Price v. Board of Liquor License Commissioners for Cecil Co.

57 A. 215, 98 Md. 346, 1904 Md. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 57 A. 215 (Price v. Board of Liquor License Commissioners for Cecil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Board of Liquor License Commissioners for Cecil Co., 57 A. 215, 98 Md. 346, 1904 Md. LEXIS 43 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Cecil County, refusing a writ of mandamus upon the application of the appellant who sued for the same to compel the defendants as constituting the Board of Liquor License Commissioners for that county, to meet as such board at Elkton, in said county to receive from him a petition, bond and other papers accompanying an application for a hotel keeper’s license to sell spirituous and fermented liquors and to take proceedings thereon as provided in the Act of 1898, ch. 532, sec. 4.

That Act is a local law of Cecil County, the title of which *348 is: “An Act to enable the registered qualified voters of Cecil County to determine by ballot whether spirituous or fermented liquors or cider shall be sold in said county.” It provides that the question whether any person or persons, or body corporate, may be licensed in that county “by whom or in which spirituous or fermented liquors, intoxicating drinks' or cider may be sold or whether or not no license to sell the same in said county shall be issued, shall be submitted to the registered and qualified voters of said county on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, and on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in every fourth year thereafter at the elec tion then to be held therein” and if it shall appear by the returns of such election that a majority of said votes have been cast “Against License,” then sections which follow in the Act numbered from one hundred and seventy-nine to one hundred and eighty-eight inclusive shall be in force in said county, and stand in the place and stead of sections one hundred and seventy-nine to one hundred and eighty-eight inclusive of Article eight of the Code of Public Local Laws—title “Cecil County, sub-title Liquors and Intoxicating Drinks.” These sections thus enacted as parts of the Code of Public Local Laws contain provisions intended to make effective the prohibition of the sale of liquors in Cecil County when it is determined by the popular .vote that no license shall issue to sell liquors in said county by defining such selling as a crime and providing for the prosecution and punishment of the violators of such provisions.

The Act then further provides that if it shall appear by the returns at an election to be held under its provisions that a majority of the votes cast are for license then other sections are enacted to become a part of the local law of the county which provide regulations under which licenses are to be issued for the sale of liquors in the county, making provisions for enforcing the observance of these regulations and prescribing penalties for their violation. Among other things in this connection the statute provides for a Board of Liquor License *349 Commissioners for the county composed of three persons, the members of which are to hold “office during good behavior or until their successors are duly appointed and qualified.” Any vacancy occurring in the board is to be filled by the County Commissioners of the county, who also are given the power to remove from office a Liquor License Commissioner “for neglect of duty or malfeasance in office upon the petition of any ten reputable citizens of Cecil County and proof of such neglect of duty or malfeasance in office satisfactory to the County Commissioners.” Three persons to serve as a Board of Liquor License Commissioners are named and appointed in the Act. This board, it will thus be seen, is made a permanent and continuing body. When at any election at which a vote is taken as to whether liquor shall be sold in the county in question a majority of the votes cast are for license it is provided that persons wishing and intending to carry on the business of selling liquor shall make application to the Board of Liquor License Commissioners according to prescribed regulations and the board is required to hear such applications and to determine whether the requisite conditions exist as provided in the statute to entitle the applicant to a license and to grant or refuse such license according to the authority and discretion conferred upon them.

As has been seen the Act here under consideration provided that the question whether or not liquor should be sold in Cecil County should be submitted to the voters of the county at the election in November of the year 1898 and at the election to be held “on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in every fourth year thereafter. The petition for mandamus did not state specifically what had been the result of the election of 1898 upon the question directed to be submitted to the voters of said county by the Act here under consideration—whether liquor should be sold therein or not; nor does this appear from the answer of the respondents. We are therefore not informed, except inferentially, by the pleadings whether, under the Act, the conditions therein prescribed ever existed which *350 authorized the issuing of licenses to sell liquor. The answer of the respondents to the petition, after 'reciting the provisions of the Act in question, the purport of which has already been given, directing the submission to the voters of Cecil County of the question of whether liquor should be sold or not in the county, averred that at the election in 1902 held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, “the question whether or not any person or persons, house, company, association or body corporate may be licensed” to sell liquor therein; or whether no license so to sell shall be issued, was submitted to the registered and qualified voters of said county; and that proclamation, was made as provided in the Act, of the result of said vote, to the effect that a majority of the votes cast upon the question so submitted was “against license for the sale of spirituous or fermented liquors in said county.” The respondents then aver that by reason of this result of the vote upon the said question at the election so held, the provisions of the act in question which have been referred to as intended, in such a contingency, to make effective the prohibition of the sale of spirituous and fermented liquors in the county in question, make it unlawful for them to issue a license to the petitioner. To this answer the petitioner interposed a demurrer which having been overruled and his petition refused he has brought this appeal.

The question we are thus called upon to decide in the state of record we have before us is, are the facts alleged in the answer of the respondents and admitted by the demurrer, sufficient to sustain the action of the Court in refusing the appellant’s petition ? It is urged in support of the demurrer that the sections of the Local Law of Cecil County as enacted by the Act of 1898, here under consideration relied upon in the answer of the respondents as making it unlawful for them to issue licenses or to entertain applications therefor are not in force. The grounds of this contention are that the part of the law relied upon in the answer is inconsistent with and repugnant to the later, subsequent sections making regulations for •the issuing of licenses, &c.; and that the last-mentioned sec *351

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 A. 215, 98 Md. 346, 1904 Md. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-board-of-liquor-license-commissioners-for-cecil-co-md-1904.