Reider v. Davis

10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177
CourtScioto County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177 (Reider v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Scioto County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reider v. Davis, 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Blair, J.

This case was submitted to the court upon the sole question as to whether or not the Dow tax may be lawfully imposed upon the business of trafficking in intoxicating liquors in a county in which the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage has been prohibited under what is known as the Rose county local option law.

The plaintiff claims that it can not, and as a basis for his contention cites the case of Haas v. Remick, 13 C.C.(N.S.), 1, reported in the Ohio Law Reporter of April 18, 1910.

We have carefully considered the opinion of the learned judges who decided this case, and with all due respect to their legal lore and acumen we find ourselves wholly unable to agree with their conclusion as announced in the first syllabus of the case, which is:

‘ ‘ The Dow tax law is not valid and operative in a county which has been voted dry under the Rose local option law. ’ ’

The opinion of the learned judges who decided this case seems to rest upon two propositions:

[178]*178First. That there is some right to engage in the liquor business which is recognized by the laws of this state. For instance, on page 2, they say:
“The right to traffic in intoxicating liquors is a common law right, possessed by the people, a property right * * * and recognized as such in this state. ’ ’

A little further on they say:

“The state, in the Dow tax law, recognized those rights and heavily taxed the persons engaged in the exercise of those rights.” " '•

And'again they say:

“The statute expressly declares the tax is imposed upon the business of trafficking in spirituous, vinous, malt or other, intoxicating liquors, and hence it expressly recognizes the right to carry on such business' and is a'permit to do it.”

And again they say:

“It is apparent, therefore, that the statute recognizes the right of and permits and makes it lawful. ’ ’

Second. They hold that the Dow assessment tax and the Eose county local option' law aré conflicting, and that the Eose county local option law, being the later enactment, repeals the Dow assessment tax law in so' far as they are conflicting, and that by reason thereof the tax' can mot be collected in territory in which the Eose' county local option law is operative. "We do not so read the decisions’ o’f the Supreme Court of the state. On page 559, 44th Ohio State, Adler v. Whitebeck, Judge Minshall, in his opinion, says:

“A simple tax upon the traffic does no violence to the principle upon which the clause inhibiting a license was inserted in the Cohstitution. This inhibition certainly arose from a sentiment in the .minds of the people that the traffic ivas wrong and should not be encouraged, not from the persuasion that it was right and of such utility that it would be impolitic to impede it by any restriction upon the liberty of pursuing it. By the imposition of a tax. there is no sanction given to the propriety or utility of the business taxed. * , * * The Legislature finds a business productive of evils to the state and society, in which many persons [179]*179are engaged, and imposes a tax upon it. In doing so it neither directly approves nor disapproves the business itself. It may, however, imply a great deal. The imposition of a tax upon the owner of a dog implies, if it implies anything beyond the purposes to protect the husbandry of sheep a disapproval of the business of keeping of a dog. It is not intended to dignify the business. The same is true of a tax imposed upon the liquor traffic. ’ ’

Instead of the liquor traffic being recognized as a common law right by the Supreme Court we think, in the ease -just quoted, that it is recognized as an evil. We quote from page 567:

‘1 If the liquor traffic is a source of evils, and from the language of Section 9, -Article XV (scheduled Section 18), it was certainly regarded as such by the framers of the Constitution, then the more the traffic prospers the greater the evils resulting from it will be and the more it is repressed, the less they will be. ’ ’

And again, page 568, the learned judge, upon this same line says further:

“The traffic being the acknowledged source of much of the crime and pauperism of the state the appropriation of the funds arising from the tax is in accord with the spirit of the law, part being distributed to the general fund from which the costs of the state created in the prosecution of crime are paid, and part to the police, and part to the'poor fund.”

And again, on page 677, of the case of Senior v. Batterman, 44th Ohio State, it is said:

“The law does not purport to be for revenue but to provide against evils, and to construe it as a revenue law it must be shown that there are no evils incident to the wholesale -traffic, and in contemplation of law, -that none can arise, -a proposition which, we think, can not be maintained. ’ ’

In other words, the tax is imposed not because of any eommon law right, property right, or other right, or privilege that exists either in the citizen or the state to carry on the liquor business, but because the Legislature found that the traffic existed, and that its existence was productive of evil to the state and its people, and in order to suppress this evil and render it less obnoxious the Legislature, in its wisdom, imposed the tax. And the tax is not [180]*180imposed as a protection to the liquor interest but to mitigate its pernicious effect upon society and is a step in the direction of prohibition.

In the construction of any statute it is well to keep in mind the legislative intent in the enactment of such statute, and in order to ascertain the legislative intent of these two statutes it may be well to take some notice of the history of legislation pertaining to the liquor traffic in this state. Our people, in the adoption of the present Constitution in 1851 approved the fact recognized by the framers of that document that the traffic in intoxicating liquors was productive of evil by inserting as a part of Article XVIII in the schedule the following clause:

“And no license to traffic in intoxicating liquors shall hereafter be granted in this state; but the General Assembly may, by law, provide against the evils resulting therefrom

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reider-v-davis-ohctcomplscioto-1910.