56 Mich. 518 | Mich. | 1885
This suit was an action of assumpsit, brought in justice’s court for a balance due on account. The plaintiff filed a bill of items containing the account on both sides, and claimed a balance due him from the defendant of $42.80. Upon the trial the defendant did not appear or plead before the justice, and plaintiff obtained judgment for the amount of his claim. Defendant appealed to the circuit court for the county of Wayne, when the cause was again tried by the circuit judge, and judgment again rendered for the plaintiff.-' Defendant, on the trial at the circuit, contested the-vplaintiff’s account on two grounds : First, that
several of the items were for intoxicating liquors sold to him after notice from the wife that sales must not be made to the defendant; and second, that the plaintiff made the sales of tiie items mentioned without first having filed the bond and paid the tax required by the statute, permitting him to sell intoxicating liquors. See How. Stat. §§ 2270, 2271. It is claimed by defendant’s counsel that such sales being prohibited by law, and a penalty therefor given of both fine and imprisonment, any contract made therefor must be held void on the ground of public policy, and therefore plaintiff cannot recover for the contested items.
Under the first section of the statute above referred to, the sale, without vendor files the statutory bond, is declared unlawful, but not, in language, void. I do not think, however, that this section was enacted for the purpose of revenue only, but for the safety and protection of public morals as well, and therefore the contract of sale made in violation of
On the trial the plaintiff was permitted to prove his account, containing between thirty and forty items, among which were six for “drinks.” These, and some others under different names, the defendant proposed to show were for intoxicating liquors sold to him, and proposed to ask the witness if he had filed with the treasurer a proper bond. Counsel for plaintiff objected to this evidence as improper and immaterial. The circuit judge ruled: “ I do not think the contract made for the sale would be void,” and sustained the plaintiff’s objection. The plaintiff then proved by his own testimony that he was a hotel-keeper, and sold liquors— beer and whisky — “ at retail and by the drink.” The defendant then asked him the question, “ Have you paid your license ?” Counsel for plaintiff objected on the ground of immateriality. The court then remarked: “As this is an action to recover the value of certain drinks which have been sold, I suppose the fact, whether he has taken out a license, comes under the same objection. If he has not, he is amenable to the public law. I think I shall have to rule in that way.”
The wife of the defendant was sworn in his behalf, and gave testimony tending to show that in 1882 she served a
At the close of the trial counsel for defendant moved to strike out all the testimony in regard to the items for liquor sold to defendant in the plaintiff’s account. The record does not show an objection to this motion. The court, however, denied the defendant’s motion. Exceptions were duly taken to these several rulings of the circuit judge.
It appears by the record that the several items in the account which, it is claimed by defendant’s counsel, were for intoxicating liquor, all arose after the liquor law of 1881 took effect, and that the notice offered to be proved was a proper one to be given by defendant’s wife under the statute, and the statute not requiring such notice to be in writing, the evidence offered upon that subject was proper. The sales of intoxicating liquors to the defendant, if any, after the plaintiff had been forbidden by the wife to let him have any, were void, and the defendant should have been permitted to show the facts. Any sale to the defendant of such liquors by the plaintiff before he .had given the bond and paid the tax required by statute, was unlawful, — a misdemeanor. To sustain them would be against public policy, and was therefore void. I think the exceptions by the defendant’s counsel were all well taken to the several rulings of the circuit judge, and that the judgment rendered by him in the case should be set aside, and a new trial granted.