Riley v. Rowe

66 S.W. 999, 112 Ky. 817, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 228
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 999 (Riley v. Rowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. Rowe, 66 S.W. 999, 112 Ky. 817, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 228 (Ky. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE HOBSON

Affirming.

This case involves the construction of subdivision 4, section 3704, Kentucky Statutes, relating to the government of towns of the sixth class. It is insisted that, where a [820]*820vote has been taken under the local option law, and resulted in favor of the sale, the trustees have no discretion as to the granting of license, and must license all applicants, regardless of their moral character or of the circumstances. The provision is as follows: “The license tax to sell spirituous, vinous or malt liquors shall not be less than one hundred and fifty nor more than five hundred dollars: and no such license shall be issued or granted in any town w'here the sale of such liquors is now forbidden by law until such law be changed; may impose penalties for violations of the conditions of said license; may provide for the annulment or suspension of the license privilege for violation of the conditions of terms of license, or of the ordinances governing the same, and no license for any business or to any person shall be granted for a longer time than one year, and the granting of licenses shall be under the exclusive control of the board of trustees who may refuse to grant license in its discretion; provided, ■ that in any town of the sixth class, in which t-he question as to whether spirituous, vinous and malt liquors might or should be sold, has been since September first, one thous- and eight hundred and ninety-two, or shall hereafter be submitted to the voters thereof, and the majority of votes cast thereat Avere or shall' be in favor of the sale of such liquors therein, then the said board of trustees of such town shall have no right, power, privilege or discretion to refuse to grant licenses to sell such liquors therein until another election is held therein as provided by general laws and a majority of the voters of said town have voted against the sale of suah liquors.” The language, “then the said board of trustees of said town shall have no right, power, privilege or discretion to refuse to grant licenses to sell such liquors therein until another election [821]*821is held,” - etc., does not aptly convey the idea that the trustees are to have no discretion as to what applicants shall be licensed. The terms used simply deny them power “to refuse to grant licenses.” That this was all the Legislature had in mind seems clear from the other provisions of the statutes adopted by the same General Assembly. It has long been a settled legislative policy in the State to regúlate the sale of spirituous liquors, and to grant license only to persons of good character at such places as were reasonably suitable, and in such numbers as the public service probably required. Experience has shown that the selling of whisky by persons of bad character is especially injurious to the' community, and most likely to bring about fraud and imposition on' those who drink. It has also been shown by experience that the multiplication of saloons beyond the demands of the community also leads to bad results. Therefore', as in the statutes that had long before existed in the State, by sec-ion 4203, Kentucky Statutes, no license shall be granted if' the majority of the legal voters in the neighborhood protest against it, nor to any person of bad character who does not keep an orderly, law-abiding house. These provisions apply outside of incorporated cities and towns. But in ithe acts for the government of cities of the first, second, third and fourth classes substantially similar provisions are made. Thus, by section 3033, Kentucky Statutes, no license shall be granted to sell liquor in any precinct if the retailing of liquor at the place named will be injurious to the people thereof, ór if a majority of them protest against it. In the second, third, and fourth classes discretion is conferred on the legislative board of the cities in general terms'. In the act governing cities of the fifth class there is a provision substantially similar to [822]*822that above quoted as to towns of the sixth class. See section 3687, subsec. 4, Kentucky Statutes. P>ut in the act for the government of towns of the fifth and sixth .classes large discretionary powers for legislative purposes are vested in the city council or board of trustees, and it would not seem that in the section quoted the Legislature had in mind taking away the discretion from the city authorities in these two classes of 'towns of determining to whom a license should be granted — a power they had always exercised and is confessedly conferred in all other •cases on the authorities entrusted with' the power of licensing applicants. It will be observed that in the body .of the section these words are used: “The granting of licenses shall be under the exclusive control of the board •of trustees, who may refuse to grant licenses.” Then follows the proviso that, where a; vote is taken under the local •option law, and is .in favor of the sale, “then the said board of trustees of such town shall have no right, power or privilege or discretion to refuse to grant licenses to sell .such liquors therein until another election is held therein as provided by general laws and a majority of the voters of said town have voted against- the sale of such liquors.” The purpose of the proviso is to limit the gteneral discretion conferred by the preceding words, and .to require the trustees to conform to the popular will by issuing licenses so long as it remains unchanged. Previous to the taking of the vote the sale of intoxicants had not been prohibited in the town. When a vote is taken under the local option law, resulting in favor of the sale in a community in which the sale has not been prohibited, the effect of the vote is simply that the people decline by this vote to put the local option law in effect. The vote in favor of the sale does mot have the effect to vest in, everybody the right to open [823]*823and run a saloon who will pay the license fee, regardless of his fitness, or the judgment of the trustees as to the necessity of the saloon or the wishes of the neighborhood. The vote only settles the question that they must issue licenses. They have no discretion to refuse to grant licenses; that is, to license nobody. The trouble the Legislature had’in mind in adding the proviso was that in some communities, after the people had voted for the sale, the trustees arbitrarily undertook to defeat the popular will by refusing the license to all applicants. This the- Legislature forbade. But neither the language used nor the context requires the construction that they were to license all applicants without regard to their character, the needs of the community, or the wishes of the neighborhood in which the saloon was to be located. If they had meant to make such a radical change in the existing law, instead of saying that the trustees shall have no right “to refuse to grant licenses” they would have used other language sufficient to convey that idea to the common understanding. The denial of “discretion to refuse to grant licenses” naturally means no more than that the trustees must grant licenses after the vote has been taken and has resulted in favor of the sale. But it leaves unaffected the discretion vested in the trustees for the welfare of the ■town to determine who is a proper applicant to whom license should be granted. A discretionary power of this character, which is necessary for the well-being of the town, should not be deemed taken away, except by the clearest language, especially where it has been a settled legislative policy to vest it in the officers granting such licenses; and this policy is contingent las to.

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Related

Miller v. Hoblitzell
271 S.W.2d 899 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1954)
Schwierman v. Town of Highland Park
113 S.W. 507 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1908)
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101 S.W. 944 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1907)
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80 S.W. 1158 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 999, 112 Ky. 817, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-rowe-kyctapp-1902.