Phillips v. City of Morgantown

19 S.E.2d 603, 124 W. Va. 170, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 63
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
Docket9264
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 S.E.2d 603 (Phillips v. City of Morgantown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. City of Morgantown, 19 S.E.2d 603, 124 W. Va. 170, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 63 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinion

Fox, President:

Early in the year 1941, the City of Morgantown, by an ordinance of its common council, adopted “Daylight Saving time,” and thereafter on June 24th, adopted a further ordinance providing that “it shall be the duty of all persons holding licenses or permits from the City of Morgan-town to conduct the business or things to be done under said licenses or permits according to ‘Daylight Savings Time’ instead of Eastern Standard Time, in all cases where the hours of doing business under said license or permit aré restricted according to time, and in all such *171 cases ‘Daylight Savings Time’ shall be substituted for Eastern Standard Time.”

S. A. Phillips and Mike Cotgagorge, plaintiffs below, each held a license issued by the State Tax Commissioner, permitting them to sell nonintoxicating beer, under the provisions of Chapter 12 of the Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1937, Code 1937, Chapter 11, Article 16. Failing to comply with the terms of the ordinance above mentioned, criminal proceedings were instituted against them, and they sought and obtained a temporary injunction against the enforcement of the said ordinance. The trial court, on hearing, awarded a permanent injunction against its enforcement, holding the same to be beyond the powers of the common council to adopt, and from this action, the city prosecutes this appeal.

We think the question at issue must be determined by construction of the statute under which the state granted plaintiffs their license to sell nonintoxicating beer. The City of Morgantown possesses no inherent police powers. Bissett v. Town of Littleton, 87 W. Va. 127, 104 S. E. 289, 20 A. L. R. 1478; Kelley v. City of Grafton, 87 W. Va. 191, 104 S. E. 487. Police power is an attribute of state sovereignty, an indefinable reservoir of power necessary to government, and which, under our system, is exercised by the people either by grant under the constitution, or by legislative enactment, and may be delegated, through either process, to agencies of government. It is true that in Harris v. Poulton, 99 W. Va. 20, 127 S. E. 647, 40 A. L. R. 334, it was held that the right to make an ordinance respecting fire protection “exists inherently in the municipal authorities as necessarily implied from the general powers granted in respect thereto.” And notwithstanding the discussion of the question, we do not think it was intended to hold that a municipal corporation, independently of other powers granted, possesses inherent police powers. “The prevailing view in this country is that the police power of municipalities exists solely by virtue of legislative or constitutional grant. In some American cases, particularly those dealing with such important police functions as protecting the public health or guard *172 ing the public safety from such dangers as fire hazards, there have from time to time appeared statements, intimations, and dicta that certain police powers are inherent in municipalities from the very fact of their organization. Many of these broad statements can be explained on the basis that the courts really had in mind implied powers, as the entire context of the opinions shows, and in the various jurisdictions where such broad statements concerning inherent municipal police powers have been made in certain opinions, the courts on numerous other occas-sions and in later opinions have reiterated the well-established American doctrine that municipal corporations have such police powers only as are expressly given or necessarily implied.” 37 Am. Jur. 902.

Taking up the nonintoxicating beer statute, which we hold must govern, we find that section 3 thereof provides: “No person shall manufacture, sell, possess for sale, transport or distribute nonintoxicating beer except in accordance with the provisions of this act, and after first obtaining a state license therefor, as hereinafter provided.” Section 12 provides that license may be issued by the Tax Commissioner to any person who submits an application accompanied by a license fee and make oath to certain facts. Section 13 provides that “It shall be unlawful: (a) For any licensee, his, its or their servants, agents or employees to sell, give or dispense, or any individual to drink or consume, in or on any licensed premises or in any rooms directly connected therewith, nonintoxicating beer between the hours of midnight and seven o’clock the following morning.” These sections, read together, do more than merely restrict a right. Under a license issued under the provisions of the act, a licensee has the right to sell nonintoxicating beer at all times, except as restricted thereunder, the restriction being that beer could not be sold between the hours of midnight and seven o’clock the following morning, and, of course, this restriction is intended to apply to every day in the year. The court takes judicial notice that the time customarily observed in the State of West Virginia, at the date of the act in question, was Eastern Standard Time, and the *173 Legislature will be conclusively presumed to have intended its enactment to have reference to the time customarily observed throughout the state. It is not necessary in this case to examine the authority of the Tax Commissioner, by rules or regulations, to change the rule as to time to be observed. However, rules and regulations, made effective as of July 1, 1941, which was after the date of the ordinance in question, but before the institution of this suit, and which, on the record, is shown to be a codification of existing rules, were promulgated by the Tax Commissioner, one of which provides that “The hours during which beer may be sold as provided in section 13-a of the Beer Law shall be governed by Eastern Standard Time.” Presumably, this particular regulation, which did nothing more than reiterate legislative intent, was promulgated under section 14 of the act, providing that: “To effectively carry out the provisions of this article the tax commissioner shall have the power and authority to adopt, promulgate, repeal, rescind and amend, in any manner required, rules, regulations, standards, requirements and orders, including the following: * * The power granted specifically as to certain rules which he may promulgate do not include the prescribing of the time within which beer may be sold, but it may be that the specific powers so granted do not exclude other necessary powers. By section 18 of the act, the administration thereof is vested in the Tax Commissioner “to whom is hereby given all necessary power and authority in the premises;

But the question here is not so much the powers of the Tax Commissioner, but rather those of the common council of the City of Morgantown, under section 17 of the nonintoxicating beer act. That section provides that “Any municipal corporation in this state shall have authority to levy a license tax under the provisions of this act upon any retailer, distributor or brewer of nonintoxicating beer whose place of business is situated within such municipality, but the amount of the license tax levied by such municipal corporation shall in no event exceed the amount fixed herein to be levied by the state: * * And then *174

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Related

State v. Chambers
77 S.E.2d 297 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1953)
State ex rel. Bibb v. Chambers
77 S.E.2d 297 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1953)
Law v. Phillips
68 S.E.2d 452 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.E.2d 603, 124 W. Va. 170, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-city-of-morgantown-wva-1942.