Otte v. State

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 203, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 293, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 207
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 203 (Otte v. State) 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
Otte v. State, 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 203, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 293, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 207 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

These three eases against the state of Ohio arise from the prosecution of claimed offenses against the “Jones-law,” so-called; the statute recently enacted by the legislature providing for the definition of what are known as “residence districts” in municipalities, and for the prohibiting or permitting the sales of liquors therein after obtaining an expression by petition of the wishes of a proportion of the voters in such district. It has been deemed a form of local option, and was enacted by the legislature'to take the place of certain previous existing legislation which provided for the obtaining of the expression of the voters by vote instead of petition.

A number of important questions are raised by the defendants, who are here the plaintiffs in error. They were convicted in the police [205]*205court of the city of Toledo, of the violation of the said Jones law. The questions are of sufficient general interest to warrant careful consideration and a somewhat extended treatment of some of the points involved.

At a former term of this court the action of one of the judges of the court of common pleas, in passing upon the sufficiency of a petition for the definition of the alleged residence district No. 3, — the one involved in the present cases, — was before this court for review upon an application for leave to file a petition in error. In our decision of the matter then presented, we were called upon to pass upon some of the questions now re-presented. With the opinion there expressed, as>to the constitutionality of the act and its construction in some of the salient features discussed, we are still content. The case has not, as yet, however, been reported, and in as brief a statement as possible, I will express our views as to the constitutionality of the act and its construction, in view of certain claimed inconsistencies urged by counsel for plaintiffs in error.

It was earnestly urged upon us that the act is, for some reasons, in violation of the constitution of our state. No especial article or section of the constitution was emphasized in argument, if pointed out, but it is said that the statute, in terms, may impose a prohibition of the liquor traffic upon a prescribed territory against the will of a majority of its electors. It is said that those who do not sign the petition have no opportunity to vote; and also that if it be true that a petition under the act is sufficient when signed by less than an existing majority of the electors at the time of such signing, then it permits a minority of the voters to determine whether the district shall be one in which liquor is or is not legally sold. We are cited in the course of the argument to the case of State v. Constantine, 42 Ohio St. 437 [51 Am. Rep. 833], in which it is held:

“Where an office is filled by an election, the election must conform to the requirements of the constitution, and each elector of the district is entitled to vote for a candidate for each office to be filled at the election.
“A statute authorizing the election of four members of the police board at the same election, but which denies to an elector the right to vote for more than two members is in conflict with Art. 5 of the constitution. ’ ’

There is nothing that we discover in this case touching the right of the legislature to make such enactments as the one before us. The right to provide against the .supposed evils of the liquor traffic is a right expressed by the constitution of the state itself; the power is broadly [206]*206given to the legislature to provide by law against the evils resulting from the traffic, and no qualification is placed upon that power, except that no license for such traffic shall be granted.

It has been a very common matter of legislation to enact that certain kinds'of business deemed inimical to the interests-of certain localities, shall not be carried on therein; and in regard to liquor selling we have had numerous enactments prohibiting the sale of liquors within prescribed distances of certain places; as, for instance, for a long time, 'within two miles of where a fair was being conducted by an agricultural .society, or within a certain distance of public institutions of various kinds. These acts have not been held invalid; they have been sustained and enforced, and their constitutionality upheld.

By analogy to the principle upon .which such enactments are sustained, there would seem to be no restriction upon the powers of the legislature directly to define districts and call them “residence districts,” in a statute prohibiting therein the sale of liquor. As the legislature may say that it shall be unlawful to sell liquor within such a distance of a schoolhouse, or a college, or a soldier’s home, or an agricultural fair, just so the legislature may enact that it shall be unlawful to sell liquor within a defined territory of a municipality in which a certain proportion of blocks or structures are occupied not for business but for residence purposes. The point at which I am arriving is, that it was not essential that the legislature should require any expression of the voters at all; the legislature might or might not place a qualification upon the operation of its enactment, and in this instance, it has so done. It has sought to obtain an expression from the voters of a district in which there was a desire on the part of some to exclude the liquor traffic. The legislature, we think, might have said that this shall only be done upon an expression of the will of two-thirds, or three-fourths of the voters. We think that it might just as constitutionally have said that it may be done upon an expression of one-fourth, or of 10 per cent, or of any other per cent of the voters; it need not have qualified it by giving any more force to the expression of the will of voters than of other adult members of the population. It might have permitted women as well as men to express their will in the matter.

In other words, there is no limit m the constitution to the power of the legislature toimake its own qualifications to the operation of.such an enactment as this, or to make the enactment unqualified, as it sees fit.

The difficulty which seems to have been encountered by some [207]*207lawyers, and the obscurity which the judge of the court of common pleas, passing upon the sufficiency of the petition relating to residence district No. 3, thought that he found in the statute as to its construction, is not apparent to us. The statute seems to us, so far as regards the requirement concerning the number of petitioners to make the law operative and enforeible, altogether clear; that is to say, as clear as most of the enactments of the legislature. We have at no time found any difficulty in determining what seems to us the manifest intent of the legislature in this respect. The claimed inconsistency arises out of the phraseology in certain parts of the statute, which seems to make the prohibition or nonprohibition of the liquor traffic in a district depend upon the voice of a majority of the qualified electors, and, in other sections,of the statute, the language that the petition shall be signed by as many qualified electors as equal a majority of the votes cast at the last preceding election; that is, the last regular municipal election in the district. The whole act is to be read together, and we cannot, in endeavoring to ascertain the true intent of the legislature, reject any of its parts.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 203, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 293, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otte-v-state-ohcirctlucas-1907.