82 Neb. 45 | Neb. | 1908
This is lan appeal from a judgment of the district court overruling a remonstrance to an application for license to sell malt, spirituous and vinous liquors in the city of Minden. The parties will be referred to as applicant and remonstrant. The record is brief, the parties thereto' having stipulated to most of the facts. Remonstrant denied that applicant was a man of respectable character, “under the general proposition that any man who will engage in the sale of malt, spirituous and vinous liquors is not such a man of respectable character and standing.” Re
1. On the issue of applicant’s character the only evidence offered was the testimony of one witness, who stated that applicant’s reputation in the neighborhood where he resided was good, and that he was a man of respectable character and standing in the community. The city council properly held with applicant upon said issue. To adopt remonstrant’s theory would invalidate the law, and we do not feel at liberty to so construe the statute.
2. In our judgment remonstrant has not sustained his contention that the legislature is without power to regulate the traffic in intoxicating liquors; that regulation, or its prohibition, is peculiarly within the police power. It is entirely competent for the people by constitutional enactment to restrict or render unlawful that business, but, if they fail to do so, the legislature is the exclusive repository of that power. Neither the constitution of 1866, nor that of the present day, will warrant the strained construction placed thereon by remonstrant. The language of the fundamental law and the interpretation given thereto by the legislative, executive and judicial branches of this government repel any such construction by the court. The legislature, since early territorial days, has exercised its function in attempting to minimize the evil inherent in and flowing from the trade in and the use of intoxicating liquors. The act of March 16, 1855 (laws 1855, p. 158), prohibited the manufacture of intoxicants; and section 172, ch. 11 of the criminal code, then in force, made it unlawful to furnish any such liquor to an Indian or to an intoxicated person. Chapter 29 of the criminal code of 1866 (Rev. St. 1866, pp. 671-676) minutely regulated said traffic, and provided both civil
There does not seem to be any error in the record, and for that reason we recommend that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.