Citizens Brewing Corp. v. Lighthall

98 Misc. 79
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 Misc. 79 (Citizens Brewing Corp. v. Lighthall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Brewing Corp. v. Lighthall, 98 Misc. 79 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Rudd, J.

The plaintiff moves for an order enjoining and restraining the defendant John Lighthall, and [80]*80his agents, from trafficking in liquors, under certificate No. 8303 at premises 38y2 Oneida street, Cohoes, and further moves that the order asked for provide that certificate No. 8303 be delivered to and impounded by the clerk of the court during the pendency of the action.

The application by plaintiff is made upon the pleadings and upon affidavits submitted.

The complaint demands judgment decreeing an injunction against the defendant Lighthall, restraining him from trafficking in liquors under the certificate above named at the premises mentioned during the pendency of the action, and that certificate No.- 8303 be declared to be void and of no effect, and that the same be canceled, and that the defendant Lighthall and defendants Penrose & McEniry be directed to consent to the abandonment of traffic under liquor tax certificate No. 8239 in the premises 38% Oneida street and for such other order, judgment or decree as may be just and proper.

The plaintiff holds, under an assignment from the Conway Brothers Brewing a/nd Malting Company, a liquor tax certificate No. 8239, issued to Ludwig Jagielo, authorizing him to traffic in liquors in Cohoes for the excise year beginning October 1, 1916, and ending September 30,1917.

This certificate was issued to Jagielo October 1, 1916.

Under that certificate Jagielo trafficked in liquor at 38% Oneida street up to four o ’clock in the afternoon of October thirty-first this year. The plaintiff, Citizens Brewing Corporation, obtained possession of the liquor tax certificate under written assignment and on the morning following, November 1, 1916, at about eleven o’clock filed with the deputy commissioner of excise for Albany county a notice of abandonment [81]*81under the Excise Law, and that it was the intention of the plaintiff to carry on said traffic at other premises in Cohoes, namely, No. 4 Oneida street.

At nine forty-five o’clock, an hour and fifteen minutes before the filing of the notice of abandonment by the plaintiff, the defendant Lighthall for the defendants Penrose & McEniry, a brewing company, filed an application with the deputy commissioner of excise for Albany county asking the issuance of a certificate in the name of a person not a party to this action to traffic in liquors at premises 38% Oneida street, the same premises to which the notice of abandonment referred.

This certificate was issued, and at the time this last named certificate was issued, which is certificate No. 8303 covering premises 38% Oneida street, there was outstanding certificate No. 8239 which authorized the trafficking in liquors at the premises mentioned.

The deputy commissioner of excise issued the second certificate, as it is claimed by the department, in the performance of a duty only as a ministerial officer.

The plaintiff subsequently presented to the deputy commissioner of excise for Albany county an application to transfer the trafficking in liquors from the abandoned premises 38% Oneida street to the premises No. 4 Oneida street.

This application was denied for the reason that the second certificate, No. 8303, to the defendant Light-hall had been issued.

The reason given by the deputy commissioner of excise for the refusal to transfer, as requested, was that if the application to transfer was granted it would result in the existence of certificates in number greater than one to every 750 of population, which in effect would be in violation of what is familiarly known as’ the ratio provision of the Excise Law.

[82]*82The excise department of the state contends that the deputy excise commissioners are not judicial officers but exercise only ministerial functions and that when an application is presented to them for the issuance of a liquor tax certificate, which is on its face correct in form, the certificate must issue even if a great many certificates in number were issued, permitting the trafficking of liquors at the same place.

This means tha-t if the holder of the original certificate, authorized to traffic, and who does traffic, desires to abandon the traffic in the particular premises for which the certificate was issued and transfer his business to other premises, another certificate having in the meantime been issued covering the original premises, then there might be danger in permitting a transfer of the first certificate to other premises, because there might be a greater number of rights to traffic than one to every 750 of population, and for this reason, and by reason of the decision in the Court of Appeals of People ex rel. Hope v. Masterman, 209 N. Y. 182, the excise department of the state takes the attitude that all holders of outstanding certificates must consent, otherwise the department will not permit the abandonment of the traffic, and for that reason will not transfer the certificate for which application is made.

In the opinion, written by Chief Judge- Cullen in the Hope case, where a situation such as is here presented developed, he suggested, anticipating that it would be impossible to obtain the consents of the subsequent certificate holders, that an equity action be brought.

We have here such an action brought to determine and unravel, if possible, the complication which certainly seems to exist.

The right of- abandonment and transfer to other premises belongs to the owner and holder of a liquor [83]*83tax certificate and not to the person in possession of the premises cither as owner or lessee. Matter of Farley, 208 N. Y. 595.

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Related

Citizens Brewing Corp. v. Lighthall
177 A.D. 18 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
98 Misc. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-brewing-corp-v-lighthall-nysupct-1916.