126 Ga. 594 | Ga. | 1906
(After stating the facts.) 1. The first and second .grounds of the demurrer are that the indictment sets forth no offense, and fails to allege that the sale of intoxicating liquor was by retail or in a quantity less than a quart. The indictment charged the offense in the language of the local act fixing the license fee for retailing or vending spirituous, intoxicating, or malt liquors in Irwin county, and fixing a penalty for violating the same. If that local act is not unconstitutional for any of the reasons assigned in the demurrer or the bill of exceptions, then an indictment which charges the offense defined by the act, in the language of the act, where the description of the acts alleged as constituting the offense is full enough to put the defendant on notice of the offense with which he is charged, is sufficiently .specific.
2. It is insisted in the demurrer that the local act is violative -of the constitution, article 3, section 7, paragraph 8 (Civil Code, § 5771), in this respect: the body of the local act requires a license fee of twenty thousand dollars before there can be a sale of
3. It is also urged in the demurrer that the local act is further' opposed to the constitutional provision quoted in the preceding division of this opinion, in this respect: the body of the local act forbids the sale of intoxicating liquor in any municipal corporation, unless the license fee be first paid, whereas the title of the act applies only to Irwin county; and as the existing law of the State excepts municipal corporations from the operation of county license, the true meaning and intent of the title of the act is that the same applies only to those portions of Irwin county lying outside of municipal corporations, and therefore the body of the act contains matter different from that which is expressed in the
4. The local act is said to be obnoxious to paragraph 17, section 7, article 3 of the constitution, which is as follows: “No law, or section of the code, shall be amended or repealed by mere reference to its title, or to the number of the section of the code, but the amending or repealing act shall describe the law to be amended or repealed, as well as the alteration to be made.” It is contended that the effect of the local act is to practically repeal, or at least to materially amend, section 40 of the act of December 2, 1896 (Acts of 1896, pp. 157, 168), incorporating the city of Fitzgerald, in Irwin county, wherein exclusive authority was given to the mayor and council to regulate and control the sale of intoxicating liquors in that city; and that the effect of the local act is further to prac-tieally repeal, or at least materially amend, the Political Code, § 421 (which fixes the county charge for license to sell liquors at $25), and that neither the act incorporating Fitzgerald nor this section of the Political Code is in any way referred to or described in the local act. As has been previously indicated, the local act is applicable to the whole county.- Whenever the legislature enacts a local act and applies its provisions to the entire territory of a county, inconsistent provisions in a charter of an incorporated town located within that county are repealed by necessary implication. Turner v. Mayor of Forsyth, 78 Ga. 683; Strauss v.
5. The question dealt with and' disposed of in the Sasser-Martin case, supra, was whether, at the time of the passage of the act of September 5, 1879, providing for the granting of licenses to sell intoxicating liquors in the county of Bulloch, there was any general law on the subject of licensing the sale of such liquors with which that act came into conflict. In reaching the decision announced in that case, the public laws of the State with regard to the sale of intoxicating liquors, as embraced in the Code of 1882, were looked to and considered as controlling the question then in hand. Since 1882, the public laws regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors in this State have been, in certain respects, amended and amplified. By an act approved December 22, 1884, to amend § 1419 of the Code of 1882, persons desiring to sell spirituous liquors in any quantity less than a gallon were required to apply to the proper authorities for a license. Acts of 1884-5, p. 42. Prior to that date, provision was made only for the granting of licenses to sell spirituous liquors at “retail” (Code of 1882, § 1419); that is to say, in quantities of less than one quart. Id. § 1424; Beiser v. State, 79 Ga. 327, 329. Under an act approved October 16, 1885, still further amending § 1419 of the Code of 1882, provision was made that before any license should be granted, the applicant
But it is insisted that the law relating to the granting of liquor licenses underwent a radical change in the compilation of the new Code of 1895 and its adoption by the General Assembly. Chapter 8 of the thirteenth title of the Political Code (page 416) deals with the subject of “liquor,” and § 15,19 of article 1 thereunder is headed, “License to sell, how obtained.” It first provides that application must be made to the ordinary (or county commissioners, if there be a board of commissioners), who shall have power to grant or refuse the application. Next comes the requirement introduced by the act of 1885, respecting the written consent of ten bona fide residents to the granting of the license, followed by the proviso, “that this section shall not apply to incorporated towns or cities.” Apparently, the term “section” refers to the section of the code in which it is used, § 