Court Opinion

ID: 9568440
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-21 20:03:45.258538+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:43:10.339697
License: Public Domain

BRANCH, J.
Appellees contend that appellant cannot challenge the procedures of the Reidsville election since appellant failed to comply with Rule 19(3) of the Rules of the Supreme Court, 221 N.C. at p. 554. The following is appellant’s assignment of error:
“Plaintiff assigns as error the Court’s signing of the Final Judgment which contained erroneous findings of fact and erroneous conclusions of law; and further assigns as error the Court’s failure to hold that Chapter 650 violates the terms of Article II, Section 29, of the North Carolina Constitution; and its further failure to hold that even under the specific terms of Chapter 650 irrespective of its constitutionality defendants were not entitled to conduct a municipal liquor referendum; and its failure to hold that the establishment of ABC Stores in the City of Reidsville was unauthorized and in violation of law.”
While not in strict compliance with Rule 19(3), plaintiff’s assignments of error are specific and definite. Since the Rules of the Court are made for our convenience and in dispatch of our appellate jurisdiction, Conrad v. Conrad, 252 N.C. 412, 113 S.E. 2d 912, we will consider appellant’s assignment of error as to election procedure.
The question, is raised whether Section 6 of Chapter 650, 1965 Session Laws, prevents the holding of a valid election within three years after the county-wide election of 27 July 1965. The pertinent provision of that section is as follows:
“In the event the County Commissioners of Rockingham County call an election on the question of whether or not Alcoholic Beverage Control Stores shall be established in the county and before an election is held in the City of Reidsville under the provisions of this Act, and if a majority of the voters in the City of Reidsville who vote in the county election vote against establishing liquor stores in Rockingham County, then no election shall be held under the authority of this Act within 3 years after the date of the county election. . . .”
By paragraph 18 of his amended complaint plaintiff alleges:
“XVIII. That as these plaintiffs are advised, believe and so allege, the defendant City of Reidsville had no right or au*585thority to call and hold a city election on the question of establishment of liquor stores, for that in the countywide election held prior to the city election, a majority of the voters of the City of Reidsville voted against the establishment of liquor stores; that, therefore, the election called and held on October 23, 1965, by the City of Reidsville was null and void.”
Defendants by their answer deny these allegations.
Every reasonable presumption will be indulged in favor of the validity of an election. 26 Am. Jur., Elections, § 343, p. 162. This applies as well to a local option election. See 48 C.J.S. Intoxicating Liquors, Contesting Elections, § 87(d), p. 217, where in this regard it is said: “The burden is on one instituting a contest to prove his right to maintain the proceeding and to prove the grounds of his complaint. . . . The usual rules as to the admissibility and the weight and sufficiency of the evidence generally apply to local option election contests.”
An election will not be disturbed for irregularities where it is not shown such irregularities are sufficient to alter the result. Owens v. Chaplin, 228 N.C. 705, 47 S.E. 2d 12; Watkins v. Wilson, 255 N.C. 510, 121 S.E. 2d 861. In the instant case it is stipulated by the parties that, “(I)t is now impossible to ascertain how many of the votes cast in Reidsville Township precincts were cast by persons residing in the City of Reidsville and how many were cast by persons residing outside the City limits.”
Plaintiff contends the burden is on defendants to prove that a majority of the votes cast within the City of Reidsville in the county election was not against the establishment of a city Alcoholic Beverage Control system. In support of this contention, plaintiff cites the rule that the burden of proof lies on the person who wishes to support his case by a particular fact which lies more particularly within his knowledge, or of which he is supposed to be cognizant. Cf. Hosiery Co. v. Express Co., 184 N.C. 478, 114 S.E. 823. However, this rule does not apply here, since there is nothing in the record to show that the city election officials or any of the defendants had any control or influence over or access to the officials who held the county-wide election of 27 July 1965. The contrary is inferred since the first election was a county election and the election under attack is a municipal election.
