222 P. 1 | Wyo. | 1924
These two cases involve identical questions. Both were brought against the City of Cheyenne to recover unearned license money under liquor-licenses issued to plaintiffs by the county of Laramie and the City of Cheyenne in the
Plaintiffs seek to recover under the authority of the provisions of chapter 100 of the Session Laws of 1919. The title of that act is in part as follows:
“An act directing the boards of county commissioners and the city commissioners and city councils of any incorporated city in the state of Wyoming, to rebate and refund so much of any license moneys paid” etc.
The act itself provides in part as follows:
“That whenever it shall become unlawful by reason of any United States law, or by reason of any state law, for any person # * * to be engaged in the retail liquor business in the state of Wyoming before the expiration of the full period for which a license authorizing the sale of liquors, wines and beer shall have been issued * * * the board of county commissioners of the respective counties in the state of Wyoming, and the city commissioners and city councils of any incorporated city in the state of Wyoming, who may have issued such license, may refund to the person, persons, company or corporation who have paid the full license money provided by law, such an amount of the license money paid as will cover the period of time, when by the laws of the United States, or of the state of Wyoming, it shall have become unlawful for any person, persons, company or corporation, to be engaged in the retail liquor business in the state of Wyoming.” (Italics are ours.)
It is the contention of counsel for appellant that, especially in view of the title of the foregoing act, mandatory in form, the provision for a refund should be considered mandatory, and that the words “may refund” should be construed to mean “shall refund.” Where the language of a statute is ambiguous, its meaning may frequently be ascertained by resort to the history of its passage through the legislature (36 Cyc. 1138), and this we shall proceed to do in this case. The act above set out was originally House Bill No. 9. The bill as introduced contained the words: “shall refund” instead of “may refund,” and had the bill passed in that form, no question could have arisen respecting its proper construction or meaning. It would then have unconditionally required a refundment. But it was not so enacted. While the journal of the House is somewhat confusing, the notation on the original bill, (which we have a right to consider: 36 Cyc. 1138) malíes it perfectly clear that it was amended in the house by substituting the word “may” for “shall,” in connection with the provision for refunding, and as so amended the bill passed both houses and in that form was signed and approved by the Governor. Here is manifest a deliberate change, notwithstanding the fact that the title to the bill was left as originally drawn, and this deliberate change seems clearly to indicate the purpose to leave the matter of refunding within the discretion of the county and municipal authorities. This is the view taken in the case of Bender v. City of Fergus Falls, 115 Minn. 66, 131 N. W. 849, a case nearly parallel to the case at bar. To the same effect is Rea v. Cook, 217 Mass. 427, 105 N. E. 618, where it was said that the deliberate refusal of the legislature to adopt a word which
“Provided, however, that any retail liquor license hereafter issued shall expire on June 30, 1919, and the licensee shall be required to pay only such part or proportion of the required annual license fee as the period of time for which license shall be issued bears to a full year. ’ ’
This amendment was so adopted in the afternoon of February 14, 1919. At that time the so-called prohibition act, to go into effect at midnight on June 30th, 1919, had already passed both houses, and the enrolled act thereof was in fact signed by the president of the senate in the afternoon of February 14,. 1919. It was probable that that act would become a law, and it was in fact approved by the Governor on the next day. Had it been understood by the legislature that House Bill No. 9, as it then stood, made the return of the proportionate, unearned! license fee mandatory, no great necessity could have existed for the Senate amendment above mentioned; and the evident purpose was to protect at least subsequent licensees from losing any license fee for the period subsequent to June 30, 1919. But even this amendment was finally defeated and did not become part of the act as finally passed.
Counsel for appellant has cited many cases wherein the term may has been construed to mean shall or must. The
“But when the rule is invoked in aid of a personal right, the right must be an existing legal one, and not one which the local board or officer is by the statute authorized to create. * * * In other words, in case the legislature intends to. compel a municipality to pay a particular claim, which it is not legally liable to pay, it must say so out and out.J 7
Whether or not the right of individuals to have a permissive statute construed to be mandatory should always be one strictly de jure, we need not decide. Counsel for appellant, however; recognize the rule as applicable to the case at bar, and- we think correctly so. But he further insists that appellants had a right de jure, and relies on Chas. Blum Co. v. Town of Hastings, 76 Fla. 7, 79 So. 442; L. R. A. 1918 F 783; Pearson v. City of Seattle, 14 Wash. 438, 44 Pac. 884; Hirn v. State, 1 O. S. 15; Allsman v. Oklahoma City, 21 Okl. 408, 95 Pac. 468; 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 511, 17 Ann. Cas. 184; Lydick v. Korner, 15 Neb. 500, 20 N. W. 26; Scott v. Trustees, 132 Ky. 616, 116 S. W. 788, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 112, and other cases holding that when a license becomes void without fault of the licensee, common honesty requires that the pro tanto amount for the unexpired term of the license should be refunded. It may be said in passing that these cases hold as they do without reference to any special legislative act enabling the local public officers to return such unearned license money, so that if appellants have a right de.jure to have the pro tcmto amount for the unexpired terms of the licenses refunded, that right exists without reference to chapter 100 of the Session laws of 1919, and that act either had no force at all, or it created a new right and authorized the local public bodies to do something which they had no previous lawful authority to do. The cases last cited do not express the law in this
It follows that the demurrers in the cases at bar, were properly sustained, and the judgments herein should accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.