28 N.Y.S. 690 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1894
The defendants are the proprietors of a saloon at No. 492 Michigan street, in this city, licensed to sell ale, beer, and liquors at retail. By the ordinance in question it is, among other things, provided that no person shall carry on a place operated under a license for the sale of ale, beer, and liquors at retail in which concerts or entertainments consisting of singing and music only are allowed, until they shall have paid to the city the sum of $50 a year as a fee for the privilege of giving such concerts or entertainments. The defendants have a sitting room which adjoins their bar room, and in this sitting room there is a piano. The offense charged against the defendants is that on a certain evening in August last, between 9 and 10 o’clock, the defendant Decker played a tune upon that piano,- and that two ladies and one gentleman sat with the defendants in the sitting room, and listened to the music. The dismissal of the complaint by the municipal court was right, for two reasons: First. It was incumbent upon the city to prove that the defendants had failed to pay the fee which entitled them to give concerts or entertainments in their saloon, assuming that the performance of Decker constituted a concert or entertainment, within the meaning of the ordinance, before it could ask for a conviction at the hands of the court, and no evidence tending to prove that fact was offered. No presumption existed in favor of the city that the fee had not been paid, or that the defendants were violating a penal