Kelly v. Rapides Parish Police Jury

168 So. 96, 184 La. 903, 1936 La. LEXIS 1126
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1936
DocketNo. 33322.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 168 So. 96 (Kelly v. Rapides Parish Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Rapides Parish Police Jury, 168 So. 96, 184 La. 903, 1936 La. LEXIS 1126 (La. 1936).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

The police jury of Rapides parish, by ordinance adopted on November 30, 1934, called a special election to be held in wards 9 and 10 of that parish to take the sense of the qualified voters of those two wards on two' separate and distinct propositions: First, whether spirituous liquors of an alcoholic content greater than 3.2 per cent. and less than 6 per cent, by volume should be sold therein; and, second, whether spirituous liquors of an alcoholic content greater than 6 per cent, by volume should be sold in those wards.

The election was held on December 31, 1934. According to the returns made to the police jury by the commissioners appointed to hold the election, a majority of those voting in each ward were opposed to the sale of alcoholic liquors, whether falling within the first or second classification above mentioned. In other words, both propositions were carried in favor of prohibition.

These plaintiffs are citizens of those two wards of Rapides parish and are therein engaged in the business of selling intoxicating liquors. They brought this suit to set aside the election and its results on various grounds. The trial judge ruled that the election was null, void, and of no effect in so far as the first proposition was concerned, but held that it was legal and'valid as to the second. Plaintiffs appealed.

As to the first proposition the judgment is correct. The reason is that Act No. 15, Regular Session of 1934, which provides in section 25 for local option elections in wards of a parish, relates only to such liquors as contain more than 6 per cent, of alcohol by volume. Under that act police juries may order and hold local option elections for an entire parish or for only one or more of the wards of the parish, and if a majority of the votes cast at such election be against permitting the sale of intoxicating liquors within such parish, ward, or wards “then said vote shall con *907 trol the action of any ward, city or town, within the limits of the said parish or ward.”

This was the only statute in effect at the time this election was called authorizing local option elections in the various wards of a parish and, as we have said, that statute has reference only to such liquors as contain more than 6 per cent, of alcohol by volume.

There was, however, a statute in effect at that time authorizing police juries to call and hold local option elections to take the sense of the electors touching the question whether beverages containing less than 6 per cent, of alcohol by volume might be sold. That statute is Act No. 2, Extra Session of 1933. But that act does not authorize police juries to call and hold such elections in the different wards of a parish. The local option provision of that act is contained in section 23, which reads as follows :

“Provided that if any parish or municipality, at an election held for the purpose under the election laws of the State, shall, by a majority of vote of its duly qualified electors, determine that the business of producing or manufacturing, or of handling, selling, using, distributing or consuming such beer, porter, ale, fruit juices, or wine in such parish or municipality shall not be licensed or permitted therein, such business shall not be therein allowed, nor shall this Act be construed as permitting the same.” (Italics are ours.)

As police juries have only delegated powers, it is clear that the local option election held in wards 9 and 10 of Rapides parish was void in so far as it related to liquors containing less than 6 per cent, of alcohol by volume.

Counsel for plaintiffs argue that the election was void as to the second proposition also. They concede that police juries are authorized by Act No. IS, Regular Session of 1934, to call and hold local option elections in the various wards of the 'parish relating to liquors containing more than 6 per cent, of alcohol by volume. But the legality of the election on this proposition is assailed mainly on the alleged ground that the police jury by ordinance attempted to, and in effect did, merge two wards of the parish into one local subdivision and that the election was held for the two wards as one subdivision or unit of the parish.

We think this attack and the argument in support of it are without merit. Of course, police juries have no authority to create special subdivisions of a parish by merging or combining wards. It is optional with police juries as to whether such elections be held for the entire parish or in one or more of the local subdivisions of the parish, but the local subdivisions mentioned by the act are the wards of the parish, and police juries are not authorized to create or recognize any others.

In this case the police jury adopted one ordinance which provided that “there is hereby ordered an election on the 31st day of December, 1934, in Wards Nine (9) and Ten (10) of the Parish of Rapides for the purpose of taking the sense of the voters of said wards as to whether or not there shall be permitted to be possessed for sale or sold any alcoholic or spirituous liquors *909 * * * in said wards.” Ward 9 has eight voting precincts and ward 10 has three. In the ordinance calling the election the police jury appointed three commissioners, one clerk, and a deputy sheriff for each precinct in each of the wards to conduct it. The election was held at each of the precincts in the wards and the election officials made returns to the police jury as directed by the ordinance. The returns showed the number of votes cast in each precinct for and against each of the propositions. The police jury opened the ballot boxes, counted the ballots for and against and checked them with the returns, and found that they corresponded. The result of the election as promulgated by ordinance showed that the combined vote of the two wards was 389 for the sale of liquors of an alcoholic content greater than 6 per cent, by volume and 711 against. The ordinance did not show the number of votes for and against in the wards separately, but only the total for and against in the two wards.

The basis of counsel’s argument that the police jury intended to, and did in effect, merge the two wards into one local subdivision or unit for the purpose of the election, is that the election was ordered by a single ordinance to be held in each of the wards on the same day, and that it was not specified in the ordinance promulgating the results the number of votes cast for and against in each of the wards, and that apparently the votes in the two were cumulated.

We do not concur in counsel’s view. Under the local option laws police juries may order and hold elections for the entire parish as a unit or for any one or more of the wards of the parish. If the election is parish-wide, the aggregate of the votes cast in all the wards for or against controls each of the wards regardless of the results in the various wards separately. If, however, the election is not parish-wide but is held in only specified wards, each of the wards named is a separate subdivision or unit and each subdivision or unit determines for itself whether prohibition is to prevail in that subdivision or whether intoxicants are to be sold within its own limits.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 96, 184 La. 903, 1936 La. LEXIS 1126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-rapides-parish-police-jury-la-1936.