Grillo v. State

120 A.2d 384, 209 Md. 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 1, 1999
Docket[No. 99, October Term, 1955.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 A.2d 384 (Grillo v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grillo v. State, 120 A.2d 384, 209 Md. 154 (Md. 1999).

Opinion

Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mildred Grillo is appealing here from two convictions by the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County for violations of the Alcoholic Beverages Law in the restaurant of the Lyre Club on Marlboro Pike at Coral Hills. Vincent Grillo, her husband, is appealing here from one conviction for a violation of the law in that restaurant.

Grillo testified that the club had been incorporated by three men under the laws of Maryland in 1953 under the name of “The Lyre Club, Inc.” He stated that the purpose of the corporation is to have a place for people who work until 1 or 2 o’clock in the morning, such as “phone operators, bartenders, waitresses, owners of clubs, owners of restaurants, cab drivers, bus operators, anyone who is, by their profession, precluded from using a licensed place for relaxation because of the hours in which they work.” He stated that Mrs. Grillo was the secretary of the corporation. Waverly Webb, Clerk of the *156 Circuit Court, testified that he had issued a trader’s license and a restaurant license to Mrs. Grillo.

Two indictments were found by the grand jury against Mrs. Grillo. One charged her with knowingly permitting Robert N. Cabral to consume alcoholic beverages at the club on January 29, 1955, between 2 and 6 a. m. in violation of Code 1951, art. 2B, sec. 88 (a). The other charged her with knowingly permitting George E. Clements to consume alcoholic beverages at the club on June 7, 1955, between 2 and 6 a. m. in violation of the same provision.

Grillo was indicted for knowingly permitting Robert N. Cabral to consume alcoholic beverages at the club on June 8, 1955, between the hours of 2 and 6 a. m. in violation of Code Supp. 1955, art. 2B, sec. 99(c).

On January 29, 1955, Cabral and Clements, detectives in the Prince George’s County Police Department, entered the Lyre Club at 3 a. m. Officer Cabral testified that as he entered the door Grillo asked him if he had ever been there before. He replied that he had, and he gave the name of the man who had brought him. He then handed to Mrs. Grillo his overcoat and a bottle of whiskey. She pasted on the bottle a small label with the name of “Cabral” marked on it. She then handed the bottle to the bartender, who placed it on a shelf behind the bar. The detectives took seats at a table and ordered a waitress to bring them whiskey with ginger ale. After the whiskey was poured from Officer Cabral’s bottle into two glasses containing ginger ale and ice, the waitress served the drinks to the detectives. After they had several drinks, they paid their bill, which included an admission fee of $1.50 each, and left the building at about 4 a. m.

The detectives returned to the restaurant on June 7, 1955, at about 3:30 a. m. On that occasion Grillo produced an application for membership in the club. Officer Cabral filled out the application, and Grillo issued him a guest card. Officer Cabral handed a bottle of whiskey to Mrs. Grillo, who pasted a label on it with his name and handed it to the bartender. The whiskey was poured *157 from their bottle and was mixed with ginger ale, and the detectives had several drinks.

The detectives came back again on June 8, 1955, at 2:40 a. m. Grillo greeted them and ushered them to a table near the bar. Again they had several drinks. Again the whiskey was poured from Officer Cabral’s bottle. Again the detectives had their drinks. After they paid Grillo for the drinks which they ordered on that day and the previous day, they departed.

Mrs. Grillo was convicted of violating Section 83(a) on January 29 and June 7. She was fined $50 in the first case, and $10 in the second case.

Grillo was convicted of violating Section 99(c) on June 8. He was fined $50.

I.

The contention of Mrs. Grillo was that Section 83(a) is invalid because Chapter 763 of the Laws of 1941, which added this section to the Alcoholic Beverages Law, did not comply with the provision in Article 3, Section 29, of the Constitution of Maryland that “every law enacted by the General Assembly shall embrace but one subject, and that shall be described in its title.”

The title of the 1941 Act reads as follows:

“An Act to add a new section to Article 2B of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1939 Edition), title ‘Alcoholic Beverages’, sub-title ‘Regulations and Restrictions’, said new section to be known as Section 42A, and to follow immediately after Section 42 of said Article, prohibiting the consumption of alcoholic beverages between the hours of 2 A. M. and 6 A. M. on any day at public places not licensed to sell the same.”

The body of the Act reads as follows:

“42A. Between the hours of 2 A. M. and 6 A. M. on any day no person shall consume any alcoholic beverage on any premises open to the general public, any place of public entertainment, or any place at which set-ups or other *158 component parts of mixed alcoholic drinks are sold under any license issued under the provisions of Article 56 and no owner, operator or manager of said premises or places shall knowingly permit such consumption.
“Any person found consuming any alcoholic beverage on any premises open to the general public, and any owner, operator or manager of said premises or places who shall knowingly permit such consumption between the hours provided by Section 42A of the herein entitled Act, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction, shall be fined not more than fifty dollars ($50.00) and not less than five dollars ($5.00).”

Mrs. Grillo complained that the title mentions only “public places,” while the body of the Act applies to (1) any premises open to the general public; (2) any place of public entertainment; and (3) any place at which setups or other component parts of mixed alcoholic drinks are sold under any license issued under the provisions of Article 56.

We are inclined to doubt that the Lyre Club is a bona fide private club. It partakes of the nature of a public restaurant. In any event, even assuming that there is a defect in the title of the 1941 Act, any such defect is now immaterial, because Article 2B was repealed and re-enacted in its entirety by Chapter 501 of the Laws of 1947. The title of the 1947 Act declares that it is an Act to repeal Article 2B of the Code, title “Alcoholic Beverages,” and all amendments thereof and additions thereto, and to enact in lieu thereof a new Article 2B, title “Alcoholic Beverages,” revising and recodifying the alcoholic beverages laws of this State, incorporating into said Article 2B all Public Local Laws relating to alcoholic beverages, and generally rearranging and simplifying all laws having to do with alcoholic beverages. No attack is made here on the 1947 Act.

Any defect of title which may have existed in the 1941 Act by reason of a failure of the title to meet the require- *159 merits of the State Constitution was cured by the 1947 Act, which incorporates the 1941 Act. State, for use of Emerson v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 171 Md. 584, 190 A. 231; Jones v. State, 207 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A.2d 384, 209 Md. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grillo-v-state-md-1999.