State ex rel. Columbia Club v. McMaster

14 S.E. 290, 35 S.C. 1, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 7, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 290 (State ex rel. Columbia Club v. McMaster) 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
State ex rel. Columbia Club v. McMaster, 14 S.E. 290, 35 S.C. 1, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 125 (S.C. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

The Columbia Club, relator, is a duly incorporated organization for social and literary purposes, with power to make such rules and regulations as they shall deem proper. The club rooms are situated in the city of Columbia, used exclusively by the members, andaré intended to provide for them a place where they, at small cost, can have and enjoy the privacy and privileges of a well conducted home, together with such intercourse and amusement as are consistent with the rules and objects. And to this end they established the following rules and regulations: A small library is provided and furnished with the periodicals and literature of the day. The club is governed by a president, a vice president, arid a managing committee, who are elected by the club. Among the duties of the managing committee is to provide the necessary accommodations, servants, &c., for the members, and to have a general supervision of the affairs of the club. Before any person can become a member of the club, he is required to be recommended by at least three active members, his name passed upon by the managing committee, and submittéd to the club for election. All members (except honorary, limited to seven in number, and to which only distinguished citizens of the State or of the United States are eligible), are required to pay an initiation fee and monthly or annual dues, from which sources the club is maintained. That is to say, each resident member pays an initiation fee of fifty dollars and a monthly assessment of two dollars; each non-resident, a fee upon initiation of twenty dollars and annual dues of ten dollars; a temporary member, a fee of ten dollars for three months. The membership now and at all times hereafter not to exceed one hundred and four (104) members of all classes.

It seems that among the refreshments purchased and kept on hand, with the funds of the members obtained as aforesaid, the [11]*11managing committee from time to time provides a small quantity of liquors and cigars, which are in the keeping of said committee, and are distributed to the members as they require the same by the servants of the club, the members placing an amount of money, equivalent to the cost price of the article or proportion thereof so furnished, which amount is fixed by the managing committee, and is not intended for profit, but solely to cover the cost thereof, and is expended to replace the articles so consumed; but as matter of fact the same does not cover the cost, but it is necessary to maintain the articles aforesaid to use a portion of the annual dues and assessments for this purpose, &c.

On February 14, 1891, the club, by its officers, was summoned to appear before the Hon. F. W. McMuster, mayor of the city of Columbia, to answer to the charge of “doing business without a license,” in violation of an ordinance of the city. The officers of the club appeared and denied the charge and the jurisdiction of the court in the premises. The city council, however, pronounced judgment against the club, and sentenced it to pay a fine of twenty dollars, and unless the same, together with an alleged license fee of $200, was paid by February 27, then instant, ordered the chief of police to close the rooms of the club. Thereupon the relator club petitioned the Court of Common Pleas for a writ of prohibition to restrain the mayor and all officers acting under him from proceeding further in the premises, upon the grounds.that said action of the municipal court was without jurisdiction, that the city had not imposed any license fee or tax upon, the club, and in fact has no rightful authority to do so, and that the sentence of the court was wholly without authority of law.

The mayor was ordered to show cause why the writ should not be granted. The application was heard by his honor, Judge Hudson, who, among other things, found as follows, viz.: “The object of the club was not to make profit out of the liquors, but merely to cover the cost price, and thus to replenish the stock ; nor was the purpose to evade the laws either of the city or State, but the association is bona fide and governed by rules and regulations as judicious and stringent as those of similar clubs in the cities of other States. So far as the aims, objects, purposes, rules, and regulations of the club are concerned,' there is no dispute. [12]*12Nothing is alleged, nor was anything attempted to be proved, derogatory to the membership or conduct of the club, but all was conceded that would allow to it a constitution and standing as free from condemnation as any similar society in any city of the land,” &c. His honor, however, held that the admitted facts “constitute a sale of liquors bjr the club,” and it was liable to pay a license fee of $200 to the city of Columbia, and therefore dismissed the petition.

The club appeals to this court, alleging error on the part of the Circuit Judge, upon the following among other grounds : 1. Because the city has no power to impose a license fee or tax upon social organizations, such as the relator. 2. Because the city has not imposed a license fee or tax upon said organization. 3. Because the sentence of the municipal court is without jurisdiction and void, in that it is not authorized by any ordinance of the city, and imposes a greater punishment than its charter allows.

The question whether social clubs, which raise the means by contribution and then distribute refeshments among its own members, are liable to a license tax for retailing spirituous liquors, has been considered by many of the courts of the country, both in England and America. The cases seem not to be in accord. We have examined many of them in the hope of being able to reconcile them, but have found it impossible to do so. We think, however, that much of the seeming conflict arises from two causes : first, where the alleged club,- as a matter of fact, is not bona fide what it purports to be, but is a mere device to evade the law against retailing without a license. In all such cases, of course, they are liable. And, second, from the difference in the terms of the various acts upon the subject, each court construing for itself the laws and regulations of its own State. In the case before us, the difficulty first above indicated is not in our way; for it has been conceded and formally found that the Columbia Club is a bona fide social organization for the uses and purposes declared in its charter.

The question then is, whether under our laws, properly construed, the city authorities of Columbia had the right to require the Columbia Club to take out a $200 license for the year 1891, and to pay a fine of $20 for not having done so. It seems that [13]*13there are two kinds of licenses recognized: one to do some kind of business called a “business license,” and the other to retail liquor called a “liquor license.” With the former kind we have no concern here, for it is not alleged that the club, as such, is engaged in any kind of “trade, business, or profession.” We have to do only with the liquor license, and it seems that all the different provisions of our law upon that subject are collected in chapter LY.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 290, 35 S.C. 1, 1892 S.C. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-columbia-club-v-mcmaster-sc-1892.