1519; but if so, the power of the county authorities to grant licenses is limited to territory not included within any incorporated town or city, irrespective of whether the municipal authorities have or have not power to grant a license. The express declaration to the contrary contained in section 1422 of the Code of 1882 is not, however, omitted from the chapter on the subject of liquor, but its precise language is to be found in article 3, which takes up the subtitle of “regulating the sale of liquors.” Pol. Code, § 1538. The first of the sections under that article (§ 1535) declares, that no one shall sell any intoxicating liquors, in any quantity, in any county or village in this State, without first obtaining a license; the next section deals with the oath to be taken by venders of spirituous liquors in any quantity; section 1531 declares that a license shall not authorize the person to whom it is issued to sell at more than one place in the county; and the following section (brought forward from the Code of
The misleading proviso contained in the Political Code, § 1519, “that this section shall not apply to incorporated towns or cities,” doubtless was the result of an effort on the part of the codifiers to adhere as closely as possible to the precise language of the amending act of 1885 (Acts of 1884-5, p. 59), rather than the result of an attempt to arrive at the true meaning of that act. It was awkwardly expressed, in that it proposed to amend section 1419 of the Code of 1882 by inserting therein a certain requirement to be made of the applicant for a liquor license, with the proviso that “this Act shall not apply to incorporated towns or cities.” It is not proposed that the section as amended should set forth the provision that- it — the “section” — ’Should not apply to any municipality. Had this been done, the section, as amended, would have been in hojjeless conflict with the succeeding section of the code (§1422), which contained an exception of a specified class of cities and towns, under a stated condition, and which was logically the section to be amended or repealed in the event it was intended that the'license law should have no application to any municipal ■corporation. That the codifiers did not understand that this sec
As has been already pointed out, the policy with regard to granting liquor licenses has undergone no essential transmutation since-the Code of 1882 or the rendition of the decision in the Sasser-Martin case. In fact, in passing recent local legislation affecting-various sections of the State, the decision in that case has evidently been looked to and relied on by the General Assembly in shaping its policy of regulating the sale of liquors in communities where different conditions prevail or there is a difference of sentiment upon the vital question of how the situation should be met. That-decision is not binding as authority upon this court, having been concurred in by only five Justices. But this bench, as now constituted, is well content to let it stand as a precedent, for the reasoning of Mr. Justice Little, who pronounced it, is more than persuasive, and rests upon familiar rules of statutory construction which may no longer be questioned. In undertaking to arrive at the purpose of the General Assembly — -whether the legislative intent was to deal with the granting of liquor licenses by a general law or b3r way of special enactment — we are bound to attribute to the members of that body a knowledge of our fundamental law on the subject of legislation and an abiding purpose to observe the constitutional restrictions b3r which they are to be governed. Bearing this in mind, we can not conclude that the General Assembly sought, under the guise of a general law, to make a purely arbi
6. The constitutionality of the local act is further assailed on the ground that it is antagonistic to paragraph 1, section 1, article 3 of the constitution, which declares: “Laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State, and no special law shall be enacted in any case for which provision has -been made by an existing general law;” in that the local act applies to all wines except those which are expressly excepted by sec
7. It is further contended that the exception contained in the.
8. And lastly, it is contended that the evidence shows that the license fee is so large that it amounts to prohibition, and therefore the act contravenes the constitutional provision forbidding special legislation where there is an existing general law on the subject-matter, the general law being the local option liquor law. The presiding judge allowed the defendant to introduce evidence to support his special plea raising this point. Speaking for myself, I know of no principle of law which allows a legislative act to be declared unconstitutional by the finding of a jury or of the trial judge on the facts of a particular case. The constitutionality of an act is purely a question of law — a question of construction of the statute and the constitution, to ascertain agreement or conflict of the former with the latter. But as the propriety of this mode of attack on the constitutionality of the act is not under review, we will simply look to. the evidence to see if it demanded a finding that a twenty-thousand-dollar license fee would necessarily amount to a total prohibition of the traffic. We do not think the evidence was such as to constrain such a finding of fact, and we can not reverse the judgment because the courfi reached the conclusion that the license fee' was not prohibitory.
Judgment affirmed.