City of Columbus v. Jeffrey

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 85

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 85 (City of Columbus v. Jeffrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Columbus v. Jeffrey, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 85 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

The one seeks to enjoin the Board of Deputy State Supervisors and Inspectors of Elections and each member thereof from acting or proceeding under or in accordance with said statute or holding any elections thereunder which have heretofore been ordered; the other seeks to compel, by mandamus, the mayor of the city of Columbus, Ohio, to order an election demanded by a petition filed by forty per cent, of the voters of a certain district in said city.

The question is presented in each case by demurrer to the petition.

It is contended that this law is in contravention of Section 26 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio, which provides that “All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state, nor shall any act except such as relates to public schools be passed to take effect upon the approval of any other authority than the General Assembly, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution.”

It is said that this law is a law of a general nature, and that under this requirement of the Constitution it must operate alike in all the cities of the state, but that by reasons of the provisions contained in Section 9 of the said act it can not .so operate.

[87]*87The provision which it is claimed prevents the uniform operation of the law is in the following language:

“But nothing contained in the provisions of this act shall ■affect, amend or repeal or alter, in any way, any other law or •ordinance which prohibits throughout the municipality the selling, furnishing or giving away of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, or the keeping of a place where intoxicating liquor is ■sold, furnished or given away as a beverage.”

•The statute in terms is general. Section 1 of the act provides that “whenever forty per cent, of the qualified electors of any residence district of any municipal corporation shall petition the mayor,” etc., an election shall be held. It is contended, lowever, that by reason of the provision contained in Section 9 of the act, the law can have no operation in any municipality in the state of Ohio, where under the provisions of an act passed by the General Assembly of Ohio in the year 1902 (95 O. L., .87-91), and commonly known as The Beal Local Option Law, .an election has been held under that law. It is said that under the terms of the Beal Law the result of an election shall not be disturbed for at least two years, and that, therefore, this law ■can have no operation in such municipalities. It is said that when once the Beal Law becomes operative in any municipality by the holding of an election therein, under its provisions, that before liquor can again be sold in that municipality an election must be held throughout the entire municipality, and that the Brannock Law provides in substance that it shall not in any .respect be in force or operate where the aforesaid Beal Law is in force and operation. It is said that this law can never operate in municipalities which have once voted to exclude the traffic, under the Beal Law.

It seems to us, however, that the Brannock Law will not bear this construction. The language is that the provisions of this ■act shall not “affect, amend or repeal or alter in any way any other law or ordinance which prohibits throughout the municipality,” etc. — that is, this law shall not be construed to be a repeal of the Beal Law or affect the operation of that law where •under it a municipality has excluded the traffic. The object ■and purpose of the law is to operate as a local option law where the condition exists which alone can give rise to its operation, to-wit, the existence of the traffic in intoxicating liquors. It [88]*88applies to every municipality in the state, and wherever the condition exists which calls for its exercise, it may be invoked “Where the condition does not exist, there is, of course, no necessity to invoke the law.

There is a difference we conceive between the uniform operation of the law and its universal operation. A law may be uniform in its operation, in that it applies to every municipality of the state and yet not universal in its operation, because the condition upon which alone it can operate and become effective •does not exist in certain municipalities. There are many laws upon the statute books which apply in terms to all municipalities and yet do not operate universally. To illustrate, the law authorizes any municipal corporation to construct levees and embankments and improve watercourses passing through the corporation. The law is uniform but it does not operate universally, for in some municipalities the condition which calls for its existence does not exist. Many other like instances might be cited. Wherever the condition exists which makes it necessary or advisable to invoke the provisions of the law, it may be invoked. Whenever, therefore, in any municipality of the state, where under the operation of the Beal Law the traffic in intoxicating liquors does not exist, but again exists as the result of a subsequent election at which a majority of the voters declare in favor of the traffic, the provisions of this law may be invoked, and this, it seems to us, satisfies the constitutional requirement that all laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation throughout the state. If, in any municipality where, under the Beal Law, at a future election under that law, a majority of the electors vote against excluding the traffic, then we see no reason to claim that the Brannoek Law can not be invoked. True, no further election under the Beal Law can be again held within two years, but that provision can not be held to authorize the traffic within that municipality for two years, for that would be in effect a licensing of the traffic, which the Constitution forbids. It simply places the municipalty in the same position that it occupied prior to the first election at which the traffic was excluded and in the same situation as all other municipalities in the state where the traffic exists. And while no vote in the municipality as a whole under the provisions of the Beal Law can be again had within two years, [89]*89there is nothing to prevent an election in districts of the municipality under the provisions of the Brannock Law. We think it is not a valid objection to the constitutionality of this law, that because the Legislature has enacted a valid local option law applying to municipalities as a whole and under which certain municipalities have excluded the traffic entirely, this prevents the Legislature from enacting any other law applying to all municipalities which will prevent the exclusion of the traffic from less than the entire territory included within the municipality.

The same objections which are made to the operation of this act might have been urged, it seems to us, against the constitutionality of the township local option law, which the Supreme Court held to be a valid and constitutional enactment, in Gordon v. The State, 46 O. S., 607. When that act was passed, and when it was under consideration by the Supreme Court, the statutes of the state prohibited the sale of intoxicating liquors absolutely within prescribed territory adjacent to certain state benevolent institutions and within two miles of agricultural fairs, etc. The township local option law could not have any operation within these prescribed territories, yet the Supreme Court held that it was a law of a general nature and that it operated uniformly throughout the state. We therefore conclude that this law does not contravene Section 26 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-columbus-v-jeffrey-ohctcomplfrankl-1904.