Severance v. Murphy

46 S.E. 35, 67 S.C. 409, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 20, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 35 (Severance v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Severance v. Murphy, 46 S.E. 35, 67 S.C. 409, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 180 (S.C. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion in this case was filed June 30, 1903, but remittitur held up until

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The defendants, constituting the board of control of Williamsburg County under the dispensary law, had printed in The County Record, a newspaper published at Kingstree, the following notice:

“All voters in Lee Township, county of Williamsburg, State of South Carolina, are hereby notified that application has been made to the county board of control of said county of Williamsburg for the location of a dispensary at Scranton, in Lee Township, and one at Lake City, in Lee Township, both in the county of Williamsburg, State of South Carolina, and that petitions for and against the location of said dispensaries will be received by the undersigned, county board of control, for twenty days from date hereof.
“(Signed) R. A. Murphy, Chairman,
S. M. McCeary,
P. G. Gourdin,
County Board of Control.”
“May 22, 1902-4t.”

This notice was given under section 563 of Criminal Code (section 7 of dispensary law of 1896), which, for a proper understanding of this discussion, it is necessary to set out in full. After amendment by the act of February, 1902, this section reads as follows:

“There may be one or more county dispensers appointed *414 for each county, the place of business of each of whom shall be designated by the county board, but the state board of directors must give consent before more than one dispenser can be appointed in any county; and when the county board designates a locality for a dispensary, twenty days’ public notice of which shall be given, it 'shall be competent for a majority of the voters of the township in which such dispensary is to be located to prevent its location in such township by signing a petition or petitions, addressed to the county board, requesting that no dispensary be established in that township. The county board may in its discretion locate a dispensary elsewhere than in an incorporated town in the counties of Beaufort and Horry, and no others, except such as are authorized by special act of the General Assembly: Provided, however, That any county, town or city wherein the sale of alcoholic liquors was prohibited by law prior to July 1, 1893, may secure the establishment of a dispensary within its borders in the following manner: Upon petition signed by one-fourth of the qualified voters of such county, town or city wishing a dispensary therein being filed with the county supervisor or town or city council, respectively, they shall order an election submitting the question of dispensary or no dispensary to the qualified voters of such county, town or city, which election shall be conducted as other special elections; and if a majority of the ballots cast be found and declared to be for a dispensary, then a dispensary may be established in said county, town or city: Provided, That dispensaries may be established in the counties of Williamsburg, Pickens and Marion, and at Seneca and other towns now incorporated in Oconee County, without such election, on compliance with the other requirements of this chapter: Provided, That nothing in this chapter contained shall be so construed as to prohibit persons resident in counties which shall elect to have no> dispensary from procuring liquors from dispensaries in other counties, or county dispensers from shipping same to1 their places of residence under proper labels or certificates: Provided, further, That *415 nothing in this chapter shall be construed to repeal an act entitled ‘An act to allow the opening of dispensaries in Pickens and Oconee Counties,3 approved December 18th, 1894.”

Upon publication of this notice, this action was instituted by the plaintiffs, residents of the town of Lake City, in Lee Township, to enjoin the defendants from taking any further steps to establish a dispensary in Lee Township. The complaint rests, first, on the allegation that the section above quoted is unconstitutional, in so far as it provides, “That dispensaries may be established in the counties of Williams-burg, Pickens and Marion, and at Seneca and other towns now incorporated in Oconee County, without such election, on compliance with the other requirements of this chapter,” on the grounds, that the immunities and privileges of the citizens of Williamsburg and the counties mentioned with it are thereby abridged, and that this provision denies to the citizens of the counties named the equal protection of the laws accorded by the dispensary law to the citizens 'of other counties; and that inasmuch as this portion of the section is not uniform in its operation throughout the State, it is special legislation, contravening subdivision 11, of section 34, of article III., of the Constitution. The second proposition of the complaint is that “said notice was fatally defective, in that the board did not designate a locality in said Lee Township, but merely gave notice that in the future that they might make such designation, but whether they would or not, was left uncertain; and the board has never otherwise designated a locality for the establishment of a dispensary in Lee Township, and given twenty days’ public notice thereof; that the said notice was also defective in that the same did not specify, as required by law, the building, giving street and number or location, in which the dispensary was to be carried on at Lake City, in said township.” The defendants demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

*416 1 *415 His Honor, Judge Dantzler, sustained the constitutionality of the provision of the section of the dispensary law *416 above quoted relating to Williamsburg and other counties included with it, upon reasoning so clear and conclusive that we shall not attempt to strengthen it. He held, however, that the notice was fatally defective, and on this ground permanently enjoined the defendants from taking further proceedings towards establishing a dispensary in the town of Lake City, in Lee Township. In this we think he was in error.

2 The portion of the section now under consideration provides, “and when the county board designates a locality for a dispensary, twenty days’ public notice of which shall be given, it shall be competent for a majority of the voters of the township in which such dispensary is to be located to prevent its location in such township by signing a petition or petitions, addressed to the county board, requesting that no dispensary be established in that township.” The word “designate,” as here used, certainly does not mean that the board shall name a place where they have determined to establish a dispensary, for the law contemplates no conclusion or even intention upon the part of the board until the majority of the voters have had twenty days to prevent its establishment by petition.

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Related

Horton-Hughes Furniture Co. v. Broad Street Hotel Co.
95 S.E. 373 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1918)
Murph v. Landrum
56 S.E. 850 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1907)
State Ex Rel. Schroder v. Burns
52 S.E. 960 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 35, 67 S.C. 409, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/severance-v-murphy-sc-1903.