111 N.E. 479 | NY | 1916
The proceeding is one to revoke a liquor tax certificate. In October, 1912, a license to traffic in liquors during the year ending September 30, 1913, was granted to one Russ. On March 14, 1913, he applied for the transfer of his certificate to the appellant Wurz, and on his statement that he had not violated any of the provisions of the Liquor Tax Law, the transfer was made. The truth is that on the same day he was indicted for using the licensed building as a disorderly house (Penal Law, § 1146). In the following June, he was convicted of that crime. On September 27, 1913, three days before the term of the certificate expired, this proceeding was begun (Matter of Farley v. Barrick,
At the outset, the petition is attacked as insufficient. Its statement in substance is that Russ, while the holder of the license, kept and maintained the building as a house of ill-fame. Such an offense committed before the assignment of the certificate, would justify its revocation as against the assignee (Matter of Cullinan,
We think that after a trial upon the merits, this objection to the form of the petition does not require the dismissal of the proceeding. A petition in these proceedings has a twofold function. It has a function as a pleading; and it has a function as evidence (Matter of Clement v. Cohen,
We are confronted in this case with a very different problem. As evidence the petition may have been defective because of the sparse statement of the sources of information; but as a pleading it was adequate. It apprised the appellant of the offense that was charged, even though, standing alone, it did not prove the offense. The appellant filed an answer, the case was tried upon the merits, and the pleading has now been supplemented by evidence. In such a situation, to nullify the order because the petition, though adequate as a pleading, was inadequate as proof, would be to lose sight of the reason which dictated our earlier decisions. A forfeiture will be ordered only after proof; but if proof has been supplied, the holder's rights have been protected.
To sustain the charge that the premises were disorderly, the court received in evidence the judgment of conviction rendered against Russ after the appellant had become the holder of the certificate. This ruling was plainly error. If the judgment of conviction had been *110
rendered while Russ was the holder of the certificate (Liquor Tax Law, §
The order should be reversed, with costs to abide the event, and the case remitted to the Special Term for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, SEABURY and POUND, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *111