State v. Court of Common Pleas of Morris

36 N.J.L. 72
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 N.J.L. 72 (State v. Court of Common Pleas of Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Court of Common Pleas of Morris, 36 N.J.L. 72 (N.J. 1872).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Van Syckel, J.

This application is made to test the constitutionality of what is termed the Chatham local option law.

The provisions of the act (Laws, 1871, p. 1470,) are substantially that it should be lawful for the persons qualified to vote at the next annual town meeting, to determine by ballot whether thereafter license to sell spirituous liquors should be granted; that if' it should appear that a majority of votes were cast for no license,” it should not thereafter be lawful to grant any such license until otherwise decided by a contrary vote at some subsequent town meeting; that from and after the passage of the act, it should not be lawful for any person within said township, without a license for that purpose first had, to sell by less measure than one gallon, and any person so selling without license should be adjudged guilty of a misdemeanor ; and lastly, that so much and such parts of all acts and parts of acts as are inconsistent with this act, be and are repealed.

[73]*73At the time prescribed by the act, a majority of the legal voters of said township voted “ no license.”

At the following May Term of the Morris Common Pleas, the relator, by petition, signed and Verified as by the act concerning inns and taverns” is required, applied for a license to keep an inn and tavern in Chatham.

The court having refused to entertain said application on the ground that it had no power to grant it, this court is asked to send its writ of 7aandamus to the court below, in aid of the applicant’s petition.

The local option law is alleged to be in conflict with that article of our state constitution which provides that the legislative power shall be vested in a senate and general assembly.

It must be conceded that this law can have no sanction if it is a delegation of the law making power to the people of the township.

If the right to declare what the law shall be in one case, may be referred to the people, the right to do so may be given in all cases, and thus the legislature may divest itself wholly of the power lodged in it by the fundamental law, until by subsequent legislation it shall bo resumed. It is also obvious that it is not competent to delegate to the people the right to say whether an existing law shall be repealed or its operation suspended. To say that what is now the law shall not hereafter, or shall not for a specified time be the law, is in effect to declare the law to be otherwise than it now is, and is a clear exercise of the law making power. The will of the legislature must be expressed in the form of a law by their own act. If it is left to the contingency of a popular vote to pronounce whether it shall take effect, it is not the will of the law makers, but the voice of their constituents which moulds the rule of action. If the vote is affirmative, it is law; if in the negative, it is not law. The vote makes or defeats the law, and thus the people are permitted unlawfully to resume the right of which they have divested themselves by a written constitution, to declare by their own direct action what shall [74]*74be law. The cases upon this subject, so far as they assert the principles above stated, have my entire concurrence. Parker v. Commonwealth, 6 Barr 507; Rice v. Foster, 4 Harrington 479; Maize v. State, 4 Ind. 342; State v. Parker, 26 Vt. 357; Santo v. State, 2 Iowa 165; Paterson v. Society, &c., 4 Zab. 385.

The test will be whether this enactment, when it passed from the hands of the law-giver, had taken the form of a complete law. It denounces as a misdemeanor the selling of liquor without license; so far it is positive and free from any contingency.

It left to the popular vote to determine, not whether it should be lawful to sell without license, but whether the contingency should arise under which license might be granted.

It was not submitted to the voters of Chatham to say whether there should be a majority vote in favor of license before license could be granted; the law as framed declares that there shall be such majority vote. The operation of the first and second sections of the act “concerning inns and taverns ” is not suspended by the declaration of the popular will, but the act itself modifies those sections, and makes it a condition of granting license that there shall be a majority vote.

It is the law which makes the majority vote necessary, and not the voice of the people.

Whether the vote is aye or no, the law at all times is the same, and requires the majority vote as a condition precedent to the granting of license.

If a supplement had been passed requiring instead of twelve reputable freeholders, the signatures of a majority of the legal voters of the township to the applicant’s petition, would its constitutionality be challenged ?

Upon principle it makes no difference whether the recommendation of the majority is expressed by ballot at a town meeting, or in the form of a certificate.

It is competent for the legislature to prescribe the mode in which it shall be done.

[75]*75Under the general law, the applicant could not call into exercise the power of the court until twelve freeholders petitioned in the manner therein directed. Under the special act in question an additional restriction is imposed, but it is imposed by the law itself and not by the people.

If the twelve freeholders under the old law do not certify, the court is restrained from acting; if they do certify, the court can exercise its discretion. So if the majority do not vote for license, the power of the court cannot be invoked; if they do vote for license, it may.

If the twelve freeholders shall not deem it conducive to the public good the privilege is denied, so if the majority shall regard it as inimical to the public welfare to permit the retail trade, the sale must abide under the penalty denounced by the law. The only difference is that under the special act the majority express their judgment as to all applications in gross, while under the general law twelve freeholders act upon them- in detail.

The fact that they vote “ no license ” does not make the law one way, or that they vote license ” the other way.

The vote of the people may be changed, but the rule that a majority vote shall be essential remains unaltered.

The legislature has pronounced what the law shall be, and it cannot be and is not abrogated, changed or altered by the popular expression.

The leading cases of Rice v. Foster, and Parker v. Commonwealth, are distinguishable in principle from this.

In those cases, the prohibition and penalty were not denounced by the law itself, but by the popular vote. The selling of liquor was not pronounced to be unlawful; it was referred to the people to determine whether it should be restrained.

Sj in the law proposed to be passed at the last session of our legislature; “ the offence defined by the act could not be committed unless the voters of the town determined that licenses should not be granted.”

But if this is construed as an act authorizing the township [76]

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.J.L. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-court-of-common-pleas-of-morris-nj-1872.