34 Ind. App. 572 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1905
This cause was transferred from- the Supreme Court. Appellant gave notice and filed his application for a license to sell intoxicating liquors at Acton, Indiana. His application was to be heard at the regular April session, 1903, of the board of commissioners of Marion county. On Eriday, being three days before the convening of the April session of said board, a remonstrance was filed with the auditor of the county, which remonstrance contained a majority of all the legal voters of the township in which Acton is located. The remonstrance was filed under section nine of what is commonly known as the Nicholson law. Acts 1895, p. 248. The name of each of the remonstrators appearing upon the instrument was signed by S. L. Arnold, in pursuance of an authority vested in him by a written instrument as follows: “We, the undersigned, residents and voters in Eranldin township (or ward, in the city of Acton), in Marion county, State of Indiana, do hereby respectfully authorize, empower and request S. L. Arnold and-, or either of them, to sign our respective names to any and all remonstrance or remonstrances against persons who may give notice of intention to apply for. a license tO' sell intoxicating liquors in said township (or in the aforesaid ward) and also properly to file and present said remonstrance or remonstrances to the auditor of said county.”
On Thursday before the regular April session of the board of county commissioners, there was filed in the auditor’s office of said county the following instrument: “To the board of commissioners of the county of Marion, State of Indiana: The undersigned severally revoke every appointment of any agent or attorney in fact to sign their names on remonstrances under the act of March 11, 1895, known as the Nicholson law. Withdraw their names from every •
The board of commissioners refused to consider appellant’s application for license, upon the ground that its jurisdiction was ousted by said remonstrance, and thereupon he appealed to the circuit court. The cause was submitted to the circuit court upon the above-stated facts and the evidence adduced, and a finding and judgment followed, denying the applicant a license. In appellant’s motion for a new trial, he raised three questions: (1) The insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the decision; (2) that the decision was contrary to law; and (3) that the court erred in sustaining the objection of the remonstrators to a certain question propounded to a witness by the applicant.
The error assigned is the overruling of the motion for a new trial.
The instrument filed before the auditor of the county on Thursday preceding the filing of the remonstrance was signed by eighty-one legal voters of the township. The remonstrance as filed contained seventy-four more names of the legal voters of the township than constituted a majority of the legal voters thereof. It follows, therefore, that if the instrument filed on Thursday, which contained the names of eighty-one of the legal voters of the township who had signed the remonstrance, was sufficient to amend the power of attorney, or the agency which they had created authorizing Arnold to sign their names to any and all remonstrances, then the remonstrance when filed did not contain a majority of all the legal voters of the township. This is the one important question in the case, and a correct decision of it must determine the rights of the parties.
In State v. Gerhardt, supra, at page 473, the Supreme Court said: “Until the beginning of this three days’ period [meaning the three days intervening between the filing of the remonstrance and the first day of the term of the board of commissioners at which the application for license is heard], whether the remonstrance had been placed on file or not, any remonstrator must be deemed to have the absolute right, by some affirmative act of his own, to withdraw his name from such remonstrance.”
So far as we are advised, the courts have not judicially and specifically determined what shall constitute such “affirmative act of his own,” which shall be sufficient to withdraw the remonstrator’s name from the remonstrance; but we do know that it has been judicially determined that it must be some affirmative act. We have no doubt but that a remonstrator who has either signed his name to a remonstrance himself, or authorized some one to sign it for him, could, if he had access to the remonstrance, erase his name therefrom at any time before the beginning of the three days’ limit. That would certainly be an affirmative act. He might also authorize some one to do that for him, and that would also be an affirmative act. It occurs to us that any act of a remonstrator which evinces an intention or desire to
The judgment is reversed, and the court below is directed to sustain appellant’s motion for new trial, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.