Weil v. Calhoun

1 Ga. L. Rep. 171
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 16, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ga. L. Rep. 171 (Weil v. Calhoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weil v. Calhoun, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 171 (Ga. 1885).

Opinion

H. K. McCay, J.

This bill is filed by three parties:

I. Mr. Weil, as trustee for certain persons holding stock in the brewery, which persons are citizens of the State of Tennessee.

2. Paul Jones, a dealer, among other things, in foreign wines and liquors.

3. By. Cox, Hill & Thompson, dealers in wines made in other States, and in spirituous liquors generally, by wholesale.

[173]*173The bill sets out that at the last Legislature of Georgia, a bill was passed providing for the prohibition of the sale of spirituous liquors, in the various counties of the State, in which there were not already prohibitory laws. .The act provides that it shall only take effect in counties where the people, by a popular vote, shall so determine. 1 The bill sets out that an election, under the law, has lately been held in Fulton county. That the prohibition vote was the largest-by-majority, and that the Ordinary is about to and threatens to declare the result.

The object and prayer of the bill is, to seek the intervention of a Court of Equity, to enjoin the Ordinary from so doing, and to ask that, until a final hearing'can be had, the Chancellor shall grant a temporary injunction, to restrain him. The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States is invoked.

1. On the ground that some of the parties are citizens of the State of Tennessee, and they charge that they appear as stockholders, and not in the name of the corporation, which is a Georgia corporation, because the corporation refuses to act, and they make it a party defendant to the bill.

That Cox, Hill Thompson are dealers in wines made in other States, and that Paul Jones is a dealer in foreign wines' and other liquors, and each have, and had, at the date of the act, large stocks on hand.'

Besides this allegation, of the citizenship of these Tennessee people, the bill alleges, as another ground for appeal to a Federal tribunal, that the act providing for the election, is in several respects, in violation of the Constitution of the.United States. That it destroys their vested rights, in that it impairs the obligation of the contract, in the Charter of the Brewery Company. That it attempts to regulate commerce between the State and foreign States, and that it discriminates between domestic wines and those of other States, anti the wines imported from abroad, by prohibiting the sale of these two latter wines, whilst it expressly exempts domestic wines irom the operation of the act. This latter, as I understand it, is the principal ground on which the plaintiffs insist there is a Federal question involved, and that this court has, therefore, jurisdiction of the controversy. The Misalleges that the necessary and inevitable effect of the law, if it be declared of force, will be to make wholly worthless the stock, fixtures, etc., of the Brewery, and seriously to interfere with the properly, business and vested interests of the complainants.

The bill charges, that the'law was not published as the Code requires; that the registration was ordered before the election was. proclaimed; that the registration act made'no provision for the registry of persons who, though not entitled to vote when the books were closed, [174]*174yet became so during the ten days intervening, after the closing of the books, and the registration; that persons living in the corporate town of West End were permitted to register and vote, and persons residing in various other localities in the county were so allowed, and that in West End and o.ther localities prohibition was already established, and by the statute no election could be held in such localities; that one or two registrars were not freeholders, as the statute requires ; and that at the two voting precincts in Atlanta, on the idea that there was not sufficient opportunity for all the voters to cast their ballots, during the legal hours, three separate boxes and voting lists had been placed at each poll, the voters required to come up and vote according to a plan based on the first letters of their surnames, and that under the .plan only one manager could properly and practically preside at one box, they being at least ten feet apart.

Various affidavits have been filed, to-wit; Ordinary Calhoun’s denying that he had fixed any day for declaring the result; denying the alleged defect in the advertisment of the election; insisting that all the registrars were freeholders; and asserting that he had expressed no-opinion as to how he would decide the questions made on the returns, and that he had notified both parties that he was ready to hear any objections and arguments upon them. And as to the illegal boxes, saying that the boxes at the two city precincts were resorted to at the request of a meeting of citizens of both parties, and were intended to facilitate the casting of the ballots and did in fact do so, in a very decided degree, and that the three managers were so situated as that they all might, and generally did, inspect and pass upon any question that-arose within the sphere of their duties.

Affidavits were filed by the plaintiffs, qualifying the statements of the Ordinary, as to what he said about when he would declare the result, and as to what he would do, but not; materially denying his statements on'the subject.

Also an affidavit explaining their motives for charging that two of the registrars were not freeholders; also, Spalding’s and Flesch’s and other affidavits of managers and others attacking the arrangements at the polls, and stating that it was not possible, under those arrangements, for each of the managers to supervise and pass upon each voter.

The defendant insists that the bill makes no case justifying the granting of the prayer, because:

No such parties or questions are made as to authorize the interference of a Federal Court under the Constitution and laws of the. United-States.

- That the registration, as provided by law, and as actually carried out, was no infringement of any rights of any one, and that whatever [175]*175objections there might be to the arrangements at the polls, as to the boxes, mode of voting, etc., and the capacity of the managers to oversee the voting, the election is still not illegal, but is good, unless it is made affirmatively to'appear that had these irregularities not existed, the result would have been different.

That the clause in the act as to localities where prohibition already existed by law, did not render the voters in the locality referred to, disqualified voters, in the county elections.

That under the police power of the States, it was competent for the Legislature to pass the law objected to, notwithstanding it may effect the property of the complainants, as insisted on in the bill..

That it was competent for the Legislature to pass the law, and make its going into effect in any county dependent on a popular vote.

« That however the clause exempting domestic wines from the operation of the act might be unconstitutional and void, yet it was possible, this being a mere proviso or exception to a general clause covering all wines, to reject the proviso, and leave the general clause stand.

That defendant was a State Court, and the Act of Congress section. 720, of Revised Statute, prohibited a United States Judge granting an injunction to restrain a Court of any State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ga. L. Rep. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weil-v-calhoun-ga-1885.