State ex rel. Kleinschmidt v. Jones

209 S.W. 876, 277 Mo. 71, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 1, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 876 (State ex rel. Kleinschmidt v. Jones) 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 rel. Kleinschmidt v. Jones, 209 S.W. 876, 277 Mo. 71, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 7 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Upon a division of opinion in the St. Louis Court of Appeals, this case was duly certified to this court in pursuance of constitutional provisions. By a sufficient petition, the prosecuting attorney of Jefferson County sought to enjoin the defendant from further running and maintaining a wholesale liquor house in a little place called Melzo in his county. Defendant was a licensed wholesale dealer in liquors under the Act of 1917, p. 318. The temporary injunction upon trial and hearing was made permanent, and defendant appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, from whence the case comes here as above indicated.

Melzo seems to be a one man’s place. It is located between the City of De Soto in Jefferson County, and Bonne Terre in St. Francois County. Its location is on a public road, about midway between the two towns. Jefferson County is “wet” and St. Francois Coanty is “dry,” and Melzo is not far from the county line. Melzo seems to be made up of a store and post-office, both run by defendant, Jones, and this liquor house is likewise owned and run by Jones. The evidence would indicate that there was another wholesale house some-, where within the neighborhood, but not at Melzo.

The petition in this case states facts sufficient to show that the maintenance of this wholesale house constituted a public nuisance, although there are many allegations therein which only go to indicate the viola[75]*75tion of criminal laws. Measured by the usual tests, the petition sufficiently charges the maintenance of a public nuisance.

The trouble with this case is the lack of evidence. There is evidence which shows that defendant sold liquor in less quantities than by the law and his license he was permitted to do. There is some slight evidence that there was, at the times indicated by a witness or two, some gambling of a minor nature. There is a little evidence of some loud talk and swearing in the place upon an occasion or two. Generally speaking the evidence shows Jones to be a reputable man, and no disorder in or about this liquor house. This comes from plaintiff’s witness, who visited the post-office, about 100 yards from the liquor house.

The great bulk of the evidence in this record is to the effect that along the public road from Melzo to Bonne Terre, men and women passed by in automobiles, apparently in their “cups.” There was a church and a school house something over a mile from, I believe a mile and a quarter, from Melzo, on the road to Bonne Terre, and these were disturbed.by these passing travelers. In instances beer bottles were thrown over into the yards, and apparently drunken remarks made to men and women near the public roadside. None of this, however, was at or near defendant’s place of business. All this was on the public.road a mile or more from the house which the State asks to be condemned as a public nuisance. The details of this evidence as to the conduct of the travelers upon the public road, far from the defendant’s place of. business, noisome as it may be, is not a matter of moment under the vital portions of the petition in this case. The petition is loosely drawn, and, contains many valueless statements of fact, but does contain a sufficient statement of facts as to the conduct of defendant’s place to make such place a public nuisance. These material allegations are not proven by the witnesses. This sufficiently outlines the case.

[76]*76injunction: of Evidence, I. That a court of equity can prevent the maintenance of a public nuisance is thoroughly established in this State. [State ex rel. v. Canty, 207 Mo. 439; State ex rel. v. Lamb, 237 Mo. 437.] This is true although some of the acts g'oing toward the creation and maintenance of the public nuisance may be acts in violation of the criminal code, and themselves punishable under the criminal law. My personal view of the law was thus expressed in the separate concurring opinion in Ex parte Laymaster, 260 Mo. l. c. 621:

“I adhere strictly to the rule announced in State ex rel. v. Canty, 207 Mo. 439, and State ex rel. v. Lamb, 237 Mo. 437. I do not understand those cases to say that a court of equity will enjoin a crime, but they do announce the doctrine that when a given state of facts shows a public nuisance, them a court of equity will enjoin the doing of the acts which make up and constitute the public nuisance, although such acts or some of them may within themselves be crimes.”

The sale of liquor in violation of law is a crime, but equity will not enjoin the sale. This will be left to the courts of law. But unlawful sales of liquor may be at such places and under such facts and circumstances, as to make the whole thing a public nuisance. It is then, and only then, that equity will intervene and abate the nuisance. But the evidence must show such surrounding circumstances and facts as will constitute the maintenance of the place of sale a public nuisance. Merely showing that there are violations of law in the sales, by selling less than the license to sell authorized, does not make a public nuisance. In the instant case there was no substantial evidence upon which a court of equity could say that, outside- of sales of liquor in violation of law, the conduct of the place, or the persons frequenting the place, were of such character as to make the place a public nuisance. The record will be read in vain for such evidence.

[77]*77That defendant conducted Ms place in as orderly-manner as is usual for a liquor house to be conducted, is clear from this record. The character of his customers is not assailed further than they no doubt bought and drank liquor. The State licensed the defendant to mate proper sales to just such persons, and without further showing than here made the State cannot enjoin in equity. Had the evidence shown some of the extravagant charges in the bill as to the conduct of the defendant’s place of business, we would have a different case. But it does not.

Noises?01*1001* II. We have indicated, and the record shows, that persons, both men and women, passed along this public Mghway, apparently under the influence of liquor. The witnesses who saw them did not know 'where they got their liquor. Nor is it very material so far as this case is concerned. It might be conceded that they bought of defendant, and the status of the case would not be changed.

Defendant was licensed to sell and every traveler seen by the witnesses might have bought their liquor from him in quantities authorized by law. Defendant was not chargeable with the conduct of his customers after they left his place of business. If such customers' stopped by the roadside and over-indulged their appetites, and thereby became boisterous as they further proceeded upon their journey, such facts do not make the licensed house of the sales a public nuisance.

In a case upon very similar facts, State ex rel. v. Moffett, 194 Mo. App. l. c. 290, Thimble, J., aptly says:

“With regard to the charge that the house was located at the point in question in order to evade the Local Option Law in the three adjoining counties, the evidence shows that the defendant had a legal right to sell where he did. Courts cannot question the motives of a man when he does only that which the law gives him a right to do. Besides, there is no evidence of any evasion of the Local Option Law in the said counties. The only situation in that regard, presented [78]*78by the

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Related

State ex rel. Davenport v. Henry
270 S.W.2d 88 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1954)
State Ex Rel. Burns v. Shain
248 S.W. 591 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 876, 277 Mo. 71, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kleinschmidt-v-jones-mo-1919.