21 S.E.2d 69 | Ga. | 1942
Where the evidence shows a sale of whisky upon the premises, and a previous refusal to sell based on the fact that things were so hot around there and that the agent of the defendant did not know the person seeking to buy the whisky, an interlocutory injunction on the petition of the solicitor-general to abate such premises as a nuisance is authorized by the evidence. Testimony of witnesses on behalf of the defendant, that they had not known of any keeping or selling of liquor and that the business was conducted in an orderly and decent manner, did not require a different verdict.
At interlocutory hearing L. H. Crawford testified for the plaintiff, that he was an employee of the State department of revenue in November and December, 1941; that as such he made some investigation in McDuffie County, and knew where John Lamar Lokey's place, known as John's Place, in said county was located; that he went to John's Place on November 14, 1941, and asked to buy a pint of liquor from a man named Harrison, who, as Lokey later told him, was an employee of Lokey; that Harrison came out to his car and told him that he did not have any liquor, that things were so hot around there he could not let him have anything, and that he did not know him; that on December 3, 1941, the witness went back and talked to Harrison about bird-hunting; that Harrison told him a good place to go, whereupon witness said: "All right, it is raining; we are wet. Let's have some liquor," and witness bought a pint of whisky from Harrison for $1.90; that Lokey was not present when Harrison handed him the liquor; that Harrison took the liquor out of a drawer on a back shelf in the house. Lokey introduced affidavits of a number of persons who testified that they lived in the immediate neighborhood of John's Place; that it was a quiet and peaceable place; that they had never known of anything indecent or disorderly to occur on the premises; and that they had seen nothing to indicate that liquor was being kept and sold there.
An interlocutory judgment was entered, continuing the restraining order, and enjoining John Lamar Lokey from continuing any *177 business in the structure or building described in the petition until further order of the court. To this judgment the defendant excepted. Any structure used for the unlawful manufacture, sale, keeping for sale, or other unlawful disposition of liquor, and all shops, houses, or places where liquors are sold or kept for sale are common nuisances and may be abated as such upon complaint of the solicitor-general of the circuit. Code, § 58-109. Any place commonly known as a "blind tiger," where intoxicating liquors are sold in violation of law, is a nuisance and may be abated or enjoined as such. § 58-110. The 1935 act entitled "Alcoholic Beverage Control Act" (Ga. L. 1935, p. 327) never became effective, due to the vote against repeal in the referendum provided for in section 36 thereof. Consequently section 6 of that act, providing for the repeal of title 58 of the Code of 1933, never became law and the chapter of the Code was not repealed thereby.
In Lofton v. Collins,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.