201 Mass. 204 | Mass. | 1909
This is a bill in equity brought under R. L. c. 101, § 8, by ten legal voters of the town of Maynard, averring that a certain building in said town was used for the illegal beeping and selling of intoxicating liquors, and praying for its abatement as a common nuisance. There was a hearing in the Superior Court, and the presiding judge found that the defendant Clark on March 25, 1908, made an application to the selectmen of the town of Maynard for a license as an innholder and for first and fourth class liquor licenses. This application described the premises as a “ building to be erected on lot on southerly side of Main Street corner of River Street in said Maynard in the whole of said building, cellar for stock only of such building.” At that time there was no building on the lot and none in process of erection. Publication of notice of this application was duly made. On April 15, 1908, the board of selectmen licensed four places for the sale of intoxicating liquors, being authorized by law to license five, and determined informally to grant a license to Clark when the building was so far completed that an innholder’s license could be granted, but no formal action was taken. On March 31, 1908, the work of digging the cellar for the building began, and on April 28,1908, the foundations and cellar being then ready, the work of constructing the superstructure was begun and was completed on June 27, 1908. On May 22, 1908, the building was so far completed and furnished that strangers and travellers to a limited number might be fed and lodged, although it was far short of being finished. On May 22, 1908, the defendant Clark applied for a license as an innholder, and on that day the selectmen granted an innholder’s license and a first and fourth class liquor license to do business at 34 and 36 Main Street. The defendant Coughlin is the
The defendants contend that the Superior Court had no jurisdiction of the cause upon the facts found, the argument being that inasmuch as the selectmen have undertaken to grant a license and have acted in a quasi-judicial capacity, their acts can be reviewed only by certiorari. If it be assumed in their favor that the act of granting liquor licenses is a quasi-judicial one, it does not follow that the Legislature cannot provide a remedy by which such action can collaterally be brought under review. It has not infrequently been held that prerogative writs will not be issued in cases where another adequate remedy has been provided by statute. Perry v. Hull, 180 Mass. 547. Attorney General v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 197 Mass. 194. The language of the statute, under which the present petition is brought, is general and confers jurisdiction whenever premises are used for the illegal keeping or. sale of intoxicating liquors. This language must have been intended to include, as it does by apt expression, instances of violation of law by the holder of a license as well as by unlicensed persons..
At the time the application for the licenses was filed and at the time notices were published, there was no building upon the lot of land upon which subsequently the building described in the licenses was constructed. It is plain, from the several provisions of the liquor license law, that no license can be granted to be exercised anywhere except in a building. There is no detailed statutory requirement as to the contents of the application, but E. L. c. 100, § 14, makes specific enumeration of certain matters which must be contained in the notice. By implication therefore the statute requires that the' application shall at least contain all the descriptive information which must be set out in the notice, namely, “ the name of the applicant in full, the class of license applied for, a particular description of the premises on which the license is to be exercised, designating the building or part of a building to be used, and, if practicable, the street and number.” It was said in Braconier v. Packard, 136 Mass. 50, at page 53, that “ the object of the provision is to
It remains to inquire, however, whether this difficulty in the procedure went to the jurisdiction of the selectmen in granting the license or whether the paper when granted remained in force until revoked in one of the ways pointed out in the statute.
