State ex rel. Shaw v. Baker

32 Mo. App. 98, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 349
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 32 Mo. App. 98 (State ex rel. Shaw v. Baker) 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. Shaw v. Baker, 32 Mo. App. 98, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 349 (Mo. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The respondents move to quash the alternative writ issued herein on the ground that it states no facts which entitle the relator to the remedy he seeks.

The material facts stated in the writ, which this motion concedes to be true, are substantially as follows :

The city of Rolla is a municipal corporation. Prior to July 4, 1888, and on said date, certain ordinances were laws governing said corporation. One of said ordinances provided that the tax for a dram-shop license should be seventy-five dollars. Another of said ordinances provided that, “No action, prosecution, suit, or proceeding, pending at the time any ordinance or part of any ordinance shall be repealed, shall be affected in any way by such repeal, but any such action, prosecution, suit, or proceeding shall proceed in all respects as if such ordinance or part of ordinance had not been repealed.”

The relator on the faith of these ordinances applied for a dram-shop license. As the law-required that he should have a state and county, license as well as one from the city, he applied for the former first, July 4, 1888, and such license was granted to him by the county [101]*101court upon execution of the statutory bond and the’payment of $282.45, July 5, 1888. On the same day he filed his application for a city license accompanied by the proper bond and a tender of the seventy-five dollars tax required by the existing ordinance. It was thereupon moved in the council that the license be granted him, but while this motion was pending and undetermined, the city council passed another ordinance, which was approved by the mayor, raising the city dram-shop tax from seventy-five dollars to three hundred dollars, and after the approval of this ordinance the council refused to grant a license to relator unless he paid the three hundred dollars tax as required by the new ordinance.

It is conceded by the written motion that the relator .is a man of good moral character, and has complied with all the requirements of the state and municipal law in force when he made application for the city license.

The respondents argue that the granting of fi license confers no contract rights, but simply a privilege which may be revoked at any time by the same authority that gave it. If this argument is intended to convey the idea that the privilege may be abrogated at any time without sufficient cause, then it is opposed to the decisions in this state. City of Hannibal v. Guyott, 18 Mo. 515; McElhany v. McHenry, 26 Mo. 174.

The license is certainly a mere privilege, but while it is exercised in strict compliance with the applicatory police regulations, it is within the protection of the law, and to that extent at least equivalent to a contract right.

The respondents further argue that the granting of a license by the city council is discretionary, and this discretion is not subject to the control of the courts'. This is unquestionably true, but the argument loses sight of the fact that where, as here, all elements bearing upon the question of discretion are eliminated from the case, the question resolves itself into one of legal [102]*102duty, which may be enforced by mandamus. State ex rel. v. Meyers, 80 Mo. 601.

The only remaining question is whether relator’s application for a license was a proceeding so as to be within the purview of the ordinance of the city of Rolla, above recited. The spirit of the ordinance, as well as fair dealing between the parties, requires that we should hold that it was such a proceeding. It is conceded that the relator made his application on the faith of existing ordinances. It is upon faith of these that he gave his bond to the 'state and paid $282.45 to the state and county. This money is wholly lost to him unless he can obtain a city license, as a state and county license without a similar license from the city is worthless, and we are aware of no provision of law which would enable him to recover the amount paid under the circumstances. He used due diligence in applying at once to the city authorities, who, it seems, held his application in abeyance for the very purpose of exacting a higher tax. It is not denied that the city, in the absence of any legal limitation, could exact by its ordinances even a prohibitory tax on dram-shop licenses, but there is no difference in principle between its making such increased tax applicable to a license granted in part, the application for its consummation being then pending before it, and between making it applicable to licenses in full force. It certainly will not be claimed that the latter could be done under the decisions in this state.

This disposes of all questions arising upon the record. As the parties have stipulated that final judgment may be entered on the motion, in conformity with the views of the court, it is ordered that the motion to quash the alternative writ be overruled, and that the writ against respondents be made peremptory.

Peers, J., concurs; Thompson, J., absent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Mo. App. 98, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-shaw-v-baker-moctapp-1888.