OPINION OP THE COURT.
The petitioner was the holder of a license issued by the board of county commissioners of Roosevelt County, authorizing him to sell intoxicating liquors at taiban, an unincorporated village in said County. After the.bigsuance of said license, and while the same was in full force and effect, and unexpired, the qualified voters of Taiban and contiguous territorjr petitioned the board of county commissioners of said County, in accordance with the provisions of chap. 78, S. L. 1913, commonly called the “district prohibition law,” to submit to the qualified voters within the named district the question “of whether or not the barter, sale or exchange of intoxicating liquors shall be prohibited therein as provided by this act.” (Sec. 1, chap. 78, supra.) Upon the filing of said petition, the district was designated by the board of county commissioners, in accordance with sec. 2, of the Act, and the election was called and held pursuant to said Act. At said election a majority of the votes cast were in favor of prohibiting the sale, barter or exchange of intoxicating liquors within said district. Sec. 14, of the Act, provides for the refund, to the holder of a license authorizing the sale of intoxicating liquors, the unused portion of the license, at the time prohibition goes into effect. Petitioner did not apply for such refund, but continued to sell intoxicating liquors at Taiban, notwithstanding the result of the election and the provisions of said act making it unlawful to do so. Upon complaint filed against him, he was arrested and detained by the sheriff of said County, under a warrant issued upon such complaint, and he brings this action to obtain his release. His right to be discharged by the writ of habeas corpus is predicated upon the assumption that said chapter 78, S. L. 1913, is unconstitutional.
The constitutionality of “local option” legislation is no longer an open question in American jurisprudence, and such laws are almost universally upheld. While some of the early cases, it is true, held such laws unconstitutional and void, because based on a contingency, and, in effect delegated legislative powers to the people, (Parker v. Commonwealth, 6 Penn. St. 507; Rice v Foster, 4 Harr. (Dela.) 497), there is today practically no State holding to the contrary with the possible exception of Tennesee. See Wright v. Cunningham,
Woolen & Thornton on Intoxicating Liquors, vol. 1, page 331, section 155, contains a full discussion on the history of local option laws and citing authorities says that by the “great weight of judicial decision now,” such laws do not violate the constitutional provision that the power to make laws is vested in the legislature, but that such laws are constitutional and valid.
“The constitutional objection to such a law is met, if the act, when it came from the legislature, received the Governor’s approval, was properly published and was, of itself, a complete and perfect enactment. In such case the popular will is expressed under and by virtue of a law that is in force and effect and the people neither make nor repeal it. By this vote, petition or remonstrance, as the case may be, they only determined whether a certain thing shall be done under the law and not whether the law shall take effect. * * * As a result a different regulation, of a police nature, may under such a law exist in one town, city or county from that which exists in another. In such ease, the maxim delagata potestas non potest delegari has no application.” See section 156 to the same effect, et seq. In Commonwealth v. Weller,
“We see no reason why, in a case like this involving a question of local interest and of mere police regulation, the popular will should not “he consulted and on a question made the subject of this enactment, it is eminently just and proper.
In Schulher v. Bordeaux,
In Boyd v. Bryant,
In Caldwell, et al., v. Barrett, et al.,
To the same effect, see Commonwealth v. Bennett,
In the case of State v. Pond,
“While this local option act provides that any County, or town, or city of the class named, may, by^a majority vote, put such County, town, or city under the operation of the law, it does not refer to them the question of passing a law; that the legislature had already done, and only called upon them to decide by a vote whether they would accept the provisions‘of a law regularly enacted by both houses of the General Assembly and approved by the Governor, By its provisions the law and not the vote extended its in-: fluence over the locality voting against the sale of intoxicants. It was the law that authorized the vote to be taken, and when taken the law, and not the vote, declared the result that should follow the vote. The vote was the means provided to ascertain the will of the people, not as to the passage of the law, but whether intoxicating liquors should be sold in their midst. If the majority voted against the sale, the law, and not the vote, declared it should not be sold. The vote sprang from the law, and not the law from the vote. By their vote the electors declared no consequences, prescribed no penalties, and exercised no legislative function. The law declared the consequences, and whatever they may be they are exclusively the result of the legislative will.”
See also State of Iowa v. Forkner,
In the ease of State of Minn. v. Cooke,
In Fell v. State,
Also see Freund on Police Power, sec. 564, page 591.
Section 8 of chapter 78 of the laws of 1913, makes it unlawful to engage in the liquor business in prohibited districts. Section 14 of the same act provides for a refund of the amount of the uunsed. license, where the licensee was doing business before the district became a prohibited district. These two sections, without doubt, revoked the license of the petitioner in this case, and he can claim no benefits under it. If this is not an- express repeal, it surely and clearly was an intention on the part of the legislature to revoke licenses when these events have happened and in law is an implied repeal, which is as effective in the case at bar as though it were express.
Therefore, it seems that the main contention of peti tioner is: The legislature in empowering twenty-five per centum of the people of a proposed area or district to petition the board of county commissoners to call an election in that district to determine whether or not the local option law shall be adopted, delegates its legislative powers and functions to these twenty-five per centum of the people of the district.
The district is created by the statute upon the filing of the petition with the board of county commissioners in compliance therewith. The board must then designate its boundaries upon the minutes. If a majority of the votes cast be in favor of prohibition, intoxicating liquor may not lawfully be sold within the district, except in certain cases for enumerated purposes, not involved in this case, until the question is again resubmitted to the voters and a majority of the votes cast are favorable to the licensing and sale of intoxicating liquors, which question cannot be submitted for four years after the previous election. On the other hand, if a majority of the votes cast are not in favor of prohibition, the sale of liquor within the district may be licensed, in accordance with law. In either event the question may not be resubmitted for a jieriod of four years The district remains in existence, as designated in the petition and upon the minutes of the board of county commissioners, whatever may be the result of the election, and, under the law, in the event a majority of the votes cast, at the election are in favor of prohibition, the law which prohibits the sale of intoxicating liquors applies to the dis trict; while, on the other hand, if the vote be not in favor of prohibition, the law which licenses the sale is in force. The act calls for no legislation on the part of the people of any district, and the vote of the electors thereof does not make the law. The electors thereof perform no legislative functions whatever. As said by the Supreme Court of California, in the case of Ex Parte Beck, supra:
“The act is wholly one of the State legislature, in force-all over the State so far as the rights of the people of the respective localities mentioned to avail themselves thereof is concerned; the only thing left to the electors of each such locality to determine being whether they will avail themselves of the prohibitions contained therein. This we have seen, involves no delegation by the legislature or exercise by the electors of legislative power, or the exercise of any power of local government by the district specified.”
There is no merit in petitioner’s contention, that, because the law provides for the designation of the district, by the board of county commissioners, upon petition of twenty-five per cent, of the qualified voters, resident within the proposed district, the legislature has delegated its legislative powers and functions to these twenty-five per centum of the people of the district.
The act in question can not' properly be held violative of any provisions of our Constitution that has been called to our attention, and we see no reason to doubt its validity. This being so, we are compelled to uphold it as a valid enactment of the State legislature. , This being so, it necessarily follows that the petitioner is not entitled to be discharged upon the showing made.
For the reasons stated, the writ is discharged and the petitioner remanded to custody.
