53 Colo. 254 | Colo. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiff, in error, -who. was the plaintiff below, instituted this action fori the purpose of restraining the officers of the city of Port Collins from attempting to enforce the provisions of an ordinance of- that city, pertaining ■ to soliciting and receiving orders for intoxicating liquors. The substance of his complaint necessary to consider is, that he has been engaged in soliciting and receiving of persons within the city of Port Collins, orders for spirituous and fermented liquors of all kinds, and has been and. now is so engág-ed as agent and employee of certain persons of the city of Denver; that on June 20th, 1910, there was duly passed and adopted a certain ordinance for the city of Port Collins which provided among other things that whoever shall solicit any person to purchase, or shall receive an order for sale, or shall deliver, for the purpose of evading- any of the provisions of the statutes concerning local option (being chapter 86 of the Revised Statutes of Colorado of 1908) any spirituous or fermented' liquors, or intoxicating drinks of any kind, or any article used, or sold as a beverage in the composition of which whisky, brandy, high wines ©r alcohol, or-any spirituous or fermented liquors shall be an ingredient, at any place within the corporate limits of the city of Port Collins, or at any place within one mile of the corporate limits thereof, shall be deemed guilty of an offense, and upon conviction shall be fined in a sum not less than $50 nor more than $300; that at an election held in said city in April, 1909, there was legally submitted at all the wards included therein the proposition of whether the said political divisions should become anti-saloon territory under the provisions of the Local Option Act approved March 25, 1907; that as a result of said election the entire city became anti-saloon territory; that by the terms of the local option law after its adoption in said city, all powers and authority theretofore vested in the city for prohibiting, 'regulating and controlling
A somewhat similar ordinance to' the one here being attacked was held good in the case of Brunstein v. The People ex rel. Town of Windsor, 47 Colo. 10. It is conceded under the ruling in that case that this ordinance would be valid, were it not for the fact that the provisions of the Local Option Act