Pollard v. Montana Liquor Control Board

131 P.2d 974, 114 Mont. 44, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 73
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1942
DocketNo. 8,384.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 P.2d 974 (Pollard v. Montana Liquor Control Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollard v. Montana Liquor Control Board, 131 P.2d 974, 114 Mont. 44, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 73 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Plaintiff, a liquor dealer in Rocker, Montana, was advised by defendant board that his license fee for the year 1942 would be $600. He, deeming the proper fee to be $200, tendered that amount to the board, which was refused. This action was then brought in the district court to obtain a declaratory judgment to determine the rights of the parties. Additional parties defendant were brought into the case. As to all of them the board contended their fee should be $600, whereas they contended the proper fee for each of them was $200. Some of them paid the sum of $600 under protest on the agreement that it would be held in a separate fund to await court determination as to the proper fee. Some paid the fee without protest. All seek a refund of $400.

The controversy is the aftermath of the case of Vantura v.[1, 2] Montana Liquor Control Board, 113 Mont. 265, 124 P.2d 569. In that case we said that since Chapter 84 of the Laws of 1937 dealt specifically with incorporated towns, and the amended Acts, Chapter 221, Laws of 1939, and Chapter 163, Laws of 1941, dealt with towns generally and without any definite prefix, the latter Acts must be construed as having application to towns whether incorporated or unincorporated. The question now presented to us arises in this way: The board contends that when towns are referred to in Chapter 163, Laws of 1941, only incorporated towns are intended as defined in sections 4955 and 4959 Revised Codes. It contends that since all of the claimants are operating in unincorporated communities and within five miles of Butte, they take the Butte rate, whereas claimants contend they operate in a town of less than 2000 people and take the $200 rate.

The use of the word "town" in statutes has been construed to mean an unincorporated town as well as an incorporated one, (State ex rel. Powers v. Dale, 47 Mont. 227, 131 P. 670, Ann. cas. 1914D, 227; Davis v. Stewart, 54 Mont. 429,171 P. 281.) *Page 47 We adhere to the view that the word "towns" as used in Chapter 163, Laws 1941, has application to unincorporated towns as well as to the incorporated ones.

The question then arises as to what is an unincorporated town, or what is a "town" within the meaning of Chapter 163. In its broad sense, a town is "an aggregation of houses so near to one another that the inhabitants may fairly be said to dwell together." (State ex rel. Powers v. Dale, supra.) Generally it may be said too that in order for such an aggregation of houses containing inhabitants to constitute a town, they must constitute a distinct place with a name. (Mahood v. State,101 Fla. 1254, 133 So. 90; People v. Van Nuys LightingDistrict of Los Angeles County, 173 Cal. 792, 162 P. 97, Ann. Cas. 1918 D, 255.) With these criteria in mind, we proceed to a consideration of the precise question as to whether each of the claimants here is operating in a town or whether each one operates in the city of Butte or in a place not a town but within five miles from Butte.

The case was submitted to the district court on an agreed[3] statement of facts. The court found for plaintiff and the additional party defendants and against the board. The board has appealed. The agreed facts are meager. Those applicable to Rocker are as follows: That plaintiff and two of the additional defendants own liquor licenses there; that Rocker has a population of approximately 100 persons, is located upon a regularly platted townsite, has two retail liquor establishments, a general store, a school and about 20 residences; that it is unincorporated and has no city government.

The facts as to Meaderville are these: Eight people own liquor licenses there; it is unincorporated, has approximately 160 houses, several mines, three blocks of stores and night clubs, a church, gas stations and a fire department. It is situated on a platted townsite and has a population of between 500 and 600 people. There is at least one-half mile of unoccupied space between Meaderville and the city limits of Butte. *Page 48

As to Centerville the facts show that it is an unincorporated community with three retail liquor saloons, a church, school, fire department, stores and boarding houses. It has about 500 residences with various streets and alleys and a population of about 1500 to 1800 people.

Nissler, it is stipulated, is unincorporated and consists of about eight houses, one store, three gas stations, two retail liquor saloons and has a population of about 30 people.

As to West Butte, it is stipulated that it is an unincorporated community situated upon a platted townsite, has three stores, a gas station, a retail liquor saloon, several hundred houses, and a population of approximately 1500 people.

East Butte is agreed to have a population of about 100 people, has a school house, one grocery store and two saloons.

The other applicants operate retail liquor saloons outside the city limits of Butte but at certain street numbers on Harrison Avenue, South Montana, East Granite Street, East Park Street, North Main Street, and at other points unnamed except as to street intersections. The streets are extensions of Butte streets and not streets of any other city or town.

In addition to the stipulated facts, we are at liberty to take judicial notice of the geography of Montana. Investigation discloses that Rocker is on the map. It occupies an enviable position. It is near the junction of the Dillon highway (U.S. Highway No. 91), where it intersects with the main thoroughfare between Butte and Anaconda. The Butte, Anaconda and Pacific Railway and the Oregon Short Line Railroad pass through it. It has made rapid strides toward becoming an important railroad center. To the south is situated the Beaverhead Valley, traversed and beautified by the Beaverhead River. This valley has long been famous. It is adjacent to the Big Hole country, noted for its livestock industry. Believe it or not, much of the products of this productive area, as they enter the channels of trade, pass through the town of Rocker. The entire output of the Anaconda smelter, as it is placed in interstate commerce, passes through Rocker. It stands as Montana's *Page 49 Rock of Gibraltar witnessing, as it passes by, a vast amount of commerce destined for remote parts of the world. Is Rocker a town? The answer must be in the affirmative.

We pass then to Meaderville. The only map of Montana available to us fails to reveal its name. But this fact is not conclusive. It was once contended that Duluth, Minnesota, was inconsequential because of the difficulty of finding it on the map. J. Proctor Knott, a Kentucky Congressman, in humble apology for not being able to locate it on the map, in 1871, said of it: "I was confident it existed somewhere, and that its discovery would constitute the crowning glory of the present century, if not of all modern times. I knew it was bound to exist in the very nature of things; that the symmetry and perfection of our planetary system would be incomplete without it; that the elements of material nature would long since have resolved themselves back into original chaos, if there had been such a hiatus in creation as would have resulted from leaving out Duluth.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P.2d 974, 114 Mont. 44, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-montana-liquor-control-board-mont-1942.