Meehan v. Board of Excise Commissioners

64 A. 689, 73 N.J.L. 382, 44 Vroom 382, 1906 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 7, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 A. 689 (Meehan v. Board of Excise Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meehan v. Board of Excise Commissioners, 64 A. 689, 73 N.J.L. 382, 44 Vroom 382, 1906 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 66 (N.J. 1906).

Opinion

[383]*383The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fort, J.

The application in this case is to set aside a resolution of the excise board of Jersey City, brought up by the writ, directing- the removal of screens from certain licensed places, in accordance with the powers conferred by the supplement to the act entitled “An act to regulate the sale of •spirituous, vinous, malt and brewed liquors, and to repeal an act entitled ‘An act to regulate the sale of intoxicating and brewed liquors/ passed March seventh, one. thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight, approved March twentieth, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-nine,” approved April 13th, 1906. Pamph. L., p. 199.

The resolution is as follows:

"Resolved, That from and after the adoption of this rule, the interior of the bar or business room in which liquors and other intoxicating drinks are sold and served under any license granted by this board shall, during such times as such sales are prohibited by law, be open to full view from the public •street; provided, however, this rule shall have no application to such places as are exempt from its operation under the provisions of said law.”

It is not claimed that the resolution exceeds the powers •conferred upon the excise board by the statute. The contention is that the statute conferring the power is unconstitutional.

The power conferred is found in section 4 of the act. This •section may be said to be inartistically drawn. It is quite involved. Summarized, it prohibits the granting of a license to any person to sell spirituous, vinous, malt or brewed liquors by less measure than one quart:

(1) In any place where a grocery or mercantile business is carried on, excepting the keeping of a restaurant and selling tobacco and cigars;

(2) In any new place within two hundred feet of a church edifice, school-house or armory; or,

(3) In any place, except in a bar or business room upon the ground floor or basement of a building upon a public [384]*384street, excepting, however, out of this third (3) class the following licensed places:

(ft) An inn and tavern, or a hotel having at least ten spare rooms and beds for the accommodation of boarders, &c.;

(&) A restaurant conducted upon more than one floor or story of a building where meals are regularly furnished to the public for compensation;

(c) A picnic or recreation ground;

(d) A building with a bowling alley;

(e) A building entirely occupied by a regularly-organized club or association.

The contention is that these exceptions result in a practical discrimination between saloon licenses and inn or hotel licenses, as well as between saloons and licensed restaurants of the excepted class where meals are regularly furnished. This seems to be the clear effect of the statute. It also distinguishes between saloons and picnic grounds and also between saloons with and without bowling alleys.

The reason for this classification is not for the court to endeavor to discover or to attempt to reconcile with what may or may not be deemed the policy-of the state as to granting, restricting or withholding licenses. With these questions the court has nothing to do. The legislature, so long as it keeps within its constitutional prerogatives, is, upon such questions, supreme. If the legislation is objectionable on questions of political policy the legislature must be looked to to remedy it. That is not within the province of the court. We can only inquire as to the legislative power under the constitution.

The section further provides that, as to all the licensed saloons or other place's where liquor is allowed to be sold, except in the excepted classes as aforesaid, “no spirituous, vinous, malt, brewed or other intoxicating liquors shall be sold or served in any room, except in such bar or business room, and the clear interior view of the whole of said bar or business room * * * shall be in no way obstructed by a screen, non-transparent glass, shade, blind, door, shutter, merchandise, or any other article placed in any of said rooms.” [385]*385This part of the section •would seem to be clear enough and to be prohibitive of all screens or the like which are obstructive of a clear view of the -whole interior of the room in which liquors are sold. A violation of this provision by any person or persons makes the person guilty of the offence of keeping a disorderly house. But the section seems to go further than this on the subject of screens and the like,-and to provide that, in addition or as supplementary to this general requirement of the statute, “the court, excise board or other board or authority having povrer by lav' to grant licenses, &c., * * * shall, upon the days and times when the sale of liquors or other intoxicating drinks is by law prohibited to be sold [Sundays and election days], may at any or all other times, require that the entire interior of such bar or business room * * * shall, during the entire prohibited time, or may at any and all other times as may be required by such authority, be open to full view' from the public street.”

It is a resolution to require this clear view from the public street on prohibited days of all places not within the excepted classes that we are asked to declare void, because it is claimed that the conferring of the power upon the excise board to pass such a resolution is unconstitutional.

Before considering this question, it might be well to state for clearness that it would seem that the section under review makes turn offences. The one by the terms of the act itself, for failure to keep a clear interior view of the whole of the bar or business room, free from any obstruction or screen, non-transparent glass, shade, blind, door, shutter or merchandise or other article placed in any of said rooms.” The other relates to any obstruction which prevents a like clear view from the public street.

It was evidently the legislative purpose to prohibit, in all cases, by force of the statute itself, any obstruction of the view, by any person, of any other person within the bar or business room serving or being served with liquor therein. The interior of the bar or business room must be so arranged as to give at all times an unobstructed view of the whole in[386]*386tcrior from the interior, and when the court, excise board or other licensing authority in any municipality shall so require, the same unobstructed view of the bar or business room must exist from the public street.

The resolution of the excise board of Jersey City here for review requires such unobstructed view from the public street upon the prohibited days.

We are unable to find in this requirement of the statute any unconstitutional feature. The right to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors by the legislature, or by municipal or other authority under legislative power given, .is within the police power of the state, and is practically limitless. It may extend to the prohibition of the sale altogether. A license is not a contract. It is a mere privilege. Cooley Const. Lim. (5th ed.) 718; Crowley v. Christensen, 137 U. S. 86; Robison v. Haug, 71 Mich. 38.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 689, 73 N.J.L. 382, 44 Vroom 382, 1906 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meehan-v-board-of-excise-commissioners-nj-1906.