Equitable Loan & Security Co. v. Town of Edwardsville

38 So. 1016, 143 Ala. 182
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 38 So. 1016 (Equitable Loan & Security Co. v. Town of Edwardsville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equitable Loan & Security Co. v. Town of Edwardsville, 38 So. 1016, 143 Ala. 182 (Ala. 1905).

Opinion

DENSON, J.

The Equitable Loan & Security Oompány recovered a judgment against the defendant, Town of Edwardsville, a municipal corporation, in the county court of Cleburne county, on the 18th day of October, 1900, in the sum of eight hundred, three and 43/100 dollars.

On the 1st day of April, 1902, an execution was issued on the judgment, and was, on the 31st day of July, 1902, levied on a stock of spirituous and malt liquors, as the property of the Town of Edwardsville.

On August 1st, 1902, the defendant filed a motion to vacate f lie levy made under the execution, upon the ground that the property levied on wais property used by the defendant in its corporate capacity for municipal *184 purposes, in that said property was used in the conduct of a dispensary under an act of the legislature, approved February 18th. 1899. The act referred to is entitled, “An Act to authorize municipal and other subdivisions of the {átate to buy and sell spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, and to further regulate or prohibit the sale of such liquors,” and is found in the general acts of the legislature, session 1898-99, at page 108.

It is alleged .in the motion that the dispensary was conducted and. carried on at a profit for the purpose of raising revenue, and the revenue arising from it wais used exclusively for municipal purposes, and that the revenue so derived was necessary to pay the ordinary municipal expenses of the defendant.

The plaintiff moved to strike the motion to vacate the levy and aliso demurred to it, the motion and demurrer were overruled, and the court rendered judgment in' favor of the defendant, vacating the levy.

The question now presented for our determination is whether a stock of spirituous, vinous and malt liquors, owned and used by a municipality as stock in trade in conducting and carrying on a dispensary, is property used for municipal purposes in such sense, as will, under § 2040 of the Code of. 1890, exempt it from levy and sale under execution issued on a judgment obtained against the municipality.

“Municipal corporations are created for public, governmental and political purposes and it is a corollary of this proposition, that all property, of whatever nature, held by them in trust 'for carrying out such purposes, should be exempt from seizure and sale under execution.” Tiedman on Municipal Corporations, § 375, p. 765.

The doctrine ais laid down by Mr. Dillon has been approved by this Court, in the case of Mayor and Aldermen of Birmingham v. Rumsey & Co., 63 Ala. 352. Judge Stone, in the case cited, uses this language, “We do not hesitate to declare, that city property, owned or used by the corporation for public purposes, such as public buildings, public markets, hospitals, cemeteries, engine-houses, fire engines and their apparatus, and other property, real or personal, of kindred utility, cannot be taken in execution for debts of the city. But, if the city owns *185 private property, not useful or used for corporate purposes, such property may he seized and -sold under final process, precisely as similar property of individuals is seized and sold.”

In the second edition of the Am. & Eng. Ency. Law,. on page 1190, the law is thus stated: “So the property of a municipal corporation which is essentially public in its nature and is held in trust for the public by the corporation, and is necessary for the exercise of its proper municipal functions, cannot be sold to satisfy the debts of the corporation. But the private property of a municipality, held for purposes of income or sale, unconnected with any governmental use or function, may be levied on and sold to satisfy a judgment rendered against the municipal corporation.”

The act of the legislature above referred to, and under which the dispensary was established and conducted by the defendant in this case, has undergone judicial construction by this Court, and was upheld. — Sheppard v. Dowling, 127 Ala. 52.

In the case cited above, the Court held that, “A power conferred upon a corporation by an independent and original act, such as the power to buy and sell liquor conferred by this act, is a power conferred by it's charter.”

The dispensary act, inferred to above and under which the defendant was operating the dispensary, provides, “That each incorporated town or city, in which the sale of liquor is not prohibited by law, shall have authority to conduct and carry on its corporate name, in itis corporate capacity, and through its legislative body, the business of buying and selling spirituous, vinous and malt liquors, subject to the restrictions hereinafter mentioned.” The act further provides that thei municipality shall invest in said business a sum of money not less than three hundred nor more than twenty-five hundred dolían?, for each dispensary it may carry on.

This Court held in the Sheppard-Dowling case, supra, that it was entirely competent! for the General Assembly to authorize towns and counties to carry on the liquor traffic as an incident to the regulation of that traffic provided by this act. Under the provisions of the act, the *186 defendant was not compelled or required to establish dispensary, but was given authority to do so. When, in compliance with the provisions of the act, it did establish a dispensary, it did so in its corporate name-, in its corporate capacity, and through its legislative body, and in that name, that capacity and through that body only, could the dispensary be legitimately conducted.

We have seen that, when the municipality established a dispensary, it had the power, and it was made its duty, by the law under which the dispensary was established, to provide the dispensary with a stock of liquors. A dispensary could not be -conducted and carried on without the liquors, and when the liquors’ were purchased they could not have been held by the municipality for any other legitimate purpose than for the carrying on of a dispensary.

That the regulation of tin sale of intoxicating liquors is within the police power of the State cannot be doubted, for it is established, if not literally by all the cases where the subject has been considered, certainly by an overwhelming array of authority, and tin; question lias been put at rest by this Court.

Further, “It belongs to (he legislative department in the exercise of the police powers of the State, to determine, primarily, what measure’s are appropriate or needful for the protection of the public morals, the public health, or the public safety, subject io the power of the courts to adjudge whether any particular law is an invasion of rights secured by the Constitution.”

We think it is well isettled that the legislature in dealing with the sale of intoxicating liquors is fulfilling a public duty; that it is striving to promote the health, safety and morals of the community; that, in the establishment of the dispensary, it constitutes a public object, use, or purpose in the promotion of which public money may be lawfully invested and expended.

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Bluebook (online)
38 So. 1016, 143 Ala. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-loan-security-co-v-town-of-edwardsville-ala-1905.