DeCaro v. City of Collierville

373 S.W.2d 466, 213 Tenn. 254, 17 McCanless 254, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 485
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 373 S.W.2d 466 (DeCaro v. City of Collierville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeCaro v. City of Collierville, 373 S.W.2d 466, 213 Tenn. 254, 17 McCanless 254, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 485 (Tenn. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought by the appellee, Joe DeCaro, by petition for the writ of statutory certiorari, "for trial de novo, under Chapter 105, Acts of 1961, as now codified in sec. 57-209, T.C.A. The question-presented by the action is stated by the Chancellor, as follows:.

*256 ‘ ‘ The Court is presented in this cause with a question of whether a municipality can deny a beer permit under the 1961 amendment to the beer statutes for the State of Tennessee, in the absence of a showing that the granting of such license would affect the health, morals and welfare of the community.”

Mr. DeCaro first filed an application for a permit to sell beer from his grocery store in the City of Collierville on or about June 10, 1960. This application was denied by the Beer Board, made up of the Mayor and Aldermen of the City. On June 29, 1960, he once again appeared before the Beer Board and they once again denied his application. On October 18, 1960, he again, through counsel, petitioned the Beer Board for a permit to sell beer. This application was continued until November 11, 1960, Avhen it was denied. On April 10,1962, he again appeared before the Board and renewed his request for a permit to sell beer in his grocery store, and said request was again denied.

The City of Collierville duly enacted an ordinance in which they limited the number of outlets for the retail sale of beer to seven. Said ordinance was passed on its first reading on October 7, 1960; on the second reading on October 18, 1960; and on the third and final reading on November 11, 1960.

Collierville is a small municipality of some two thousand inhabitants. All of the retail outlets for the sale of beer are in seven restaurants. About 1952 one grocery store in this town did sell beer by the package, but at the request of various people in town this grocery store voluntarily quit the sale of beer. In requesting this grocery store to discontinue the sale of beer, these people *257 felt that the sale of beer from a grocery store tended to corrupt the morals of the town in that children see people carrying beer home with them and that the carrying of beer home in large quantities would be more conducive to intoxication than would the consumption of beer in a restaurant with a meal. Under an argument of this kind this grocery store, some eight or ten years prior to the institution of the present suit, had stopped selling beer, and there had been no beer sold except in these seven restaurants since then. This was evidently the same kind of reasoning that prompted the City Fathers to deny the appellee a permit to sell beer. The appellee is given an excellent character rating and there is no objection to him personally, and he otherwise complies with all the requirements of the statute for the issuance of a permit. Thus it is that we arrive at the question in this lawsuit as above quoted from the opinion of the Chancellor.

The Chancellor felt that in view of the opinion of this Court in Fentress County Beer Board v. Cravens, 209 Tenn. 679, 356 S.W.2d 260 (1962), that so long as the complainant complied with the provisions of the statute, sec. 57-205, T.C.A. it was mandatory on the Beer Board to grant him a permit. In this holding we think that the Chancellor was in error. All that the opinion in Fentress County Beer Board v. Cravens, supra, held (although some language in the opinion might be construed otherwise) was that under Chapter 105 of the Acts of 1961, which amended sec. 57-205, T.C.A., a refusal of a beer license could now be considered by the courts through the statutory writ of certiorari with a trial de novo, and that this statute was not unconstitutional in so providing, for reasons stated in the opinion. Neither this case nor the *258 1961 amendment in any way attempts to strike from the Code Section 57-508, T.C.A., which provides in effect that municipalities may enact ordinances governing the issuance and. revocation of beer licenses.

. In one of the first cases reviewing the statutes regulating the. granting of permits or licenses for the sale of beer (sec. 57-201, T.C.A. et seq.) this Court held that this. Chapter was in the nature of a local option law and that the Legislature intended that each municipality, looking to the morals and. general welfare of its citizens, shquid have a wide discretion in regulating the traffic in beer, and in determining to whom licenses should be issued for that.purpose. Cravens v. Storie, 175 Tenn. 285, 133. S.W.2d 609 (1939).

' ‘‘Local option with respect to intoxicating liquors, "sometimes established by'constitutional provision, and sometimes established by legislative act, is in essence the right of the people in a city, town or other specified ..locality to determine for themselves by a decisive vote •at an election the issue whether or not they shall pro- - Mbit intoxicating liquors, or adopt a particular regulation thereof.” McQuillin, Municipal Corporations, 3rd Ed., Vol. 6, sec. 24.167.

As said above, Section 57-208, T.C.A., is a Section -that -authorizes municipalities to pass ordinances governing the issuance and revocation of beer licenses. This Section has' in no way been repealed or affected by Chapter 105 of the Acts of 1961; a municipality still has the fight to regulate the granting of permits or licenses to'sell beer within the municipality as has been set forth in many of our cases, such as Howard v. Christmas, 180 Tenn. 519, 176 S.W.2d 821 (1944), which holds in effect *259 that there aré "wide discreti'onáry powers given thé Boards of municipalities with reference to zoning, etc.; and Gatlinburg Beer Regulation Committee v. Ogle, 185 Tenn. 482, 206 S.W.2d 891 (1947); Ketner v. Clabo, 189 Tenn. 260, 225 S.W.2d 54 (1949); and Grubb v. Morristown, 185 Tenn. 114, 203 S.W.2d 593 (1947), which hold that a city may by ordinance under its authority totally prohibit the sale of beer. In the Ketner case, above referred to, an ordinance had been passed limiting the number of permits to sell beer. This was held valid under sec. 57-208, T.C.A., which, as we have said, is still in full force and effect. This Ketner case likewise held that this Act does not make it mandatory on the city authority to issue to anyone a license , to sell beer. In the Ketner case, supra, this Court likewise determined that a city under its police power had the interest of the municipality at heart and knows what interest will best be served by limiting the number of retail outlets for the sale of beer, and that its decision is final and no constitutional right of a rejected applicant for a beer license is infringed upon.

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Bluebook (online)
373 S.W.2d 466, 213 Tenn. 254, 17 McCanless 254, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decaro-v-city-of-collierville-tenn-1963.