State Ex Rel. Patterson v. Longpre & Cameron

251 P. 468, 35 Wyo. 482, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 28
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1926
Docket1280
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 P. 468 (State Ex Rel. Patterson v. Longpre & Cameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Patterson v. Longpre & Cameron, 251 P. 468, 35 Wyo. 482, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 28 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinion

*485 Blume, Justice.

This is an action brought by the State of Wyoming on relation of George W. Patterson, County and Prosecuting Attorney of Albany County, Wyoming, against Longpre and Cameron, a co-partnership, and against the members of said co-partnership individually, and against Anna E. Tegner, owner of the premises hereinafter mentioned, for the purpose of abating a liquor-nuisance on the premises known as the Antlers Bar in Laramie, Wyoming. After trial of the case, the court found the existence of a nuisance and rendered judgment on June 6, 1924, abating it, but authorizing the owner of said premises to resume possession and occupancy thereof upon filing a bond in the sum of $500 conditioned as required by law. From the judgment so entered the said partnership and the members thereof individually have prosecuted an appeal to this court — the owner of said premises, however, not joining in such appeal. A bond staying execution was given in the sum of $500.

1. A motion was filed in the lower court to have the petition made more definite in certain respects. A demurrer also was filed, on the ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The record fails to disclose any ruling on either the motion or demurrer and we cannot, accordingly, consider *486 them, although we can still consider the question as to whether or not the facts alleged in the petition constitute a cause of action against the appellants. But it is merely claimed that the petition is fatally defective because it fails to allege that Anna E. Tegner, the owner of said premises, had any knowledge of the existence of the nuisance on the premises above mentioned. She has not appealed, and the appellants herein are not entitled to urge any errors which affect only their co-party who is not before the appellate court complaining thereof. 4 C. J. 698. It is not claimed that the petition does not state sufficient facts so as to allege a nuisance, kept by appellants, but counsel rather concedes the contrary. And no question, accordingly, as to the sufficiency of the petition remains for our consideration. We might say, however, that where the petition states facts sufficient to allege a liquor nuisance, as is substantially admitted to be true in this ease, it would be immaterial whether the prosecuting attorney of Albany County believed that he was bringing the action under chapter 87 or under chapter 117, Session Laws of Wyoming, 1921. Tucker v. State of Wyoming, ex rel. Snow, 251 Pac. 460, decided this day.

2. Testimony was admitted in the case to the effect that the general reputation of the Antlers Bar, aforesaid, was that of a place where intoxicating liquors might be procured, and it is argued that such testimony was improperly admitted. The point has become increasingly important, and perhaps pressing, since the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and the passage of the National Volstead Act and similar laws in the various states. Section 3 of chapter 87, Sessions Laws of 1921 — that chapter relating, among other things, to the abatement of nuisances caused by prostitution, gambling and storing of liquor — provides:

*487 “The action when brought shall be triable at the first term of court, after due and timely service of the notice has been given, and in such action evidence of the general reputation of the place shall be admissible for the purpose of proving the existence of said nuisance. ’ ’

¥e have held, however, in the case of Tucker v. State ex rel. Snow etc., decided this day, that the provisions of chapter 87, aforesaid, were repealed by chapter 117, supra, in so far as they relate to liquor nuisances. And the provisions of section 3, chapter 87, above quoted, are so closely interwoven with the other provisions of that chapter that they also must be held to have been repealed in so far as they may relate to such liquor nuisances. Chapter 117, supra, which was copied closely after the National Volstead Act, does not provide for the introduction of testimony relating to such reputation, and we must, accordingly, determine as to whether or not such testimony is admissible without any statutory provisions on that subject. The courts of Oklahoma have uniformly held that it is. Titsworth v. State, 2 Okla. Crim. 282, 101 Pac. 288; Ostendorff v. State, 8 Okla. Crim. 360, 128 Pac. 143; Wilkerson v. State, 9 Okla. Crim. 663, 132 Pac. 1120; Caffee v. State, 11 Okla. Crim. 263, 145 Pac. 499, Cameron v. State, 13 Okla. Crim. 692, 167 Pac. 339. The ruling of the Montana Supreme Court is to the same effect; State v. Mercier, 70 Mont. 333, 225 Pac. 802, the court saying upon that point:

“Error is predicated upon the ruling of the trial court, permitting the State to introduce evidence that the general reputation of the boarding house was that of a place where intoxicating liquors were kept and sold illegally. The overwhelming Aveight of authority sustains the ruling. ’ ’

*488 And in Ryan v. United States, (C. C. A.) 285 Fed. 734, tbe court, in making the same ruling, simply said:

“The defendants were all charged with maintaining a nuisance, and there was no error in permitting the government to prove that the reputation of the premises maintained by them was bad. ’ ’

See also Chamberlain, Modern Law of Evidence, sec. 745; Blakemore on Prohibition, page 248. Most, if not all, of the other cases holding such testimony admissible have been decided under a statute expressly authorizing it. The Oklahoma cases and the Montana case above mentioned apparently admit such testimony upon the same theory upon which many courts have admitted it for the purpose of proving a place to be one of ill fame, or a disorderly house. Other authorities, on the contrary, hold such testimony inadmissible to establish the existence of a nuisance, especially where, as in this state, the statute requires the nuisance to be one in fact. One of the first cases on that subject is Commonwealth v. Stewart, 1 S. & R. (Penn.) 342, decided in 1815. In that case the defendant was charged with permitting men and women to drink on his premises and misbehave themselves so as to cause a common nuisance. The court ruled that testimony of general complaints by the neighbors was not admissible for the purpose of establishing the nuisance. In the case of Commonwealth v. Hopkins, 2 Dana (Ky.) 418, decided inU834, the defendant was indicted as a common gambler, and it was held that evidence that he was such by reputation was not admissible. Citing these two authorities, section 186 of volume 3 of Greenleaf on Evidence — dealing with the subject of nuisances — states as follows:

“In proof of the charge, evidence must be adduced to show, first, that the act complained of was done by the defendant. # * * Second, that it was to the common *489 injury of tbe public and not a matter of mere private grievance, and this must be shown as an existing fact and not by evidence of reputation.”

In 1859, the point was before the court in Warner v. Brooks, 14 Gray (80 Mass.) 107, and the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 468, 35 Wyo. 482, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-patterson-v-longpre-cameron-wyo-1926.