The difficulty with the defendant Clark is that the irregularity in the granting of the license began with his own unwarranted act in describing in his application a building not then in existence. His application, which was his own act, showed on its face that no legal license could be granted upon it. It is the general rule that a public board, when acting under authority conferred by statute in issuing licenses, must conform to the provisions of the statute, and if they fail to exercise their authority pursuant to its terms the licensee is not protected. This was laid down in an early case respecting the license of an auctioneer. Clark v. Cushman, 5 Mass. 505. In other jurisdictions it has been frequently held that the requirement of a notice as a prerequisite to the granting of a license is jurisdictional, and that a failure to comply or defective compliance with this requirement is not a mere irregularity in the proceedings, but one which renders them wholly void and the license of no protection. Pisar v. State, 56 Neb. 455. Brown v. Murphy, 22 Vroom, 250. People v. Davis, 36 N. Y. 77. Russell v. State, 77 Ala. 89. Lombard v. Cheever, 8 Ill. 469. State v. Moore, 1 Jones, 276. House v. State, 41 Miss. 737. It has been repeatedly held in cases arising under our liquor laws that a license granted in violation of some provision of the license law was illegal, and although unrevoked, afforded no protection against criminal proceedings for acts, which would not be contrary to the statute, if the license was of any validity. For instance, licenses to be exercised in buildings within four hundred feet of a schoolhouse, although regular in form, have been held to be no justification to the holder; Commonwealth v. Whalen, 134 Mass. 206; Commonwealth v. Jones, 142 Mass. 573; Commonwealth v. McDonald, 160 Mass. 528. So also a license issued in excess of the number permitted by law; Commonwealth v.
The defendants rely upon certain expressions used by the court in McGinnis v. Medway, 176 Mass. 67. That was an action to recover money paid for a license, which was subsequently revoked on the ground that the selectmen in posting the notices of the application required by the statute failed to do their duty in that they posted upon the adjoining property instead of the estate described in the application. It was there said respecting the licenses that “they were a full and legal protection to the licensee until revoked under the statute, and they could not be so revoked for the cause for which they were actually revoked, except by a court acting in proceedings instituted directly for that purpose under the provisions of the sixth section of the statute.” R. L. c. 100, § 14. This language was used in a different kind of a case with another purpose, and cannot be held to apply to such a case as the present where in the very first step toward the granting of the license, which was necessarily taken by the defendant Clark and not by any public authority, it appeared upon the face of his paper that no valid license could be granted. An examination of the records of the selectmen, which must include at least the application, the notice and a copy of the license, shows that the attempted issuing of the licenses was void, because of the fatal defect in the application and notice as well as in the variance between the description of the building contained in these papers and in the license issued, where it was referred to by its street numbers.
There are many cases in other jurisdictions where language apparently imperative in form has been held to have been intended only as directory, and failure to comply with the provision has been held not to affect the validity of the act done. French v. Edwards, 13 Wall. 506. Hehl v. Guion, 155 Mo. 76. Albright v. Sussex Co. Lake & Park Commission, 39 Vroom, 523, 534. State v. Lean, 9 Wis. 279, 292. In re Hennessy, 164 N. Y. 393. People v. Allen, 6 Wend. 486. People v. Cook, 8 N. Y. 67. See cases collected 2 Sutherland, Stat. Cons., pp. 1117 and 1118, and Cooley, Const. Lim. (7th ed.), pp. Ill to 113. But here we are dealing with language which is only permissive in form. It permitted the granting of licenses to be done aforetime after deliberation and' investigation instead of under pressure to hurry
It seems plain, therefore, that there is authority to grant such licenses in months other than April. It is to be noted that this court has in two cases since St. 1883, c. 93, without discussion of the question here raised, ordered a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue requiring the signing of licenses where the vote by the public board was later than April. Braconier v. Packard, 136 Mass. 50. Fitzgerald v. Hurley, 180 Mass. 151.
The ruling of the judge that the applications filed in March were insufficient and the licenses issued thereon void was right, as was also the ruling that the innholder’s license issued on May 22 was valid, but his ruling that no license for the sale of intoxicating liquor could be granted except in the month of April was wrong. This error, however, does not affect the validity of the decree entered. Under the terms of the report, if the rulings were not correct the decree is to be set aside. We construe this to mean incorrect in respects affecting the form or substance of the decree. Let the entry be
Decree affirmed.
The application described the premises for which the licenses were desired as a “ building to be erected on lot on the southerly side of Main Street in said Maynard in whole of said building, cellar for stock only of such building.”' The innholder’s license allowed Clark to be an innholder “ at 34 and 36 Main Street in ” Maynard; the first class liquor license was to Clark, “ doing business at No. 34 and 36 on the southerly side of Main Street as