Gallovich v. People

68 Colo. 299
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1920
DocketNo. 9550
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 Colo. 299 (Gallovich v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallovich v. People, 68 Colo. 299 (Colo. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court.

The case is here on writ of error to the District Court of Las Animas County. The defendant was convicted of unlawfully keeping intoxicating liquor in the basement of his restaurant and soft drink parlor. It appears that this was his second conviction, and he was accordingly sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor for not less than one year.

Numerous errors have been assigned, but the one chiefly relied upon is that the section under which the defendant was tried and convicted is unconstitutional and therefore void. That portion of the statute involved, Session Laws of 1917, page 283, is as follows: “It shall be unlawful for any person to have, keep or use intoxicating liquors in any store, shop, club, roadhouse, railroad car, place of private business or place of public resort, or in any room or rooms of any hotel, rooming house or boarding house or in any part or parts of any building directly or indirectly connected with any such place, or in any place except in his home or except while carrying same with the permit herein provided for thereto securely fastened; it shall be unlawful for any person in this state to manufacture intoxicating liquor for any purpose whatsoever.”

It is contended that article XXII of the Constitution, relative to intoxicating liquors, is not a grant of power to legislate upon that subject, but is a limitation upon the authority of the legislature to deal with the prohibition of the liquor traffic. Article XXII is as follows: “From and after the first (1st) day of January, 1916, no person association or corporation shall, within this state, manufacture for sale or gift any intoxicating liquors; and no person, association or corporation shall import into this state any intoxicating liquors for sale or gift; and no person, association or corporation shall, within this state, sell [301]*301or keep for sale any intoxicating liquors or offer any intoxicating liquors for sale, barter or trade; Provided, however, That the handling of intoxicating liquors for medicinal or sacramental purposes may .be provided for by statute.

.Sec. 2. All provisions of the Constitution in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.”

In substance it is urged by defendant that the Constitution having prohibited the traffic in intoxicating liquors except for certain specific purposes, the legislature is prohibited from legislating against its possession by private individuals for personal use. It seems, however, that in so far as the state Constitution is concerned, that such possession, when held in public or semi-public places, may well be prohibited as an aid to the enforcement of the statutes against the traffic itself.

This question was passed upon, in substance and effect, in Schwartz v. People, 46 Colo. 239, 104 Pac. 92. In that case the constitutionality of certain local option laws was questioned, and it was urged that inasmuch as the Constitution directed the legislature to prohibit the introduction and sale of impure and spurious intoxicating liquor into the state, it by necessary implication inhibited any legislation as to traffic in pure liquors. In other words, the contention there, as here, was that the terms of the Constitution were in the nature of a limitation of power on the subject, and not a grant of power. In speaking to this question in that case this court said, at page 252: “Although, urged from many view points, and presented in various phases, with great ability, research and learning, and involving numerous incidental questions, the contention rests chiefly upon the application of the doctrine, to. the facts of the case at bar, that a general grant of legislative authority in the constitution is limited and qualified by subsequent special affirmative provisions therein relative to a particular subject matter. This contention is in. effect an elaboration of the legal maxim that ‘A specification of particulars is an exclusion of generals,’ or ‘the ex[302]*302pression of one thing is the exclusion of another.’ In other words it is said that when the constitution conferred the special power and enjoined the special duty upon the legislature to prohibit the importation, manufacture and sale of spurious and impure liquors, but remained silent as to the prohibition, manufacture and sale of pure liquors, that such affirmative declaration must be construed as implying the negative as to the legislative power by law to prohibit traffic in the latter kind.”

It is this theory of interpretation which the objectors urged in the Schwartz case that the defendant relies upon in this case, when he argues in substance that because the Constitution prohibits the barter and sale of intoxicating liquors the legislature has no power to regulate the possession thereof by individuals for personal use.

In pointing out the fallacy of this contention in the Schwartz case, the court at page 252 declares: “With reference to the rule of interpretation, which forms the groundwork, and is the very gist, of the argument of counsel for plaintiff in error, that ‘The expression of the one is the exclusion of the other,’ it may be fairly said that it is in no sense a fixed and unalterable rule, to be applied in every case where ingenious counsel may deem it applicable, and may be in need of its helpful agency to attain the end sought; neither is it in high favor as a rule of constitutional construction nor of universal application.”

The court then quotes at length from Story on the Constitution, sec. 448, and from People ex rel. Livesay v. Wright, 6 Colo. 92, and Orahood v. Denver, 41 Colo. 175, 91 Pac. 1116. Again referring to the question as to whether an affirmative section limited the legislative powers, the court continued, at page 270, where Alexander v. People, 7 Colo. 155, 2 Pac. 894, is quoted with approval, and said: “So here, read in the light of the foregoing rule of interpretation and fixed policy of both the state and territory from the beginning, to control, regulate, license and absolutely prohibit the sale of every Icind of intoxicating liquors, when and where deemed necessary, for the [303]*303common good, this provision of our Constitution is clearly mandatory, and confined to impure liquors only, requiring affirmative action on the part of the legislature to the extent and in the manner specified, and is, in no measure, prohibitory, or a limitation of its powers to legislate upon the subject of pure liquors in any manner which it believes wise and beneficial.”

It is clearly within the power of the state to prohibit the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors. It necessarily follows, therefore, that the state has power to adopt such reasonable laws as may be necessary to make such prohibition effective. Crane v. Campbell, 245 U. S. 304, 62 L. Ed. 304, 38 Sup. Ct. 98. It is manifest that the statute in question is a reasonable and appropriate means for such purpose.

It is admitted that the state, in the proper exercise1 of its police powers, may prohibit the traffic in intoxicating liquors. Any regulation having reasonable relation to that end may also be adopted, in order to make the prohibition effective.

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68 Colo. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallovich-v-people-colo-1920.