118 Ky. 429 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
On June 27, 1896, by a vote of the people of Clark county, tbe local option law was put in force in the county, inducting the city of*Winchester. On June 28, 1899, an election was held in the North Winchester precinct to determine whether the local option law should become inoperative in that precinct. A majority of the'voters voted that it should become inoperative therein. Winchester is a city of the fourth
More than three. years had elapsed from the time the vote was taken upon the question as to whether the local ojtion law should be in force in Clark county to the date when the vote was taken in the North Winchester precinct on the question of the local option law becoming inoperative in that precinct. Section 61 of the Constitution makes it the duty of the General Assembly to provide bv general law a means whereby the sense of the voters of any county, city, town, district, or precinct may be taken as to whether or not spirituous, vinous, and malt liquors shall be sold, bartered or loaned therein, or the sale thereof regulated. As required by that section, the General Assembly passed a local option law for the State. The General Assembly has left to the decision of each local community under which of two policies it shall live — the license system or prohibition — and authorized the people to take a vote at certain intervals, and thus
It is urged that the voters did not vote upon the question as to whether liquors should be sold in North Winchester precinct, because a vote that the local option law should be inoperative is not equivalent to voting that liquors might be sold. It is expressly provided in section 2554, Ky. St., 1903, that the question may be submitted to the voters “whether or not any prohibition law in force in any county, city, town, district, or precinct by virtue of any general act or special act or acts shall become inoperative.” The question as provided by the statute was submitted to the voters of the precinct in question. It is evident that every voter, when he voted, knew that he was expressing his opinion upon the question as to whether or not liquors should be sold in the precinct. It is the substance of the act done, not the form, that determines its quality and effect.
It is insisted that the board of council had the right to arbitrarily refuse to grant the license to sell liquors by virtue of the charters of the cities of the fourth class, which is section 3490, Ky. St., 1903. It reads as follows: “The council shall have power by ordinance to license, permit, regulate or restrain the sale of all kinds of vinous, spirituous or malt liquors within the limits of the city, or to restrain or prohibit the sale thereof within one mile of the limits thereof, provided nothing herein shall ba construed as granting the power or right to one town or city to license, per
In our opinion, mandamus is the proper remedy.
The judgments are reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.