172 Ind. 457 | Ind. | 1909
Appellant gave the statutory notice, and on February 5, 1908, filed his application before the Board of Commissioners of the County of Wabash for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in Lagro township. By and through an attorney in fact, appellee Breeding and 474 other voters of the township filed a remonstrance on January 3, 1908, against the granting of any license. On February 5 appellant filed a verified answer that the remonstrance was void and without legal force, and that the attorney in fact was wholly without authority from the remonstrators or any of them authorizing him to execute said remonstrance. There was a trial before the board of commissioners, a finding and judgment against appellant, an appeal to the circuit court, where the answer was refiled, a trial and finding had, and over a motion for a new trial, judgment against him, refusing a license.
The only error assigned is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial. It appears from the evidence that the remonstrance was signed by an attorney in fact, under the following power:
“Wabash County, State of Indiana.
We, the undersigned residents and legal voters in Lagro township, said county and State, do hereby respectively empower and request William Lewis, E. F. Gates and Fred I. King, or any one of them, to sign our names to any and all remonstrance or remonstrances against persons who may give notice of intention to apply for license to sell intoxicating liquors in said township, and also to file and present such remonstrance or remonstrances to the board of commissioners of said county, and also to sign our names to remonstrance or remonstrances against the granting of a license or licenses to any person whatsoever, to sell intoxicating liquors in said township, and to file and present such remonstrance or remonstrances to the board of commissioners of said county.”
The contention of appellant is that the attorneys in fact were without authority to execute the remonstrance filed January 3, 1908, for the reasons: (1) That the power of attorney as to 399 of the remonstrators had been executed for more than two years; (2) that the power had been extinguished by the remonstrance of December 29, 1905; (3) that the power vests a discretion in the attorneys in fact, as to when, or whether at all, they shall file remonstrances.
On the part of appellees it is contended that the instrument contemplates the repeated exercise of the power, and that there is no legal inhibition against so doing when, and as often as, it may be necessary to accomplish the desired result.
Two inquiries present themselves: (1) Does the instrument by its terms, or from the objects sought to be attained, or from the intention to be gathered from it, purport to be a continuing power ? (2) Can such power be a continuing one, in view of the provisions of the statute, or, if a continuing grant, is it in contravention of public policy? We consider the last proposition first, for if a continuing power cannot be created, the first proposition becomes immaterial.
The proceeding cannot be ex parte, but each applicant has a right to be heard upon the remonstrance. Cain v. Allen (1907), 168 Ind. 8; Kunkle v. Abell (1906), 167 Ind. 434; Anderson v. Weber (1907), 39 Ind. App. 443.
When not controlled by the federal Constitution, or national treaties, or by the principles of commercial or mercantile law, or by general jurisprudence of national application, questions of public policy are governed by the constitution and statutes of the several states, or the declarations of their highest courts. It is local as to the states, as it is •within different subdivisions, when applied, Hartford Fire
The judgment of the circuit court was correct, and ig affirmed.