State Ex Rel. Strupp v. Anderson

206 N.W. 51, 165 Minn. 150, 1925 Minn. LEXIS 1108
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 27, 1925
DocketNo. 24,817.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 51 (State Ex Rel. Strupp v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Strupp v. Anderson, 206 N.W. 51, 165 Minn. 150, 1925 Minn. LEXIS 1108 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

*152 Stone, J.

After a summary trial before a justice of tbe peace, a conviction of unlawfully selling intoxicating liquor in the city of Bed Wing and a sentence to imprisonment for 60 days, the relator procured a writ of habeas corpus from the district court. Upon hearing, the writ was discharged and relator appeals. The arguments advanced in his behalf will be disposed of in their order, our only problem being to determine whether there was jurisdiction for the trial, conviction and sentence challenged by the writ.

The conviction was for violation of an ordinance entitled: “To restrain, prevent and prohibit any person or persons from vending, dealing in, giving, or disposing of” intoxicating liquors within the limits of the city, “unless thereto duly licensed by the City Council.” It provides that every violator shall, upon conviction, “'be punished by. a fine of not more than one hundred dollars or by imprisonment in the city or county jail for not more than ninety days.” It is true that the ordinance contemplates licenses, but it provides that none shall be issued contrary to the Constitution of the United States, or any act of Congress passed in conformity therewith or any law of the state of Minnesota which shall forbid such “vending, dealing, giving or disposing of” intoxicating liquor.

There is nothing in the point that the city council did not have the power to enact such an ordinance for, by the home rule charter, the council is given “full power and authority” to enact and enforce ordinances “for the government and good order of the city, for the suppression of vice and intemperance, and for the prevention of crime,” and to “impose penalties and punishments by fine, imprisonment or both.” That language is general but sufficient for present purposes. The direct and causal relation of intemperance to disorder, vice and criminality is so undeniable that the necessity for its suppression is obvious. But, in addition to this general language, the charter, in the second subdivision of section 5, expressly authorizes the city council to prohibit within the city the disposition of intoxicating liquors in any manner “unless thereto duly licensed by the Oityi Council.” The force of that prohibition *153 is in no way mitigated, nor is the provision itself abrogated by the fact that the city is prevented by the paramount law of nation and state from licensing the sale of intoxicating liquor.

Merit is equally lacking from the next point for relator which is that the provisions of the charter and ordinance in question have been suspended by section 27 of chapter 455, p. 548, L. 1919 (G. S. 1923, § 3228), the state prohibition law. That portion of section 27 now invoked by appellant suspends “all laws and parts of laws, ordinances and charter provisions- inconsistent” with the state law. The applicable provisions of the charter and ordinances now under consideration are not inconsistent and therefore remain unaffected by the statute. Moreover, by chapter 338, p. 519, L. 1921 (G. S. 1923, § 3255), the council or principal governing body of any city, village or borough, whether operating under a home rule charter or not, has the power to prohibit the disposition by sale, or the other methods therein enumerated of intoxicating liquor. The effect of such an. act is to authorize not only subsequent but existing appropriate legislation. Vigliotti v. Penna. 258 U. S. 403, 42 Sup. Ct. 330, 66 L. ed. 686.

Another argument for relator is that the act for which he was convicted is an indictable criminal offense against the state, but that notwithstanding he was summarily tried, convicted and sentenced to imprisonment, without a trial by jury which he demanded, and that the ordinance under which he has been so dealt with denies him the right to a review of his trial, conviction and sentence by appeal or certiorari. Section 10 of chapter 3, invests justices of the peace with “sole and exclusive jurisdiction of all suits, prosecutions, or proceedings for any violation of any¡ ordinance” and section 14 enacts that no appeal shall be allowed “from any judgment or ruling of any Justice of the Peace of said City, rendered or- made in any action or prosecution for any violation * * * of any ordinance” and attempts to prohibit the issue of any writ of certiorari “in any such case.”

For the reasons stated in City of Red Wing v. Nibbe, 160 Minn. 274, 199 N. W. 918, the denial of an appeal from a conviction under an ordinance is permissible. The right of appeal is given by statute *154 and in consequence may be taken away by statute. In this state a home rule charter, otherwise unobjectionable, has the force of statutory law within the limits of the municipality to which it applies.

Whether the right of one convicted in such a case to a writ of certiorari, as well as an appeal, may be taken away, is, as was recognized in the Nibbe case, another and more serious question. It is not here for consideration, because the relator has not attempted to invoke that remedy and is not in a position to complain because its attempted denial is by a clearly severable provision, the invalidity) of which, if in fact it is invalid, would not affect any other portion of the charter.

Finally, relator urges that the offense for which he was summarily tried and convicted, being an indictable crime under state law, has passed out of the category of “petty offenses,” to the summary trial of which without a jury there has never been any constitutional objection. We are mindful that necessity may arise, in view of the modem tendency to extend state control over matters heretofore considered as best left to local regulation, of reconsidering and possibly defining anew the limits beyond which legislatures and municipal councils cannot go in visiting summary conviction under an ordinance upon acts which are also crimes against the state, the practical result being that for the same act, if not for the same offense, the offender may be twice punished by deprivation of his liberty, once by the municipality and once by the state.

But as long as. we are concerned with evils such as that of intemperance, which has a definitely local aspect because of the community disorder and deterioration which always attend it, we shall not depart from the wholesome rule adopted in State v. Lee, 29 Minn. 445, 13 N. W. 913. That was a case where the keeper of a house of ill-fame had been convicted and punished under a city ordinance and yet was held subject to subsequent indictment and trial and a second conviction and punishment under state law. Intemperance and prostitution are such habitual companions that the reasoning which for present purposes is applicable to one is equally so to the other. In the language of Mr. Justice Vanderburgh, in *155 the Lee case that reasoning in substance is: “The city ordinance does not have respect to the guilt or moral turpitude of the act * * * considered as a crime, but only to the purposes of a police regulation.” So -while an act, outside a city, may subject an offender “to punishment by the state only, committed inside its limits, by reason of the place and the consequent aggravation attending it,” may “render him liable also to the additional penalty.

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 51, 165 Minn. 150, 1925 Minn. LEXIS 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-strupp-v-anderson-minn-1925.