State ex inf. Harvey v. Missouri Athletic Club

170 S.W. 904, 261 Mo. 576, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 17, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 904 (State ex inf. Harvey v. Missouri Athletic Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex inf. Harvey v. Missouri Athletic Club, 170 S.W. 904, 261 Mo. 576, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 271 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The circuit attorney of the city of St. Louis has instituted two original proceedings in this court in the nature of quo warranto for the purpose of forfeiting the charters of two corporations, the St. Louis Club, and the Missouri Athletic Club, because of their alleged misuse and abuse of their respective franchises in having sold, without licenses as dram-shop-keepers, intoxicating liquors, and in having violated section 7226, Revised Statutes 1909, in receiving, storing, keeping or delivering* as agents or otherwise, [586]*586of any other person, intoxicating liquors without having licenses as dramshop-keepers.

The material issues in these cases being identical, varying only' as to the manner in which the defenses are presented by counsel in each of the cases, they will be considered together.

These clubs were incorporated at different dates under what is now article 10 of chapter 33, Revised Statutes 1909, the statute authorizing the incorporation of benevolent, religious, scientific, educational and miscellaneous associations. This statute has not undergone any material change through legislation since the incorporation of these clubs; incidentally, its latitude, measured by judicial interpretation, may not inappropriately be likened to that virtue which is figuratively said to cover a multitude of sins. [1 Peter, iv, 8.]

No useful purpose will be served by setting out the pleadings at length. The informations formally charge the respondents with the abuse and misuse of their corporate powers in reference to the matters above stated, and ask a forfeiture of their charters. Their returns confess and avoid as to the charge of selling intoxicating liquors without license; and as to the alleged violation of section 7226, Revised Statutes 1909, that it is invalid, as being unconstitutional. The buildings, appointments, conditions of membership, privileges, government and exclusive restrictions of each club are set forth at length and with particularity.' It is pleaded that the matter of the right of these clubs to sell liquor without license has been adjudicated by this court in State ex rel. Bell v. St. Louis Club, 125 Mo. 308, and that the right under this decision has uninterruptedly been exercised by them since the rendition of the opinion in that case in 1894; that efforts have been made at successive sessions of the General Assembly to effect changes in the dramshop law which would require social clubs to take out dramshop licenses, and the failure or refusal of the Legislature to [587]*587enact laws of this character is a construction of the dramshop law by the State, represented by its officials, authorizing sales of liquor without license by such clubs. Whereupon, respondents plead that such failure or refusal on the part of the lawmaking power operates as an estoppel upon relator from claiming that the dramshop law applies to bona-fide social clubs; that respondents, relying upon the fact that they have' never heretofore been molested in the sale of liquors without license, or in the violation of section 7226, supra, have expended large sums of money in furnishing and equipping their club' houses, and that relator, by reason of the nonaction of the Legislature and the failure of the law officers to proceed against them for years after respondents had organized .and were in operation as social clubs, should not be heard to complain against them.

Eelator’s reply in each case is a general denial, • and in addition in one it is alleged that the suit pleaded in abatement by respondents (State ex rel. Bell v. St. Louis Club, supra) was brought by an unauthorized person and the proceedings therein were void, and that the facts in that and the instant cases are not identical, and that section 7226, supra, had not been enacted when the Bell case was determined.

Agreed statements of facts detail the character of each club as a social organization, the nature and amount of its expenditures, including the expenditures for intoxicating liquors; the nature and amount of income, including that charged to members and their nonresident guests for intoxicating liquors; the manner in which the club is governed, and numerous other matters not necessary to be set out here. As to the dispensing of liquors, practically the same plan is pursued in each club. If a member desires liquor he orders same and it is served to him in the club; on receiving it he signs a card acknowledging the receipt of same and stating the price; he makes payment for [588]*588same within a stated time thereafter. Stress is laid in each statement upon the member receiving the liquor and not paying for it at the time, and that he is not permitted, under the rules, to pay for the liquor when received, but subsequently when he pays for his supplies for the month, and as a part of such supplies; that the same prices are charged members for liquors as are required to be paid at licensed cafes and dram-shops for like goods; that the money received by respondents for liquors is mingled with the other funds and used in replenishing the stock of liquors and in purchasing other supplies; that no profit has ever been made by these clubs or paid to members. A complete statement of each club’s entire accounts for the preceding year accompanies the recital of the agreed facts.

The questions confronting us are so interrelated that their discussion, with probably some prolixity, becomes necessary to a determination of the issues involved.

Sale: Intoxicating Liquors by Incorporated Club to Members.

I. It is scarcely worth while at this day and time to consume space discussing the character of the liquor traffic, except to say that early in our judicial history Judge Napton, who may well be styled the Story of our jurisprudence, said, in Austin v. State, 10 Mo. 591, that “the sale of intoxicating liquors is by law illegal and is not a privilege of a citizen of this or any other State, and that the right to sell same can only be acquired by complying with the law. ’ ’ Thirty-five years later, with no adverse intimation in the interim, this court reiterated the doctrine announced in the Austin case, supra, and in a per curiam opinion in State ex rel. v. Hudson, 78 Mo. 302, said, in addition, that “the license fee exacted of dramshop keepers is not a tax, but a price paid for the privilege of carrying on a business detrimental to public morals, and which the Legislature in the exer[589]*589cise of its police power has the right to prohibit altogether.” And Burgess, J., in State v. Seebold, 192 Mo. l. c. 727, said: “It is fundamental that no one has a natural right to sell intoxicating liquor, because the tendency of its use is to deprave public morals, and to do so without a license from proper authority is unlawful.” (Citing cases.) So it was held in Higgins v. Talty, 157 Mo. 280, that a dramshop license was a mere permit, not a contract, between the State and the licensee, in which the latter has no vested rights, bnt is subject at all times to the police power and is revocable at any time the State may see proper to do so for any violation of the dramshop law, whether the license so provides or not.

Other opinions of this court and the courts of appeals add such'force to the doctrine announced as repetition and unvarying adherence give to any judicial declaration. The last word on the subject has been so aptly said by "Woodson, J., speaking for this court, in State v. Parker Dist. Co., 236 Mo. l. c. 255, that it may be appropriately incorporated here as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 904, 261 Mo. 576, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-harvey-v-missouri-athletic-club-mo-1914.