Ruehl v. State

100 A. 75, 130 Md. 188
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 100 A. 75 (Ruehl v. State) 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
Ruehl v. State, 100 A. 75, 130 Md. 188 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant in this case was indicted, tried and convicted in the Circuit Court for Allegany County for the sale of intoxicating liquors without having first obtained the additional license required by Chapter 594 of the Acts of 1916.

*190 Tbis Act, including tbe title, is as follows:

“An Act to add a new section to Article 56 of tbe Annotated Code of' Maryland, title ‘Licenses,’ said section to follow immediately after section 89 of said Article, to be sub-titled ‘Additional License Fees for ■ tbe State,’ to be known as section 89A, and providing for increasing tbe license fees for the sale of liquors in eacb of tbe counties, cities (including tbe City of Baltimore), towns and villages of tbis State, any saloons and restaurants, wholesale liquor dealers and jobbers, bottlers and hotels, and for the payment of tbe increases provided for to tbe Treasurer of tbe State, for tbe general purposes of tbe State.
“Section 1. Beit enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland, That a new section be and tbe same hereby is added to Article 56 of tbe Annotated Code of Maryland, titled ‘Licenses,’ said section to follow immediately after section 89 of said Article, to be subtitled ‘Additional License Fees for tbe State,’ to be known as section 89A, and to read as follows:
“Additional License Fees for the State.
“89A. Tbe license fees now provided by law for tbe issuing of licenses for tbe sale, by retail or wholesale, as tbe ease may be, in eacb of the counties, cities (including tbe City of Baltimore), towns and villages of tbis State, of distilled, fermented, spirituous or malt liquors, or any mixture thereof, shall be increased in eacb of tbe following cases by tbe following amounts: “Eacb saloon, or restaurant, in addition to tbe license fee,now required, shall pay an additional one hundred dollars ($100.00) eacb year.
“Eacb wholesale liquor dealer or jobber, in addition to tbe license fee now required, shall pay an additional one hundred dollars ($100.00) each year.
“Eacb bottler, in addition Jto tbe license fee now required, shall pay an additional one hundred dollars ($100.00) eacb year.
“Eacb hotel having not more than two hundred rooms, in addition to tbe license fee now required, *191 shall pay an additional two hundred and fifty dollars ($250.00) each year.
“Each hotel having more than two hundred rooms, in addition to the license fee now required, shall pay an additional five hundred dollars ($500.00) each year.
“The additional license fees hereby provided for shall be due and payable at the same time or times that the license fees now existing are by law required to be paid in each of the counties, cities (including the City of Baltimore), towns and villages of this State, and shall be payable to the same local officials, and shall be subject to the same penalties for non-payment, and shall be disposed of as other license fees now provided by law for the issue of licenses- for the sale by retail or wholesale, as the case may be, of distilled or spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, or any mixture thereof!’

The. sole question presented by the demurrer to the indictment is whether the act contravenes section 29 of Article 3 of the State 'Constitution, which provides that “each law enacted by tbe General Assembly shall have but one subject and that shall be described in its title.”

Upon examination of tbe Act, it will be seen that the title provides that the “additional license fees” are to be paid to the Treasurer of the State, for the general purposes of the "State, while the body of the Act provides that such fees “shall be disposed of as other’ license fees now provided by law,” etc.

Tbe disposition of “other license fees/’ collected in the City of Baltimore and in certain countiesi, towns and villages of the1 State, is regulated and controlled by the statutes in force in said localities!, respectively. In several of the counties. all of such fees collected therein are payable to the State, for the use of the State while in the City of Baltimore and In other counties, towns, and villages, of the State only a part thereof are paid to the State for such purpose.

*192 For instance, in Allegany County one-half of such fees is paid to the State for the use of the State while-in the City of Baltimore and in Baltimore County only one-fourth thereof is paid to the State for such purpose, and in other counties, towns and villages of the State, only a part of such fees are paid to the State for the use of’ the State.

It is contended by the appellant that because of the fact that all of said license fees are, by the title of the Act, to be paid to the State for the use of the State, while by the body of the Act, only a part of such fees collected in the City of Baltimore and in certain counties, towns and villages of the State is payable to the State for such purpose, the Act is void, in that it contravenes the aforesaid constitutional provision.

In its passage through the Senate the original bill was amended by striking out the words “but the said additional license fees hereby imposed shall in each and every case be paid over quarterly by the local official collecting them to the Treasurer of the State, to be used wholly for the general purposes of the State, and no part thereof shall be remitted to or be used for the purposes of any county, city, town or village. This section shall not affect in any way the disposition or application now required to be made of the license fees now existing, but shall only affect the disposition or application of the increases1 in such fees hereby imposedand inserting therein in lieu thereof the words., “and shall be disposed of as. -other license fees now provided by law for the issue of licenses for the sale by retail or wholesale, as the case may be, of distilled or spdritous, vinous, malt liquors or any mixture thereof.” These latter words are found italicized in the Act as we have quoted it. The amendment also excluded “wholesale druggists” from the provisions of the Act.

The bill as amended was thereafter passed by both branches of the Legislature, and was duly signed by the Governor.

Had the original bill been passed as offered there could have been no question as to the validity of the Act in respect *193 of this provision of the 'Constitution. It is only because of the amendment that the question is here presented. This Court has in many cases passed upon the validity of statutes where this question has been raised and the principles of law to be applied thereto can no longer be in doubt. The difficulty is not in the ascertainment of the law, but in its application to the facts of each particular case.

It is said by Mr. Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, and cited and approved by this Court, in Fout v. Frederick Co., 105 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
100 A. 75, 130 Md. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruehl-v-state-md-1917.