State ex rel. Hallway v. Hollrah

160 S.W. 578, 177 Mo. App. 670, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 73
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 578 (State ex rel. Hallway v. Hollrah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hallway v. Hollrah, 160 S.W. 578, 177 Mo. App. 670, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 73 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

NOE TON I, J.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition instituted here, and the writ is directed to the judges of the county court of St. Charles county.

[672]*672Relator is a dramshop keeper in the city of St. Charles. It appears that, at the regular November term of the county court of St. Charles county, and on the fourteenth day of December, 1912, the relator was granted a license as a dramshop keeper in the city of :St. Charles by the action of .the county court in that behalf then had. The county court found the plaintiff’s petition for a dramshop^ to be in all respects regular .and that a majority of those authorized to sign such petitions under the statute had affixed their signatures thereto, also that relator was a proper person to be licensed. Upon the approval of his application for a ■dramshop license, petitioner paid to the collector of St. ■Charles county the license fees assessed, took his receipt therefor, filed the necessary statements required by the statute, and executed his bond as a dramshop ■keeper, which was duly approved. In all respects the proceedings were regular, and the relator was granted •a license on his petition by the county court for six months from and after the fourteenth day of Beeem"ber, 1912 to June 11, 1913.

It appears, too, that on the thirteenth day of June, 1913, in vacation of the county court, the relator filed ■with the clerk of that court his application in writing, .as required by law, for a second license on said petition for an additional period of six months; that he paid the •collector of revenue the license tax in such cases, and •otherwise complied with the law entitling him to a license for six months as a dramshop keeper. Thereupon the county clerk proceeded to and did issue tbe relator a new license as a dramshop keeper authorizing 'him to conduct a dramshop the same as before and in ■accordance with his original petition, from the four-teenth day of dune, 1913 to the fourteenth day of December of the same year. Thereafter, on the four-teenth day of July, 1913, at the May adjourned term of ■the county court, the county clerk reported his action in that behalf to the court, in accordance with section [673]*6737207, Revised Statute 1909 ; that is to say, the clerk filed a statement with the county court to the effect that he had, in vacation, granted relator the renewal license on the original petition above referred to and the amount paid the county collector thereon for State and county purposes. But, upon presentment of such statement to it, the county court declined to recognize the validity of the dramshop license so issued by its clerk in vacation, and set the matter for trial in the court as to whether or not a new license should be issued on the original petition, as though it were competent for it in that proceeding to make an order invalidating the license issued by the clerk in vacation and inquire a second time, long after the adjournment of the term of court at which the petition was approved and original license issued thereon, into the validity of the petition and the fitness of relator as a dramshop keeper. Because the court was thus proceeding to exercise jurisdiction toward a new inquiry in that behalf and to review the action of the clerk in issuing the renewal license in vacation, and as if to annul and deny the same, the preliminary writ of prohibition was sued out here, on the theory that such court was proceeding' without jurisdiction in the premises.

It therefore appears that the question for decision relates both to the authority of the county clerk to issue the renewal license for six months, in the circumstances stated, and the power of the county court to review judicially the act of the clerk thereabout and annul or invalidate the license issued for six months by the clerk in vacation, when the dramshop keeper has complied with all of the provisions imposed by the statute and the petition has been determined sufficient and an original license issued thereon six months before.

There can be no doubt that the county court possesses power to revoke the license of a dramshop keeper under the provisions of section 7218', Revised [674]*674Statute 1909, whenever it shall be shown to the court, upon the application of any person, that such dram-shop keeper has not at all times kept an orderly house, etc. But in such proceedings to revoke the license, the dramshop keeper shall be notified in writing, according to the provisions of that section, of such application five days before the order revoking the license shall be made. Though this section reveals the county court to be possessed of supervisory power in respect of such matters and to revoke a license once issued, no such proceeding is before us here, and the question in judgment pertains alone to the validity of the license issued by the clerk in vacation, for a period of six months. This question must be determined on an interpretation of the statutes according to the legislative intent.

It is urged that the county court possessed the power to revoke and annul a license issued by its clerk in vacation, as here, and that this court has heretofore so declared in the case of State ex rel. Gumperts v. Higgins, 84 Mo. App. 531. It is true the court reviewed the' statutes as they then stood touching this question and so declared the law in that case. The statute conferring power on the county clerk to issue a license in vacation for the second six months’ period, on the original petition approved six months before by the county court, was the same then as now; but another section of the statute then appearing in the dramshop law no longer obtains. In considering the question in that case, the court laid stress upon sections 3003 and 3002 of the Revised Statutes of 1899. Section 3003 required the clerk to report all licenses issued by him in vacation on original dramshop petitions theretofore approved by the court, to the county court together with the amount paid the collector thereon, and such section is identical with section 7207, Revised Statute 1909. In other words, that statute continues the same now as in 1899. There can be no doubt that this, section of the statute, which requires the clerk to make such report [675]*675to the county court, at first view suggests the thought that the court may exercise supervisory power over the clerk in respect of granting such license. The statute referred to is as follows:

“The clerk-of the county court shall make out a statement of all such licenses, granted by him in vacation, and the amount paid the collector on each for State and county purposes, and report the same to the court at the next term after the same were granted.” [Section 7207, E. S. 1909.]

Whatever may have been the intention of the Legislature when this statute was first enacted as a companion with others since repealed, it seems that subsequent legislation repealing other sections indicates an intention on the part of the lawmakers that the clerk shall make his report to the county court forthepurpose only of enlightening that tribunal concerning the licenses granted in vacation and the amount paid the collector on each, to the end that the court may be able to supervise the financial transactions involved. We say this because two other sections of the statute, which formerly existed along with this one, and expressly empowered the county court to supervise the matter of issuing dramshop, licenses by the clerk in vacation, have been repealed by the Legislature. When the case of State ex rel. v.

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State ex rel. Verble v. Haupt
163 S.W. 532 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 578, 177 Mo. App. 670, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hallway-v-hollrah-moctapp-1913.