Williams v. State

107 S.W. 1121, 52 Tex. Crim. 371, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1908
DocketNo. 4052.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 1121 (Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. State, 107 S.W. 1121, 52 Tex. Crim. 371, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 19 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

BROOKS, Judge.

There was a prosecution instituted in the corporation court of the City of Dallas, charging that appellant unlawfully es *374 tablished, located, maintained and conducted a saloon, being a place where intoxicating liquors are sold, in the corporate limits of the City of Dallas, at number 333 Exposition Avenue, outside of certain limits set out in the complaint. Upon conviction in the corporation court, appellant appealed therefrom to the county court of Dallas county at law, where he was tried before the court, without the interposition of a jury, and the court assesed his fine at $105, from which judgment he has appealed to this court.

Appellant filed a motion to quash the complaint because the same neither charges nor prescribes any offense against any valid ordinance of the City of Dallas, nor any provision of the city charter of the City of Dallas; nor any other law of the State of Texas; and further, because said ordinance and charter provisions of the City of Dallas, upon which said complaint is based, are contrary to section 20, article 16, of the Constitution of the State of Texas, in that said ordinance attempts to prohibit by legislative enactment the sale of intoxicating liquors in a portion of the city, and to subdivide a city as to prohibition terrtory, contrary to the laws of the State of Texas and the Constitution of the State of Texas. Under this assignment, appellant insists that this provision of the Constitution is the exclusive method of effecting prohibition in a specified territory of the State, and the law governing a local option election was not observed in the passage of this ordinance. We have heretofore held that it lay within the sound discretion of the Legislature to prescribe limits in cities and towns within which, saloons may be conducted and outside of which saloons may be prohibited. It does not encroach upon any constitutional right of appellant, or anyone else in this State, to establish saloon limits; but the establishment thereof lies within the sound discretion of the Legislature. The establishment of saloon limits is in no sense a prohibition law, but is a bare regulation of the sale of whisky. Judge Bookhout of the Court of Civil Appeals, for the Fifth District of this State, 101 S. W. Rep., 1052, in the case of Cohen v. Rice, uses the following apt language: “The section of the charter quoted above is not a local option statute, prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors in the City of Marshall, but a statute regulating its sale within that city; and this the State, or the city council of Marshall, acting under power conferred by charter, had a right to do, under the police power of the State. The ordinance does not prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors in the City of Marshall, but regulates the sale of the same in the city by confining its sale to the business portion of the city.” See also Ex parte Levine, 46 Texas Crim. Rep., 364; 81 S. W. Rep., 1206, and Garonzik v. State, 50 Texas Crim. Rep., 533; 100 S. W. Rep., 374.

2. Appellant further insists that the ordinance in question violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, in that said ordinance and charter provision deny to this defendant, and to other persons in the City of Dallas similarly situated the equal protection of the law; that said ordinance and charter provision arbitrarily and *375 unequally prescribes four different methods of prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors within the corporate limits of the City of Dallas:

a. It prescribes a special territory beyond which the intoxicating liquors are prohibited regardless of whether such outside territory is residential or business property, except that upon certain circumstances it exempts the property known as the Fair Grounds, b. Within such prescribed limits, the standard of prohibition is whether or not there is more residences than business houses within a radius of three hundred feet of said place of business, c. The portion of the City of Dallas known as Oak Cliff is by legislative enactment declared to be a residential section of the city, regardless of the local condition, d. The portion of the city known as the Fair Park property is exempted, although within the territory denounced as prohibition whenever consent to sell intoxicating liquors therein is obtained from the proper city officials.

On page 74 of the charter of the City of Dallas, passed by the Legislature in 1907, the charter provides as follows: “Ho person shall establish, locate or maintain any saloon, being a place where intoxicating liquors shall be sold within the above prescribed limits, etc. * * *.”

We hold that the language here used merely authorizes the inhibition of the saloon. The charter after prescribing the limits, provides further that said Board of Commissioners shall never have power to authorize the establishment and maintenance of saloons in that territory heretofore annexed to the City of Dallas and known as the territory of Oak Cliff. It further provides that the public park, known as the grounds of the Texas State Fair, heretofore purchased by the city and now maintained as a public park, is not and shall not be construed to be included within such prohibited limits, and the sale of intoxicating liquors upon the grounds and territory so purchased and maintained by the city shall be lawful when license shall be duly obtained therefor, together with the consent of the city authorities in control of such park.

We hold that both of said provisos are bare legislative declarations; in the first instance inhibiting the establishment and maintenance of saloons in Oak Cliff; and in the second instance, exempting certain territory from said saloon limit boundary; and is no discrimination within the letter or spirit of the Constitution of this State or of the United States. See Garonzilc’s case above.

A clause of section 10 of what is known as the Baskin-McGregor bill, passed by the Act of the Thirtieth Legislature, page 258, read as follows: “And if the place of'business be in any block or square of any city or town where there are more bona fide residences than there are business houses in said block or square, or in any block where there is a church or school, then said petition shall be accompanied with the written consent of a majority of bona fide householders of the residences in said block or square.”

Appellant insists that this clause is contradictory of the saloon limit law of the City of Dallas. We hold not. It is a well-known rule of statutory construction that where two statutes can be given a con *376 struction to uphold both, .it must be done. We hold, and we take it that the language clearly imports, that before one can get a State license for the retail sale of whisky in any block where there are more bona fide residence than business houses, he must secure the consent of the majority of the bona fide householders.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 1121, 52 Tex. Crim. 371, 1908 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-texcrimapp-1908.