The prevailing rule is that the burden of proof is on the party holding the affirmative. Wilson v. Casualty Co., 210 N.C. 585, 188 S.E. 102. Although not decisive, we note, in passing, that the only unquestioned vote by the voters in the City of Reidsville resulted in a majority vote “for Alcoholic Beverage Control Stores and Law Enforcement.”
*586Plaintiff depends entirely on the provision of Section 6 of Chapter 650, 1965 Session Laws, and the results of the total votes cast in the six precincts encompassing the City of Reidsville to sustain his allegations. This is not sufficient to meet the burden of proof which he must carry. Furthermore, a careful reading of the section evidences that only where, in the event of a prior election, it is shown the voters within the City of Reidsville voted against the establishment of ABC stores shall a city election be deferred for three years. The clear intent of this provision was to prevent a repetitious election where the probable outcome had already been determined. By stipulation it is admitted the probable outcome of a city election could not be determined from the prior county election. We therefore hold that the city election was authorized by the statute.
The principal question presented for decision is whether the Reidsville Act, Chapter 650 of the 1965 Session Laws, is in violation of Article II, Section 29, of the North Carolina Constitution, which provides:
“§ 29. Limitations upon power of General Assembly to enact private or special legislation.— The General Assembly shall not pass any local, private, or special act or resolution relating to health, sanitation, and the abatement of nuisances; changing the names of cities, towns, and townships; authorizing the laying out, opening, altering, maintaining, or discontinuing of highways, streets, or alleys; relating to ferries or bridges; relating to nonnavigable streams; relating to cemeteries; relating to the pay of jurors; erecting new townships, or changing township lines, or establishing or changing the lines of school districts; remitting fines, penalties, and forfeitures, or refunding moneys legally paid into the public treasury; regulating labor, trade, mining, or manufacturing; extending the time for the assessment or collection of taxes or otherwise relieving any collector of taxes from the due performance of his official duties or his sureties from liability; giving effect to informal wills and deeds; nor shall the General Assembly enact any such local, private or special act by the partial repeal of a general law, but the General Assembly may at any time repeal local, private or special laws enacted by it. Any local, private or special act or resolution passed in violation of the provisions of this section shall be void. The General Assembly shall have power to pass general laws regulating matters set out in this section.”
Appellees do not seriously contend that the Act is not local.
*587In the case of Surplus Co. v. Pleasants, Sheriff, 264 N.C. 650, 142 S.E. 2d 697, the Court stated:
“A statute is either 'general’ or 'local’; there is no middle ground. . . . Conceivably, a statute may be local if it excludes only one county. On the other hand, it may be general if it includes only one or a few counties. It is a matter of classification. For the purposes of legislating, the General Assembly may and does classify conditions, persons, places and things, and classification does not render a statute 'local’ if the classification is reasonable and based on rational difference of situation or condition; ‘ “universality is immaterial so long as those affected are reasonably different from those excluded and for the purpose of the statute there is a logical basis for treating them in a different manner.” ’ A law is local, ' “where, by force of an inherent limitation, it arbitrarily separates some places from others upon which, but for such limitation, it would operate, and where it embraces less than the entire class of places to which such legislation would be necessary or appropriate having regard to the purpose for which the legislation was designed, and where classification does not rest on circumstances distinguishing the places included from those excluded.” ’ On the other hand, a law is general ‘ “if it applies to and operates uniformly on all the members of any class of persons, places or things requiring legislation peculiar to itself in matters covered by the law.” . . . Classification must be reasonable and germane to the law. It must be based on a reasonable and tangible distinction and operate the same on all parts of the State under the same conditions and circumstances. Classification must not be discretionary, arbitrary or capricious.’ ”
Here the statute is applicable in only one city. Neither the statute nor the appellees show any reasonable distinction between the City of Reidsville and any other city or town for the purpose of classification under the terms of the statute. See also State v. Dixon, 215 N.C. 161, 1 S.E. 2d 521; Sams v. Board of Com’rs., 217 N.C. 284, 7 S.E. 2d 540; Coastal Highway v. Turnpike Authority, 237 N.C. 52, 74 S.E. 2d 310.
