The petitioner brings this petition for a writ of certiorari against the city manager of Worcester to quash the revocation of the petitioner’s license to operate a drive-in theatre, so called, in the city of Worcester. The case was heard on the petition and the respondent’s substituted return. From an order dismissing the petition the
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petitioner appealed. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 96.
Adamsky
v.
City Council of New Bedford,
The petitioner filed his application for a license on June 15, 1950. After an investigation, which included a public hearing and a report by one of the city’s police officers, the respondent notified the petitioner that his application for a license was approved subject to certain conditions concerning the operation and construction of the theatre and the posting of a surety bond to insure their performance. The required bond was filed by the petitioner and the license was issued on November 29, 1950. Thereafter, on January 22, 1951, the respondent informed the petitioner by letter that “in the public good” the license was revoked.
The statute (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 140, § 181) under which the license in question was issued expressly provides that the licensing authorities may “revoke or suspend such license at their pleasure.”
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It is settled law in this Commonwealth that “One who accepts a license revocable at the discretion of the granting authority takes it subject to that infirmity, and he has no just ground of complaint if the power to revoke is properly exercised before the term of the license has expired.”
Woodbury
v.
Municipal Council of Gloucester,
It appears that the respondent in his letter to the petitioner based the revocation on the following grounds: public opposition to establishment of a theatre, danger to the morals
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of the neighborhood, and danger due to increased traffic hazards. It is true, as the petitioner argues, that these questions were gone into at some length at the hearing which was conducted prior to the granting of the license. But we cannot say that the respondent, in reconsidering the matter and coming to a different conclusion, thereby acted arbitrarily. The respondent could have concluded that the license was improvidently granted. The petitioner has no right to insist that the error be perpetuated. What was said in
Sheriff
v.
Gillow,
Order dismissing petition affirmed.
Notes
It was agreed that Worcester was operating under a Plan E charter (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 43, §§ 93-116, inserted by St. 1938, c. 378, § 15) and that the respondent was vested with the authority conferred under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 140, § 181, to grant and revoke licenses.
