State Ex Rel. Lyon v. State Dispensary Commission

60 S.E. 928, 79 S.C. 316, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 14, 1908
Docket6799
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 60 S.E. 928 (State Ex Rel. Lyon v. State Dispensary Commission) 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. Lyon v. State Dispensary Commission, 60 S.E. 928, 79 S.C. 316, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 75 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

¡The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The General Assembly, by an act approved 24th February,' 1908, appropriated the sum of $15,000, to be paid by the State Dispensary Commission out of any funds in its hands into the State Treasury for the use of the Attorney-General, in the conduct of criminal prosecutions against persons charged with violations of law connected in any manner -with the State Dispensary. For the enforcement of his official rights, Honorable J. Fraser Lyon, Attorney-General, filed his petition for mandamus on 2d March, 1908, in this Court against W. J. Murray, John Mc-Slween, C. K. Henderson, Avery Patton and B. F. Arthur, as Ae State Dispensary Commission. The petition alleges custody by the Commission of State funds sufficient to make the payment of the sum appropriated, the demand for payment by the State Treasurer, and the refusal iby the Commission to comply with his demand. The petition further alleges the payment by the Commission of the suml appropriated to be a plain ministerial duty required by statute, and its prayer *318 is for a writ of mandamus requiring -the performance of this duty. Upon this petition, the Chief Justice made an order, requiring the respondents, as the State Dispensary Commission, to show cause in this Court on 4th March, 1908, why .the mandamus- should not issue as prayed for.

The State Dispensary Commission in its return and answer admits the statute above recited requires of them the paymient of the sum therein mentioned- to the State Treasurer, 'and their custody of funds, sufficient to- meet the requirement, and the refusal- to make the payment. As justification of its refusal to comply -with the statute, the Commission alleges-: “That they are restrained and enjoined by orders of the United State 'Circuit Court for this circuit from! paying any funds into- the bands- of the State Treasurer, in two- cases, toi wit.: The case of the Wilson Distilling Co. v. W. J. Murray and others, a copy of their bill of complaint being hereto, attached and marked ‘Ekfaibit A,’ -along with the restrailring order in s-aid- case, and an amended bill that has just been filed. And further, that they are restrained by an order in the case of the Fleischmann Company v. W. J. Murray and others, a copy -of which ‘bill and restraining order and oral decision, as announced, is hereto attached and marked ‘Ekhiibit B.’ ”

The -answer sets- out that these orders of injunction were made by the Circuit 'Court of the United States, notwithstanding respondent’s plea on the following' grounds, to the j urisdietion of the Court:

1. “The funds in the hands of the ‘State Dispensary Commission,’ created by the Act of February 16, 190-7 (Acts of 1907, p. 835), belong to and are the property of the State, which has a right to control the same, ¡and which, through the said Commission, as its agent, is in possession thereof.

O. “The said ‘State Dispenary 'Commission’ is the mere agent or instrumentality of the State vested with! the ministerial function of winding up the State’s di-spensary business; selling the goods ¡and -property on- 'hand, collecting the debts due the State in connection with the said business, and hold *319 ing the proceeds for the Sítate and subject to' its right of disposition thereof. And also vested with the ministerial function- of paying, with the funds held ¡by them for said State, such of the said dlaimis- as they may, upon said investigation, find and decide to -be just liabilities of the State.

3. “The pending action is- in effect an action against the State, because it seeks to lay hold of the funds belonging to the State and in the hands of the said- Oomlmiission' as its agent, and through' the said Commission in possession of the State, and further seeks to have such fund© applied to the payment of alleged liabilities of the State.

4. “The State -can not be held to have waived its- constitutional immunity from suit by the said act creating the 'State Dispensary Commission/ except to the -extent of the remedies therein provided for and allowed toi claimants for the -collection of such debts a's may be due them by the State in connection with its- dispensary business, and, therefore, such claimants are limited to the remedies therein provided for and allowed.

5. “The -said act -creating the ‘State Dispensary Commission’ having been passed and the remedies therein provided for having been allowed as a -purely voluntary matter on the part of the Legislature of the State, the said act is subject to be repealed and the allowance of -the remedies therein provided for is subject to -be recalled at any time at the pleasure of the Legislature, and in its discretion.”

The pleadings in the -causes- in the Federal Court will not be set out in detail. It is sufficient to say the actions were brought by -the plaintiffs therein named, claiming to be creditors for liquor sold to the State Dispensary against the respondents constituting the State Dispensary 'Commission; and in those actions, the Circuit Court of the United States has made orders enjoining the respondents from disposing of, except by order of that Court, the fund of $800,000, which came into their possession as the Oomlmisision appointed and organized under the statutes of the State to wind up the State Dispensary, and contemplating the adjudication by that *320 Court of the claims of the plaintiffs and others and the compílete control of the entire fund for the satisfaction of such claims as the Court might adjudge to be just.

Replying to the return of the Commission made in this cause, the Attorney-General alleges, first: “That the petition in the case of Wilson Distilling Company et al. v. State Dispensary Commission, and the petition in the case of the Fleischmann Company v. State Dispensary Commission, together with the exhibits and orders therewith, show that the said proceeding's are suits against the State of South 'Carolina, and that the Circuit Court of the United States is- utterly without jurisdiction to, in any manner, (entertain the same, or to interfere with, or to in anjuvise restrain the action of the said Commission'and, second, “That the property and assets in the bands of the State Dispensary Commission aris - ing from the assets and property of tine late State Dispensary are the sole property of the State ¡of South Carolina, .and the affairs of the fete State Dispensary are now being concluded and Wound up under the terms, of an act of the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, approved the 16th day ¡of February, 1907, and amended by an act approved the 24th day oif February, 1906; that the Comm|ission, in dealing with the said funds, can not be controlled, nor can the disbursement or use of said funds be directed by any court in equity or otherwise, in any suit in which the State o.f South Carolina is not a party, as the interests of the State would be necessarily affected directly by any decree or judgment rendered in such' suit.”

11 From this statement of the pleadings, it is evident no issue of fact arises.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.E. 928, 79 S.C. 316, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lyon-v-state-dispensary-commission-sc-1908.