128 Ga. 197 | Ga. | 1907
This was a petition by the City of Barnesville and the dispensary commission of Barnesville and certain individuals, against the ordinary of Pike county, praying that the latter be enjoined from calling and ordering an election under the provisions of the act of August 1, 1906 (Acts of 1906, p. 114), providing for local-option elections in counties in this State in which the sale of whisky is not lawful except through dispensaries. After the hearing the judge refused to grant the injunction as prayed for, and the plaintiffs excepted.
The act, upon its face, declares that it is applicable only in counties where the sale of intoxicating liquors is unlawful except in dispensaries, and then provides for an election to be held “to determine whether or not the sale of liquor shall be absolutely prohibited in such counties.” The election is to be held under the provisions of the Political Code relating to elections under the general local-option liquor law, so far as applicable. It is provided that if a majority of the votes cast at the election shall be against the dispensary, intoxicating liquors shall not be sold in the county, either by private individuals or in dispensaries, except that licensed druggists may sell or furnish pure alcohol for medical, scientific, and mechanical purposes. It is also provided that when an election is held under this act, no other local-option election shall be held in less than four years thereafter, and then only upon a new petition, conforming to the provisions of the act. If after the expiration of that time another election is held, and the result of the election is in favor of the dispensary, “then the laws regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors in dispensaries in said counties, which were in existence at the date when the operation ^as suspended by virtue of the voters of said county having voted against the dispensary, shall be restored to force and effect.” The act under consideration does not provide for the 'repeal of the law establishing the dispensary, but merely for the suspension of its operation during the dates between the. election resulting against the dispensary and one resulting in' favor of the dispensa^. After an election of the character last referred .to, the original law providing for the establishment of the dispensary comes into operation again, without any new legislation on the subject. The subject-matter of the act, therefore, is the suspension of the operation of a dispensary law in any county where a dispensary has been established. The passage of a law dealing with this subject was within the power of the General Assembly, and any matter of legislation which was germane and pertinent to this subject-matter could be embraced in the act without making it amenable to the objection that it contained two subject-matters. The status of a county during the time that the operation, of the dispensary was suspended was a matter germane and pertinent to the general subject-matter
Nox-was it subject to the objection that there was matter in the body of the act not referred to in the title thereof; for the title distinctly declares that it is an act to provide for local-option elections in counties in which the sale of liquor is not lawful except through dispensaries, to determine the question of whether the sale of intoxicating liquors through dispensaries shall be prohibited •in such counties, to determine the status of the county in respect to the sale of intoxicating liquor after the election has been held, and to provide a mode for changing the same, and for other purposes.
■2. It is contended that the act of 1906 above referred to is not .applicable to Pike county, for the reason that Pike county does not come within the descriptive terms of the act, which declares that it shall be operative in counties where the sale of intoxicating ■liquors “is unlawful except in dispensaries.” While there is a dispensary in existence in the city of Barnesville, which is in the county of Pike, established under the act of December 18, 1900 (Acts of 1900, p. 214), it is said that the sale of intoxicating liquors is nevertheless lawful in Pike county, .although as a matter of fact no one is engaged in the sale at this time; that is, there is no law prohibiting the sale, and no legal obstacle to the issuance of a license, though none has been issued. It therefore becomes necessary to determine the status of Pike county in reference to ■the laws in relation to the sale of liquor; and to do this, reference must be had to certain local acts on the subject. In 1883 an act was passed which authorized the submission to the voters of Pike county of the question of whether the sale of liquor should be allowed in the county (Acts of 1882-3, p. 586). An election was ■held under the provisions of this act, in July, 1884, and the result of the election was against the sale. This local áct was in force when the general local option -law was passed; and by the terms of
In 1887 an act was passed amending the local act of 1883 (Acts of 1887, p. 857). This act provided that an election might be held in Pike county to determine the question of whether the sale of liquor should be prohibited. The method of election is fully provided for in the act. The provisions of the act, relating to the election, are substantially the same as those contained in the general local-option law, as now set forth in the Political Code, §1541 et seq. The language of the local act and the general law is, except in a few minor.particulars, identical. There is no substantial difference between the two in regard to the manner of calling the election, or conducting it, or of contesting the result. The effect produced in the event that the result of the election was in favor of the sale is different in the local act from what it would have been if the election had been held under the general law. By the seventh section of the act of 1887 it is provided that if the election “shall result in the repeal of the prohibition law” then of force