Court Opinion

ID: 7949631
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:24:59.317493+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:05.231918
License: Public Domain

Fellows, J.
The local option law was in force in Eaton county at the time respondent there sold to one Flory 10 gallons of hard cider manufactured by him. The sale is not disputed, but it is insisted that this court did not in the case of People v. Eberle, 167 Mich. 477 (133 N. W. 519), hold the entire provisions of the exceptions found in the acts of 1899 and 1903 invalid, and that respondent, notwithstanding the holding in that case, might sell fermented cider in quantities of not less than 5 gallons without being guilty of a violation of the local option law.
The local option law was passed in 1889 (Act No. 207, Pub. Acts 1889; 2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 7080 et seq.). It continued in force without amendment until 1899 when by Act No. 183 certain amendments were adopted; section 15 having added to its proviso the following words:
“Nor prohibit the sale of wine or cider from homegrown fruit in quantities of not less than five gallons.”
*472By Act No. 170 of the Public Acts of 1903 (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 7093), there was added to the proviso of section 15, after the words just quoted, the following:
. “Nor shall the provisions of this act be construed to prohibit the manufacture of wine or cider; nor shall the provisions of this act be construed to prohibit the sale at wholesale of wine or cider manufactured in said county to parties who reside outside of said county.”
In the Eberle Case these provisions, and all of them, were assailed as offending section 2, art. 4, of the Federal Constitution, which provides:
“The citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States.”
We there construed these provisions, these exemptions, and it was very clearly pointed out that they applied and applied only to the products of homegrown fruit, and, as so construed, this court held they were discriminatory, in conflict with the Federal Constitution, and void. But it was further held, that eliminating these invalid exemptions, the balance of the law was valid, workable, and capable of being administered independently of them. The case was taken to the Federal Supreme Court and there affirmed; Eberle v. Michigan, 232 U. S. 700 (34 Sup. Ct. 464). Mr. Justice Lamar, who delivered the opinion of that court, said:
“On the other hand, in the case at bar the original local option law of 1889 had been held to be constitional as a whole, and its validity could not be impaired by the subsequent adoption of what were in form amendments but, in legal effect, were mere nullities.”
A perusal of the opinion of this court and that of the United States Supreme Court clearly demonstrate *473that in the Eberle Case the exemptions mentioned and here invoked were held to be void, nullities, and of no more force than as though they had never been passed, and the balance of the act valid. Unless we overrule the Eberle Case this conviction must be affirmed. We are not inclined so to do; it was correctly decided.
The conviction is affirmed, and the case remanded for sentence.
Kuhn, C. J., and Stone, Ostrander, Bn®, Moore, Steere, and Brooke, JJ., concurred.