Schwartz v. Town of Gallup

165 P. 345, 22 N.M. 521
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1917
DocketNo. 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 165 P. 345 (Schwartz v. Town of Gallup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwartz v. Town of Gallup, 165 P. 345, 22 N.M. 521 (N.M. 1917).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

ROBERTS, J.

Appellants, on the 10th day of June, 1916, were engaged in the retail liquor business in the town of Gallup, McKinley county, this state. On that date the board of town trustees of said town, at a special meeting enacted Ordinances Nos. 85 and 88. The second section of Ordinance 85, with which only we are concerned in this case, provided that on and after the 1st day of July, 191G, retail liquor dealers should pay the town of Gallup a license fee of $1,500 per annum, payable semi-annually in advance. The last clause of this section further provided that all drug stores should be considered retail dealers under this section, when selling or offering for sale liquors as above provided, except under a doctor’s prescription. Prior to the passage of this ordinance the license fee exacred from retail liquor dealers was $300 per annum.

Ordinance No. 88 required saloons to close at L3 o’clock midnight and to remain closed until 6 o’clock in the morning of any day, and' to also! close at 12 o’clock midnight of Saturday of one week and remain closed until 6 o’clock a.M. on the following Monday. The ordinance further prohibited any billiard or pool tables, chairs, tables, benches, or other furniture in any room where intoxicating liquor was sold. Winerooms were also prohibited, and likewise the use of curtains, screens, or other obstruction in the doors and windows in the lower story so that a dear and unobstructed view of the entire premises might he had from the outside. The ordinance further forbade the letting of any person into a saloon between the hour of 12 o'clock midnight Saturday night and the hour of 6 o'clock Monday morning following. Penalties were prescribed for violation of the ordinance.

On the 29th day of June, 1916, appellants filed in the district court of McKinley county their complaint, in which they sought an injunction against the town of Gallup, its officers, agents, and servants, from attempting to enforce the provisions oE the two ordinances in question. In the complaint it was alleged that the appellants had been engaged in the retail liquor business in said town for some time,- and had invested large sums of money in the purchase of Eurniturc and fixtures, and had entered into contracts and leases for buildings in furtherance of their several businesses, that each and all were the holders of license of the United States government and of the state of New Mexico, authorizing them to engage in the liquor business, and that Ordinance No. 85, which fixed the license fee at $1,500, was unjust, unreasonable, oppressive, confiscatory, and prohibitive, and that such ordinance was an attempt to levy a tax upon said business in order to raise a revenue therefrom for the general purposes of said town. It was further alleged that Ordinance No. 88 was discriminatory and a denial of-equal protection of the law to retail liquor dealers in said town, and that under the provisions of said Ordinance No. 88 all retail liquor dealers, doing business in said town were prohibited from having in their places of business any chairs, tables, pool tables, or other furniture, save and except the necessary bar and back bar, and were prohibited from having any screens, doors, curtains, or other obstructions in the front of their several places of business or in the windows or doors thereof: whereas, under the provisions of Ordinance No. 85, all drug stores within said town .were, upon the payment of the license fee exacted from liquor dealers, permitted to conduct a retail liquor house without any restrictions as to tables, chairs, curtains, etc., so that an unjust and unfair discrimination existed under said ordinance between open saloons and secret tippling places under the guise of drug stores. The complaint set forth further grounds wherein it was claimed that said ordinances discriminated against saloon keepers and in favor of drug stores engaged in the sale of liquor.

It was further alleged that neither of said ordinances was passed at any regular meeting of the board of town trustees, but both were pretended to have been passed at a special meeting held June 10,1916, and that said ordinances were not properly passed, and that said meeting was not lawfully held, no notice having been given as required by the ordinance of said town.

Appellees interposed a demurrer to the complaint which was overruled by the court, whereupon they answered admitting the passage of the ordinances in question, and alleged that they were duly and legally enacted and 'denied the other material allegations of the coinplaint. Thereafter the record evidence, showing the enactment of the ordinances in question, was submitted to the court, and later the cause was set for hearing upon the merits. When the case was called for hearing appellees filed a motion for judgment on the ground that plaintiff's complaint set up no facts which entitled them to relief in equity. This motion was sustained by the court, and judgment was entered dismissing the complaint. From this judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

[1,2] The first point urged by appellants is that Ordinances 85 and 88 were not lawfully adopted and passed by the board of trustees of the town of Gallup for two reasons: First, that Ordinance No. 4 of said town required that, whenever a special meeting of the board of trustees was deemed necessary, such meeting might be called by the chairman of the board and two members of the board, and that a written notice of the time and place of such meeting should be given to each and every member of the board, which notice was required to be served at least two hours previous to the time at which such special meeting was called to meet, which provisions were not compiled with in calling and holding the special session at which said ordinances were enacted. The second point urged is that the ordinances in question were not recorded in the book which was kept for such purpose, but that said ordinances were merely pasted in at one end, and not recorded as required by the ordinance of said town.

There is no merit in either contention stated. Every member of the board of trustees and the president were present, consented to, and participated in the meeting. Notice of a special meeting of a city council or board of trustees of a town may be dispensed with, or its necessity waived, by the presence and consent of every one of those entitled to notice. Dillon on Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) § 534. Many authorities are cited by the author in support of this proposition, and further discussion is unnecessary.

As to the second contention, it appears, and is not disputed by appellants, that ihc ordinances in question were typewritten on sheets of paper and pasted in a book kept for the purpose of recording the ordinances of said town. It is thus evident that the statute requiring town ordinances to be recorded has been complied with.

[3] The lower court held that, since the statutes of the state confer power upon the boards of trustees of towns “to license, regulate, or prohibit” the liquor traffic within the municipal boundaries, therefore the manner or extent to which the town authorities carried out this power was not subject to review by the courts as to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the enactment, or as to whether or not there had been any abuse of discretion or an arbitrary and oppressive use of the town’s authority.

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Bluebook (online)
165 P. 345, 22 N.M. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-town-of-gallup-nm-1917.