41 Wash. 385 | Wash. | 1906
This appeal is from an order of the lower court temporarily restraining the defendants from transa ferring a retail liquor license issued by the city to one I. G. Morgan, and directing the Seattle Brewing & Malting Company to deliver the paper evidence of said license to the respondent. It appears from the complaint and the affidavits filed at the hearing that, on December 20, 1904, the city of Seattle issued to I. G. Morgan, of the firm of Stumpf & Morgan, copartners, a retail liquor license, authorizing the
“Collateral Pledge of License. Seattle, Washington, December 9, 1901.
“For and in consideration of money advanced and guarantees made in my behalf and for me, and for and in consideration also of the notes hereto attached, made payable by me to the said. Seattle Brewing & Malting Co., I do hereby pledge all interest, claim or demand of whatsoever nature, I have now or may have in any sum of money or in any interest in that certain license of the city of Seattle directed to me, permitting the sale of intoxicating liquors at that certain place known as Brooklyn Cafe, and I do. authorize said Seattle Brewing & Malting Co., for the better securing to it of the full payment of any and all indebtedness of any kind whatsoever that may be due it from me, to take possession, and control, by any means convenient, and with as little expense to me as 'possible, of any claim or interest in any money glowing out of the said license, or of any interest in said license. The said license herein intended to be treated as a collateral pledge for the better securing of my indebtedness to the said Seattle Brewing & Malting Co., and I do hereby waive any proceedings of foreclosure upon the same, and direct that upon my failure to pay my indebtedness to. the said Seattle Brewing & Malting Co., as agreed by the oral understanding, and by the terms and conditions of the annexed notes by me made, the said Seattle Brewing & Malting Co. is then and there to take possession of all interest I have in any manner or form in said license, and take possession and control of the said license as the said Seattle Brewing & Malting Co., shall see fit, without expense and without suit, the license certificate being left in possession of the pledgee*387 herein for the purpose of complying with ordinance Ho. 4205. “Witness: Charles A. Thorndyke. (Signed) I. G. Morgan.”
After .the license was issued, a retail liquor saloon was conducted by authority of the license at the place therein described, by the firm of Stumpf & Morgan. On January 17, 1905, certain creditors of Stumpf & Morgan brought an action against them and attached all the property of the firm, including the saloon known as the Brooklyn Cafe, and took possession thereof. The retail liquor license was at that time hanging upon the wall of the saloon. On January 21, 1905, an agent of the Seattle Brewing & Malting Company obtained possession of the license certificate by taking it from the saloon. On January 26, 1905, respondent was appointed receiver of the assets of Stumpf & Morgan, and duly qualified, and thereupon demanded the possession of the license certificate, which was refused. The Brewing and Malting Company, on January 27, 1905, presented to the city a petition, signed by themselves and said Morgan, for a transfer of said license to one Hick Kennedy, and also asking for a change of location for the use of the license. The ordinances of said city provided for a transfer of an unexpired license, and for a change of location by consent of the city, upon application therefor, and upon the observance of certain formalities. The city was about to make the transfer, when the respondent, as receiver, brought this action for a restraining order and for possession of the certificate of license.
Appellants argue that the license, or the right to do business, in controversy is a personal privilege conferred by the city upon the licensee, and is not such property as is subject to debts of the licensee, and that none of the rights secured thereby can be enjoyed by the receiver; that the license is merely an intangible privilege. A number of the state courts have held in accord with this position of the appellants. See: Voight v. Board of Excise Corners, 59 N. J. L. 358, 36 Atl. 686; Feigenspan v. Mulligan, 63 N. J. Eq. 179, 51 Atl. 191; State v. Lydick, 11 Neb. 366, 9 N. W. 560, and cases
The United States courts have held that liquor licenses issued under statutes authorizing a transfer are assets of an estate under the bankruptcy act. Fisher v. Cushman, 43 C. C. A. 381, 103 Fed. 860; In re Becker, 98 Fed. 407; In re Fisher, 98 Fed. 89 ; In re Brodbine, 93 Fed. 643; In re Gallagher, Fed. Cas., No. 5,192. Mr. Blacky in discussing these cases and the question involved in this action, in his note appended to the case of Fisher v. Cushman, supra, at page 392, says:
“If these questions [referring especially to franchises to collect tolls and the like] should again arise, it is probable that they would be decided in accordance with the rule laid do wn in regard to liquor licenses; the true test being found in the question whether the franchise or right is actually transferable, with the consent of the authorities and without any practical difficulty, and whether it has a market value and can be disposed of by sale.”
This, it seems in reason, must be the correct rule. If a license to sell liquors is transferable, valuable, and is subject to sale, it is certainly not a merely personal privilege; but it has all the attributes of property except tangibility, and must be treated as property. People v. Durante, 45 N. Y. Supp.
Appellants contend that the Brewing Company is entitled to the license under the contract or collateral pledge quoted above. We think this contention is without force as against creditors. The agreement was neither executed, acknowledged, filed, nor recorded as required by law, and the license cea'tificate was left in possession of Stumpf & Morgan. It has been held that a contract of this kind constituted an equitable mortgage which was not included within a statute requiring mortgages upon “goods and chattels" to be filed, upon the ground that a liquor license did not fall within the classification of goods and chattels, and would therefore be enforced. Niles v. Mathusa, 20 App. Div. 483, 47 N. Y. Supp. 38. Our statute, however, provides that “mortgages may be made upon all kinds of personal property” (Pierce’s Code, § 6549), and “every such instrument, within ten days from the time of the execution thereof, shall be filed in the office of the county auditor” (Pierce’s Code, § 6550). PTo transfer of personal property shall be valid as against creditors where the property is left in possession of the vendor unless the bill of sale is recorded within ten days after such sale. Bal. Code, § 4578. We have held above that the license was personal property. Whether we construe the contract as a bill of sale or a chattel mortgage, it did not conform to the statute in either event, and was void as to creditors.
Crow, Root, Dunbar, Hadley, and Fullerton, II., concur.