Perry v. Sevier County Beer Commission

184 S.W.2d 32, 181 Tenn. 696, 17 Beeler 696, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 293
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 32 (Perry v. Sevier County Beer Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Sevier County Beer Commission, 184 S.W.2d 32, 181 Tenn. 696, 17 Beeler 696, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 293 (Tenn. 1944).

Opinion

*698 MR. Chiee Justice Gbeen

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This proceeding originated by a notice from the Sevier County Beer Commission to Charlie J. Perry to appear and show cause why a beer license issued to him should not be revoked. Specifications were filed by the Beer Commission setting’ out a number of grounds for the contemplated action, to all of which charges Perry interposed a general denial or plea of not guilty.

After a hearing* before the Commission in which many witnesses were introduced, by a vote of two to one, Perry’s license was revoked. Perry filed a petition for certiorari and there was a hearing in the circuit court on the record made before the Commission. The circuit judge expressed the opinion that he was without jurisdiction under decisions of this Court to interfere with the action of the Commission and dismissed the petition for certiorari. Prom this judgment Perry appealed to this Court, according to the provisions of Chapter 53 of the Public Acts of 1943.

Numerous charges were made against P'erry. Pie was charged with running a disorderly house where lewd women and lewd men assembled, that the operation of his place caused a congestion of traffic, with some other derelictions, and particularly with violating a rule promulgated by the Commission prohibiting the sale of beer in the county after 7 p. m. in the evening.

Without undertaking to set out the proof here, it is sufficient to say that we have examined it carefully and find none of the charges sustained except that Perry did sell beer after 7 p. m. in the evening. Many witnesses were offered by Perry, including neighbors, several women among them, and Sevier County officers, tending *699 to show that he conducted an orderly place, permitted no lewd women there, refused to sell beer to drunken men, and in general ran a model place of the kind. As one of the witnesses said, it was as nice a “beer joint” as could be maintained.

The proof offered by the Commission, apart from sales after 7 p. m., only went to the extent of showing that on one occasion there whs a fight in Perry’s place and that on another occasion a pedestrian was run over by a car about a half mile from Perry’s place and seriously injured. When this man was picked up he told the officer that he had been to Perry’s. There is no showing, however, that Perry sold him any beer. Indeed, there is a suggestion that Perry refused to sell him beer. All the proof showed that there wras ample parking space in front of Perry’s establishment for visiting cars and there is no evidence that there was any congestion of traffic by vehicles assembled at that point. It is said that by reason of 7 o’clock closing ordinances in Sevierville and Gatlinburg that heavy traffic by beer drinkers to Perry’s place resulted, since that was the only place where beer could then be obtained. We find no evidence to this effect. The fight mentioned seems to have arisen suddenly from an old grudge and Perry put the parties out of the place.

The case then comes down to a question as to whether the County Beer Commission had a right to make the regulation prohibiting the sale of beer by licensed dealers after 7 p. m. Indeed, remarks of counsel for the Beer Commission during the hearing’ of the evidence indicated that this was the main reliance of what we may call the prosecution.

We do not think that our statutes gave to the *700 County Court or the County Beer Commission the authority to promulgate this 7 p. m. regulation.

¡Section 10 of Chapter 69' of the Public Acts of 1933, authorizing- the sale of beer prescribes several conditions with which an applicant for a license to sell beer in any county outside the limits of any town or city now incorporated shall comply. The discretion given to the county court or its beer commission is contained in the third subsection of- that section of the Act as follows: Third, that no such beverages will be sold except at places where such sale will not cause congestion of traffic or interference with schools, churches, or other places of public gathering, or otherwise interfere with public health, safety and morals; the County Court having the right to forbid such storage, sale or manufacture at places within two thousand (2,000) feet of such places of public gathering in its discretion. ’ ’

In the sixth subsection of section 101 the following appears : All incorporated cities and towns in the State of Tennessee are authorized to pass proper ordinances governing the issuance and revocation of licenses for the storage, sale, manufacture and/or distribution of such beer and/or other beverages as herein prescribed within the corporate limits, providing a Board of persons before whom such application shall be made, but the power of such cities to issue licenses shall in no event be greater than the power herein granted to counties, ■ but cities and towns may impose additional restrictions, fixing zones and territories and providing hours of opening and closing and such other rules and regulations as will promote public health, morals and safety as they may by ordinance provide.”

It will be noted that the power given to incorporated cities and towns to provide hours of opening and closing *701 is referred to as one of the “additional restrictions” ■which, an incorporated city or town, but not a county, is authorized to impose.

The Act of 1933 was amended, in certain respects, by Chapter 53 of the Public Acts of 1943. This amendatory Act, in Section 2, provided that no alcoholic beverage within the scope of the Act of 1933 should be sold between 12 o’clock midnight and 6:30 a. m., and that no such beverage should be sold between 12 o’clock midnight on Saturday and 11:59 p. m. on Sunday. Continuing, Section 2 contained this language: “Provided, however, that this paragraph shall not affect the power of governing-bodies of municipal corporations by ordinance to fix the hours when such beverages may be sold within the incorporated limits of such respective municipalities. Municipal corporations may authorize the sale of such beverages in their respective corporate limits on Sundays or at such hours as may be prescribed by ordinance. ’ ’

It thus appears that Chapter 53 of the 'P'ublic Acts of 1943 fixed the hours at which beer might be sold generally over the State and authorized municipal corporations, but not counties, to fix different hours. In all this beer legislation the term municipal corporations is used as referring to incorporated cities and towns, not counties. The Legislature háving made the sale of beer legal within certain hours, we think the counties and the county commissions are not authorized to vary or further restrict these hours. Indeed, the scheme of legislation seems designed to withhold from counties the power given to cities and towns to fix the hours of sale.

In Wright v. State, 171 Tenn. 628, 630, at page 637, 106 S. W. (2d) 866, at page 870 this Court said:

“There appears to be express authority of cities and ■towns to pass proper ordinances governing the issuance

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 32, 181 Tenn. 696, 17 Beeler 696, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-sevier-county-beer-commission-tenn-1944.