People ex rel. Watkins v. Commissioners of Excise

4 Misc. 547, 24 N.Y.S. 739, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 202
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Misc. 547 (People ex rel. Watkins v. Commissioners of Excise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme 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. Watkins v. Commissioners of Excise, 4 Misc. 547, 24 N.Y.S. 739, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 202 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Ward, J.

The relator keeps a hotel in the town and village of Warsaw known as the Watkins House. This village has about 4,000 inhabitants. Watkins is a man of good character and competent to keep a first-class hotel. The hotel building is a fine one, and every way suitable to carry on the business of [548]*548hotel keeping and properly furnished for that purpose. Commissioner Smallwood was duly nominated and elected as a no-license commissioner of excise for the town of Warsaw at a regular town meeting held in February, 1891. Stephen 0. Vincent was in the same manner nominated and elected as a no-license commissioner at the town meeting held in February, 1892. Commissioner McClure was duly nominated and elected as commissioner favoring license at the town meeting held in February, 1893. These commissioners duly qualified and acted as such, and on the 4th day of June, 1893, while they were in session as a board of excise in the town of Warsaw, the relator presented to them a written application for a hotel license, accompanied by a bond and affidavits, which bond and application were sufficient and as required by law. The commissioners made a return to the writ, which among other things set forth “ that after fully considering said application,, it was determined by a majority of said commissioners comprising such board that no license should be granted thereon, and the statement was then and there recorded of the reason of such determination as follows: That a majority of the excise board were elected as no-license commissioners, all of which is respectfully submitted, including copies of all papers upon which our action is based.”

The papers here referred to were the application, bond and certain affidavits showing the qualifications of the relator, the condition of his premises and other reasons submitted to the board to justify the granting of a license. Several other applications were made for licenses in the same town by hotel keepers and all were rejected for the same reason. FTo license was, therefore, granted in the town, the commissioners elected as anti-license commissioners voting against the license, and the other one voting for it. These facts are undisputed,, and the question is fairly up whether the reasons given by the commissioners for their action in refusing a license to the relator afford any justification for their action, or whether the court will treat their refusal as arbitrary and direct them to grant a license to the relator.

[549]*549A brief review of the excise legislation of this state may be profitable in disposing of the questions arising on this proceeding. By chapter 300 of the Laws of 1845, amended by chapter 14 of the Laws of 1846, electors of the several towns and cities of this state were authorized to determine by ballot whether the board of excise should grant licenses to sell intoxicating liquors, and if they should vote in favor of no license, then the board was prohibited from granting any licenses. These acts were repealed by chapter 274 of the Laws of 1847. The legislature in 1855 (Chapter 231 of the Laws of that year) passed an act entitled An act for the prevention of intemperance, pauperism and crime; ” this was known as the prohibitory law whereby the sale or giving away of intoxicating liquors was absolutely forbidden except for mechanical, chemical, medicinal and sacramental purposes under certain conditions, and a violation of this law was punished criminally, and it further provided that all acts and parts of acts inconsistent therewith were repealed. The state thus entered upon a system of prohibitory legislation, the first in its history. But this was a short-lived system, for the Court of Appeals in March, 1856, in the action Wynehamer v. The People, reported in 13 N. Y. 378, declared the law Unconstitutional.

The next year the legislature passed a general act (Chapter 628 of the Laws of 1857) entitled “ To suppress intemperance and to regulate the sales of intoxicating liquors.” This is what is generally known as the Excise Act of 1857, and was comprehensive in its character, establishing a complete license system, and providing punishments for its violation and for the appointment of county commissioners in each county who “ should have the power to grant licenses to inns, taverns,” etc., but the conflict between those who favored prohibitory legislation and those who favored the license system was not yet ended.

In 1870 (Chapter 175 of the Laws of that year), another act was passed on the subject, entitled “ Am act regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors,” and provided that the boards of [550]*550excise of the towns should be the “ supervisor and justices of the peace thereof for the time being, respectively,” and they should heme the power to grant licenses to any person or persons of good moral character who should be approved by them, etc., and made provision for the boards in villages as well. The county commissioners were thus in effect abolished and the subject of town licenses remitted to the town officers.

By chapter 549 of the Laws of 1873, certain amendments were made to the two acts last mentioned, and concluded with this important provision (being section 6), “nothing herein contained shall in any manner apply to any city or town where the majority of voters have voted for or shall hereafter vote for local prohibition in accordance with any law providing for such voting until such city or town shall reverse, by vote, such local prohibition.” We note here the reappearance of the prohibition sentiment in the legislation of the state, but this section 6 seemed to coniine by its terms the operation of that section to where a vote had been in accordance with some law providing for such voting, and as the only law providing for such voting that had existed in the state, had been repealed as above shown, this proviso to the act of 1870, if strictly construed, was incapable of being carried into effect, but still it stood to some extent as a legislative declaration in favor of local prohibition.

The next year, by chapter 444 of the Laws of 1874, the legislature provided for the election of excise commissioners in the several towns at their annual town meetings, who should constitute a board of excise of their several towns, and discharge the duties imposed upon the supervisor and justices of the peace of the town-by chapter 175 of the Laws of 1870 and laws amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto.

By section 2 of this chapter (444) it was provided that the commissioners should be voted for upon a separate ballot, which should be deposited in a separate box marked “ excise.” Ro duties other than those of commissioner of excise were imposed upon these new officers. The purpose of the statute [551]*551seemed to be to utterly divorce this office from all other town offices, and to provide for the election by the people of independent excise commissioners.

It is notorious (so much so, that the court can take judicial notice of the fact) that from the passage of this last act until the present time, a period of over eighteen year’s, local option or prohibition has been a question at issue in the towns of this state upon which the electors voted. These commissioners would generally be nominated in primary meetings or caucuses, the same as other town officers. They were nominated and voted for either as commissioners who would grant licenses under proper conditions, or who would not grant them under any circumstances. A commissioner was elected each year. A majority of the board governed and was a quorum.

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Related

People ex rel. Deutsch v. Dalton
30 N.Y.S. 407 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1894)
People ex rel. Wood v. Board of Commissioners
27 N.Y.S. 41 (New York Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Misc. 547, 24 N.Y.S. 739, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-watkins-v-commissioners-of-excise-nysupct-1893.