Therefore, we conclude that the Act under consideration is a local act. For the purposes of this decision we need not consider whether the Act is special or private.
The more serious question posed for decision is whether the dispensing of intoxicating liquors by the State is a ‘trade’ within the meaning of the constitutional provision.
*588“Questions of constitutional construction are in the main governed by the same general principles which control in 'ascertaining the meaning of all written instruments, 11 A. J. 658, and, ‘the fundamental principle of constitutional construction is to give effect to the intent of the framers of the organic law and of the people adopting it,’ . . .
“Constitutional provisions should be construed in consonance with the objects and purposes in contemplation at the time of their adoption. To ascertain the intent of those by whom the language was used, we must consider the conditions as they then existed and the purpose sought to be accomplished. Inquiry should be directed to the old law, the mischief, and the remedy. The court should place itself as nearly as possible in the position of the men who framed the instrument. 11 A. J. 675; Ex parte Bain, 121 U.S. 1, 30 L. Ed. 849.” Perry v. Stancil, 237 N.C. 442, 75 S.E. 2d 512.
Article II, Section 29 removed some sixteen or more subjects from the field of local, private and special legislation. Prior to its framing in 1915, more than eighty percent of the laws enacted by the General Assembly were local, special or private laws. Thus it is apparent that the purpose of this amendment, when framed by the legislature in 1915, was to relieve the General Assembly from the necessity of passing on laws relating to certain specified matters in which only a small territory or a few persons were concerned, and to thereby enable members of the General Assembly to devote their time and attention to the enactment of legislation important to the entire State.
The problem of intoxicating liquors was a major problem for the General Assembly of 1915, just as it has been for hundreds of years and is today.
“While the moderate and temperate use of intoxicants, and more especially vinous liquors, is reviewed by what appears to be the greater portion of the populace, not with disfavor, but rather ‘as a lawful comfort which God alloweth to all men,’ overindulgence has been recognized from remote antiquity, not only as an evil in itself, but also as a cause of crime, cruelty, indolence, neglect, and poverty and, therefore, as a fit subject of moral and legal condemnation. As early as 1552 the British Parliament by statute, restricting the keeping of alehouses and tippling houses, and in America, the problem of liquor traffic has received legislative attention for more than three centuries.” 30 Am. Jur., Intoxicating Liquors, § 1, p. 525.
*589In this state it has long been considered a proper subject of legislative control. State v. Joyner, 81 N.C. 534. In connection with the problem, the Court stated in Guy v. Commissioners, 122 N.C. 471, 29 S.E. 771: “Nor is it essential that the regulation (of intoxicating liquors) shall be uniform throughout the State.” Although we note this statement was made some nineteen years prior to the enactment of the amendment, it evidences early recognition of the fact that due to varying social and cultural differences within the state, the control of intoxicating liquors was not a subject easily susceptible of uniform regulation. The truth of this fact has been subsequently borne out and was recognized by the 1937 legislature when they, after the end of prohibition, adopted a “local option” plan of liquor control. G.S. 18-61. This plan and many local acts have generally been acquiesced in and abided by for thirty years.
Although sixteen specific matters are prohibited by Section 29, Article II, it is noteworthy that the framers of this proposal did not specifically refer to regulation of the sale of intoxicating liquors. It would seem that had it been the intention of the General Assembly to include this ever-present and important question among the prohibited subjects, the term “intoxicating liquor” would have been included in the enumerated list. There, are eleven different definitions of the word “trade” in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, varying from “a path traversed or for traverse,” to “the business one practices or the work in which one engages regularly.” Certainly' those who so painstakingly and carefully drafted the proposal for submission to the people would not have chosen a word capable of such varied definitions and meanings as “trade” to include this monstrous and demanding problem.
