State ex rel. Hill v. Moore

84 Mo. App. 11, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 2
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 84 Mo. App. 11 (State ex rel. Hill v. Moore) 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. Hill v. Moore, 84 Mo. App. 11, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 2 (Mo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

BLAND, P, J.

A. D. Hill and ten other alleged citizens of Dexter, Stoddard county, Missouri, at the relation of the state presented their petition to the Dexter Circuit Court, praying that a writ of certiorari issue to the appellants, who are justices of the county court of Stoddard county, commanding them to bring up the record of their proceedings, by which John E. Bracken was granted a license to keep a dramshop in said town. The substantive allegations of the petition necessary to be stated in this opinion are: That the city of Dexter is a city of the fourth class and contained less than two thousand inhabitants; that petitioners are resident taxpaying citizens of said city; that requests had been made to both the Attorney-General of the state and to the prosecuting attorney of Stoddard county, to prosecute a writ of certiorari to revoke the license of Bracken, and that both had refused to do so, or to permit the use of their names in the prosecution of the writ; that the license granted ta Bracken was to keep a dramshop for one year, to be issued in periods of three months if desired. [15]*15The writ was issued aud duly served, on the defendants, who appeared and filed a motion to quash the writ on the following grounds:

1. Because said writ was improvidently issued.
2. Because plaintiff’s petition in the cause praying for the issuance of such writ does not state faets sufficient to authorize this court to review the action of defendants or the exercise of their judicial discretion in the matter complained of by relators.
3. Because relators do not show by or upon the face of their said petition that they have or possess any right to require defendants to submit their action in the behalf complained of to review by this court.
4. Because relators have no legal right to prosecute this action.
5. Because it does not appear by or upon the face of the petition by the allegations therein contained, or by reasonable intendment therefrom that these relators have suffered any special wrong, injury or grievance by the action of the defendants in this behalf, or that they will suffer any special wrong, injury or grievance by such action of defendants not common and general to all the citizens of Stoddard county.
6. Because it does not sufficiently appear from said petition that the public officers, whose duty it is to prosecute this action, have refused or declined to institute and prosecute said action.
1. Because it does not sufficiently appear from the petition filed herein, or from any exhibits filed therewith that the city of Dexter is a city containing less than two thousand inhabitants.
9. Because the petition on its face shows that relators were guilty of gross negligence and laches in applying for said writ.
[16]*1610. Because upon the whole showing of relators the writ should not have been granted.

The motion to quash was overruled, whereupon the defendants filed a duly authenticated copy of Bracken’s application for a license, the petition purporting to be signed by a majority of the taxpaying citizens and guardians of minors of the city of Dexter, asking that a license be granted to Bracken and the bond of Bracken as a dramshop keeper, together with a certified copy of the order of the county court granting the license, as and for a return to the writ. No answer was filed putting in issue any of the facts alleged in the petition, nor was there anything alleged in the return denying any of the facts recited in the writ of certiorari. The defendants rested their defense on the regularity and sufficiency of the proceedings of the county court after the overruling of their motion to quash and did not attempt to put in issue any of the allegations of the petition, which were dehors the record of the county court. The circuit court adjudged the order of the county court granting the license to be in excess of the jurisdiction of that court and quashed its proceedings and the license. Defendants have brought the cause here by writ of error.

Eor a reversal of the judgment plaintiffs in error contend, first, that the petition fails to show that the relators have any legal capacity to sue out the writ, and second that the proceedings of the county court and the order granting the license are regular and not in excess of the jurisdiction of the county court. The petition alleges that defendants in error are taxpaying citizens of the city of Dexter; that both the Attorney-General of the state and the prosecuting attorney of the county had refused to permit the application for the writ to be made in their names.

I. In State ex rel. v. Heege et al., 37 Mo. App. 338, an application for a writ of certiorari to bring up the pro[17]*17ceedings of the county court of St. Louis county granting a dramshop license, was made by taxpaying citizens of the township in which the license had been granted. The petition alleged that both the Attorney-General and the prosecuting attorney of the county had refused to permit the application to be made in their names. This court ruled that in the exercise of its discretion it would permit the taxpaying citizens to make the application, they having first protested against the grant of the license to the county court, and it being shown that permission had been refused by both the Attorney-General and the prosecuting attorney of the county to make the application in their names. Judge Thompson (who wrote the opinion), in discussing the right of taxpaying citizens to prosecute the writ in their own names, uses the following language: “Our statutes relating to dramshop licenses recognize the principle that the granting of a dramshop license is of interest to the assessed taxpaying citizens of the cities, towns or municipal townships, by making it a condition precedent to the granting of such license that the applicant shall support his application by the petition of at least a majority of the taxpaying citizens of the city, incorporated town or municipal township containing twenty-five hundred inhabitants or more; and we think we merely carry out the policy of this statute in recognizing the right of citizens of the municipality or township remonstrating against the issuing of the license to remove the record of the county court to a superintending court for the purpose of having the question determined whether it has been granted in a case within the jurisdiction of the county court.” It is insisted by plaintiffs in error that the case in hand is distinguishable from the Heege case in this, that in the latter case the relators had first remonstrated against the granting of the license, that by filing [18]*18their petition of remonstrance in the county court they in a sense became parties to the record. The language of the learned judge quoted above seems to lend some countenance to this contention, but an examination of the Dramshop Act (chap. 22, R. S. 1899), fails to disclose any right of the taxpaying citizens to file a remonstrance against the granting of dramshop licenses, or by any form of protest to become in any sense parties to the record. Such proceedings are purely ex parte. State ex rel. Reider v. Moniteau Co. Ct., 45 Mo. App. loc. cit. 394. The tendency of the sale of intoxicating liquors is to deprave public morals, and is therefore illegal. Austin v. State, 10 Mo. 591; State ex rel. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 Mo. App. 11, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hill-v-moore-moctapp-1900.