delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, a taxpayer, brought suit in the superior court of Coolc County to enjoin the defendant officers from disbursing public funds in the administration or enforcement of sections 23 and 24 of article VI of the Illinois Liquor Control Act. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1949, chap. 43, pars. 144a and 144b.) By his amended complaint the validity of each section was challenged on several grounds. A motion by defendants to dismiss the suit was sustained as to section 23 but overruled as to section 24, which the court found to be unconstitutional. Defendants elected to stand on their motion, and a final decree was rendered accordingly. Plaintiff appеals to this court, contending the superior court erred in holding section 23 valid, and defendants have taken a cross appeal contesting the portion of the decree holding section 24 to be void.
The validity of section 23 will be considered first. It reads as follows: “No unmixed whiskey, unmixed gin or unmixed rum shall be sold or offered for sale at retail for consumption on the premises, except in a container having a minimum capacity of at least one fluid ounce and which contains at the time of sale at least one fluid ounce of the beverage being sold. The provisions of this Section shall not prohibit the sale of unmixed whiskey, unmixed gin or unmixed rum on boats or railroad cars licensed to sell liquor for consumption on the premises in containers regularly used and having a smaller fluid capacity.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1949, chap. 43, par. 144a.) It is first contended that the section is unconstitutional on the grounds that the terms “unmixed whiskey,” “unmixed gin” and “unmixed rum” are vague and uncertain in meaning, and that by their use the legislature has given to the Illinois Liquor Control Commission- an uncontrolled discretion to define the type of liquor referred to. There is no merit in this position. Contrary to plaintiff’s argument, the word “whiskey” has a usual and popular meaning, which is not rendered ambiguous by the fact that classifications may be made as to “bonded” whiskey, “straight” whiskey, “blended” whiskey and the like. The statute applies to all types of whiskey, gin and rum, sold or offered for sale by the drink, in the form in which they are poured from the bottle, without being first сombined with other ingredients to form a mixture. The term “unmixed” clearly refers to the designated liquors in the form in which they exist in the original container, and has no bearing upon their composition as determined by the manufacturer. Where the words appearing in a statute are in common and daily use, аnd when read in connection with the context are susceptible to a common understanding, their use does not render the statute invalid. The section is not subject to the objection of uncertainty and vagueness.
Plaintiff secondly contends that the fixing of a minimum quantity which may be sold is an unreasonablе and arbitrary restriction having no relation to public health, safety, or welfare. The police power of the State is not confined to the protection of public health and safety, and the preservation of order, but extends as well to the prevention of fraud, deceit and imposition. (People v. Freeman,
It is further urged thаt in exempting sales made on boats and railroad cars the section constitutes special legislation in violation of section 22 of article IV of the constitution. This position cannot be sustained. The legislature may reasonably believe that the causes of the evil at which the аct is directed do not exist in such places to the same extent as elsewhere. The intensity of competition among ordinary vendors of intoxicating liquors, which may to some extent induce resort to questionable practices in order to sell at reduced prices, does not exist оn railroad cars. Whether it is among the taverns and other fixed localities that the evil to be suppressed is most likely to arise is a matter for determination by the legislature if there is some reasonable basis for the classification. The legislature has a broad discretion in making classifications for police regulation. The requirement of the constitution that laws shall be general does not mean that every statute shall have effect upon every individual and in every locality. It is for the legislature to determine when and where conditions exist requiring an exercise of poliсe power to meet existing evils, and, when the legislature has acted, a presumption arises that the act is a valid exercise of such power. (People v. Monroe,
Plaintiff next insists that the subject of the act is not embraced within its title and is, therefore, in violation of section 13 of article IV of the constitution, which provides that no act “shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.” The title of the act in question, which added the two sections to the Liquor Control Act in 1949, is as follows: “An Act to add Sections 23 and 24 to Article VI of 'An Act relating to alcoholic liquors/ approved January 31, 1934, as amended.” (Laws of 1949, p. 813.) The title of the act amended is thus set forth in the title of the amendatory act. It is well settled that where such is done, any provisiоn which might have been inserted in the original act may be incorporated in the amendatory act without violating the constitutional provision that the subject of an act shall be expressed in the title. (Malloy v. City of Chicago,
The question remains whether the provisions of section 24 are unconstitutional. They are as follows: “No person or persons licensed to sell liquor at retail for consumption on the premises shall use in such sales or possess on such premises any glass or other container so constructed as to be deceptive in appearance or to mislead the consumer as to its true capacity.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1949, chap. 43, par. 144b.) Plaintiff’s attack on the validity of this section is based upon two contentions: First, that its provisions are so vaguе and indefinite that persons subject to the act cannot ascertain whether the use of any particular container will render them liable to the penalties; and, second, that by prohibiting the mere possession of any container “deceptive in appearance” the act is unreasonable and arbitrary.
It is axiomatic that a statute, to be valid, must not be vague, indefinite and uncertain. It must be sufficiently explicit to advise those whom it purports to affect as to what their rights are and how they will be affected by its operation. Statutes which are so incomplete, vague, indefinite and uncertain that men of ordinary intelligence must necessarily guess at their meaning and differ as to their application, will not be upheld by the courts. (Ill. Liquor Control Com. v. Chicago’s Last Liquor Store,
The laudable object of the law, namely, to prevent deceрtion, cannot be accomplished by simply making illegal “deception” or the use of articles “deceptive” in appearance. There are few words more flexible than the terms “deceptive” and “misleading.” They prescribe no fixed standard by which the containers may be tеsted, and lack the precision essential to afford due process of law. In Vallat v. Radium Dial Co.
In view of our holding that section 24 is void for uncertainty, it is unnecessary to consider plaintiff’s contention that its prohibition of the mеre possession of a deceptive container renders its provisions unreasonable and arbitrary.
Plaintiff finally urges that if section 24 is unconstitutional section 23 must also be held void, and invokes the rule that where legislative provisions are so mutually connected with, and dependent on, each other as to indicate that the legislature intended them as a whole and not otherwise, the unobjectionable portion must fall with the invalid part. The rule has no application here. The general rule is that only the invalid parts of a statute are without legal effect. It is only where thеy are so blended with, and a part of, the other provisions that the legislature would not have passed the remainder, that the whole will be declared void. (Grennan v. Sheldon,
We conclude that the superior court was correct both as to section 23 and as to section 24, and its decree will accordingly be affirmed. 6 J
, Decree affirmed.
