People ex rel. Leonard v. Hamilton

2 Liquor Tax Rep. 69
CourtMonroe County Court
DecidedApril 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Liquor Tax Rep. 69 (People ex rel. Leonard v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Monroe County Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Leonard v. Hamilton, 2 Liquor Tax Rep. 69 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Sutherland, J.

The relator is the proprietor of the “ Cottage Hotel ” in the village of Spencerport, town of Ogden, and holds a liquor tax certificate expiring April 30, 1899, which autnorizes him to sell liquor as a hotelkeeper in said town. On March 24th he made an application in due form to the county treasurer for a new certificate to enable him to continue to sell during the year commencing May 1st. With his application he tendered a bond executed in proper form for approval and offered to pay the amount of the tax, but the treasurer declined to issue the certificate upon the ground that March 14, 1899, the town clerk of said town filed with him a paper of which the' following is a copy:

County of Monroe.— Statement of the vote of the town of Ogden on questions submitted on local-option at the annual town meeting held in said town March 7, 1899:
“ Question No. 1: number voting Yes, 250; No, 328.
“ Question No. 2: number voting Yes, 218; No, 314.,
“ Question No. 3: number voting Yres, 351; No, 185.
11 Question No. 4: number voting Yes, 260; No, 305.
“ F. H. Dewey,
“ Town Clerh.”

In response to the writ, the treasurer answers that said instrument was considered by him as due official information that the electors of the town of Ogden had determined by a vote taken at their toivn meeting under the local option provisions of the Liquor Tax Law that no liquors should be sold in that toivn during the next two years (except by a pharmacist and upon a physician’s prescription), and that accordingly he could not lawfully issue the certificate applied for by the relator.

The relator now attacks the document filed by the town clerk as not authoritative, and as insufficient upon its face to warrant the refusal of his application, and counsel agree that the legal [71]*71sufficiency of the clerk’s statement is the only question to be determined by me in this proceeding.

Under the Liquor Tax Law of 1896, local excise boards are abolished, and the people of the towns are permitted, for the first time since 1847, to vote directly upon the question of sale or no sale in their respective localities. The county treasurer has no discretion to exercise in granting or refusing liquor tax certificates. He acts ministerially and is governed by the face of the papers filed with him. People ex rel. Belden Club v. Hilliard, 28 App. Div. 140. In towns where the sale of liquor is lawful, the right of any duly qualified applicant to enter upon or continue the business remains until, under the local option clause, the right is lost by vote of the people. There is no presumption that such a vote will be taken at the biennial town meeting. In order to have a vote, some one must take the initiative, and the conditions precedent must be complied with, and accordingly section 19 of the Liquor Tax Law provides that when a proper application statement is made with the requisite consents, and a sufficient bond furnished, “ the county treasurer * shall at once prepare and issue to the * * person making such application and filing such bond and paying such tax, a liquor tax certificate in the form provided for in this act, unless it shall appear by a certified■ copy of the statement of the result of an election held, on the question of local option, pursuant to section sixteen of this act, in and for the town where the applicant proposes to traffic in liquors under the certificate applied for, that such liquor tax certificate can not be laAvfully granted, in which case the application shall be refused.”

Under section 16, which regulates the procedure for voting upon local option, provision is made for submitting to the people four distinct questions, and the section provides that “A certified copy of the statement of the result of the vote, upon each of such questions submitted, shall, immediately after such submission thereof be filed by the town clerk or other officer Avith whom returns of town meetings are required to be filed by the election law, with the county treasurer of the county.” The word “ certified ” was inserted in section 16 before “ copy ” by the amendment of 1897.

Now, the document filed by the town clerk with the treasurer, March 14th, is not the “ certified copy of the statement of the result of the vote” which the clerk is required to file by section 16, and with which, under section 19, the treasurer must be fur[72]*72nished in order to refuse an applicant his certificate. The use of the definite article “ the ” before the words “ statement of the result of the vote ” gives to those words precise and definite appli- ' cation. The words undoubtedly refer to that formal return of the result of the canvass of the votes, which, under sections 83, 84 and 111 of the General Election Law, must be made and signed by the inspectors of election. This formal document is styled throughout the Election Law as “The Original Official Statement of the. Result” and “The Original Statement of the Canvass.” By section 110 it is made a felony for any election officer to sign “ any original statement of canvass ” at any place other than the polling place. Very careful provisions are made for the preservation of the ballots marked for identification and of ballots rejected as void, which are to be secured in sealed packages and filed “with the original statement of the canvass”; and section 111. of the Election Law further provides: “If ballots are voted on any constitutional amendment, proposition or question, a similar return of the ballots and votes cast thereon shall be made and included as a part of such original statement. * * At the end of each return contained in such original statement of the canvass, and also at the bottom of each sheet, or half-sheet thereof, the inspectors shall make and sign a certificate that the foregoing statement is correct.”

That these general provisions of the Election Law apply" to town meetings can not be doubted. In the original enactment of the Election Law, chapter 680, Laws of 1892, section 117, there .was a direction that in town elections held at a different time-from a general election, a certified copy of “the statement of the result of the canvass” should be filed with the town clerk. In" the re-enactment of the Election Law, in 1896, section 117 was omitted, its substance being incorporated into other sections. The requirement that a certified copy of the original statement should be filed with the town clerk seems to have been omitted in the .revision, possibly because the original statement itself is filed with the town clerk as the proper custodian of the records <of the town meeting.

In the town of Ogden the town meeting is not held in separate election districts, and, accordingly, the four justices of the peace of the town preside at the town meeting and discharge the duties of inspectors of election. In the general revision of the statutes adopted by the Legislature in 1827, it was provided that the [73]*73justices of the town should preside at town meetings and act as inspectors of election, canvassing the vote (IB. S. chap. 11, tits. 2, 3), and the town clerk had no voice in judging as to the result; he only recorded the proceedings of the meeting which had to be signed also by the justices presiding.

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Related

People Ex Rel. Hirsh v. . Wood
42 N.E. 536 (New York Court of Appeals, 1895)
People ex rel. Belden Club v. Hilliard
28 A.D. 140 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Liquor Tax Rep. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-leonard-v-hamilton-flactyct44-1899.