Ex parte Yeager

11 Gratt. 655
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 11 Gratt. 655 (Ex parte Yeager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Yeager, 11 Gratt. 655 (Va. 1854).

Opinion

DANIEL, J.

The legislative provision, on the proper construction of which the questions raised in this case mainly turn, will be found in chapters 38 and 96 of the Code of 1849.

The third section of the first mentioned chapter, p. 443-4 of the Code, provides that for a license to keep a house of entertainment the application shall be, when the house is in a town having a corporation court, to such court, and when it is not in any such town, to the court of the county wherein it is. If the court be of opinion that the applicant is sober and of good character, and will probably keep a house orderly, useful and such as the law requires, it may *grant such license; and if the house be in a town, the court, when it grants the same, may, if the applicant desire it, dispense with the necessity of his providing for horses. If such application be refused, the refusal shall be entered of record; and a license shall not be granted to the applicant before the next May term, unless by a court composed of the justices to whom the first application was made, or a majority of the acting justices of the county or corporation.

The fourth section of chapter 38, p. 207 of the Code, provides, that no person shall, without license, keep either an ordinary, house of private entertainment or bowling saloon or alley. And the eighil section of the same chapter provides, that the receipt for the tax on such license as is mentioned in fhe fourth section, shall be produced to the court to which application is made for the license, before such application is considered. If the court reject the application, the tax shall be refunded to the person who paid it.

On the one hand it was insisted at the bar, that the terms “may grant such license,’’ are either absolute^ imperative, making it the duty of the County court to grant the license whenever the applicant produces the receipt of the proper officer for the tax imposed on such license, and brings himself within the requirements of the fourth section of the first mentioned chapter, or indicative of a purpose to enjoin a duty which is to be performed with discretion ; a [343]*343sound discretion, having a regard to public convenience, and looking to the objects contemplated by the act; and that the action of the justices in refusing to grant a license, may be revised and controlled in a superior court by means of a mandamus.

On the other hand it was insisted, that the word “may” is used in the statute in its popular sense. That it is permissive, and is employed to grant an authority coupled with a discretion, which latter, *from its very nature, does not admit of its being guided or superseded by the orders of any superior or appellate tribunal.

In considering these opposing views we may, I think, be greatly aided by a reference to previous legislation on the subject.

The fourth section of the act of 1705, 3 Hen. St. 376, after declaring that whosoever shall retail liquors in their houses without license first had and obtained, shall forfeit and pay a fine of two thousand pounds of tobacco, provides, that “any one intending to set up an ordinary or house of public entertainment, shall petition the county court; and they, by their discretion, shall judge whether it is convenient to suffer such a house to be set up; and whether the person petitioning be of ability sufficient to comply with the intent of the law in providing convenient lodging and diet,” &c. The section then proceeds further to provide, that on “said petition being approved,” the court shall take bond of the petitioner, with good and sufficient security, with condition to find and provide, constantly, good, wholesome and cleanly lodging and diet for travelers, and stablage, provender, &c., for horses: And that “the bond and security being thus taken, the court may grant their order," &c.

The act" of 1748, ? 1, 6 Hen. St. p. 71-2, after declaring that every person intending to keep an ordinary, shall first petition the County court, proceeds, “And the justices of the court to whom such petition shall be exhibited, shall thereupon consider the convenience of the place proposed, and the ability of the petitioner to keep good and sufficient houses, lodging and entertainment for travellers, their servants and horses,” &c. “And if such petition shall appear reasonable, such court is hereby authorized, and may, if they think fit, grant the petitioner a license to keep an '^ordinary for the term of one year next ensuing the date of such license, and from thence till the next court held for the same county, and no longer; which license shall be signed by the first justice sworn in the commission of the peace for such county; and may, upon petition, be renewed from year to year, if the court shall think fit.

The first of the above recited acts, as we have seen, commits, in terms, the granting of such licenses to the discretion, judgment and approval of the justices. And though the words of the act of 1748 are not exactly the same, they are not less expressive of a purpose to confer authority on the justices to consider and act in the matter, free from all control other than the dictates of their own judgment.

The language used in the act of 1792, in reference to the grant of the license, is identical with that employed in the act of 1748. The act of 1819 provides that every person intending to set up an ordinary or house of public entertainment, shall first petition the court of the county or corporation wherein such ordinary is intended be, and obtain a license for keeping the same; and the justices of the court to whom such petition shall be exhibited, shall thereupon consider the convenience of the place proposed, the character of the petitioner for good order, sobriety and honesty, and his ability to keep good and sufficient houses, &c. ; and if such petition shall appear reasonable, and the court shall be satisfied and enter of record that the petitioner is a man of good character, not addicted to drunkenness or gaming, and shall be of opinion that he will keep an orderly and useful house of entertainment, they shall be and are hereby authorized to grant to such petitioner a license to keep an ordinary.”'— “Upon like petition and like entry on record, the license may be renewed from year to year, as long as the court shall be of opinion that the petitioner hath preserved his *good character, and continues to keep an orderly and useful house of entertainment,” &c. 2 Rev. Code, ch. 240, § 1.

The same language is employed in the act of 1840. See ch. 21, sec. 13, Sess. Acts 1839-40.

It is obvious, I think, that there is no such variance in the provisions of these two last mentioned acts, from those found in the preceding acts we have cited, as would denote any change in the policy of the legislature.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Gratt. 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-yeager-va-1854.