Emery v. City of Elyria

8 Ohio N.P. 208
CourtLorain County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 208 (Emery v. City of Elyria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emery v. City of Elyria, 8 Ohio N.P. 208 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

NYE, J.

This action comes into this court on error from the docket of the mayor of the city of Elyria.

The plaintiff in eror, the defendant below, was arrested for keeping his place of business open on Sunday, under' an ordinane which prohibits the keeping of a place open on Sunday where intoxicating liquors are sold to be drank, on other days of the week.

On the trial of the case, the plaintiff below, the city of Elyria, offered the evidence, and the defendant below omitted to offer any evidence on the trial, and submitted the case on the evidence offered by the plaintiff below.

The uefendant was found guilty and sentenced to pay a fine and costs. And the case is brought here on a petition in error,"which sets forth all the evidence offered upon the trial.

There are several questions alleged and claimed as error upon the hearing of the case in this court, and I will only pass upon those questions which have been submitted to me, and upon which error is alleged in argument.

Section 6, of the ordinance under which the affidavit in this case was drawn, provides that “Whoever on the first day of the week commonly called Sunday, shall keep open in any manner whatever within the limits of this village, any house, shop, room, or other nlace where ale, porter or beer is habitually sola or furnished to be drank, or keep open in any manner ,any place of notorious or habitual resort for tippling or intemperance, shall be fined not more than fifty dollars”.

It is claimed by the city that this ordinance was passed under the authority of section 1692 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, which provides that “in addition to the powers specifically granted in this title, and subject to the exceptions and limitations in other parts of it, cities and villages shall have the" general powers enumerated in this section, and the council may provide by ordinance for the exercise and enforcement of the same.”

; Clause 5. — “To regulate ale, beer and ! porter houses and shops”.

It is claimed upon the hearing of this case that this clause of this section was repealed by implication by sections 4364-20, Revised Statutes, of Ohio, which is section 11 of the Dow law.

That section provides, “That the sale of intoxicating liquors, whether distilled, malt or vinous, on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday, except by a regular druggist on _ the written prescription of a regular practicing physician for medical purposes only, is hereby declared to be unlawful, and all places where such intoxicating liquors on other days are sold, or exposed for sale, except regular drug stores, shall on that day be closed.”

Further on in the same section, “and any municipal corporation shall have full power to regulate, restrain and prohibit ale, beer and porter houses and other places where intoxicating liquors are sold at retail for any purpose or in any quantity other than is provided for in section eight”.

It is also claimed that because the ordinance under which the affidavit in this case was drawn does not except drug stores, that it is therefore invalid, as going beyond what is authorized by section 11, of the Dow law, just quoted.

It will be observed that there are two objections made to this ordinance. The first is because it canhot stand under section 1632, clause five, for the reason that said clause five was repealed by implication by section 11, of the Dow law.

I am aware that there are instances in which one statute is repealed by another by implication ; but an examination of the dates at which these two statutes under consideration were passed convinces me that there was no repeal by implication.

The Dow law was passed in 1886, and the last amendment to section 11, was passed in 1888. If it could be said that the Dow law passed in 1886, repealed clause five of section 1692, at the time said Dow law was passed, it would hardly be consistent to say that such state of facts exists at.the present time; because for the purpose of amending section 1692, in certain other particulars said section has been changed and re-enacted since the Dow law was passed, and said clause five of said section has been re-enacted in the same language that it contained at the time the Dow law was passed.

This amendment was made on April nth, 1899, (87 v. 166.) So that the legislative intent has been called to this section 1692, since section 11, of the Dow law was passed, and since any amendment to that section has been made.

I conclude that if the legislature intended to repeal clause five of section 1692, when it passed the Dow law, the attention of the legislature has been since called to this subject, and it has re-affirmed its former enactment, and restored clause five of section 1692, and that that clause is now in full force.

But I hold that clause five of section 1692, as it now stands in the statute was not repealed [210]*210by implication by section n, of the Dow law, ■nor by any other portion of the Dow law, nor was there any intention on the part of the legislature to repeal the fifth clause of section 1692.

I now come to the next question as to whether it is necessary under cluse five of section 1692, to except drug stores from the operation of an ordinance under that clause of the statute.

Clause five of said section provides that the council may “regulate ale, beer and porter houses and shops”. Now, in my opinion this has no reference whatever to drug stores.

The ordinance in question prohibits the “keeping open of any house, shop, room or other place, where ale, porter or beer is habitually sold or furnished to be drank, or keeping open in any manner any place or notorious or habitual resort for tippling or intemperance”.

I am of the opinion that by no fair interpretation of the ordinance can it have any application to a drug store, and when the ordinance prohibits the keeping open of that kind of a place on the first dav of the week, commonly called Sunday, it does not infringe upon any rights granted by the legislature under section 11, of the Dow law.

It will be observed that this ordinance does not aim or attempt to aim at places where intoxicating liquors are sold on prescription; but onlv aims to close places on Sunday where intoxicating liquors are sold to be drank, and that it has no reference to a drug store where intoxicating liquors are sold “upon prescription or for exclusively known mechanical, pharmaceutical or sacramental purposes”.

And "in considering this subject it will be observed that the last portion of section 4364-20 which is section 11, of the Dow law,provides “That any municipal corporation shall have full power to regulate, restrain and prohibit ale, beer and porter houses and other places where intoxicating liquors are sold at retail for any purpose or in any ciuantity other than is provided for in section eight of this act”.

Section eight of this act is section 4364-20 of the Revised Statutes.

Now, turning to this last named section, we find that it provides that The phrase Trafficking in intoxicating liquors’ as used in this act, means the buying or procuring and selling of intoxicating liquors otherwise than upon prescription issued in good faith by reputable phvsicians in active practice, or for exclusively known mechanical, pharmaceutical or sacramental purposes.”

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8 Ohio N.P. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emery-v-city-of-elyria-ohctcompllorain-1899.