In re Hauck

38 N.W. 269, 70 Mich. 396
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 38 N.W. 269 (In re Hauck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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 Hauck, 38 N.W. 269, 70 Mich. 396 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Champlin, J;

Charles Hauck was convicted in the circuit court for the county of Jackson upon an information charging him with being engaged in keeping a saloon in the city of Jackson, where malt, brewed, fermented, and vinous liquors were sold and kept for sale at retail, and, while so engaged, he kept his saloon and bar therein open, and did not keep said saloon and bar closed, until 6 o’clock of the following morning, February 29, 1888 ; said February 29, 1888, being an election day; said election being held in the city and county of Jackson on said day, under and by virtue of a general law of the State, being Act No. 197 of the Laws of 1887 of said State, approved June 18, 1887; the said Charles Hauck not being engaged in selling drugs, etc.

[398]*398The court sentenced him to pay a fine of $50 and costs, assessed at $25, and, in default of the payment of such fine and costs, that he be imprisoned in the county jail of -said county until such fine and costs are paid; not exceeding, however, the period of 60 days from the day of sentence, which was on April 14, 1888. Default was made in the payment of the fine and costs, and Hauck was committed to the county jail, from whence he has petitioned this Court for a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the cause of his detention. In his petition he alleges 18 reasons why his imprisonment is illegal, as follows:

1. It is in violation of that part of Article 4, § 20, of the Constitution of this State, which requires the object of a law to be expressed in its title; said act being entitled An act to regulate the manufacture and sale of malt, brewed, or fermented, spirituous, and vinous liquors in the several counties in this State,’ while the object of said act is to prohibit such manufacture and sale in counties where a majority of the electors voting at an election, to be called in accordance with the provisions of said act, shall vote against such manufacture and sale.

2. Because it violates section 1, Art. 4, of the Constitution, in that it delegates to the people of the several counties legislative power vested by sa', .-ection in the Senate and House of Representatives. Said act does not take effect in any county by its own terms and provisions, nor upon the judgment and determination of the Legislature; but takes effect only by virtue of the vote of a majority of the electors voting as aforesaid.

“3. Because said act does not make the holding of an election compulsory, but leaves it entirely to the option of the people of the several counties to act upon it or not.

4. Because any township or city, containing one-fifth or more of the electors in a county, may force upon the other cities and townships an election against their wishes, thereby subverting the right of local self-government.

“ 5. Because the Legislature cannot authorize the holding of such election upon the petition of one-fifth of the voters of the county; it being the duty of the Legislature to provide for the holding of such election, or to refer it to some authority recognized by the Constitution.

[399]*399“ 6. Because the act does not provide any means for determining whether the applications for an election, presented to the county clerk, as provided for in section 1 of said act, are signed by one-fifth of the voters of the county, or that such signers are voters.

“7. Because there is no provision in said act for making any record of the determination of the county clerk that one-fifth of the voters of the county have made such application for the holding of such election, or for the preservation of such applications, or the making of any record of the call issued by said county clerk for such election, or the preservation of any proof thereof, or any record or proof of any act in connection with the holding of such election until the return of the local election boards.

“ 8. Because there is no provision in said act for giving notice to the electors, of the townships and wards by the township clerks or inspectors of elections of the wards in any city or otherwise of the calling of said election, or time and place of holding the same.

“ 9. Because no provision is made for the opening or closing of the polls, or the manner of conducting such election, excepting the manner of casting the ballots and making the returns.

“ 10. Because there is no provision for a county canvass of the votes or returns, or other official determination of the result of the election.

“ 11. Because tbe tabular statement of the votes cast in each voting precinct in the county, provided to be made by the county clerk, is made prima facie evidence of the truth of the matters therein contained, including the result of such election.

“12. Because said act attempts to confer upon the major-, ity of the electors voting at such election a power not possessed by the Legislature itself, viz.: To alter, amend, suspend, and supersede, as provided in section 1, other general statutes, as well those existing at the time of such vote as those which may be passed by the Legislature thereafter. The Legislature cannot revise, alter, or amend a law by reference to its title only. Const. Art. 4, § 25. Neither can it pass irrepealable laws.

“13. Because said act was repealed by Act No. 313, Laws of 1887, being an act providing for the taxation and regulation of the traffic in liquors. The proviso in said last act designed to prevent such repeal is prohibitory legislation, and [400]*400entirely foreign to tbe object indicated by its title, and is in conflict with section 20, Art 4, of the Constitution.”

About the same time the petition for habeas corpus was presented to us, another petition was presented by the people, on the relation of Charles E. Keefer, for a mandamus against the common council of the city of Hillsdale, to compel them to approve a bond presented to them for the purpose of complying with the provisions of Act No. 313, Laws of 1887, which requires every person engaged in the sale of liquors, except druggists, to present to the common council a bond for their approval on or before the first Monday in May. The common council refused to act upon the bond, for the reason that the provisions of the act aforesaid were suspended in the county of Hillsdale by a vote taken under Act No. 197, Laws of 1887. This act the relator alleges to be unconstitutional and void. The cases, involving the same questions, have been heard and argued together, and this opinion will cover the points taken in both cases.

'Act No. 197, Laws of 1887, reads as follows:

“An Act to regulate the manufacture and sale of malt, brewed, or fermented, spirituous, and vinous liquors in the several counties in this State.

“Section 1. The People of the State of Michigan enact, That the manufacture and sale of malt, brewed, or fermented, spirituous, and vinous liquors in the several counties in this State be, and the same is hereby, regulated as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W. 269, 70 Mich. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hauck-mich-1888.