Because of the singular nature of Section 29, Article II, of the North Carolina Constitution, we find no cases in other jurisdictions actually interpreting the word “trade” in the. connection presented by this appeal. However, in the case of Cohen v. State, 53 Tex. Cr. R. 422, 110 S.W. 66, defendant was indicted under a statute providing for the punishment of anyone engaged in the “business or occupation” of keeping or storing intoxicants for others in any county, etc., where the sale of intoxicants had been prohibited, who permitted another to drink intoxicants within such place of business. Defendant claimed that the intoxicants drunk on the premises were not kept for hire or profit, nor as a business or calling, but that such keeping was casual and incidental. The court held that an instruction defining “business or occupation” to be “that which engages one’s time and attention or labor, or that about which one is engaged or employed,” was misleading and that the correct defi*590nition of the words “business and occupation” is meant “a calling, trade, or vocation which one engages in for the purpose of making a living or of obtaining wealth.”
The case of State v. University Club, 35 Nev. 475, 130 P 468, is one which considered whether a statute imposing a license tax on persons engaged in the “business of selling liquor” applied to a bona fide social club where liquor was sold for a fixed charge, and profit went to the general expenses of the organization. The court held that the term “business” as used in the law imposing the license tax on business, professions and callings ordinarily means “a business in the trade or commercial sense; one carried on with a view to profit or livelihood.”
In the case of City of St. Louis v. Smith, 325 Mo. 471, 30 S.W. 2d 729, the court held that a municipality was not an “incorporated company” within the constitutional provision providing for the right of trial by jury in a condemnation proceeding. The distinguishing difference between a municipal corporation and a business corporation was made in that the latter is one organized for the purpose of carrying on a business for profit, while the former is organized with political and legislative powers for the purpose of local civic government and police regulation of the people of a particular district included within its boundaries, and is a subordinate branch of the government of a state.
Our own Court has considered the prohibitions contained in Section 29, Article II, of the North Carolina Constitution in other connections, but has never directly passed on the question of whether the operation of an alcoholic beverage control store by the State or a municipality is a trade. However, in the case of State v. Chestnutt, 241 N.C. 401, 85 S.E. 2d 297, defendant appealed from conviction under an act which banned all motor vehicle races on Sunday in Wake County. Defendant contended the act violated Article II, Section 29 of the North Carolina Constitution. The Court held the statute constitutional, stating through Bobbitt, J.:
“Conceding, arguendo, that the statute, directly affecting conduct in a single county, is a local act, S. v. Dixon, 215 N.C. 161, 1 S.E. 2d 521, is it an act regulating labor or trade within the meaning of Art. II, sec. 29? Were the statute directed solely against labor, e. g., compensated employment, or trade, e. g., business ventures, for profit, in relation to the conduct of motor vehicle races on Sunday in Wake County, the question posed would be serious indeed. But where the statute in sweeping terms bans an activity, to-wit, all motor vehicle races on Sunday in Wake County, making it a misdemeanor to promote *591or engage in the proscribed activity, without regard to the commercial or non-commercial character of the activity, the fact that there defendants promote and engage in such activity for profit and for compensation puts them in no better position than those who promote and engage in such activity without reference to profit or compensation.” (Emphasis ours)
On the other hand, the Court, in the case of Speedway, Inc. v. Clayton, 247 N.C. 528, 101 S.E. 2d 406, interpreting a statute which regulated professional racing in Orange County, held the statute invalid as being a local act regulating trade, prohibited by Article II, Section 29, North Carolina Constitution. The Court so held on the basis that this was an act aimed at persons, firms or corporations promoting and conducting motorcycle or motor vehicle races for profit in Orange County.
The results reached in Clayton and Chestnutt are distinguishable in that they recognized the difference in an absolute prohibition under the State’s police power and a regulation of a business venture entered into for profit by persons, firms or corporations. Both Chestnutt and Clayton differ from the instant case in that here there is a State agency as opposed to persons, firms or corporations, and here the defendants are engaged in a governmental operation as opposed to pleasure or a business venture for profit.
