Shaw v. Police Jury of Beauregard Parish

12 So. 2d 810, 202 La. 774, 1943 La. LEXIS 929
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 8, 1943
DocketNo. 37002.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 810 (Shaw v. Police Jury of Beauregard Parish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Police Jury of Beauregard Parish, 12 So. 2d 810, 202 La. 774, 1943 La. LEXIS 929 (La. 1943).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a suit to annul an ordinance of the police jury of the Parish of Beauregard prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquor in the parish. The ordinance was adopted in consequence of a majority vote of the electors voting at a local-option election ordered by the police jury and held throughout the parish, in response to a petition of more than twenty-five per cent of the electors in the parish, under the provisions of Act No. 17 of the First Extra Session of 1935.

The plaintiffs are six electors and property taxpayers residing in the parish, and are engaged in the retail liquor business, five of them in the City of DeRidder and one in the Town of Merryville. DeRidder and Merryville are the only municipalities in the Parish of Beauregard.

The case was heard and submitted on a stipulation of facts; from which the judge decided that the election and ordinance were valid and effective to 'the extent of prohibiting the sale of any and all kinds of alcoholic or intoxicating liquor containing more than one-half of one per cent of alcohol by volume, in any part of the parish except in the City of DeRidder or in the Town of Merryville. But the judge decided that in DeRidder and Merryville the effect of the election and ordinance was merely to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors containing more than six per cent of alcohol by volume, and hence to permit the sale of liquors containing more than one-half of one per cent but not more than six per cent of alcohol by volume. The plaintiffs are appealing from the decision. The police jury, answering the appeal, prays for an amendment of the judgment so as to give the prohibition ordinance full effect inside as well as outside of the corporate limits of DeRidder and Merryville. The police jury therefore, in effect, prays for a rejection of the plaintiffs’ demand.

At the time when the twenty-five per cent of the voters in the Parish of Beauregard petitioned the police jury to call the election the parish was thoroughly wet, so to speak; that is to say, there was no prohibition of the sale of alcoholic or intoxicating liquor of any kind in the parish, or in any ward, or in either of the two municipalities. The proposition stated in the petition to the police jury and submitted to the voters throughout the parish was this:

“Shall the business of * * * selling * * * intoxicating liquors, as defined in Section 2 of Act 17 of the First Extraordinary Session of the Legislature of Louisiana of the year 1935, otherwise than when prescribed by a licensed physician as a medicine, be licensed or permitted within the corporate limits of the Parish of Beauregard, Louisiana.”

*780 The plaintiffs set up three grounds for contending that the ordinance is null. Their first complaint is that the petition in which the police jury was requested to call the election was not signed and presented as one document, but was signed and presented as eighty-four separate documents or petitions. The eighty-four documents or petitions were alike, as far as the wording was concerned, which was in typewriting and which conformed with the statute; the only difference in the several documents was that they were signed of course by different petitioners — some of the petitions being signed by only a few and others by many voters. The statute does not in terms require that only one petition shall be signed by all of the twenty-five per cent or more of the voters'in the parish. The requirement is simply that a local-option election shall be called “only upon petition of twenty-five per centum (25%) of the duly qualified voters” et cetera. Section 4. Even if the wording of the statute required “a petition” we would doubt that the intention was to require the circulating and signing of only one petition. So. long as the several copies of such a petition are substantially alike in their statement of the proposition to be submitted, and the total number of signers of all of them constitute one-fourth or more of the qualified voters of the parish, or ward or municipality, as the case may be, and are so certified by the registrar of voters, the requirements of the law in that respect are complied with. In this connec-tion the plaintiffs complain also that the eighty-four documents or petitions — together with the registrar’s certificate— were not fastened together by metal fasteners, or otherwise than by means of a rubber band around them. It ■ is not charged or intimated that the certificate of the registrar of voters was not true, or that the signers of the petition or petitions did not constitute as many as one-fourth of the qualified voters of the parish. In the absence of any such charge we must consider as being unimportant the complaint which pertains only to the form in which the petition of the voters and the certificate of the registrar of voters was presented to the police jury.

The second complaint of the plaintiffs is that, inasmuch as there are municipalities in the Parish of Beauregard, the police jury should have submitted to the voters two separate and alternative propositions, namely, (1) whether the sale of all liquors containing more than one-half of one per cent of alcohol by volume should be prohibited, or (2) whether the sale of only those alcoholic or intoxicating liquors containing more than six per cent of alcohol by volume should be prohibited.

The term “alcoholic or intoxicating liquors”, as used in the statute, is defined in section 2, and the liquors are classified there into two separate kinds or classes of. alcoholic or intoxicating liquors — :thus :

“(a) Beer, porter, ale, fruit juices, wine, or other alcoholic liquors, of an’ alcoholic content greater than one-half of one per centum of alcohol by volume, but not exceeding six per centum of alcohol by volume;
*782 “(b) Malt, vinous, spiritous, alcoholic, or intoxicating liquors containing more than six per centum of alcohol by volume.”

Immediately following this classification of alcoholic or intoxicating liquors, in section 2 of the statute, is this declaration:

“That at any election held under the authority of this Act propositions in respect to the traffic in all such liquors defined in the above paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, or in respect to either those defined in paragraph (a) or those defined in paragraph (b), may be submitted to the electors.”

But the statute does not contain any provision requiring or intimating that, if the proposition to be submitted to the electors of a parish, or ward, or municipality, in which there is no prohibition against the sale of any kind of intoxicating liquor, is to prohibit the, sale of all liquors containing more than one-half of one per cent of alcohol by volume, there must be submitted at the same time the alternative proposition to prohibit only the sale of the strong kind of alcoholic or intoxicating liquors, defined in paragraph (b) as “liquors containing more than six per centum of alcohol by volume.” It was decided in the case of Pennix v. Webster Parish Police Jury, 188 La. 902, 178 So.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 810, 202 La. 774, 1943 La. LEXIS 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-police-jury-of-beauregard-parish-la-1943.