Pendarvis v. Berry

52 S.E.2d 705, 214 S.C. 363, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 23, 1949
Docket16200
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 52 S.E.2d 705 (Pendarvis v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pendarvis v. Berry, 52 S.E.2d 705, 214 S.C. 363, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 37 (S.C. 1949).

Opinion

Stukes, Justice.

This action was brought in 1948 for an accounting and dissolution of a claimed partnership between appellant and respondent which was alleged to have been formed about July 1, 1945 for the operation of a retail liquor store in the town of Johnston.

The appeal is from the refusal by the lower court to sustain a demurrer- to the third defense of the answer, which is, in substance, that plaintiff- (appellant) sold his Johnston liquor store to-defendant-(respondent) as-of July-.l, 1945 in order to operate a similar-store-in the-City of Columbia, for which latter appellant procured licenses from the State for *366 the fiscal years ending 1946 to 1948, inclusive; and that subsection (c) (9).of section 4 of The Alcoholic Beverage Control Act of 1945, 44 Stat. 337, 343, prohibits the ownership of any interest in, and operation of, any liquor business except the retail store which one operates under license, and thereby the partnership alleged in the complaint was illegal, contrary to public policy and unenforceable.

The cited section of the statute is as follows:

“No retail dealer shall own, operate or have any interest whatsoever in any business, store or establishment dealing in alcoholic liquors except the store or place of business covered by his retail dealer’s license granted under this Act. No license shall be issued to more than one member of any household in this State and only one license shall be issued to any licensee.”

The demurrer to the stated defense was overruled upon the conclusion that the alleged partnership contract contemplated a transaction which is forbidden by statute and therefore unenforceable, for which there were cited our decisions of McConnell v. Kitchens, 20 S. C. 430, 47 Am. Rep. 845, and Grant v. Butt, 198 S. C. 298, 17 S. E. (2d) 689.

There are two related decisions so recent that they had not been published at the time of the hearing of this case in the Circuit Court. They are Ex parte Rosenfeld (In re Langley’s Estate), 214 S. C. 39, 51 S. E. (2d) 88, and Romanus v. Biggs, 214 S. C. 145, 51 S. E. (2d) 503, 507. They skirt the question here involved and it was said in Romanus v. Biggs, with reference to a similar alleged contravention of the Act of 1945 (enacted after the transactions there concerned) that: “It is argued that such a violation would be of a technical nature, not involving public morals or public policy, which could at most result only in the revocation of the wholesale'license.'We find it unnecessary to pass upon this contention.” That issue, in substance, -is presented by this appeal.

*367 The excellent brief - of appellant is principally upon the contention that in view of the fact that the Act of 1945 contains no declaration that a contract in evasion of its terms is void and unenforceable and the Act is not designed to protect the public health and morals or to protect the public from imposition and fraud, a contract of evasion is not void but is enforceable in such a case as this.

By means of the foregoing contended distinction, the authorities relied upon by the lower court are differentiated by appellant. It is said that McConnell v. Kitchens resulted as it did because the pertinent statute there (requiring the la-belling of fertilizer) was for the protection of the public from fraud and the defendant who invoked it was a person (farmer) specially entitled to its protection. It is argued that the authority of that decision is restricted by the subsequent case of opposite result, Tate v. Pegues, 28 S. C., 463, 6 S. E. 298, for the reason that the defendant there was not entitled to invoke the statute (the same involved in McConnell v.< Kitchens) because it was not designed for his protection but for the protection of a farmer, which the defendant was in McConnell v. Kitchens. Grant v. Butt, the other authority cited by the lower court, is distinguished by appellant upon the contention that it was obviously decided purely on grounds of public policy. The facts of it were so- flagrantly violative of basic public policy and so foreign to- the facts of the instant case that it belongs to a class apart from the latter and need not be further, considered. However, the real distinction between the McConnell and Tate cases (and the interesting old cases referred to in the quotation which follows) is that in the latter the action was not upon an illegal contract (as' here) but upon assumpsit for money had and received by an agent for his principal. It is stated in the following brief excerpt from the opinion by Chief Justice McIver in Gist v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 45 S. C. 344, 23 S. E. 143, 153, 55 Am. St. Rep. 763: “Indeed, the true theory in sitch cases is that the illegal business out of which the money received by the agent arises is no part of the cause *368 of action, and is not necessarily connected therewith; the real cause of action being money had and received by the agent for the use of his principal. This .is a principle-upon which the cases of Andersons v. Moncrieff, 3 Desaus. [124], 125 and Owen v. Davis, 1 Bailey 315, cited in support of the decision in Tate v. Pegues, supra, rest”.

Elder Harrison Co. v. Jervey, 97 S. C. 185, 81 S. E. 501, confirmed the rule just stated.

A further obstacle to- appellant's attempted distinction is that it overlooks or ignores the consideration that the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act of 1945 is a typical exercise of the police power of the State and is designed for the protection of the morals and welfare of the public. The universality of this conception of legislation looking to control of the liquor traffic was pointed out in Davis v. Query, 209 S. C. 41, 39 S. E. (2d) 117. It cannot be gainsaid that, while the Act of 1945 is also a revenue law, its principal purpose is the protection of the public health and morals. Riquor cdntrol legislation is generally of such purpose. Absence of this important feature influenced the decision of the leading case of Fairly v. Wappoo Mills, 44 S. C. 227, 22 S. E. 108, 29 L. R. A. 215. Annotations, cited by appellant, 30 A. L. R. 834, 42 A. L. R. 1226 and 118 A. L. R. 646. Fairly v. Wappoo Mills and the other cases contained in the foregoing annotations refer to the enforceability or unenforceability of contracts made by persons who had not procured licenses to do business. The case in hand is of course stronger against enforceability because the statute here forbids the contract,- licenses it in no event and even provides penalties for- doing the act which the alleged partnership contract contemplated. Sec. 9(b) prescribes forfeiture of the bond of a licensed dealer for any violation of the Act and Sec. 14(i) (2) is as follows: “For each violation of any. other provision of this Act, except where a. different punishment is expressly provicjed, a fine or imprisonment in the discretion of the Court of General Sessions.”

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E.2d 705, 214 S.C. 363, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendarvis-v-berry-sc-1949.