“The will of the people as expressed in the Constitution is the supreme law of the land. ... In searching for this will or intent, all cognate provisions are to be brought into view in their entirety and so interpreted as to effectuate the manifest purposes of the instrument. . . . The best way to ascertain the meaning of a word or sentence in the Constitution is to read it contextually and to compare it with other words and sentences with which it stands connected. Noscitur a sociis is a rule of construction applicable to all written instruments.” State v. Emery, 224 N.C. 581, 31 S.E. 2d 858. “The maxim is, noscitur a sociis: the meaning of a doubtful word may be ascertained by reference to the meaning of words with which it is associated.” Morecock v. Hood, 202 N.C. 321, 162 S.E. 730.
The framers of the Constitution have enumerated a great many specific subjects, then grouped the words “regulating labor, trade, mining, or manufacturing.” Applying the rule of noscitur a sociis to the word “trade,” in reference to the words with which it is associated, we are led to the conclusion that “trade” refers to a business venture embarked in for gain or profit by a person or a business corporation. It refers to commerce engaged in by citizens of *592the State, and not a restricted activity conducted by the State itself.
As one of his principal authorities, appellant cites and relies on Taylor v. Carolina Racing Association, 241 N.C. 80, 84 S.E. 2d 390, where an act providing for the operation of a dog-racing track in Morehead City was held unconstitutional by the Court as being a local and special act regulating trade. Under provisions of the act the track was to be operated by a corporate licensee of a city racing commission. It is noted there were other reasons for declaring the act invalid in the Taylor case, in that Article II, Section 7, was violated because there was a grant of privilege and immunity, and further, there was an unlawful delegation of legislative power. This was also a case where a private corporation was unquestionably embarked on a business venture for the purpose of profit. In deciding the case, pertinent principles as to the sovereign police power were clearly and concisely stated by the Court, speaking through Bobbitt, J., as follows:
“Legislative power vests exclusively in the general assembly, Constitution of North Carolina, Article II, and except as authorized by the Constitution, as in case of municipal corporations, may not be delegated. . . . (A)n act, otherwise valid, may be enacted so as to take effect upon approval by a majority of the qualified voters of the affected locality, . . .
“ ‘The power of the legislature to enact laws conferring police powers and regulating traffic, etc., within particular localities, seems to be well settled.’ . . .
“Legislation enacted in the exercise of the police power for the benefit of the public is as extensive as may be required for the protection of the public health, safety, morals and general welfare of the people.”
Again considering the exercise of the sovereign police power, the Court, speaking through Parker, J. (now C.J.) in the case of Boyd v. Allen, 246 N.C. 150, 97 S.E. 2d 864, said: “Under its inherent police power the State of North Carolina has the right to prohibit, regulate or restrain the use, manufacture and sale of beer within its bounds. . . . The liquor business ‘stands, by universal consent, in a class peculiarly within the police power.’ ” This police power allows the State of North Carolina to prohibit, restrain or regulate the sale of intoxicating liquor within particular localities upon approval by a majority of the qualified voters of the affected locality. If there exists in the sovereign, under the exercise of its police power, the right to regulate intoxicating beverages, it logically follows that *593the sale or dispensing of intoxicating beverages must either be permitted by the sovereign state or be sold or dispensed by the sovereign state. As stated by Stacy, C.J., in Amick v. Lancaster, 228 N.C. 157, 14 S.E. 2d 733: “It would be strange indeed, if the same government which authorizes the establishment of a ‘liquor control store/ should also provide for its padlocking at the instance of a private citizen. ...”
It is noted that profits were contemplated under the statute. However, these profits, if any, would be distributed primarily to governmental agencies and for law enforcement.
The Act under consideration made any board authorized thereunder subject to the provisions of Article III, Ch. 18, of the General Statutes, commonly known as the ABC Act of 1937. The first section of the Article, i. e., G.S. 18-36, provides in part: “The purpose and intent of this article is to establish a system of control of the sale of certain alcoholic beverages in North Carolina.” (Emphasis ours) G.S. 18-39 provides: “Powers and authority of Board. — Said state board of alcoholic control shall have power and authority as follows, to wit: (1) To see that all the laws relating to the sale and control of alcoholic beverages are observed and performed.” (Emphasis ours). G.S. 18-46 provides in part:
“No alcoholic beverage shall be sold knowingly to any minor, or to any person who has been convicted of public drunkeness or of driving any motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquors, or has been convicted of any crime wherein the court or judge shall find as a fact that such person committed said crime or aided and abetted in the commission thereof as a result of the influence of intoxicating liquors (within one year of any such conviction), or to any person known to be an habitual drunkard or who has within one year been confined in the inebriate ward of any State institution. The manager and the employees of and in any county store may, in their discretion, refuse to sell alcoholic beverages to any individual applicant, ....
