Evers v. Flanagan

186 Misc. 101, 61 N.Y.S.2d 496, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2730
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 Misc. 101 (Evers v. Flanagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evers v. Flanagan, 186 Misc. 101, 61 N.Y.S.2d 496, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2730 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Stoddart, J.

This is an application under sections 123 and 124 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law for an order enjoining the respondent Daniel D. Flanagan from operating a retail liquor store for the sale of liquor for consumption off the premises at No. 30-08 33d Street, Astoria, and restraining the Commissioners constituting the State Liquor Authority from issuing a license authorizing such use of the premises.

The petitioner, a taxpayer, predicates his right to relief upon subdivision 2 of section 105 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law which provides: 11 No premises shall be licensed to sell liquors and/or wines at retail for off premises consumption, unless said premises shall be located in a store, the entrance to [103]*103which shall be from the street level and located in a business center on a main thoroughfare or on an arcade or subsurface thoroughfare leading to a railroad terminal.” (Italics by the court.) In Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed.) main ” as an adjective has been defined as 5. Principal; chief; first in size, rank, importance, etc.; as, the main line of a railroad; the main body of an army ”. The respondents upon the oral argument did not and in their papers do not contend that the Legislature used the word differently.

Here, the exhibits submitted show clearly that 33d Street in Astoria is not a main ”, principal ” or chief ” thoroughfare. It is one of many secondary roads in that area, and with the exception of a few plots immediately adjacent to the intersecting avenues, it is zoned for residences. While it has not been urged on this application, it might be mentioned that there is no business center on this road, for surely one or two small stores on a street in the city of New York do not constitute a business center ”.

In opposition to this application, the respondents question only the power of the court to restrain the State Liquor Authority under sections 123 and 124 from issuing a license.

In Matter of O’Brien v. Rozza (247 App. Div. 747, affd. 271 N. Y. 545) the Appellate Division of this department, upon a similar application and involving a store a few hundred feet from the premises involved here, directed the cancelation of a license which had been issued contrary to section 105.

Here, the application for the license has been approved but the mere formality of issuing the license has not taken place. I do not believe it necessary for the petitioner to await that ministerial act before seeking the aid of the court. Accordingly the application is granted.

Settle order on notice.

(On reargument, January 22, 1946.)

The respondents have applied for permission to reargue a motion for an injunction under sections 123 and 124 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law. The court grants the permission requested.

Upon the argument of the original application the respondents did not discuss the merits of the petitioner’s application but merely urged that the court was without power to restrain the State Liquor Authority from issuing a license. Now, they contend that the petition should have been dismissed on its merits.

[104]*104The petitioner, a taxpayer, seeks to restrain the respondent, Daniel D. Flanagan, from operating a retail liquor store for the sale of liquor for consumption off the premises at No. 30-08 33d Street, Astoria, County of Queens, and to restrain' the State Liquor Authority from issuing a license to Flanagan authorizing that use of the premises.

The basis of the controversy is subdivision 2 of section 105 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law which provides: “No premises shall be licensed to sell liquors and/or wines at retail for off premises consumption, unless said premises shall be located in a store, the entrance to which shall be from the street level and located in a business center on a main thoroughfare or on an arcade or sub-surface thoroughfare leading to a railroad terminal.” ■ (Italics by the court.)

In my original decision I agreed with the petitioner that the premises, 30-08 33d Street, were not in a business center on a main thoroughfare, and granted the injunction in the belief that the issuance of a license by the Liquor Authority would be contrary to law. The respondents contend now that the petitioner and the court are in error. The respondents did not, upon their first appearance before the court, nor do they now, contend that the Legislature used the word “ main ” in a special sense. In fact upon the present oral argument it was stated that the use of the word “ main ” by the Legislature was mere surplusage. In the papers submitted the respondents do not suggest what was intended by the Legislature. The Liquor Authority submits the affidavit of one Jack Reinstein, who states that the aforesaid section was enacted at the request of the Liquor Authority. He avers that ‘ ‘ It has been the intent of the Liquor Authority, in submitting this provision for enactment into law and its practical construction thereof that the use of the word 6 main ’ as applied to describing ‘ thoroughfare ’ was only for the purpose of distinguishing between a thoroughfare which was used by the public in general as compared to a thoroughfare which was either a private way, a private lane, a back alley, an arcade, sub-surface thoroughfare, or a cul de sac, right of way, or such similar passageway ” and that “ It was to distinguish between a passageway opening at both ends, which is used by the general public, and a passageway which was not open to the public or which was not used by the general public that the word ‘ main ’ was inserted, and for no other purpose.”

The Court of Appeals wrote in Palmer v. Van Santvoord (153 N. Y. 612, 616): “ Words are not to be rejected as super-[105]*105flu on s when it is practicable to give to each a distinct and consistent meaning. ‘ The good expositor,’ says Lord Coke, ‘ makes every sentence have its operation to suppress all the mischief; he gives effect to every word of the statute; he does not construe it so that anything should be vain and superfluous, nor yet make exposition against express words, but so expounds it that one part may stand agreeable with the other and all may stand together.’ (Coke’s Eep. part VIII, p. 310) ”, and stated in People v. Dethloff (283 N. Y. 309, 315) that in interpreting statutes we must proceed “ upon the assumption that the Legislature did not deliberately place in the statute a phrase which was intended to serve no purpose ”.

In Matter of Hardecker v. Board of Education (180 Misc. 1008, 1011, affd. 266 App. Div. 980, affd. 292 N. Y. 584) Justice Kleinfeld wrote: “ The construction of a statute is a question of law for the court and the primary consideration is to ascer-. tain and give effect to the intention of the Legislature. Such meaning is to be ascertained from the statute itself, and where the language is clear and unambiguous courts may not speculate as to possible meanings. They must take the act as they find it and construe it according to the plain meaning of the language used. Words of ordinary import should receive their understood meaning and the definitions of lexicographers are considered useful as guide posts in determining the sense in which the words were used. (McKinney’s Cons. Laws of N. Y., Book 1, §§ 71, 92, 232, 234.) ”

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Bluebook (online)
186 Misc. 101, 61 N.Y.S.2d 496, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evers-v-flanagan-nysupct-1945.