State ex rel. Brockett v. City of Alliance

91 N.W. 387, 65 Neb. 524, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 328
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1902
DocketNo. 12,742
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 91 N.W. 387 (State ex rel. Brockett v. City of Alliance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Brockett v. City of Alliance, 91 N.W. 387, 65 Neb. 524, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 328 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The relators prosecute error proceedings from an order of the district court for Box Butte county denying their applications for peremptory writs of mandamus against the respondents, and dismissing at their cost the three several actions brought for the purpose of obtaining such writs. By agreement of all parties in interest, the three several actions were consolidated and pro- wuted as one suit, the law and the facts being equally applicable to each, and the writs prayed for being identical, save as to the names of the relators; and the right to have the Avrits issued is based substantially on the same grounds in each application. The facts are all agreed to and stipulated in the record. The questions involved and presented to us for consideration are purely matters of Ioav. The subject of the controversy is in respect of the granting of licenses to the relators by tbe municipal authorities of the city of Alliance, a city of less than 5,000 inhabitants, to sell intoxicating liquors therein for the current fiscal year. The case presents a. tAvofold aspect, one of Avhich is whether, Avhen a city council has granted a license to sell intoxicating liquors, after full and due compliance with all of the requirements of chapter 50 of the Compile-Statutes regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors and tlw ■ordinances of the city regulating the granting of licenses, the city council may, at an adjourned, sitting, some íavo weeks later, without notice to the applicants and without giving any reason therefor, rescind and revoke its previous order granting such licenses, and reject the application. [529]*529The other question is whether, when the city council has enacted an ordinance for licensing and regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors within the corporate limits of the municipality, and is granting licenses to different applicants, it may arbitrarily and capriciously, through mere whim, favoritism, or prejudice, and without reason, or cause, discriminate against an applicant in every way admittedly qualified, and who has complied with all the requirements of law and the ordinances of the city, and against whom no objections, remonstrances or protests are presented, and refuse to grant to such applicant a license, while granting the same to others. It is argued with a degree of plausibility, and with citations of authorities of respectability in support of the position, that whether a license shall be granted to any individual rests in the discretion of the licensing authorities, and that such discretion is absolute, unlimited and beyond the control of any other power.

It appears from the stipulated facts in the case at bar that on May 6 the city council, after full compliance with all the requirements of the law on the part of the relators, entered an order granting licenses to them on their several applications, and also to three others residing in the city who were desirous of engaging in the same business. The licenses were granted after hearing, and in pursuance of an ordinance of the city duly enacted for such purpose. The city council then adjourned its meeting until the 20th of the same month. The mayor, whose duty it was, with the city clerk, to sign the licenses so granted to relators by the city council, refused to sign the same, and no formal licenses were issued. On May 20, at the adjourned meeting of the city council a motion was made to reconsider and rescind the action taken on May 6 in granting licenses to the relators; two members voting in favor, and. one against' the motion, which was declared adopted. The city council was at the time composed of four members, and the mayor as an ex-officio member; one of the councilmen being absent. No reason is assigned for the city [530]*530council’s action last taken, and none appears to exist. The action was manifestly the result of an arbitrary exercise of power by the members of the city council, who favored the motion to reconsider, so as to deprive the relators of the privilege of engaging in the business, not because there was any objection which would not apply equally to the others who had been granted a license, but from motives undisclosed; it being contended that no reason of a substantial character -was required to be assigned as a basis for the action taken. It is admitted that the relators had expended large sums of money in buying stocks of liquors and preparing to engage in the business, relying on the faith of the order of the city council of May 6 granting them licenses on their application to engage in such business. It is argued that because the meeting of the city council of May 20th was in pursuance of an adjournment of the meeting of May 6th, and no formal license had issued, the city council might properly reconsider its former action, and reject the several applications of the relators. The council could, we think, reconsider and revoke its action taken prior thereto at the same meeting, where no rights have attached, and the action taken which is sought to be reconsidered has not been acted on. Dillon, Municipal Corporations [3d ed.], sec. 290, and authorities cited. The relators were not authorized to engage in the business until licenses were issued. The money paid as license fees did not belong to the city before the licenses were issued, and to that time was subject to the order of the relators. State v. City of Lincoln, 6 Nebr., 12. Without, however, passing directly on the question first called to our attention, we pass to the second, which, in our view of the case, must finally dispose of the rights of the litigants in the present proceeding, as presented to us by the record.

This phase of the litigation is fairly presented by the issues, has been exhaustively argued by counsel, and its determination appears essential to a proper disposition of the case. It is quite important to know and determine [531]*531whether or not, in granting a license to sell intoxicating liqnors under the law of this state, the licensing authorities after they have determined to grant licenses in a particular locality or municipality have an uncontrolled and unlimited discretion, without reason or cause for the basis of the action taken, to arbitrarily grant a license to one individual and refuse to another equally well qualified, or whether the discretion reposed in them is a limited one, and must be exercised on some rational ground, as distinguished from mere caprice. In the case at bar no reason is given for the action taken by the city council in reconsidering its prior action granting the relators license to engage in the liquor traffic, and, by the stipulation of facts, no reason of a substantial character did exist as a cause for the action taken. If the discretion thus exercised is an unlimited one, then, so far as the present phase of the case is concerned, the relators are without remedy, and the action so taken is final. It is the settled law of this state, as well as in many other jurisdictions, that whether the traffic in intoxicating liquors shall be licensed by the licensing authorities of a political subdivision of the state, or the municipalities thereof, rests absolutely and entirely in the discretion of such bodies, and in the exercise of such discretionary power there is no control or limitation by any other power, State v. Cass County, 12 Nebr., 54. But may it be said that a licensing board has the same absolute discretionary power to grant to one a license, and refuse another?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 N.W. 387, 65 Neb. 524, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-brockett-v-city-of-alliance-neb-1902.