In re Kinzel

28 Misc. 622, 2 Liquor Tax Rep. 155, 59 N.Y.S. 682
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 Misc. 622 (In re Kinzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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 Kinzel, 28 Misc. 622, 2 Liquor Tax Rep. 155, 59 N.Y.S. 682 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Davy, J.

This is a motion to revoke and cancel a liquor tax certificate, No. 13,865, issued to Michael Malone, the keeper of a hotel at No. 93 Front street, in the city of Rochester, on the ground that said Malone, on Sunday, the 14th day of May, 1899, permitted his servants to sell liquor to a number of persons who were not guests of the hotel.

The two principal questions in this case are, first, did the servants of said Malone sell liquor to persons on the Sabbath who were not guests of the hotel; second, were such sales made without his knowledge and consent.

It appears from the evidence that two of the petitioner’s witnesses entered the dining-room of the respondent’s hotel on Sunday, the fourteenth day of May last; one of them called for a glass of beer and the other called for a glass of ale. After these parties had finished drinking the ale and beer a couple of cheese sandwiches were brought from an adjoining room and placed on the table. These sandwiches were not ordered or paid for by either party. It also appears from the evidence that while these parties were in the dining-room there were two men at another table, with their hats on, drinking beer without having any kind of food before them, and there was no food on any of the tables in the dining-room. It also appears that another man came into the dining-room and called for a glass of beer, and he was informed by one of the servants that it would be necessary for kirn to have something to eat, and they brought him a cheese sandwich with his beer. It also appears that during this time the respondent, his wife and son were in the dining-room and must have seen all that took place.

The facts testified to by the petitioner’s witnesses are not disputed by the respondent or any of his witnesses. Mis testimony was to the effect that he had instructed his servants not to violate the law, and to tell persons who came to the hotel on Sunday and asked for liquors that they must have something to eat with their •drinks. The petitioner claims that these parties to whom liquor was sold were not guests of the hotel, and this mode of selling liquor was a violation of the Liquor Tax Law; and for such violation he seeks, under the provisions of section 31 of said act, to revoke the respondent’s license.-

That section provides that the holder of a liquor tax certificate under subdivision 1 of said act, who is the keeper of a hotel, may .-sell liquor to the guests of such hotel, except to such persons as are [624]*624described in clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of section 3 of this act, with their meals or in their rooms therein, except between the hours of one o’clock and five o’clock in the morning, but not in the bar-room or other similar room in such hotel, and the term hotel as used in this act shall mean a building regularly used and kept open as such for the feeding and lodging of guests, where all who conduct themselves properly and are able and ready to pay for their entertainment are received, if there be accommodations for them, and without any stipulated engagement as to the duration of their stay or as to the rate of compensation, are, while , there, supplied at a reasonable charge with their meals, lodgings, refreshment and such other service and attention as are necessarily incident to the use of the place as a temporary home, and in which the only other dwellers shall be the family and servants of the hotelkeeper, and which shall conform to the requirements of the statute.

Section 31 provides that a guest of a hotel within the meaning of that section is, first, a person who in good faith occupies a room in a hotel as a temporary home and pays the regular customary charges for such occupancy, but who does not occupy such room for the purpose of having liquor served therein; second, a person, who during the hours when meals are regularly served therein, resorts to a hotel for the purpose of obtaining and actually orders and obtains at such time in good faith a meal therein. The re-t quirements of this provision of the statute are very broad and sweeping, and are not in the least ambiguous.

The hotelkeeper’s license gives him certain privileges on the Sabbath which must be exercised in conformity to the law. It will be seen from the language of the act that persons who resort to an inn on Sunday for the purpose of procuring and drinking liquor are not guests within the meaning of the statute, and the fact that the hotelkeeper or his servants furnish sandwiches with the liquor does not make such persons guests. To put a sandwich beside a glass of beer when a sandwich is not ordered, and to take it away again without having received any pay therefor, is not serving a meal in good faith with the drink. If a person on the Sabbath goes to a hotel and calls for liquor, and the proprietor or his servant informs him that he cannot be served with liquor unless they furnish him a meal, and a sandwich is brought and placed before him and they call it a meal, it is hardly necessary to say that this is not serving a meal in good faith with the drink as re[625]*625quired by section 31 of said act. Such a meal does not make him a guest in the common acceptation of the word. Eo such device or subterfuge can defeat the policy of the law. This mode of trafficking in liquor by hotelkeepers on the Sabbath is contrary to the express provision of the statute. The proprietors of hotels, therefore, who permit liquors to be sold in the manner indicated run the risk of having their liquor tax licenses revoked.

A guest within the meaning of the statute is a person who in good faith occupies a room in a hotel as a temporary home, and pays the regular and customary charges for such occupancy, but who does not occupy such room for the purpose of having liquor served therein; or, second, a person who during the hours when meals are regularly served therein resorts to a hotel for the purpose of obtaining and actually orders and obtains at such time in good faith a meal therein.

If a person occupies a room in a hotel in good faith for rest or lodging, or actually orders and obtains a meal, he would be a guest, and to such person the hotelkeeper may sell intoxicating liquor under his license. But one who takes a room for a brief period for the sole purpose of procuring and drinking liquor is not a guest within the meaning of the statute, and if the proprietor knowingly permits him to occupy and use the room, for such a purpose he violates the law. One who goes to a hotel on the Sabbath and orders a meal not in good faith, not because he is hungry or wants anything to eat, but for the sole purpose of procuring and drinking intoxicating liquor to gratify a craving appetite, is not a guest within the meaning of the statute because he does not order the meal in good faith, and if the proprietor of the hotel knows that the sole and only object in ordering the meal is to obtain intoxicating liquor, then he has no right to furnish it.

If a traveler who is tired and hungry should stop at a hotel on the Sabbath, and at the usual hour for dinner should go into the dining-room, and the only food placed before him was a cheese sandwich, could it be said that the sandwich constituted an ordinary meal? Assume that the guest refused to pay for the meal and the landlord sued him, would any court hold that the sandwich was a meal? I think not. When a person goes to a hotel that is conducted on the American plan and orders a meal, he is usually supplied with a variety of food, as bread, butter, meat, vegetables and tea or coffee.

[626]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Misc. 622, 2 Liquor Tax Rep. 155, 59 N.Y.S. 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kinzel-nysupct-1899.