Fishback Brewing Co. v. City of St. Louis

95 S.W.2d 335, 231 Mo. App. 793, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 201
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 335 (Fishback Brewing Co. v. City of St. Louis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fishback Brewing Co. v. City of St. Louis, 95 S.W.2d 335, 231 Mo. App. 793, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 201 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*798 HOSTETTER, P. J.

This is a suit in equity instituted by plaintiff, Fischbach Brewing Company, a corporation, by the filing of its petition, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, on the 22nd day of November, 1934. The defendants are the City of St. Louis, a municipal corporation; and its Excise Commissioner and License Collector; and, in said suit it is sought to restrain said defendants from enforcing or attempting to enforce a certain ordinance of said city, No. 40274, against the plaintiff or its agents, servants or employees, and from instituting or prosecuting any proceeding of any character against the plaintiff or its agents, servants or employees for the enforcement of said ordinance or for the collection of any license fee, tax or eharg’e sought to be imposed by said’ ordinance or the collection or assessment of any of the penalties or punishments provided by said ordinance for the violation thereof.

Upon the filing of plaintiff’s petition the defendants jointly demurred thereto upon the ground that said petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants. The trial court sustained the said demurrer, and plaintiff, in open court, declined to plead further; and, thereupon the court entered final judgment on said demurrer in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff. From such judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The petition contains allegations substantially as follows: That plaintiff is a Missouri corporation engaged in the manufacturing and brewing of beer containing in excess of 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight in the City of St. Charles, Missouri; that Ordinance No. 40274 was drily passed by the board of aldermen of the City of St. Louis and approved by the mayor and became effective on the 23rd day of March, 1934, purporting to have been enacted under the authority of Section 25 of the Liquor Control Act passed by the Fifty-seventh General Assembly of Missouri in Extra Session (Laws of Missouri 1933-1934, Extra Session, p. 88), which ordinance, inter *799 alia, provided for tbe appointment of an excise commissioner of said City of St. Louis, for the issuance of licenses for the manufacture, brewing and sale, both at wholesale and retail, of intoxicating liquor, including beer of an alcoholic content in excess of 3.2 per cent by weight, and' prescribes the license fees to be charged therefor and provides that such licenses shall be issued by the excise commissioner of said city to whom such license fees are made payable and that no license shall be issued by the license collector of said city except with the approval of the excise commissioner of said city, and provides that said excise commissioner shall enforce the provisions of this ordinance and that he and his deputies and inspectors shall have the power to make arrests in carrying out the provisions thereof and that Section 10 of said ordinance provides as follows:

“For the privilege of manufacturing intoxicating liquors for sale and consumption in the City of St. Louis, for beverage purposes, or for the privilege of selling such liquors for resale by any other person in the City of St. Louis, the following fees shall be charged (a) For the manufacture and/or sale for such resale of beer with an alcoholic content in excess of 3.2 per cent by weight, Fifteen Hundred Dollars ($1500.00) per year in advance/’ that plaintiff’s brewery is located within the corporate limits of the City of St. Charles, a municipal corporation and that its brewing and manufacturing business is conducted within said City of St. Charles; that the beer so manufactured and brewed at its plant within said City of St. Charles is, and at all times mentioned in the petition has been, sold, distributed and delivered by plaintiff to retailers for resale by them in said city of St. Charles and in the defendant City of St. Louis and in a great many other cities and municipalities in the State of Missouri; that plaintiff has no plant for its manufacturing business in the City of St. Louis, nor has it ever maintained any stock of beer, store, storeroom or other place of business in said St. Louis city for the sale of its beer so manufactured by it or otherwise; that its beer of the alcoholic content aforesaid is, and at all times mentioned' in the petition has been transported by plaintiff from said City of St. Charles to the City of St. Louis and there sold by plaintiff to retailers for resale in said City of St. Louis in quantities only of not less than one gallon; that in some instances plaintiff sells and delivers its said beer to its customers in the City of St. Louis upon and in the filling of orders received by plaintiff at its brewery in St. Charles city directly from its customers in St. Louis city; while in other instances plaintiff sells and delivers its beer to its customers in said City of St. Louis upon and in filling orders forwarded' to plaintiff at its brewery in St. Charles by agents and brokers in said St. Louis city authorized by plaintiff to solicit *800 and obtain sucb orders, but not otherwise; that all such orders of all character have been filled by plaintiff by means of its trucks in charge of its employees, by which trucks plaintiff’s said beer is -hauled and transported directly from its brewery in St. Charles city and delivered' to its customers in said St. Louis city; that its said beer so sold and delivered in said St. Louis city has been either paid for at the time of such delivery by payment directly to plaintiff’s employee in charge of its truck so delivering the same, or by remittance forwarded by said customers in St. Louis city to plaintiff at its brewery plant in St. Charles city; that plaintiff has paid all license fees and charges imposed upon it by law for the manufacture and sale of its product within the State of Missouri to the Supervisor of Liquor Control of said State and in all respects complied with the provisions of the laws of Missouri relating to the manufacture and sale of beer of the alcoholic content above mentioned and has also been required to, and paid annually, a license fee to said City of St. Charles as a manufacturer or brewer of such beer as required by ordinance; that by the provisions of Section 25 of said liquor control act the Legislature has authorized incorporated cities within this State to charge for licenses issued only to “manufactures, distillers, brewers, wholesalers and retailers of intoxicating liquor within their limits” and not otherwise, and has thereby denied to all incorporated cities within Missouri the right to charge or exact a license fee or charge for the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquor, except from manufacturers, distillers, brewers, wholesalers and retailers of such intoxicating liquors within the limits of such cities; that the last provision of Section 21 of said Liquor Control Act provides that “manufacturers and blenders of intoxicating liquor shall not be required' to take out a merchant’s license for the sale of their products at wholesale at the place of manufacture or in quantities not less than one (1) one gallon;” that by reason of the facts and matters alleged, plaintiff is not a manufacturer or a brewer of beer or a distiller of other intoxicating liquor within the limits of the City of St. Louis, but is a manufacturer and brewer located within the limits of the City of St. Charles, Missouri; that plaintiff is not and has never been either a wholesaler or retailer of beer or other intoxicants within the limits of St.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 335, 231 Mo. App. 793, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fishback-brewing-co-v-city-of-st-louis-moctapp-1936.