“It shall be unlawful for any person to buy any alcoholic beverage if he be within the class prohibited from purchasing same as set out in this section, and it shall further be unlawful for any person to buy any alcoholic beverage for any person who may be prohibited from purchasing for himself under any of the provisions of this article.”
G.S. 18-53 prohibits advertising by any county ABC store and on billboards, signs, or other device.
*594G.S. 18-54 prohibits advertising of alcoholic beverages by any radio broadcast.
G.S. 18-58 regulates the transportation of alcoholic beverages.
These statutory acts and pronouncements of intention by the legislature lead us to the conclusion that the purpose of the alcoholic beverage control act of 1937 and the many local acts of regulation and prohibition were to control every possible facet of intoxicating liquor.
Considering our Court’s definition of the word “trade”, i. e., a “business venture for profit,” Speedway v. Clayton, supra, in connection with the recognition that it has never been the philosophy of the people of North Carolina or their elected representatives to put the State in competition with private enterprise, we conclude that it would necessitate cynical, strained and illogical reasoning to hold that it was the intent of the legislature in passing the 1937 Act or of the 1965 legislature in passing the “Reidsville Act” to place the sovereign state in a “business venture for profit” for the purpose of dispensing a product to its people which is recognized as a cause of crime, cruelty, indolence, neglect and poverty.
We cannot conceive that the people of North Carolina, speaking through their representatives, contemplated under Section 29 of Article II that the sovereign state would enter, any trade or business venture for profit. Nor did they intend to limit or fetter the police power of the State in any manner in its control of intoxicating liquor. Rather, we conclude that it is evident the people of North Carolina recognize that decreeing total abstinence from intoxicating liquor is futile, and that in localities where a majority of the qualified voters approve, the State may undertake the controlled dispensation of alcoholic beverages in the exercise of its police power. “Undoubtedly, the State possesses the police power in its capacity as a sovereign, and in the exercise thereof, the Legislature may enact laws, within constitutional limits, to protect or promote the health, morals, order, safety, and general welfare of society.” State v. Ballance, 229 N.C. 764, 51 S.E. 2d 731.
This Court recognizes a presumption in favor of the constitutionality of a statute. In the case of McIntyre v. Clarkson, 254 N.C. 510, 119 S.E. 2d 888, the Court said: “ ‘It is well settled in this State that the Courts have the power, and it is their duty in proper cases, to declare an act of the General Assembly unconstitutional — but it must be plainly and clearly the case. If there is any reasonable doubt, it will be resolved in favor of the lawful exercise of their powers by the representatives of the people.’ ”
“Every presumption is in favor of the constitutionality of a *595statute, and the courts will not pronounce an act of the General Assembly unconstitutional unless it is plainly so.” Strong, N. C. Index, Yol. 1 (Supp.) Constitutional Law, § 10.
And again considering the constitutional question in the case of Assurance Co. v. Gold, 249 N.C. 461, 106 S.E. 2d 875, the Court stated: “Every presumption favors the validity of a statute. It will not be declared invalid unless its unconstitutionality be determined beyond reasonable doubt.” See also 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, § 99(b).
Thus applying these recognized rules of construction, we hold that Chapter 650 of the 1965 Session Laws does not violate Article II, Section 29 of the North Carolina Constitution, as the act of dispensing intoxicating liquors by the State is not a trade, but is a valid exercise of its police powers. Nor does this exercise of the police power violate the terms of Article II, Section 29 of the North Carolina Constitution as being a partial repeal of a general law.
Affirmed.