Ex Parte Parker

55 S.E. 122, 74 S.C. 466, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 55 S.E. 122 (Ex Parte Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Parker, 55 S.E. 122, 74 S.C. 466, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 152 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

A committee appointed by the General Assembly to investigate the Dispensary asked Lewis W. Parker, a witness testifying before it, a question which he refused to answer, whereupon the committee held him to be in contempt, and ordered its marshal to hold him in custody until he would answer.' The witness Parker then sought by habeas corpus proceedings to be released by this Court from the custody of the marshal of the committee. Upon the hearing of the return an order was made adjudging the confinement of the petitioner to be lawful and remanding him’ to the custody of the marshal. We propose now to give the reasons for the Court’s conclusion that the committee did not transcend its powers in ordering the arrest.

It is necessary to1 understand first the obj ect for which the committee was appointed and the extent of the authority *467 conferred upon it.. The Senate and House o-f Representatives on January 31st, 1905, passed a concurrent' resolution providing for the appointment of three Senators and four members of the House “to investigate the affairs of the State Dispensary.” The second section- of the resolution is important and is, therefore, set out in full: “That said committee be, and is hereby, empowered to send' for papers and persons, to swear witnesses, to require the attendance of any parties whose presence shall be deemed necessary, to appoint an expert accountant and stenographer, and to investigate all transactions concerning said Dispensary and its management, and- to* take testimony either within or without the State, and shall have access at all times during their service to all the books and vouchers and other papers of said institution, especially in investigating the following facts:

“(a) Whether or not it is a fact that houses represented by agents who are near relatives of the members of the Board of Directors, receive large orders at each purchase.
“(b) Is it a fact that members of the Board of Directors are, or have been, agents for certain, wholesale houses from which large purchases are made ?
“(c) Is it a fact that parties to whom large orders are given are not wholesale dealers but brokers, and that the orders are filled by third persons, thus making the State pay the commissions of the middleman?
“(d) Was it necessary to purchase the large quantity of liquors ordered in December, 1904, to fill demands, and especially the new and fancy goods purchased which is unknown to! the trade ?
“(e) Are the extraordinary heavy purchases made necessary to the best interest of the Dispensary system ?
“(f) What is the financial standing of the business, and is it run on the best principles for the interest of the law as originally passed and amended ?
“(g) Is it a fact that the State, through the Dispensaries, is violating the Constitution of 1895, in that it is selling whiskey in less quantities than one-half of one pint ?
*468 “(h) is it a fact that the State is selling 5’s in case goods to its customers and charging them for one quart ?
“(i) Is it a fact that certain agents are traveling over the State and offering special inducements to County Dispensers to ‘push’ certain brands of liquors, and if so, is it a fact known to the members of the State Board of Directors?
“(j) Is it a fact that certain requirements of the law are dispensed with by the County Dispensers by order of, or by the consent of, the members of the State Board of Directors?
“(k) Has the whiskey which has been recently purchased been ordered out from the dealer, or is it held in reserve for future delivery ?
“(1) What is the indebtedness of the Dispensary for liquors which have been bought but not delivered ?
“(m) And any and all other matters relating to: the management of the State Dispensary, and of any official or person in relation thereto.
“(n) Is it, or not, a fact that excessive freights have been paid to railroads for transporting liquors into- the State, when said liquors could have been shipped into' the State by water at less cost to' the State ?
“(nn) Whether there is any warrant of law or authority for the establishment and conduct of what is commonly known as ‘Beer Dispensaries',’ as they are now1 and have been conducted ?”

After the committee had been appointed- and entered upon the investigation, the General Assembly, on January 26, 1906, enacted a statute intended to enlarge its powers, and to remove any doubt as to' its right to' exercise the powers which the concurrent resolution had purported to confer. Only the preamble and the first and second sections of the statute are relevant to this inquiry: “Whereas, a Committee has been appointed to' investigate the State Dispensary under the Concurrent Resolution of the General Assembly, dated the 31st-day of January, 1905 ; and whereas, in the progress of the work of the said Committee, some doubt has arisen as to the power of the said Committee in the discharge of their *469 duties; and it being provided in section 5 of said Concurrent Resolution that the said Committee should apply to the General Assembly for such other power and authority as the circumstances arising during this investigation may seem1 to require; therefore,

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, That the Committee heretofore appointed under the terms of the Concurrent Resolution, dated the 31st day of January, 1905, ór any other Committee or Committees that may be appointed, are hereby authorized and empowered to' elect a marshal, who, upon being sworn, shall be and become a peace officer of the State and invested with all the power of sheriffs and constables in the service of any and all process issued by the C'ommitttee aforesaid, and with the power to arjest and imprison upon the order of the said Committee any and all persons who shall fail and refuse to1 obey any legal order of the said Committee, or who shall be guilty of any disorderly conduct in the presence of said Committee during any session thereof, or who shall be guilty of any contempt of said Committee.

“Sec. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 122, 74 S.C. 466, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-parker-sc-1906.