Cochran's License

47 Pa. Super. 376, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 147
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 Pa. Super. 376 (Cochran's License) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochran's License, 47 Pa. Super. 376, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Oblady, L,

This case comes before us on an appeal from the decree of the court of quarter sessions, refusing to grant a distiller’s license to the appellant upon his petition filed under the Act of June 9, 1891, P. L. 257. The record shows that a formal application and bond were filed on [January 2, 1911. Petitions remonstrating against granting the license were filed on February 7, 1911, and as shown by the record, the application and remonstrance against the same were heard in open court. On February 9 the following order was made: “After hearing and upon due consideration, the license as prayed for is refused.”

This order is in substance the same as that made in Black Diamond Distilling Co.’s License, 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 649, and Reynoldsville Distilling Company’s License, [378]*37834 Pa. Superior Ct. 269, and in each of these cases the decree was affirmed, as fully complying with the requirements of the act of assembly.

On February 20, 1911, the petitioner requested the court to set forth in writing its reasons for refusing the license. It was not obligatory on the license judge to do so, and his volunteering to place on record some of his reasons for refusing the license has only tended to make obscure a decree which was at that time, clear, unconditional and final. The order is as follows: “February 20, 1911, the foregoing petition being presented in open court, in response thereto, the judge presiding at the .license court says, that he had no reason for refusing the said applicant a distiller’s license other than that he believed, under the evidence and the facts within his own knowledge, among which, was that the applicant’s proposed distillery would be located in the immediate vicinity of many mills and industrial plants there being operated, and. employing many men, and that the applicant intended to sell by the gallon to consumers, — it was a wise exercise of his discretion and his duty to refuse said license.”

The fourth section of the act of 1891, specifically provides that the provision of that section, as to whether the place to be licensed, is necessary, shall not apply to a brewer or distiller.

No case has yet decided that under the act of 1891 any citizen of the United States of temperate habits and good moral character, is entitled, as a matter of right, to a distiller’s license, for any place he may see fit to designate, upon filing a regular petition and bond. A proper exercise of judicial discretion might under some circumstances warrant, if it did not require, an inquiry in the suitableness (not the necessity) of the place, for the business. A distiller’s license confers privileges of a wholesaler so far as liquor manufactured by himself is concerned. He is not limited to sales to other dealers, but may sell in quantities not less than one gallon to anyone. Having [379]*379regard to the express purpose of the license laws, there is much the same reason for regulating his business, when he sells in such quantities, as for regulating that of the wholesaler. He may sell liquor of his own manufacture, in original packages of not less than forty gallons, without being licensed by the court, but, if he desires to sell in less quantities he comes within the regulating and restraining privileges of the license laws and must apply to the court, and must set forth in his application the particular place for which license is desired. The privileges conferred by a distiller’s license being so nearly like those which an ordinary dealer has under a wholesale license, the legislature has seen fit to place it in the discretionary power of the court to determine whether he shall have them. . . . Hence the court ought to be satisfied that the place for which such a license is desired is a genuine distillery, where the applicant can and will conduct the business of a manufacturer only, and not that of a wholesaler under cover of a distiller’s, license: Lauck’s Application, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 53.

In Gemas’s License, 169 Pa. 43, the Supreme Court say, “By the act of June 9, 1891, the granting of licenses to wholesale dealers, brewers, distillers, etc., of spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, is assimilated to a certain extent to licensing of retailers, and is put within the discretion of the court of quarter sessions. This discretion, as we have frequently said, is a judicial discretion, to be exercised for legal reasons, and in a judicial manner. When so exercised it is not reviewable.”

In Gross’s License, 161 Pa. 344, the license was refused without giving any reason therefor. In regard to which the Supreme Court say, “If there be nothing on the records of the court, but the averments in the petition, these at the time fixed must be heard and considered. The court may hear oral testimony or the arguments of counsel on either side; it may, of its own knowledge of the unfitness of the applicant, or of his failure in other material particulars to meet the requirements of the law, [380]*380refuse the application, just as it may, of its own knowlledge, approve for sufficiency, or reject for insufficiency the sureties on the bond. The exercise of judicial discretion by the court is commanded by the statute. The discretion must be exercised in a lawful manner. The applicant hath a right to be heard, and so have objectors. If the court has, in a lawful manner, performed the duty imposed upon it, it is not our business to inquire whether he has made a mistake in its conclusions of fact. Whether the same facts induce in our minds the same belief as that of the court below, as to the character of the applicant or other material averments, is wholly immaterial; it is the discretion of the court of quarter sessions, not ours, that the law requires. If the record shows the decree was made after hearing, at the time fixed by rule or standing order, the presumption is, the decree is judicial and not arbitrary, and this presumption is not rebutted by an argument from evidence that the court ought to have reached a different conclusion. The act is an official one, performed by a public officer in the exercise of the functions of his office. The presumption in all cases is that the officer performed his duty, according to law; he is not bound to set out legal reasons for his action; he is only bound to have them.”

In Black Diamond Distilling Co.’s License, 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 649, we stated, “But although the court’s discretion is not so broad in a distiller’s application as in an application for a wholesale or retail liquor license, and the reasons which may influence the discretion of the court are fewer in the former than in the latter case, yet the same general principles upon which it is procured, on appeal, in the absence of anything to show the contrary, that the license was refused for a legal reason and not arbitrarily, apply as well in one case as in the other.

In Reynoldsville Distilling Co.’s License, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 269, in which no remonstrance was filed, and the petition, certificate and bond were in due form, the court re[381]*381fused the application without expressing of record its reasons for so doing, and we held, “So far as the determination of this question is concerned, there is no difference between such a case and a case where no fact or objection is stated in the remonstrance, which would justify the court in refusing the application, and it must be presumed that the appellant’s application was refused for a legal reason and not arbitrarily.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Pa. Super. 376, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochrans-license-pasuperct-1911.