in the county, no sale of liquor shall be authorized without a license being obtained from the ordinary, authorizing the sale upon the terms and conditions referred to in the act. This section contains a proviso that the provisions of the act, as to the manner of obtaining a license, shall not be construed to apply to any incorporated town in the county. An election was held under this act which resulted in favor of the sale. In Beckham v. Howard, 83 Ga. 89, it was held that the effect of this election was to authorize a license for the sale of liquor in the county at points not embraced in any of the incorporated towns in the county, but that under the proviso above referred to, the towns were “absolutely and unconditionally dry.” The General Assembly undoubtedly had power to provide for the unconditional repeal of the act of 1883 in its entirety. It had authority to repeal it in part and to allow it to remain in force in part. It could make a repeal of either character subject to a vote of the people of the county. The effect of the act of, 1887 was to submit to the people of the county the question as to whether the act should be repealed so far as it related to the sale of liquor in places outside of the incorporated towns, and remain of force so far as such towns were concerned. The legislature has authority to submit a question of a partial repeal of an act to the voters of
But it is said that the three-mile law is of such character that it may be in operation one day and not operative the next; that a. school may be abolished, or a church or schoolhouse may be burned or destroyed, and the sale of liquor, therefore, would be lawful in territory contiguous to the place where the church or school was. formerly located. Thesé contingencies may happen, .but each case
But it may be said that the General Assembly has provided that the three-mile law shall not be applicable in certain cases. This is true. Exceptions to this act are set forth in section 435 of the Penal Code, which is as follows: “The preceding section does not apply to an incorporated town or city, nor to the sale of such liquors in original packages of not less than forty gallons, by the manufacturer thereof to legally authorized dealers; nor does it prohibit the sale of domestic wines; nor does it prohibit regular practicing physicians from dispensing alcoholic stimulants for medical uses in their practice.” Does the fact that the General Assembly makes an exception in a law, which either in terms or in effect declares a certain act to be unlawful, make such law any less1 a law declaring such act to be unlawful? The word “unlawful,” in the act of 1906, must be interpreted in the light of the legislation of this State where the word or its equivalent is used. Many transactions are denounced by the law as unlawful, and then, by way of exception, the General Assembly provides that if the transaction takes place under certain circumstances, the party shall be relieved from the penalties of the law. The law declares, in effect, that it shall be unlawful to point a pistol or a gun at another,.
What did the General Assembly mean, in the act of 1906, when they declared that the act should apply to counties in which “the sale of liquor is unlawful except in dispensaries.” The legislative intent was evidently to embrace those counties in which, under the operation of some valid law of this State, the sale of liquor was declared to be unlawful, without reference to whether, under any of such laws, there might be an exception inuring to the benefit of a certain class enumerated by the General Assembly in an excepting clause. If this interpretation is not placed upon the act of 1906, the General Assembly have probably done an idle and vain thing. The 'general local-option liquor law, which declares the sale of liquor in a county in which an election has been held resulting against the sale shall be unlawful, has more than one exception having the effect to relieve persons making a sale of liquors from the penalties of the act. That act excepts the sale of domestic wines, and the sale of all wines for sacramental purposes, and also excepts the sale of pure alcohol when it is to be used for certain purposes. •Political Code, §1549. If the effect of the exceptions to the three-mile law is to prevent a county, the territory of which is entirely within the operation of that law,- from coming within the operation of the act of 1906, then, for the same reason, any county within the operation of the general local-option liquor law, where an elec
It was not intended, by the use of the word “dispensary,” in xhe act of 1906, to make a class out of any of these various forms of a dispensary that are found under the different laws providing for the establishment of such institutions. The General Assembly evidently intended, by the use of the word “dispensary,” to describe a place where liquor is sold by governmental authority, without reference to whether the officers in charge were officers of the State, county, or municipality, or how the profits of the dispensary were to be divided. The legislative intention was to enable the people of the county, where any one of the different forms of a dispensary appeared, to express their preferences as to whether the dispensary should continue in that county or whether it should be suspended. It was the evil effects resulting from the sale of liquor by the dispensaries that brought about the legislation authorizing the people to suspend its operation by a popular vote. No matter who controls the dispensary, or how its profits are divided, the evil effects resulting from the sale of liquor therein are the same, and the people are entitled, under the act of 1906, to determine whether the dispensary system in the county shall be continued or whether it shall be changed for the time being to a system in which the sale of liquor is altogether prohibited.
We see no reason for reversing the judgment refusing to restrain the ordinary from calling an election under the act of 1906.
Judgment affirmed.