Howard v. Acme Brewing Co.

83 S.E. 1096, 143 Ga. 1, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 578
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 16, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 83 S.E. 1096 (Howard v. Acme Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Acme Brewing Co., 83 S.E. 1096, 143 Ga. 1, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 578 (Ga. 1914).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

The defendant is a corporation owning and operating a brewery for the manufacture and sale of malt liquors. ’ Certain citizens of Bibb county filed a petition in the superior court, by virtue of what is known as the “blind-tiger act,” to abate the brewery as a nuisance. The statute upon which the proceeding was based is as follows: “Any place commonly known as a ‘blind tiger,’ where spirituous, malt, or intoxicating liquors are sold in violation of law, shall be deemed a nuisance, and the same may be abated or enjoined as such, as now provided by law, on the .application of any citizen or citizens of the county where the same may be located.” The case was tried, at the interlocutory hearing, upon this agreed statement of facts: The Acme Brewing Company is a corporation owning and operating a brewery in the City of Macon, and engaged [2]*2in the sale of malt liquors on its premises; the company s plant is worth approximately half a million dollars; it employs a large number of men, and since the enactment of the prohibition law has never been charged with its violation; it holds a license from the ordinary of'Bibb county, authorizing it to manufacture beverages and drinks and liquors in imitation of and intended as a substitute for beer, ale, wine, whiskey, and other alcoholic, spirituous, and malt liquors; and likewise holds from the municipality of'Macon a similar license. The brewery company has paid to the commissioner of internal revenue the special tax required by the United States government for a retail malt-liquor dealer and for a wholesale malt-liquor dealer, as required by § 3239 of the United States Revised Statutes, and holds internal revenue special tax receipts for the current year. It is admitted that the defendant company is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling a beverage commonly known as “near beer.” This beverage is intended as a substitute for beer, and is in reality a malt liquor. For the purposes of the interlocutory hearing only, it is admitted that this beverage is nonintoxicating. Upon this agreed statement of facts the court refused to abate the brewery as a nuisance under the' “blind-tiger” statute.

The turning point in this case is the meaning to be given to the word “malt” as used in the prohibition act of 1907 (Penal Code of 1910, § 426), and in the “blind-tiger” statute above quoted. The prohibition statute forbids the sale, or giving away to induce trade, at any place of business, or keeping or furnishing at any public place, or the manufacture of or keeping on hand at a place of business, “any alcoholic, spirituous, malt, or intoxicating liquors, or intoxicating bitters, or other drinks which, if drunk to excess, will produce intoxication; and any person so offending shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. Nor shall it be lawful in the limits of said State for intoxicating liquors to be sold in dispensaries, and the sale of intoxicating liquors in said State shall be prohibited to private persons and to the State, its officers and agents.” Penal Code (1910), § 426. This act was approved August 6, 1907, and by its terms was to. become effective on the 1st day of January thereafter. The statute was construed by the Court of Appeals in Roberts v. State, 4 Ga. App. 207 (60 S. E. 1082), in a decision pronounced on April 9, 1908. It was there ruled that: “The words ‘alcoholic, spirituous, and malt liquors,’ in the prohibition statute, mean intoxicating [3]*3liquors which can be used as a beverage, and which, when drunk to excess, will produce intoxication. If the liquid manufactured or sold, or kept on hand at a public place, or at a place of business as defined in the fourth headnote, can not be used as an intoxicating drink, because of other ingredients, or is not intoxicating because it does not contain a sufficient amount of alcohol to cause intoxication when drunk to excess, it is not within the prohibition of the statute, although it does contain as one of its ingredients an appreciable quantity of alcohol or spirituous liquor.” The Court of Appeals, under the constitution of this State, is vested with exclusive jurisdiction for reviewing judgments of convictions for violations of this statute. A few months after this pronouncement by the Court of Appeals of its construction of the prohibition statute, the legislature was called in extraordinary session by the Governor to consider legislation pertaining to the disposition of the convicts of this State, including the establishment of a plan for the manage- / ment, confinement, and labor of the convicts and including the undertaking of such works or work in connection with which convicts may be used, together with the raising of revenue and the appropriation of money to carry out such plans, and to provide for the establishment of juvenile courts and reformatories. At that session of the legislature a general act was passed for the future employment of felony and misdemeanor male convicts upon the public-roads of the several counties of the State, and for a system of penology. Theretofore the State had derived a considerable revenue from the leasing of convicts. With the abolition of the old lease system the State lost this revenue. To supply the deficiency the legislature at this extraordinary session passed an act to provide a revenue to be used for the development and conduct of the penitentiary system of the State, by requiring a license tax to be paid by all persons, firms, or corporations manufacturing or selling “any imitation of or substitute for beer, ale, wine, whiskey, or other spirituous or malt liquors.” Acts 1908, p. 1112. It will be observed that the same General Assembly which passed the prohibition act also enacted the revenue act, and presumably with a full knowledge of the construction of the former by the Court of Appeals. Apparently the legislature based its action upon the construction which the Court of Appeals had given to that act. Subsequently the revenue act imposing license fees upon the manufacture and sale of [4]*4imitations of the interdicted liquors was attacked as being in violation of art. 8, sec. 3, par. 1, of the constitution of this State (Civil Code of 1910, § 6578). That clause of the constitution declared that the special tax “on the sale of spirituous and malt liquors, which the General Assembly is hereby authorized to.assess,” is set apart and devoted for the support of common schools. The contention was that the legislature could not divert a tax derived from the license of any malt liquor from the school fund to the support of a penitentiary system. It was held by this court that “The expression ‘malt liquors/ as used in article 8, section 3, paragraph 1, of the constitution, has reference to and was intended to include only such malt liquors as are intoxicating in their nature; and a special tax on persons engaging in the occupation of selling, storing, or manufacturing beverages which are an imitation of certain intoxicating malt liquors, and which imitations may be, 'as a matter of fact, made of malt and which are non-intoxicating, is not required to be set apart and devoted to the support of common schools under the provision of that paragraph just referred to.” Carroll v. Wright, 131 Ga. 729 (63 S. E. 260). This ruling was reaffirmed in Carswell v. Wright, 133 Ga. 714 (66 S. E. 905). The Court of Appeals has consistently followed the construction placed upon the prohibition act in Roberts v. State, supra, in several cases; and the legislature has- convened in session several times since the pronouncement in the Roberts case, and has passed no legislation conflicting with that construction.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 1096, 143 Ga. 1, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-acme-brewing-co-ga-1914.