Kolling v. Bennett

10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 81
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 81 (Kolling v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kolling v. Bennett, 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 81 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The petition in error in this case is to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas, in a case brought by Lucie Bennett in said court under the statute commonly called the “ Adair law ” — and especially sec. 4357, Rev. Stat. — against Charles. Rolling and Thomas Hammond, on account of intoxicating liquors having been sold, as plaintiff charges, by Charles Rolling to her husband. It is charged that Thomas Hammond was the owner of the premises where intoxicating liquors were sold. Such proceedings were had that Thomas Hammond was dropped out of the case before the plaintiff took judgment. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Charles Rolling for $150. A motion for [82]*82a new trial was made, based upon various grounds, and was overruled by the court and judgment was entered upon the verdict.

The plaintiff in error complains : First — That the petition is insufficient because it does not aver facts showing that the wife, who had caused the notice to be served as provided by sec. 4358, Rev. Stat.,. was liable to injury through the intoxication of her husband at the time the notice was served. And in support of the contention that this is required, counsel for plaintiff in error cites us to the case of Pegram v. Stortz, 31 W. Va. Rep., 220. The 7th proposition of the syllabus in the case is as follows :

“ Under this act it was also essential, to sustain an action, that, when such person was so served with notice the husband named in the notice was in the habit of drinking to intoxication.”

In the act referred to we find this provision :

“ * * * Upon due proof that such liquors were sold or furnished as aforesaid, and that the person mentioned in said notice was, at the time of the service thereof, in the habit of drinking to intoxication, an action may be maintained,” etc.

We find no such provision in sec. 4358, Rev. Stat., of Ohio. Under our statute one may serve the notice in anticipation of the habit of drunkenness being formed or a debauch being indulged in, and as a means of prevention thereof, and of the consequent damages, and the notice, by person or by filing, is a full and complete safeguard of the seller. He has no right to complain or to ignore it because* the person against whom he is warned is not at the time intoxicated or in the habit of getting intoxicated. Public policy, having in view the wrong and inconvenience to the person named in the notice, might well dictate a provision for his protection to the effect that notice should not be given not to sell to him, unless he were a person, addicted to drunkenness; but the law seems to have left him to the ordinary remedies of persons who may have been defamed.

The seller of intoxicating liquor, however, has no right infringed by the giving of such notice, even if it be premature or causeless; certainly he has no vested right to sell to a. particular person which is thereby impaired. So long as the law receives the construction put upon it in the cases of Bader v. Beckwith, 29 Ohio St., 314; Sibila v. Bahney, 34 Ohio St., 399, and Russell v. Tippin, 5 Circ. Dec., 433, he is fully protected by the notice and by the provision that the sales must be to a person at the time in the habit of getting intoxicated, or at the time intoxicated, of which condition or habit the seller must have knowledge, or that the sale must be otherwise unlawful. In other words, he is not made liable to respond in damages under the statutes of Ohio, unless in making the sales complained of he shall have committed a crime which involves moral turpitude, against the commission of which crime and wrong he has been forewarned by the person liable to be damaged thereby. The statute treats the seller of intoxicating liquors with especial and peculiar tenderness in thus providing that he may not be required to respond in damages for results to others flowing from crimes by him wilfully committed, unless the person suffering because of his wrong shall have first said to him, in effect: “If you commit this offense against the criminal laws of the state, and I am injured in person, property or means of support in consequence thereof, I will endeavor to require you to compensate me for the injury.” To add to this statute the further qualification that this warning shall have no efficacy unless the person as to whom the warning is given shall be intoxicated or in [83]*83the habit of becoming intoxicated, at the time the warning is given, is not warranted by any fair rule of construction, and is not required by any reasonable consideration of the rights and interests of the liquor seller, the person likely to be injured by his unlawful sales or the public.

Whether since the amendment of February 17, 1875, 72 O. L., 85, carried into Revised Statutes, secs. 4357 and 4358, somewhat modifying the provisions considered by the Supreme Court in Baker v. Beckwith and Sibila v. Bahney, supra, and adding the provisions as to notice now found in sec. 4358, the statute should still be construed to require that the sales must be in violation of the penal laws on this subject, to render the seller liable for damages in a civil action under this statute, as held by this court in Russell v. Tippin, supra, I am inclined to doubt, but that question is not necessarily involved here, and has not been considered by the whole court. However, that may be we all agree that the notice is effectual though served before the person proscribed shall have become intoxicated or contracted a habit of intoxication.

Second — It is also contended that the allegations and proof do not bring the sales complained of within the provisions of sec. 6943, Rev. Stat., i. <?., that while the petition avers that sales were made to a person at the time in the habit of getting intoxicated, and that the defendant then knew of this habit, the evidence does not sustain these allegations; and that while the evidence tends to prove that the person to whom the sales were made was at the time intoxicated, and that the defendant then knew of his condition of intoxication, the petition does not contain averments 'authorizing evidence of such a state of facts, or a recovery therefor.

As no objection was made to the petition in the court below, by demurrer or otherwise, and the evidence went to the jury without objection that it did not tend to support the averments of the petition, or that it tended to establish a case somewhat at variance from that stated in the petition, it is not apparent that the trial judge would have erred had he submitted to the jury the case clearly made out by the evidence, though not distinctly set forth in the petition, i. e., a case based upon sales made to plaintiff’s husband while he was intoxicated, the seller (defendant) at the time knowing that he was intoxicated. It is not apparent that the case proved was so far variant from that alleged that plaintiff in error could have been misled to his prejudice in making his defense, since the habit of intoxication which it was averred the husband had, and of which it was averred plaintiff in error had knowledge when he made the sales complained of, necessarily involved either a protracted debauch or more or less frequent sprees, and, not unnaturally, sales while in a condition of intoxication.

Neither did the plaintiff in error claim or attempt to make it appear when the evidence was adduced that he would or. might be prejudiced thereby. (See sec. 5294, Rev. Stat.)

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Related

Baker v. Beckwith
29 Ohio St. 314 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kolling-v-bennett-ohcirctlucas-1899.