Mayor of Leesburg v. Putnam

29 S.E. 602, 103 Ga. 110, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 27, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 602 (Mayor of Leesburg v. Putnam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Leesburg v. Putnam, 29 S.E. 602, 103 Ga. 110, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 370 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

In 1874 the town of Leesburg was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly. Acts 1874, p. 201. It was there declared that an act entitled an act to prescribe the manner of incorporating towns and villages in this State, approved August 26,1872, excepting the first five sections thereof, should be the charter of the town of Leesburg, with the proviso that no recorder should be elected for the town. That part of the general law for the incorporation of towns and villages, which was thus declared to constitute the charter of the town, is now embraced in sections 689 et seq. of the Political Code. In a town or village thus incorporated the council hás “power to make and pass all needful orders, by-laws, ordinances, resolutions, rules and regulations, not contrary to the constitution and laws of this State.” Political Code, § 696. Such council also has “power to license and regulate the management of barrooms, saloons, hotels, and private boarding-houses, livery-stables, and private and public transportation through the town or village.” Political Code, §702. There being no law prohibiting the sale of liquor in the county in which Leesburg is situated, the council of the town fixed the license for the sale of liquors during the year 1897 at one thousand dollars. There was no application for a license, and the council thereupon passed the following ordinance: Section 1. “Be it ordained by the town council of Leesburg, Georgia, and it is hereby ordained by authority of the same, that the council of said town, as soon as practicable after the passage of this ordinance, establish what is known as a dispensary in said town for the sale of spirituous and malt liquors, under such regulations as they may by their authority enact.” Section 2. “Be it further enacted, that a committee of three be appointed by the mayor^ from the council of said town, to manage and prescribe regulations for said dispensary, to purchase stock and put in operation said dispensary,-subject to the approval of the town council.” [112]*112Section 8 repeals conflicting laws. Passed and approved June 10, 1897. The council were proceeding to establish a dispensary in accordance with this ordinance, when certain residents and taxpayers of the town filed an equitable petition, alleging that there was no authority in the charter of the town authorizing the passage of such an ordinance; that debts in the name of the town had been or were about to be contracted under the authority of the ordinance; and praying that the town council be enjoined “from further carrying out their illegal scheme for the establishment of the said dispensary, from selling or offering to sell any liquors in the town of Leesburg, from contracting any debts or paying out any money in connection with said dispensary, and doing any other act in connection with the same.” Upon the hearing the judge granted the injunction prayed for, and to this ruling the defendant excepted.

A public corporation is one having for its object the administration of a portion of the powers of government, delegated to it for that purpose. Civil Code, § 1833. Its powers are fixed by its charter. Civil Code, § 1831. It may exercise such powers as are expressly delegated to it, as well as those which would be reasonably implied from the terms of the charter. The implied powers of a municipal corporation must be such as are necessary and proper to carry into effect the objects and purposes for which the corporation was created. Did the town council of Leesburg have authority to establish “ what is known as a dispensary” for the sale of spirituous and malt liquors? The purpose of the ordinance being to establish in the town of Leesburg that system of selling liquors which is known as the dispensary system, it becomes necessary to inquire what is such system. It must be presumed that the town council of Lees-burg, when it passed the ordinance quoted above, had in contemplation those dispensaries which are established and operated by authority of the laws of this State. An examination of such laws will disclose that the controlling features of the system are, first, that no liquors shall be sold by the drink, and none sold shall be drunk on the premises where sold; and second, that the management and control of the sale of liquors under such a system must be in the hands of a person not [113]*113pecuniarily interested in the quantity of liquors to be sold. See Acts 1890-91, vol. 2, p. 436 (Athens Dispensary); Acts 1895, p. 157 (Camilla Dispensary); Acts 1896, p. 183 (Ft. Gaines Dispensary). The licensed tippling-house was the evil; the dispensary, under the dispensary system, was the remedy.' Two of the things which, combined with others, made the barroom an intolerable nuisance in any community, were entirely obviated. Authority to sell liquors over the counter in such quantities as to be consumed on the premises, when vested in a person who is pecuniarily interested in such sales, is calculated to increase the quantity consumed, and thus bring about intemperance with all its attendant evils. The saloon-keeper not only supplies those who are already addicted to the use of liquors, but he wastes neither pains nor expense to allure into his place of business both young and old, who, but for its attractions, would have cared nothing for the article which he sells. While the dispensary plan does not remedy the evil entirely, it is claimed that it does away, to a great extent, with the blighting influence which inevitably results from the presence of the licensed tippling-house in a community. Such being the case, a dispensary can not be correctly termed either a barroom or a saloon. While it is a place wherein the sale of liquor is lawful, it had its origin in an effort to provide a plan for the authorized sale of liquor, in which the evils resulting from the barroom and saloon would be, to some extent, done away with. It is a protest against the tippling-house, saloon, barroom and grog-shop. A barroom is defined to be “a room containing a bar or counter at which liquors are sold,” and also “ a room with a bar where liquors and refreshments are served.” A bar is defined to be “a barrier or counter from which liquors and food are passed to customers; hence the portion of the room behind the counter where liquors for sale are kept,” and also a “room or counter where liquors or refreshments are dispensed, as in a public house.” A saloon is defined to be “a public room for specific uses; especially a barroom or grog-shop; as a drinking saloon, etc,” and also “a place devoted to the retailing and drinking of intoxicating liquors; a grog-shop.” (See Webster’s and Standard Dictionaries.) It is apparent from [114]*114these definitions that the terms “barroom” and “saloon” are inseparably connected with that class of the liquor traffic formerly represented by what was called the tippling-house or grog-shop. The use of either term conveys at once the idea of a place where liquors are sold in such quantities as to be drunk upon the premises where sold. It therefore does not follow that where a municipal corporation has the “power to license and regulate the management of barrooms, saloons, etc.,” this power includes the right to operate a dispensary. The power to license saloons clearly imports that the business must be in the hands of some person other than the licensing authority. One person can not be the licensing power and the licensee.

Neither can the power to operate a dispensary be drawn from what is known as the “general welfare clause,” because it is not ordinarily within the power of a municipal corporation to engage directly in any commercial enterprise.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 602, 103 Ga. 110, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-leesburg-v-putnam-ga-1897.