions, section 495 then provides that "the mayor shall make or cause to be made by the dance-hall inspectors an examination of the place for which said license is desired, to ascertain that the same be a fit and proper place and be constructed, maintained, operated or conducted in accordance with the provisions of the ordinances of the city and county governing and controlling such structures and places. If the person making application for a license be of good moral character and of good reputation in the community, and if the applicant has complied with the law in all respects, and if the place for the dance house or hall be approved as a fit and proper place for keeping or conducting a public dance house or hall in the opinion of the majority of the dance-hall inspectors, the mayor may approve such application and transmit such approval, who may thereupon authorize the clerk to issue a license for such dance premises. Thereupon such license shall be issued by the clerk. No license shall be issued by the clerk, except upon approval of the board of supervisors, upon the recommendation of the mayor and the majority of the dance-hall inspectors."
It will be noticed that the portion of section 495 quoted is loosely worded and does not state to whom the mayor shall transmit his approval of the application nor "who may thereupon authorize the clerk to *Page 537 issue a license," but in view of the rest of the section it may be assumed that the intent of the makers of the ordinance was that the mayor should transmit his approval to the board of supervisors which board should thereupon authorize the issuance of the license.
The authority to enact ordinances for the regulation of such places as dance halls is commonly delegated by the legislatures of the several States to the supervisors of municipal corporations, and, if such an ordinance is reasonable in its requirements, it will be upheld by the courts. And under such an ordinance the board of supervisors may provide for the appointment of appropriate officers whose duties shall consist of supervising and executing the rules and regulations prescribed by the ordinance. Such rules and regulations, however, must be enacted by the board of supervisors itself and the making thereof may not be delegated to officers whose duties are purely ministerial.
In the ordinance under consideration the board of supervisors has not, as it should have, definitely legislated as to when, where and the conditions under which a license to conduct a public dancing-hall may be obtained. In the requirement that "if the place for the dance house or hall be approved as a fit and proper place for keeping or conducting a public dance house or hall in the opinion of the majority of the dance-hall inspectors" the board of supervisors has not indicated nor attempted to indicate what shall constitute a fit and proper place for keeping a dance hall but has left the determination of this to the uncontrolled opinion of the dance-hall inspectors, who are not even required to adopt a uniform standard of requirements applicable alike to all applicants. Under the ordinance the inspectors are not merely authorized to execute the law but they are in effect made the final arbitrators as to *Page 538 whether, when and under what circumstances a license to conduct a dance hall may issue, if at all. Such a delegation of legislative authority is not authorized by law and in our opinion the ordinance is invalid.
The demurrer interposed should have been sustained and the appeal is sustained on the grounds urged.