Court Opinion

ID: 7946233
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:20:45.001058+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:56.263261
License: Public Domain

Hooker, J.
On June 10, 1910, the relator made and. filed an application to the council of the village of Augusta, in Kalamazoo county, for a license to carry on the business of selling at wholesale brewed or malt liquors. He accompanied it with a surety company’s bond in the proper amount. The council adjourned to June 16th, on which day a motion not to consider the wholesale bond was carried, whereupon while the council was in session, but. after a motion to adjourn had been made, an application for a. retail license and a retail dealer’s bond were presented. Adjournment was then voted by the council without action. Relator thereupon petitioned the circuit court for a mandamus to compel the council to accept the-bonds and issue the licenses, and, upon the return to the order to show cause, the prayer of the petition was denied, and relator has brought the case to this court by certiorari.
Augusta is organized under the general law for the incorporation of villages, being chapter 87, 1 Comp. Laws. Subchapter 7 of said chapter 87 contains the provision conferring powers upon the council, among which is “to suppress saloons for the sale of spirituous and intoxicating liquors,” etc. 1 Comp. Laws, § 2769, subd. 7. On March. 14, 1910, the council adopted the following ordinance:
*681“ Ordinance No. 35.
“ To suppress saloons and bars for the sale of spirituous and intoxicating liquors.
“Section 1. The village of Augusta ordains, that it shall be unlawful for any person or persons to own, establish or operate, in person, or by clerk, servant, agent or employé, any saloon or saloon bar for the sale of malt, brewed, spirituous, fermented, vinous and intoxicating liquors in the village of Augusta.
“Sec. 2. It shall be unlawful for any person by himself, his clerk, servant, agent or employé, to sell, offer for sale, or keep for sale, in any saloon or bar in the village of Augusta, any malt, brewed, spirituous, fermented, vinous or intoxicating liquors.”
A penalty was provided by other sections which we think it unnecessary to include in this opinion.
The council bases its refusal to issue the licenses and approve the bonds upon this ordinance. In answer, the relator cites Act No. 29Í, Pub. Acts 1909, known as the “Warner-Cramton Law,” which was an act to amend certain sections of the general law providing for the taxation and regulation of manufacturing, selling, etc., of spirituous and intoxicating liquors, and to add 35 new sections thereto, and which his counsel contends repealed subdivision 7, 1 Comp. Laws, § 2769, of the general village law. He claims, also, that the selling of liquor at wholesale not to be drunk upon the premises where sold is not keeping a saloon, and therefore the council had no power to prohibit the selling at wholesale, and, furthermore, that the ordinance does not by its terms include wholesale houses. The act of 1909 (section 2) defines a “wholesaler” as follows:
“ Wholesale dealers shall be held and deemed to mean and include all persons who sell or offer for sale such liquors and beverages at wholesale in original trade packages and in bulk and by measure not to be drunk on the premises.”
We do not overlook respondents’ claim that this gives a wide latitude to the sales that a wholesaler may make, but, *682if it is too wide, it is a legislative, and not a judicial, question; and we observe that in section 1 of Act No. 291 that matter has received attention.
Assuming that the ordinance is valid, we are constrained to say that it does not in terms preclude the wholesaling of liquor, except where it shall be sold in a saloon or at a bar. The only construction to which subdivision 7, § 2769, is susceptible, is that the word “saloon” refers to places where persons come to buy drinks of liquor, to be drunk there. It is the common understanding of a liquor saloon that is meant, and the ordinance means no more. We are therefore of the opinion that the ordinance is no obstacle to the authority of the council to license wholesaling, and no justification for a refusal to do so, in a proper case. As we said in Village of Sparta v. Boorom, 129 Mich. 558 (89 N. W. 436):
“We are not prepared to say that a wagon might not constitute a saloon, or that a saloon might not be movable, or that it would be any the less a saloon because it was continually moved from place to place, but that is not the charge here. The general village incorporation act did not authorize the prohibition of the sale of liquor in general terms, and it omitted to enlarge the meaning of the word ‘saloon.’ The term has a common and well-understood meaning, and this meaning must be applied to this act. 1 How. Stat. § 2; 1 Comp. Laws, § 50. It did not authorize the village council to enlarge its meaning by calling every man who should make a sale of liquor a saloon keeper, and the cases which hold that a single sale may be evidence to show a man a saloon keeper, where it occurred in a saloon, are not in point.”
