Wells v. State

1 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 309
CourtWilliams County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 6, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 309 (Wells v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Williams County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. State, 1 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 309 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Hubbard, J.

This is a petition and. proceeding in error to reverse the judgment of the mayor of the village of Edon, in this county, in the case of The State of Ohio v. Frank Wells, then pending before [310]*310said mayor, on- the affidavit of one E. D. Scott, whereby it is charged that “from the 4th day of March, 1903, until the 27th day of March, 1903, at the village of Edon, county of Williams and state of Ohio, one Frank Wells then and there being, did unlawfully keep a place where intoxicating liquors were then and there sold as a beverage. That the said Frank Wells was not then and there a regular druggist, and was not then and there a manufacturer of intoxicating liquors from the raw material. That the keeping of said place as aforesaid by the s'aid Frank Wells was then and there prohibited and unlawful and contrary to the statutes in such case made and provided.”

Without enumerating the several ímlinigs, acts and decisions of said mayor, it is sufficient to say, that, if the contentions of the plaintiff in error are correct, there is serious and substantial error in the record, prejudicial to the said plaintiff in error, which will warrant and compel the reversal of the judgment of said mayor in this proceeding; and that all of the rights of said plaintiff in error have been fully preserved,' and appear on the face of the transcript of said mayor’s docket and the bill of exceptions allowed by him, which forms the record before this court for review.

Considering the questions thus presented by the record, for the purpose of determining the merits of said contentions of said plaintiff, in their logical order 'and as briefly 'as possible, we find that the State relied on a copy of the record of the result of a certain election held in said village of Edon, on the 2d day of February, 1903, to prove that, at the time and place charged in the affidavit, the keeping of the place therein specified, for the purpose therein charged, was prohibited and unlawful; which said copy was in the words and figures following and certified as follows:

“Edon, Ohio, April 7, 1903.
"I, Charles F. Eyester, clerk of said village, hereby certify that the following is a correct copy of the record of the result of the local option election held in said village February 2d, 1903.
“The'State of Ohio, County of Williams, Municipal Corporation of Edon. — The special election held on the 2d day of February, A. D., nineteen hundred and three (1903), within 'and for the municipal corporation of Edon, under the local option law, resulted as follows: Whole number of votes for the sale of intoxiicating liquors as a benevage, seventy-eight (78); whole number [311]*311■of votes against the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, one hundred and twenty-seven (127).
“C. F. Eyester,
“Clerk of Edon, Ohio.’'

That the defendant below relied upon the record of the probate court of this county, “In the matter of the contest of the local option election at the village of Edon, Ohio,” to prove that said election was illegal and void, and had been so determined and adjudged by said probate court, under and by virtue of the provisions of R. S., 4364-20i, and in conformity therewith; and thereby to overcome the prima facie evidence of tire fact sought to be proved by said certified copy of the record of the result of said alleged action, and thus disprove the truth of the charge so made against him by said affidavit.

This record shows that within the time limited in Section 4364-20i one H. M. Kelly, a qualified elector of said village, duly contested said election of February 2, 1903, in the manner described in said section; that his petition set forth five separate grounds of contest; that all the proceedings in the matter of said contest, prior to the time set for the hearing thereof, were had in subsantial conformity with the provisions of said Section 4364-20Í. It appears from the journal entry of the proceedings had in said matter, on that day, to-wit, the 11th day of March, 1903, that a motion on behalf of the village to strike from the petition the first alleged ground of contest was submitted to the probate court and by it overruled; that, on the hearing, the petitioner, in open court, withdrew from the consideration of the court the grounds of contest numbered two and four, and waived all claims of insufficiency of notice to the electors of said village of the time and place of holding the election contested. This left the remaining grounds numbers one, three and five on which alone the contest was submitted to the probate court. By the third ground, the regularity and legality of the meeting of the council, at which said special election was ordered and the time and place of holding the same fixed, was attacked; and by the fifth ground, the proceedings of the mayor as well 'as the council in ordering said eleotion were alleged to be unlawful, illegal, null and void, for that they did not proceed according to law. The first ground is in the words and figures following, to-wit:

[312]*312“That the said local 'option law, passed, as aforesaid, by the General Assembly of said State of Ohm, on said 3d day of April, A. D. 1902, was and is unconstitutional for the said law is not one of a uniform nature and is not one of a general nature, and does not, has not, and can not have, a uniform operation throughout the said state of Ohio, and is in contravention of and repugnant to section one, article fourteen of the Constitution of the United States, and article two and section twenty-six of the Constitution of the State of Ohio.”

Said journal entry of March 11, 1903, which is found on pages 139 and 140 of Journal No. 19 of said probate court, proceeds as follows:

“And the court, having heard the evidence upon the remaining grounds of contest alleged, does find that the' grounds of contest numbers three and five are not well taken, and that no irregularity obtained upon the part of the council of said village and the mayor thereof, or either thereof, in and about ordering said election; and the court coming now to the consideration of the first ground of contest, does find the same well taken and does sustain the same, and the count does hold that the so-called Beal Municipal Local Option Law, being the act' of the General Assembly of the State of Ohio, passed on the 3d day of April, 1902, and printed in Volume 95, on pages 87 to 91, inclusive, of the Laws of Ohio, is repugnant to the Constitution of the United States and to the Constitution of the State of Ohio, in respect to the section of said law numbered 4364-20&, the provisions whereof the courts finds repugnant to said Constitutions as aforesaid. And the court considering said part and section of the law to be repugnant to said Constitutions 'as aforesaid, it is by the court considered and adjudged and held that the pretended election held in said village of Edon, Williams county, Ohio, February 2, 1903, purporting to be held under said law, was an illegal and invalid election, and was and is without force and effect, and it is therefore ordered and adjudged that said election and the pretended results thereof be, and the same are hereby, set aside and held for naught, and it is ordered that the said village of Edon pay the costs of this proceeding, taxed at $-.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-state-ohctcomplwillia-1903.