Adams Express Co. v. Young

211 S.W. 407, 184 Ky. 49, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 25, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 407 (Adams Express Co. v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams Express Co. v. Young, 211 S.W. 407, 184 Ky. 49, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 21 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

[50]*50Opinion on the Court by

Judge Quin

Granting writ, of prohibition.

/The petitioner, Adams Express Company, has applied to this court for a writ of prohibition against the .respondent as judge of the Rowan circuit court to present him from proceeding with the trial of ten indictments against the petitioner for violations of section 1307 Kentucky Statutes, which section is as follows:

“Any person who shall sell, lend, give, procure for,, or furnish spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, or any mixture of either, knowingly, to any person who is an inebriate or in the habit of becoming intoxicated or drunk-by the use of any such liquors, or who shall suffer or permit any such person to drink any such liquors in his bar .room, saloon, or upon the premises under his control, or ■in his possession, shall be fined for each offense fifty dollars, and the person so offending, together with the • sureties on his bond, if he has executed a bond to enable-■him to sell liquor, be liable to a civil action for damages '•by the wife, or the father, or the mother, or the child of •such inebriate, or person so in the habit of becoming intoxicated oi drunk, in which punitive damages may be assessed; but the person so selling shall not be liable in a civil action to the wife, father, or other relation, unless written notice forbidding such sale has been given the person so selling prior to the offense complained of, and such action shall be brought within one year from the ■time the cause of action has accrued, and not after.”

Demurrers to those indictments were filed and overruled. It is alleged that the penalty for violation of this statute is a fine of $50.00 from which there is no appeal; that this section does not apply to the delivery of liquor by a carrier; that unless restrained by this court, respondent will erroneously and illegally proceed to cause "the petitioner to be fined in each of the cases to its irreparable damage and injury, when it has no adequate or any remedy by appeal or otherwise.

It is also charged that respondent will, unless prohibited by this court, cause the grand juries of the other-counties comprising the Twenty-first Judicial District to return indictments against it in probably more than one hundred cases for the same offense, and thus cause it. to defend many vexatious indictments at a large expense in costs, attorneys’ fees and fines. The shipments in[51]*51volved in the indictments originated in Catlettsburg and Lexington, where the sale of liquor is authorized, and were delivered at Morehead, in Rowan county, local option territory, and it is stated that petitioner had no interest in said liquor other than as a common carrier to ■deliver same to the consignor.

A response was filed putting in issue substantially all the allegations of the petition.

There is nothing in the record to indicate that respondent had acted or was about to act in an arbitrary manner .relative to said indictments.

The application of the statute to the petitioner and its right to the writ sought are the two questions presented for our decision.

First. We are of the opinion that petitioner is not subject to indictment under the section quoted.

A brief history of legislation in this state regulating the shipment of intoxicating liquors will be found in Adams Express Co. v. Crigler & Crigler Co., 161 Ky. 89.

A statute of 1906 (Ky. Stats. 2569a) made it unlawful for a carrier to transport liquor into dry territory, but permitted the individual to carry not exceeding one gallon of liquor as personal baggage for his private use.

Inasmuch as Congress had. exclusive control over interstate commerce, this act of 1906 did not apply to interstate shipments, hence_shipments of liquor originating outside the state could be shipped into dry territory in the state.

The Webb-Kenyon law, passed by Congress in 1913, withdrew from interstate shipments into dry territory the protection previously given such shipments.

As a result of the Webb-Kenyon law in connection with the act of 1906, an interstate shipment of liquor for personal use, into dry territory could be made, but a similar intrastate shipment could not be made. See Adams Express Co. v. Commonwealth, 154 Ky. 462.

The anomalous situation thus presented was corrected by an act of March 8,1914 (Ky. Stats., sec. 2569b), which permitted intrastate shipments of liquor into dry territory under certain conditions therein specified.

In Adams Express Co. v. Crigler & Crigler, supra, we held that the act of 1914 .repealed section 2569a.

For many years prior to this legislation the statutes made it unlawful to sell, lend, give, procure for or fur[52]*52nish intoxicating liquors to minors or inebriates (secs. 1306 and 1307 Ky. Stats).

Section one of the act of 1914 (Ky. Stats., sec. 2569b, subsec. 1) provides in part as follows:

“And it shall be unlawful for any person to buy for, sell, furnish, or knowingly deliver, ship or in any manner transport to any such person as first above mentioned in this section, or his agent, or any minor, any of the liquors heretofore mentioned.”

The opinion in the Crigler case, supra, would seem conclusive of the question before when the court says:

“Applying these well settled rules of construction to the act of 1914, We find it impossible to avoid the conclusion that it repealed section 2569a. Section 8 of the act of 1914 expressly declares its intention to repeal ‘all acts and parts of acts ’ inconsistent with the provisions of that act. That the provisions are inconsistent, and that the act of 1914 was intended to constitute the whole law upon the subject of intrastate shipments, is easily apparent, when the two laws are contrasted.”

Why the legislature included minors in the new act and did not include inebriates is not for us to say. It is the duty of the court to interpret, not make, laws. The power to. legislate is delegated to the legislative department. Constitution, secs. 27, 28.

As evidenced by the above quotation the act of 1914 was intended to constitute the whole law upon the subject of intrastate shipments; and this being true we are constrained to hold that section 1307 does not apply to the petitioner as a common carrier. It is not for us to question the reason or the wisdom of the legislature in excluding inebriates from the provisions of the act. If designedly done it is a matter that must address itself to the law making body; if .the omission was unintentional, then that same body can correct it.

Second. The writ will have to be granted.

In defining the jurisdiction and power of this court section 110 of the Constitution vests in this court the power to issue such writs as may be necessary to give it-general control of inferior jurisdictions.

Where the lower court is proceeding out of its jurisdiction and there is no adequate remedy for the threatened wrong this court will grant the writ. This court has granted the writ in cases where respondent had jurisdiction, but when an appeal would not furnish an ade[53]*53quate remedy or there was no other remedy, and where great and irreparable injury t\nd injustice would result. Board of Prison Commissioners v. Crumbaugh, 161 Ky. 540.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 407, 184 Ky. 49, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-express-co-v-young-kyctapp-1919.