In re Grant

140 P. 226, 44 Utah 386, 1914 Utah LEXIS 40
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1914
DocketNo. 2621
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 P. 226 (In re Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Grant, 140 P. 226, 44 Utah 386, 1914 Utah LEXIS 40 (Utah 1914).

Opinions

McCAPTY, O. J.

(after stating the facts as above).

1 Counsel for petitioner, E. W. Allen, concede at the threshold of their discussion of the case that “it was for the legislature to say that in small communities the city council have the right to grant and revoke licenses without appeal,” and that “it was especially their right that where in great communities, when large establishments are built up under a liquor license, that district courts grant, and upon a trial and judgment, have the power to revoke.” The important question, therefore is: Does the appeal suspend, or, more correctly speaking, temporarily vacate, the judgment of the district court, and operate as a bar to the prosecution of the licensee, his agents and employees, for the selling of liquors during the pendency of the appeal % The great weight of authority seems to be that where, as in the case at bar, the judgment is self-executing, and no act of a ministerial officer is necessary to make it effective, an appeal does not suspend or otherwise stay the force and effect of the judgment.

In 20 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 1244, it is said:

“Under the statutes regulating the filing of supersedeas bonds, it is held that as a supersedeas has the effect of merely staying proceedings, without destroying the force and effect of the judgment, and leaves the proceedings in the condition in which it finds [391]*391them, and as a sell-executing judgment requires no proceeding for its enforcement, there is nothing upon which a stay bond can operate in the case of such ®. judgment.”

In Elliott, App. Pro. section 392, it is said:

“"Where a judgment or decree executes itself, that is, where no act of a ministerial officer is necessary to put it into effect, the supersedeas does not alter the state of things created by the judgment from which the appeal is prosecuted. This doctrine is strikingly illustrated by the case wherein it was held that a judgment suspending an attorney from practice executes itself, except as to costs, and the granting of a supersedeas only suspends the right to enforce collection of costs, and does not allow the attorney to practice pending the appeal.” (Citing Walls v. Palmer, 64 Ind. 493.)

Tbe cited case involved tbe question of whether an attorney, who bad been disbarred and his license revoked by the circuit court, was entitled to practice his profession during the time the cause was pending on appeal to the Supreme Court. In the course of the opinion the court said:

“But it is urged that the appeal and supersedeas, ... by staying the judgment of suspension, has the effect of restoring the petitioner to his rights as an attorney and counselor during the pendency of the appeal. ... To give them that effect, and grant the prayer of the petitioner, would be to "reverse the judgment of the suspension by a writ of mandate before the appeal is judicially decided. The effect of the appeal and supersedeas is to stay the judgment of suspension as it is, and prevent further proceedings against the petitioner. It does not reverse, suspend, or supersede the force of the judgment. That remains in all respects the same. The judgment itself requires no further execution than its own terms; it executes itself, except as to the collection of costs, which is stayed by the appeal and supersedeas.”

In Black on Intoxicating Liquors, section 196, the author

“The revocation of a license, under due proceedings, absolutely extinguishes the license; and certiorari taken to such action is no bar to a prosecution for sales made either during the pendency of the writ, or of an appeal from a judgment affirming the action of the board.” (1 Woollen & Thornton, Intox. Liq., sec. 456.)

[392]*392Padgett v. State, 93 Ind. 396, is a case in. wbicb the board of commissioners denied Padgett a license to sell liquor. He prosecuted an appeal to the district court, and succeeded in obtaining judgment that he was a fit person to receive a license. The remonstrators appealed from the judgment of the circuit court, and filed the proper appeal bond. It was there contended, as in the case at bar, that the judgment was ineffective and inoperative during the pendency of the appeal. The court said:

“The statute . . . provides that, ‘when an appeal is taken during the term at which judgment is rendered, it shall operate as a stay of all further proceedings,’ and if the act of taking out a license is a proceeding on the judgment, then the appeal stayed the appellant from obtaining the license. We do not regard the issuing of the license as a proceeding on the judgment within the meaning of the statute. One reason for this conclusion is that the judgment is self-executing. The entry of the judgment entitles the applicant to his license without any other proceedings on the judgment. . . . There is, indeed, no provision for enforcing obedience to the judgment by process, and none is needed, for the judgment enforces itself. . . . There is no necessity for any process; there is no property to he seized by it; no wrongdoer is to be ejected from an office, or from property, or anything of that kind; all that can possibly be accomplished is effected by the judgment itself.”

Tbis question was involved in the case of Neuman v. State, 16 Wis. 112, 45 N. W. 30. In the course of the opinion the court says:

“The more serious question is whether the pendency of the writ of certiorari, and the subsequent appeal from the judgment thereon to this court, operated as a bar to the prosecution of Neuman for selling during the time which would have been justified by the license, had it not been so revoked.”

The court after discussing the question says:

“It follows, from what has been said, that neither the pendency of the certiorari, nor the appeal from the judgment affirming the order of the village board, and quashing the writ, operated as a bar to the prosecution for the several offenses of which Neuman was convicted in this action.”

[393]*393The authorities seem to quite uniformly hold, that in the granting and refusing of licenses to sell liquors much is left to the discretion of the court or board charged with that duty, and in most jurisdictions the law does not require the same strictness as to proof and procedure that obtains in actions or special proceedings generally. The object being the revocation of a privilege rather than punishment, the authority or tribunal vested with this power “are not required to take the formal proceedings essential to form a basis of a judicial decision affecting 'liberty, or property,” but the proceedings may be summary. Black, Intox. Liq. section 194.

Section 10, chap. 106, Laws Utah 1911, among other things, provides:

“The district courts of the several counties in which cities of the first and second class may be situated, city councils of cities of the third class, board of 'trustees or board of county commissioners, for violation of any of the provisions of this act or any ordinance, or .for any other good canse, . . may revoke a license granted within the city, town or county, as the case may be.

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Bluebook (online)
140 P. 226, 44 Utah 386, 1914 Utah LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grant-utah-1914.