Commonwealth v. West Philadelphia Fidelio Mannerchor

22 Pa. D. & C. 196, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 477
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedApril 10, 1934
Docketno. 33
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Pa. D. & C. 196 (Commonwealth v. West Philadelphia Fidelio Mannerchor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. West Philadelphia Fidelio Mannerchor, 22 Pa. D. & C. 196, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 477 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Gordon, Jr., J.,

This petition of the Attorney General is filed under section 410 of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Act of November 29, [197]*1971933, P. L. 15, and asks for the revocation of a liquor license issued by the Liquor Control Board to West Philadelphia Fidelio Mannerchor Club, on the ground that the respondent club has sold liquor to its members on Sunday in violation of the third clause of section 411 of the act. There is no dispute that the club did sell liquor to its members on Sunday, and the only question presented for our determination is whether clubs are forbidden by the act to sell liquor on that day. If they are the license should be revoked, and if they are not the petition should be dismissed.

The act authorizes the issuance by the Liquor Control Board of three classes of licenses, namely, hotel, restaurant, and club licenses, and in section 411 provides as follows:

“Sales of Liquor by Licensees. — Every hotel, restaurant or club licensee may sell liquor for consumption only in that part of the hotel or restaurant habitually used for the serving of meals to guests, patrons or members, "and, in the case of hotels and clubs, to guests or members in their private rooms in the hotel or club. In the case of a restaurant located in a hotel which is not operated by the owner of the hotel, and which is licensed to sell liquor under this act, liquor may be sold for consumption in that part of the restaurant habitally used for the serving of meals to patrons, and also to guests in private guest rooms in the hotel.

“A hotel or restaurant licensee shall not maintain any counter or bar at or over which liquors are sold to guests, patrons or members.

“Liquor may be sold by licensees, other than clubs, only after seven o’clock antemeridian of any week day and until two antemeridian of the following week day, and shall not be sold on Sunday or on any day on which a general, municipal, special or primary election is being held.”

The question of statutory interpretation presented by the case before us is whether the prohibition against the sale of liquor on Sunday in the latter part of the third clause of this section applies to clubs, as well as to hotels and restaurant licensees. In other words, was it the legislative intent that the restrictive words “licensees other than clubs” should apply to all the provisions of the clause or only to the provision as to sales on weekdays to which it is immediately connected? The Attorney General contends that the legislature intended by the language employed, first, to prohibit the sale of liquor between certain hours on weekdays by hotels and restaurants only; and, second, as to Sundays and election days, to prohibit its sale by all classes of licensees, including clubs. The respondent club contends on the other hand that, logically and grammatically, the words “licensees other than clubs” should be read in connection with each provision of the clause, the legislative intent having been so to limit the application of all its provisions.

In support of the position taken by the Attorney General, it is argued that, as there is no repetition of the exception as to clubs in the latter portion relating to sales on Sundays and election days, it would do violence to the broad and unqualified declaration that liquor “shall not be sold on Sundays”, etc., to read into it the limiting language of the portion which deals with sales on weekdays. If we invert the order of the provisions without changing the words used, the clause would read that liquor “shall not be sold on Sunday or election days, and may be sold by licensees other than clubs only between ‘certain hours’ on weekdays”. Standing thus, the intention of the legislature to prohibit sales by all licensees on Sundays and election days would be manifest.

Section 411, it will be noted, is the only one which deals generally with sales by licensees, and, apart from the requirement that they may sell only for [198]*198consumption on the premises, its three clauses contain all the regulations of sales by others than the State itself. The first of these clauses prescribes the places where all classes of licensees may sell liquor, by providing that it shall be sold only in those parts of their buildings which are used for the serving of meals; and “in the case of hotels and clubs, to guests or members in their private rooms.” The second clause regulates the manner of sales and deals only with hotels and restaurants, by forbidding them to sell liquor over the bar, thereby allowing such sale by clubs; and the third clause defines the times when sales may be made. It is argued that there would appear to be no good reason why, with regard to Sunday selling, an exception should be made as to clubs as opposed to hotels and restaurants; that the motive for prohibiting sales on Sundays and election days, namely, to preserve peace and order on days especially requiring such regulation for the public welfare, is as strong in the case of clubs as in that of hotels and restaurants; and that to make an exception in this particular in respect to clubs would give rise to an invidious distinction which the legslature could not have intended. It is true that in hotels and restaurants the public generally is brought together in connection with the use of liquor, while in the case of clubs there is, theoretically at least, a more careful and limited selection of the patrons of the establishment. Nevertheless, the elements of danger involved in the sale of liquor which justify its regulation, and the need, if there be any, for its prohibition at certain times, are substantially as great in the one instance as in the other. Further, if the prohibitive provision in question does not apply to clubs, they are subjected to no regulation whatever, except as to the place in their-buildings in which liquor is permitted to be served; and, even as to that, there may be some doubt because of the singular, and possibly accidental, omission of reference to clubs in an important part of the clause which defines the places in which it may be sold. Hence, if clubs were not intended to be included in the prohibition against sales on Sundays and election days, there would appear to be little reason for requiring them to be licensed, other than for purposes of revenue. The foregoing are the principal reasons advanced for the position taken by the Attorney General.

On behalf of the respondent club, on the other hand, it is contended that the clause in question relates in its entirety to “licensees other than clubs”, because clubs are expressly eliminated in the only part of it defining those against whom it shall operate. In the various clauses of the section, the licensees to whom each is intended to apply are carefully designated. In one part of the first clause all classes are included, while in the other only hotels and clubs. Similarly, the second clause deals only with hotels and restaurants. So also, by different but as clear language, the third clause deals with “licensees other than clubs”, and by them liquor is permitted to be sold between certain hours on weekdays and not at all on Sundays or election days. This, it is contended, takes clubs out of the prohibition against sales on Sundays.

The State has never attempted, in the history of liquor control in Pennsylvania, to regulate the dispensing of it by clubs tó their members and guests. That transaction, although called a sale by the act, is not a sale in contemplation of law; Klein v. Livingston Club, 177 Pa. 224; and it has never been thought to present an economic or social problem requiring legislative control and regulation.

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Related

Klein v. Livingston Club
35 A. 606 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Pa. D. & C. 196, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-west-philadelphia-fidelio-mannerchor-paqtrsessphilad-1934.