30 Fla. 529 | Fla. | 1892
The petition of C. Theisen, filed in this court on the 3d day of November, A. D. 1892, alleges that he is detained and held in custody by Joseph Wilkins, sheriff of Escambia county, Florida, and ex-officio marshal of the Provisional Municipality of Pensacola, under judgment and sentence pronounced against him on the first day of November, A. D. 1892, by the President of said Provisional Municipality, and judge presiding in said municipal court, on a charge of violating an ordinance of said municipality. The detention is alleged to be unjust and contrary to law, and the grounds stated in the petition for this allegation are as follows, viz: That petitioner obtained from the collector of revenue of said county a State and county license as a liquor dealer for election precinct number 12 in said Escambia county, for the year commencing October the first, A. D. 1892, and ending September 30th, A. D. 1893; that prior to obtaining said license he complied in all respects with the laws of the State of Florida in reference to securing a permit from the Board of County Commissioners of said county for said license ; that said election precinct number 12 in said county is within the corporate limits' of the Provisional Municipality of Pensacola, and petitioner, at the same time that he obtained said State and county license, also obtained a license as
The sheriff and ex-officio marshal, in answer to the writ of habeas corpus, states that he detains the petitioner under a commitment from the court of the President of the Provisional Municipality of Pensacola, issued upon a sentence by said court that said petitioner pay a fine of ten dollars, or stand committed, and that he has not paid said fine. It is also stated in the return that the proceedings against the petitioned, upon which said commitment was issued, was upon an affidavit based upon a duly ordered ordinance of the said municipality, copies of the affidavit and ordinance being attached to the return as part thereof. The ordinance is the same as that set out in the foregoing petition, and the affidavit charges that petitioner, on the 25th day of October, A..D. 1892, within the corporate limits of the Provisional Municipality of
The petitioner by his counsel moves the court for a discharge from custody for the reason that the return of the sheriff and ex-officio marshal sets up no sufficient or valid grounds for the detention of said petitioner.
The validity of the ordinance in question is involved in this case. It is contended for petitioner, in the first place, that the Provisional Municipality of Pensacola has no power or authority to pass such an ordinance; secondly, that said ordinance is in conflict wdth the laws of the State on the subject of regulating the business of liquor dealers ; and, thirdly, that ^aid ordinance upon its face is unjust, oppressive, unreasonable and permits of unlawful discrimination at the uncontrolled discretion of the Board of City Commissioners. Conceding, that the Provisional Municipality of Pensacola has the authority to pass an ordinance that no licensed retail liquor dealer shall sell liquors within four hundred and fifty feet of any established school or church,- and that such an ordinance would not be in conflict with the laws of the State
Counsel for respondent concedes that the consent •clause in the ordinance before us confers upon the Board of Commissioners the power to discriminate between different individuals, but he insists that this •does not invalidate the ordinance. He does not, as we understand, maintain that the Municipality of Pensacola can, under its powers, enact such an ordinance in reference to the ordinary vocations of life which a man has an inherent right to pursue, such as keeping a market, a dairy, or conducting a laundry, and the like, but that it does have the power to pass such an •ordinance in reference to the business of retail liquor •dealing, as a part of the police power of the State delegated to it. This proposition, it is evident, contains two essential elements, both of which are necessary to its maintenance. The first is, that the legislative power of the State over the subject of retailing intoxi
The authorities cited by counsel for respondent to sustain the power of the Commissioners of the Municipality of Pensacola to require their consent to retail within the prohibited limits, are ex parte Christensen, 85 Cal., 208; Crowley vs. Christensen, 137 U. S., 86, and Perry vs. Salt Lake City, 25 Pacific Rep., (Utah), 739, L. R. A., Book 11, page 446. The ordinance called m question in the first case provided that ‘ ‘ no license as a retail liquor dealer, or as a grocer and retail liquor dealer, shall be' issued by the collector of licenses, unless the person desiring the same shall have obtained the written consent of a majority of the
The mere fact that provision is made by State regulation for securing the license to sell, does not in our judgment exclude all municipal regulation or restraint of such business within corporate limits, but to what extent such regulation or restraint can go it is not necessary to say, as the ordinance in question is void because it permits of arbitrary discrimination in reference to matters which are now exclusively under statutory regulation, and which have not been delegated to municipal bodies.
The other questions discussed are not decided, inasmuch as the rightñjd detention of petitioner depends upon the validity of the ordinance set up in the petition. This being void for the reasons assigned, no other matters become essential to the disposition of the case. The motion must be sustained and the petitioner discharged, and it is ordered accordingly.