Ex parte Sikes

102 Ala. 173
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 102 Ala. 173 (Ex parte Sikes) 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
Ex parte Sikes, 102 Ala. 173 (Ala. 1893).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

By an ordinance of the city of Troy, dealers in spiritous liquors were required to pay two thousand dollars for a license. For a violation of this ordinance the defendant was arrested and fined, and, refusing to pay the fine, imprisoned. He sued out a writ of habeas corpus before the probate judge who, upon the hearing of the case, refused to discharge the petitioner, and remanded him to the custody of the marshal. From this judgment the petitioner prosecutes his application to this court. All the facts are agreed upon, and the only question is as to the legality of. the ordinance. The prisoner contends that it is prohibitory in its character and effect, and that such' an ordinance is not authorized by the municipal charter of 'the city of Troy.

The act of the legislature, 1890-91, p. 724, declares that ‘ ‘The mayor and councilmen shall have power and [175]*175authority * * to license and regulate the retailing and the wholesale of liquors within the corporate limits, and to provide for the annulling and revoking such license for good cause being shown ; * * * to license and regulate commission merchants,dry doods and grocery merchants, keepers of hotels and eating houses; * * to prohibit the sale of liquors on any election day ; * * to restrain and prohibit gambling, to prohibit all unlawful assemblies; to prohibit violations of the Sabbath ; to prevent stock from running at large; * * to prohibit all breaches of the peace,” &c., “and to fix the price or tax on all licenses.” We think it very clear that the authority “to license and regulate ” a business does not include the authority to prohibit it absolutely. We have so held many times. — Ex parte Burnett, 30 Ala. 461; Miller v. Jones, 80 Ala. 89; Ex parte Cowert, 92 Ala. 94; Ex parte Mayor of Anniston, 90 Ala. 516.

Independent of the judicial construction given to a statute which merely confers the power to license and regulate a business, a reading of the act in question clearly demonstrates that the intention of the legislature was to authorize the mayor and councilmen to “license and regulate,” and not to “restrain and prohibit” the sale of spiritous liquors. Whenever it was intended to confer such power, the words used are “restrain,” “prohibit,” but these and similar words are not used when the power in regard to the sale of liquors was conferred. We are of opinion the legislature has the constitutional right to prohibit or authorize' any community, or municipality, absolutely to prohibit the sale of spiritous liquors. — Intendant of Marion v. Chandler, 6 Ala. 899; Ex parte Burnett, supra; Ex parte Cowert, supra; Harris v. Intendant of Livingston, 28 Ala. 579.

Having the power to prohibit, the legislature undoubtedly could fix the price of a license to sell liquor at any sum, and, had it seen proper to exercise the right, could have conferred on the mayor and councilmen of Troy, by express provision, the power either to prohibit en-* tirely or fix the price of the license at two thousand dollars. It has, however, declared that the “Mayor, and councilmen shall have the power to license and regulate the retailing and the wholesale of liquors within the corporate .limits,” and “to fix the price or tax on all licenses. ’ ’ The only limitation on the power and dis[176]*176cretion of the mayor ana councilmen, in fixing the "price of the license” is contained in the words "license and regulate the sale,” and this limitation is, that the price fixed shall not be prohibitory. What is the test by which it shall be determined whether a ‘ ‘price for a license’ ’ is or is not prohibitory? Upon what principle is it to be held, that a, price of two hundred dollars is not prohibitory, and two thousand dollars is prohibitory? What rules and facts must guide the mayor and councilmen in fixing the price of a license, so that the ordinance will be an exercise of power within their granted authority “to fix the price,” and not transgress the boundary fixed by the term "to license and regulate,” 'so that it shall not be prohibitory? No one unvarying price will suit for all places and all circumstances'. It seems to us the populousness of the municipality, the profitableness of the business, the character of the business proposed to be licensed, and its effects upon the community, the additional expense necessarily entailed by a police supervision of the business, (and perhaps other matters might be mentioned), are all proper subjects of inquiry in arriving at a legal and just conclusion, in fixing a price which will not bo prohibitory. In the case of Ex parte Burnett, the town council of Cahaba required by ordinance a license of one thousand dollars, and it was pronounced prohibitory in its character. There were no facts ill evidence in the case, except the ordinance and the act of the legislature granting charter rights, and the conviction of the petitioner for a violation of the ordinance. And in that case it was said : “Neither is it our purpose to limit the price of a corporation license to the sum fixed by the general law on a license to retail. As one of the incidental powers of a corporation the council may certainly transcend that limit, provided their ordinance is not in its nature prohibitory.” We italicize.

The authority granted to the mayor and councilmen of Troy is more specific and enlarged than that under which the town council of Cahaba acted. In the case of Ex parte Marshall, 64 Ala. 266, the rule recognized, that the “license may be graduated by the populousness of the community in which the privilege was to be exercised, and the profitableness of the employment;” and in Van Hook’s Case, 70 Ala. 361, the additional expense [177]*177for a faithful enforcement of police superintendence, should he considered.

Under these rules and principles of law we cannot say the ordinance is void upon its face. What are the agreed facts? The city of Troy has a population of about four thousand inhabitants. That in the years 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893 there were three separate retail liquor dealers in Troy, who paid a license of $2,000, and each did a business of about $38,000 in the year 1890, and the business of each In 1891 amounted to $35,000, and in the year 1892, to about $24,000, and in the year 1893, each did a business of $20,000, an aggregate for the four years of $351,000.00. The capital invested upon which this business was transacted is not stated, but it is stated ‘ ‘that the profits on the amount of business was about one-fourth of these amounts, out of which were paid all licenses, bosides house rent, clerk hire and other current expenses.” It is also stated that the expenses of petitioner, Sykes, for the year 1893 approximated $0,000. What these expenses were for, whether confined solely to the busines of selling liquor, or whether family expenses were included is not stated, and the expenses of the two other dealers are not given. It is also stated that “the other dealers for the year 1893, did an unprofitable business after paying their licenses and other expenses.” It also appears that the other two dealers have paid the license for the year 1894, and are continuing in the business. The profits at 25 per cent, on total sales of spiritous liquors in Troy for four years, not exclusive of current expenses, were about $88,000.

We do not think there is anything in this showing, which reasonably satisfies the mind that the license required is prohibitory in a business view.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Ala. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-sikes-ala-1893.