Jones v. Sullivan County Beer Board

292 S.W.2d 185, 200 Tenn. 301, 4 McCanless 301, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 410
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 185 (Jones v. Sullivan County Beer Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Sullivan County Beer Board, 292 S.W.2d 185, 200 Tenn. 301, 4 McCanless 301, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 410 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is another case wherein the Beer Board revoked a permit, the plaintiff in error in this instance, to sell beer. The plaintiff in error seasonably took the matter to the law court and that court affirmed the revocation of the permit. Steps were seasonably taken and the matter appealed here where assignments of error have been made, briefs filed, and arguments heard. We now have the matter for disposition.

The plaintiff in error under what is called in the record “a wholesale beer permit” was operating his place of business near the Johnson City highway in Kingsport, Tennessee. A number of citizens of that County (Sullivan County, Tennessee) filed with the Beer Board a petition seeking to have this permit revoked. The pe *303 tition was based on allegations in which they concluded that the plaintiff in error was creating both a public and private nuisance in selling beer at this location because it was closer to church' and public buildings than the statute permitted and because he was selling at retail when his permit was a wholesale permit. The signers of this petition are not strictly speaking parties to the proceeding but were in effect relators or prosecutors. Anderson v. Putnam County Beer Board, 184 Tenn. 623, 201 S.W. 2d 994.

There are six assignments of error which present in reality three questions, to-wit: (1) Was one Thomas who acted as chairman of this Beer Committee an authorized member of such committee; and (2) Could the Beer Committee revoke the license on the ground that the place of business of the plaintiff in error was nearer than 2,000 feet to a church in the absence of the Committee or prosecutor showing such a resolution had been passed by the County Court; and (3) Whether or not there was any material evidence offered before the Board which would sustain a revocation.

At the hearing before this Committee able counsel representing the plaintiff in error challenged, before that Committee, the right and authority of the acting chairman, Mr. C. D. Thomas, to sit as a member of that Board. Some 10 or 12 pages are taken up with colloquy between various counsel representing the plaintiff in error and counsel representing the prosecutors. In this argument between the lawyers it was stated repeatedly by counsel representing the plaintiff in error that a deputy clerk had told him that there was no minute entry on the Quarterly County Court’s minutes showing Mr. Thomas to have been appointed as a member of that *304 Committee. No minutes were offered in evidence and the only thing- on the question, aside from the hearsay statements of the counsel, are the statements of Mr. Thomas himself. On at least two instances he said:

“I have been a member of the County Court twenty-five years and I have been a member of the beer commission, was elected before these other gentlemen, with Judge Bandy, Paul Zimmerman, long years ago.”

And again he said:

“I was a member of the beer commission before that. I- was on with Paul Zimmerman and Judge Bandy on the beer commission before that.”

At least he insisted that he was a member and there was no showing to the contrary other than statements of counsel as to what a deputy clerk had told him. Be that as it may the question was not properly presented to this Commission as this Beer Committee did not have authority to pass on the subject. This question was directly raised in Anderson v. Putnam, County Beer Board, supra, when this Court held that the Beer Committee, being the committee of the quarterly court, that such court was the exclusive forum in which a test of the validity of the election of the committee members could be raised. This holding is in no wise in conflict with that of Crowe v. Carter County, 195 Tenn. 659, 263 S.W.2d 509. It is not necessary for us to again review what was so well said in the Putnam County case, the question here raised being the first question therein raised and determined.

This Committee, in the instant case, having acted, and asserted at various times herein that they had been recognized by the courts over a period of years and acted otherwise on these beer permits, were given the indicia of reputation of being the Beer Committee of Sullivan *305 County and such, being true they were at least a de fado committee and beyond the collateral attack of third parties. See Ridout v. State, 161 Term. 248, 30 S.W.2d 255, 71 A.L.R. 830, wherein this question is directly decided. It is true the E-idout case did not concern the formation and action of a beer committee or a beer board but the determination of the action there of a trial judge in submitting the matter to the grand jury was of equal force and importance as that of the action of a beer committee. Mr. Justice Chambliss speaking for the Court in that case has very ably and fully taken up the definitions of de facto officers, when they may act and when they may not act. The reasoning there is equally applicable here and it is not necessary for us to again repeat what is so well said there.

This Committee, those who acted ip the instant case, was composed of three men. Apparently the Committee as originally appointed had been five but at the time of this hearing there were only three present, two of these three were recognized by the plaintiff in error as being members of that Committee. It was only Mr. Thomas’ membership that was challenged. We think that the questions raised on the actions of this Committee have been correctly decided by the trial court and there is no error in his decision thereon.

The record here is made up of testimony of two or three deputy sheriffs and other citizens of Sullivan County who testify that they saw beer sold and they bought beer by the case and that they were not retailers but just private citizens. There is no question raised by the plaintiff in error about who beer was sold to. On Saturday afternoons there would be forty or fifty cars parked around the place and traffic was congested and *306 jammed there. This clearly would indicate that there was a retail disposition being made of beer at this point. According to the record, and this merely appears by one of the various statements of connsel in the long colloquys between connsel in this record, that this man held a wholesale permit and did a wholesale business. Clearly as the term wholesaler or wholesale permit is applied under the evidence of this record there was a violation of the term wholesaler and the plaintiff in error was doing a retail business.

The proof also is by some two or three witnesses that this place of business was within 873 feet of a church. There were a number of other churches and a school or so within close proximity. The question of how the distance was measured to this church was argued at length. The general rule is, unless otherwise specifically provided by statute, that:

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 185, 200 Tenn. 301, 4 McCanless 301, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-sullivan-county-beer-board-tenn-1956.