Court Opinion

ID: 3495403
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:03:12.639326+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:38:46.767646
License: Public Domain

An amendment to our State Constitution (art. 16, § 11) was adopted in 1932 which reads in part as follows:
"The legislature may by law establish a liquor control commission, who, subject to statutory limitations, shall exercise complete control of the alcoholic beverage traffic within this State, including the retail sales thereof."
Pursuant thereto, Act No. 8, Pub. Acts 1933 (Ex. Sess.), was enacted. Section 1 reads in part as follows:
"Scope of act. On and after the effective date of this act, it shall be lawful to manufacture for sale, sell, offer for sale, keep for sale, possess and/or transport any alcoholic liquor, as hereinafter defined, including alcoholic liquor used for medicinal, mechanical, chemical or scientific purposes and wine for sacramental purposes, subject to the terms, conditions, limitations and restrictions contained herein, and only as provided for in this act.
"Except as by this act otherwise provided, the commission shall have the sole right, power and duty *Page 597 
to control the alcoholic beverage traffic and traffic in other alcoholic liquor within the State of Michigan, including the manufacture, importation, possession, transportation and sale thereof."
Section 5 provides for the creation of a liquor control commission. Section 7 reads:
"The commission shall adopt rules and regulations governing the carrying out of this act and supplemental thereto."
Acting thereunder, the commission adopted the following regulation:
"In addition to the restriction contained in Act No. 8, Pub. Acts 1933 (Ex. Sess.), no licensee, by himself, his servants, agents or employees shall sell or permit the sale of any alcoholic liquor for consumption on the premises between the hours of 2:00 o'clock and 7:00 o'clock a. m., eastern standard time (except where central standard time is used)."
On November 27, 1934, the city of Saginaw adopted an ordinance which fixed the closing hours of places licensed to sell intoxicating liquor for consumption on the premises at not later than 12 o'clock p. m. and until 7 o'clock a. m. of the following day.
The question here presented is whether the regulation of the commission, which intervened, or the city ordinance is controlling. The trial court found the provision in the ordinance to be of no force or effect and enjoined the city from enforcing it. The city has appealed.
Article 8, §§ 20, 21, of our State Constitution provide that the legislature shall provide by a general law for the incorporation of cities, and that under it the electors (of a city) shall have power and authority to frame, adopt and amend its charter — "And through its regularly constituted authority, to pass *Page 598 
all laws and ordinances relating to its municipal concerns, subject to the Constitution and general laws of this State."
Counsel for the city contend that the ordinance is not in conflict or inconsistent with the regulation of the commission; that it but exacts additional requirements by limiting the time during which licensed places shall be kept open, and relies for the exercise of its power upon that given it by section 4, subd. 3, of its charter, which reads as follows:
"To make and enforce all regulations, by-laws and ordinances which may be necessary and expedient for the preservation of health, and the prevention of the spread of, or the introduction into the city of contagious, malignant, infectious or other diseases."
The power conferred upon the city under the constitutional provision is "subject to the Constitution and general laws of this State." The constitutional amendment, providing for a liquor control commission, vested in it when established by act of the legislature "complete control of the alcoholic beveragetraffic within this State, including the retail sales thereof."
The legislature, after providing for its creation, conferred upon it, subject to certain exceptions, "the sole right, powerand duty to control the alcoholic beverage traffic * * * withinthe State," and to "adopt rules and regulations governing thecarrying out of this act and supplemental thereto."
The word "control," as used in the Constitution, means to regulate and govern.
"Courts are not to tamper with the clear and unequivocal meaning of words used in a statute. There can be no departure from the plain meaning of a statute on grounds of its unwisdom or of public policy." Handy v. Township of Meridian, 114 Mich. 454,457. *Page 599 
"It is the rule that, in the absence of specific statutory or charter power in the municipality, the provisions of an ordinance which contravene a State law are void.People v. McGraw, 184 Mich. 233; 43 C. J. p. 215. What the legislature permits, the city cannot suppress, without express authority therefor." National Amusement Co. v. Johnson,270 Mich. 613.
Under the broad power thus conferred upon the liquor control commission by the Constitution and the statute, it must be held that its regulations relative to the hours of closing are binding upon all licensees, and are not affected by the provision in the ordinance relating thereto.
The conclusion thus reached is also supported by section 52 of the act, which, after specifically repealing a number of acts, provides that —
All other acts and parts of acts, general, special or local, and all ordinances and parts of ordinances inconsistent with or contrary to the provisions of this act are hereby repealed."
It may be noted that in the days of the saloon the statute (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 7047) fixed the hours on which they should be closed, with permission, however, to certain cities to extend them. The need of uniformity in this respect was doubtless one of the reasons for the exercise of the statutory regulation relative thereto.
Counsel for the city relies on our decisions in Monk v.Common Council of Ann Arbor, 264 Mich. 584; Johnson v. LiquorControl Commission, 266 Mich. 682, and Scott v. Township Boardof Arcada Township, 268 Mich. 170, to sustain their contention. In the Monk and Scott Cases construction was placed upon a provision in section 17 of the act which provides that applications for licenses must be approved by the local legislative body, and in the Johnson *Page 600 Case upon the right of the commission to revoke a license as provided for in the same section, and what was said in the opinions in these cases must be considered in its application to the facts presented.
The decree of the trial court is affirmed. As a public question is involved, no costs will be allowed.
POTTER, C.J., and NORTH, FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred.