137 Iowa 548 | Iowa | 1908
The allegation of the petition is that the premises on which defendant is carrying on the business of selling intoxicating liquor in Des Moines constituted a nuisance, for the reason that on March 12, 1906, the day of the school election in that city, liquors were sold on said premises in violation of law. The case was presented to the lower court on an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that the defendant was prior to the date above mentioned, and since has been, engaged in the sale of intoxicating liquors on his premises in compliance with the provisions of the mulct law, unless it be found that it was a violation of law to sell liquor on the day of the school election. It appears from the recitals in this agreed statement, as well as from the argument of counsel for appellant, that the purpose of instituting this action was to secure a determination of the question whether a day of a school election- is
We reach the conclusion, therefore, that the sale of liquor by defendant on the day of the school election in Des Moines was a violation of the condition of the mulct law relating to sales on “ any election day,” and that thereafter the defendant in maintaining a place for the sale of liquor under the authority previously given to him by virtue of the provisions of the mulct law was a nuisance.
The trial court was therefore in error in refusing to grant an injunction as prayed, and its judgment is reversed.