To this we may add that it does not follow that a wholesaler may not so conduct his business as to make him chargeable with keeping a saloon, or doing it in a saloon or over a bar. See Rattenbury v. Village of Northville, 122 Mich. 160 (80 N. W. 1012). We think that the case of Craig v. Werthmuller, 78 Iowa, 598 (43 N. W. 606), is plainly distinguishable from this case, and that the allusions to saloons and saloon purposes have no application here, and it seems to us so obvious that we do not feel *683justified in elaborating the question of its application. Counsel for respondents offer two other reasons wfiy this writ should not issue:
(1) That the council in good faith refused to pass upon the sufficiency of the wholesaler’s bond, and has not considered the question, apparently relying on the ordinance as a sufficient reason.
(2) That the application and bond were filed with the council pending a motion to adjourn and that the council almost immediately adjourned.
The court found this to be true, and that the council had not had “sufficient time after such filing to consider the same to justify the court in ordering their approval.”
We must accept this finding of facts as true, and therefore the writ cannot issue. But as this is a reason that is technical in its nature, we consider the other reason, viz., that their refusal is justified by the ordinance, to settle a question which is really involved, and to prevent the necessity of further litigation by another application for mandamus as to the retailer’s license. This application on its face asks a license to sell spirituous or intoxicating liquors in the barroom of a hotel. It therefore was an application to sell over a bar, if not in a saloon, and we think it within the prohibition of the ordinance, and therefore, unless the ordinance is void, the writ cannot issue.
It is relator’s claim that the general village law was repealed by the Warner-Cramton act of 1909. Act No. 291, Pub. Acts 1909. The law for the incorporation of villages (chapter 87, 1 Comp. Laws) was passed in 1895 (Act No. 3, Pub. Acts 1895)! As we have seen, it conferred power upon councils to prohibit saloons. Unless it has been repealed by implication, it is yet in force, and the ordinance is a sufficient answer to relator’s claim, as this later act in its turn took precedence over the liquor law of 1887 (Act No. 313, Pub. Acts 1887, 2 Comp. Laws, § 5379 et seq.), and gave to Augusta local powers on this subject. It is claimed that this was done by the amendments of 1909.
*684Starting, then, with the proposition that the exclusive provisions of the law of 1887 (which we have held repealed ordinances on this subject at the time it was passed) were limited in their application by the law of 1895, which reenacted the authority to village councils, we must inquire whether Act No. 291, Pub. Acts 1909, is consistent with the continued existence of subdivision 7 of the village incorporation act for it having been made to appear by the passage of the act of 1895 that, notwithstanding the interpretation previously put upon this identical subdivision 7 in the former village incorporation law, it was the legislative will that the power should be reconferred upon the village councils, we must find some subsequent legislation showing a contrary intent, or conclude that there was no intention to repeal it. The act of 1909 amended and added to the general liquor law of 1887. Some of the reasons given in People v. Furman, 85 Mich. 110 (48 N. W. 169), have lost their force by the passage of the law of 1895; e. g., that' this was a general liquor law, and that it especially provided that all inconsistent laws should be repealed. There is nothing in the law of 1909 to show that it or the law as amended was designed to be of more general application than that of 1887, after the limitation was put upon it by the new village act, and there is an absence of any new repealing act. We find nothing in the law of 1909 justifying the inference that it was designed to take from incorporated villages the power reconferred by subdivision 7 of the .act of 1895. Upon this subject, where one act is special, see a discussion in People v. Wenzel, 105 Mich. 70 (62 N. W. 1038). Neither of these acts is special, but there may be seen an analogy arising from the fact that the general incorporation act confers special powers to a class of localities. There is nothing irreconcilable in these two acts, and, as said by Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, § 210:
“ But repeal by implication is not favored, (a) It is a reasonable presumption that the legislature did not intend to keep really contradictory enactments in the statute *685book, or to effect so important a measure as the repeal of a law without expressing an intention to do so. Such an interpretation, therefore, is not to be adopted unless it be inevitable. Any reasonable construction which offers an escape from it is more likely to be in consonance with the real intention. Hence it is a rule founded in reason, as well as in abundant .authority, that, in order to give an act not covering the entire ground of an earlier one, nor clearly intended as a substitute for it, the effect of repealing it, the implication of an intention to repeal must necessarily flow from the language used, disclosing a repugnancy between its provisions and those of the earlier law so positive as to be irreconcilable by any fair, strict, or liberal construction of it, which would, without destroying its evident intent and meaning, find for it a reasonable field of operation, preserving, at the same time, the force of the earlier law, and construing both together in harmony with the whole course of legislation upon the subject.”
See, also, Lake v. Village of Cedar Springs, 162 Mich. 569 (127 N. W. 690).
We are of the opinion therefore that the order of the learned circuit judge was correct, and the same is affirmed.
Bird, C. J., and Ostrander, Moore, McAlvay, Brooke, Blair, and Stone, JJ., concurred.