Lyman v. Young Men's Cosmopolitan Club

50 N.Y.S. 977

This text of 50 N.Y.S. 977 (Lyman v. Young Men's Cosmopolitan Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyman v. Young Men's Cosmopolitan Club, 50 N.Y.S. 977 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

RUMSEY, J.

On the 26th of April, 1897, there was presented to the special deputy commissioner of excise for the county of New York an application of the Young Men’s Cosmopolitan Club of New York, by Charles Smith, its president, for a liquor-tax certificate, under the provisions of the liquor-tax law (chapter 112, Laws 1896). Upon that application, which was in proper form, a liquor-tax certificate was granted. On the áth of June, 1897, a petition was presented to this court by Mr. Lyman, the state commissioner of excise, asking, for an order revoking and canceling the certificate which had been granted to this club. The application was made pursuant to the provisions of section 28 of the liquor-tax law as it was amended by chapter 312 of the Laws of 1897. An order to show cause was granted, and upon the return of that order the court made an order of reference to take proof of the facts and report the evidence to the court. Upon the coming in of the referee’s report, a further hearing was had, which resulted in an order denying the petition, and from that order this appeal is taken. The grounds upon which the application to revoke the certificate was made were that the respondent was violating the liquor-tax law by selling intoxicating liquors on Sunday and on week [978]*978days between 1 o’clock and 5 o’clock in the morning, which is forbidden by section 31 of the act. That the sales were made at such times-was not denied, but the respondent claimed that it was within one of the exceptions of the statute, and for that reason it was authorized-to make such sales. As they were undoubtedly illegal unless the respondent brought itself within an exception of the statute, the burden of so doing was upon it. Black, Intox. Liq. § 511. By way of supporting that burden, the respondent asserted, and attempted to prove, that it was a club which had been organized in good faith before May 6, 1895, and its certificate of organization was filed before March 23, 1896, and for that reason it claimed that it was within the exception-section 31 of the statute), by which it is provided that a corporation or association organized in good faith, under any law which before May 6, 1895, provided for the organization of societies or clubs for social, recreative, or similar purposes, and which corporation or association was actually lawfully organized, and, if a corporation, its certificate of incorporation duly filed before March 23, 1896, and which at such date trafficked ¿.n or distributed liquors among the members thereof, is excepted from the provisions of those clauses of the section-which forbid sales by the holder of the certificate on Sunday or between 1 o’clock and 5 o’clock in the morning of any other day. It was assumed by the court below that the evidence established that this club was actually organized in good faith, under some law providing for the organization of clubs for social, recreative, or similar purposes, before May, 1895. The evidence upon that subject was simply that an association calling itself the “Young Men’s Cosmopolitan Club of the Eighth Assembly District of New York” had been formed several' years before; that it was unincorporated; had no written by-laws, but" that it had some sort of a practice by which members were admitted, that practice being that one desiring admission made an application to a committee of three, who considered the application for five or ten minutes, and, if they reported favorably, admitted the applicant, and, if not, rejected him. It appeared that no action of the-club was ever taken upon the application of any person for membership. The testimony was that the objects of the club were partly political and partly social, but the witness, although being somewhat doubtful upon all those points, was perfectly clear that from the beginning of the organization of the unincorporated association it had as a part of its business sold liquor to its members. Upon that point there was no doubt in his mind or hesitation in his answers. It appeared, further, that this association was unincorporated until the 15th of June, 1895, at which time articles of incorporation were filed, and the club was removed to its present location. Without deciding-that these facts establish that this corporation was a club duly organized for social, recreative, or similar purposes, we shall assume that that is the case (as was assumed in the court below), and shall consider here only the question on which this case must ultimately turn, viz. whether a corporation organized in good faith originally for social, recreative, or similar purposes, and which by virtue of that organization has acquired a right under the statute-to sell intoxicating liquors to its members on Sundays or at any hour of any other day, is liable-[979]*979to lose that right by a change in the purposes of the organization or in the manner of conducting its affairs. For a long time there had been not only in this state, but in almost every state of the Union, a serious question whether clubs were amenable to the laws which prohibited the sale of liquor without a license. The final conclusion in this state, as established by the court of appeals in the case of People v. Adelphi Club, 149 N. Y. 5, 43 N. E. 410, was that such clubs, organized and carried on in good faith for social,, recreative, or similar legitimate purposes, to which the furnishing of liquors to its members is merely incidental, and having a limited and selected membership, were not within the statute, and were not required to take out a license for the sale of intoxicating liquors. The question, had previously been mooted in the case of People v. Andrews, 50 Hun, 592, 3 N. Y. Supp. 508, in which it was held by the general term of the Fifth department that, if a club was fraudulently organized for the purpose of evading the excise laws, it will constitute no defense, but the question of fraud was one for the jury. The judgment in that case, however, was reversed by the court of appeals. People v, Andrews, 115 N. Y. 427, 22 N. Y. Supp. 358. The steward of an alleged club had been indicted for selling liquors to persons who were not members of the club. The position taken by the defendant in the court of sessions, where the indictment was tried and the conviction had, was that the club was a bona fide club, duly organized for social purposes, and therefore not within the act, and not required to take out a license. This contention of the defendant was overruled by that court, which held that the organization was within the act, and the sale of liquors by the steward was in violation of the statute. The general term upon appeal reversed this conviction, holding that the question whether the club was organized under the act or whether it was organized for the purpose of evading the act was a question for the jury, and should have been submitted to it. Upon appeal to the court of appeals it was held that the transaction which was charged as a violation of the excise law was a violation of the law, and the judgment of the court of sessions was affirmed, but this ruling was not put upon the ground that the sale of liquors by a social club to a member, or to persons not members, upon the request of a member, was a violation of the excise law, but upon the ground that as a matter of law the scheme was a fraudulent one, to avoid the provisions of the liquor law, and for that reason the sales were illegal. People v. Adelphi Club, 149 N. Y. 10, 11, 43 N. E. 410. This is therefore an authority for the proposition that, whatever may be the alleged purpose of an organization, the court is at liberty to examine into all the facts, and conclude from those facts whether the particular organization is or is not within the provisions of the excise law.

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Related

People v. . Adelphi Club
43 N.E. 410 (New York Court of Appeals, 1896)
People v. . Andrews
22 N.E. 358 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)
People v. Andrews
3 N.Y.S. 508 (New York Supreme Court, 1889)
Parker v. McCaldin
3 Misc. 14 (New York City Court, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y.S. 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyman-v-young-mens-cosmopolitan-club-nyappdiv-1898.