115 Wis. 43 | Wis. | 1902
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff in error is a manufacturer of beer in Eau Olaire, and was convicted under sec. 1550, Stats. 1898, because his agent sold bottled beer to a consumer in Eau O'laire from his wagon, the plaintiff in error having no local license. The claim is that the manufacture of beer is a lawful business, and that he who engages in such business must have the right to dispose of his product unless such
“If any person shall vend, sell, deal or traffic in, or for the purpose of evading any law of this state, give away, any 'spirituous, malt, ardent or intoxicating liquors or drinks in any quantity whatever, without first having obtained a license or permit therefor as required by this chapter, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and on conviction thereof shall be punished therefor,” by fine or imprisonment as prescribed.
The argument is that the license provided for by. sec. 1548 is a license to keep a place for the sale of liquor, and that by the terms of the section it can only be granted to persons who keep a grocery, saloon, or other similar place; that sec. 1550 only punishes those who sell liquor' without having obtained the license or permit required-by secs. 1548 and 1548ft; that a brewer who keeps no saloon cannot obtain a license under
The question is not without some difficulty, especially in view of the decision of this court in the case of Scanlan v. Childs, 33 Wis. 663. In that case it appeared that a brewer in Janesville sold beer in casks at wholesale to retail dealers in that city, and it was held that he could rightfully do so without license, on the ground that the manufacture of beer was a lawful business, and that the statute only applied to the vending of liquors at wholesale or retail by persons who buy for that purpose, and not to sales by manufacturers of their own product in quantities to dealers in the usual course of trade. At the time this decision was made the law as to the obtaining of licenses was somewhat different from the present, in that it provided for two kinds of licenses, — one for the keeping of groceries, saloons, or other places for the sale of liquors to be drank on the premises in quantities less than one gallon; and another for the licensing of persons to sell liquors not to be drank within their houses or on the premises. The section which described the offense and prescribed the penalty was, however, identical in all essential particulars with sec. 1550, supra. 1 Tay. Stats, pp. 728 — 730, eh. 35, secs. 1, 2, 5.
The nest case involving the question of the application of the statute to manufacturers was that of Peitz v. State, 68 Wis. 538, 32 N. W. 763. At this time the law governing the subject was contained in ck. 296, Laws of 1885, and it was substantially identical in its essential particulars with the law in force when the Scanlan Case was decided. In the last-named case it appeared that a brewer in one place had established a depot at another town fifteen miles distant, where he
Tbe last case touching tbe question is that of Mayer v. State, 83 Wis. 339, 53 N. W. 444, where a brewer in Milwaukee established an agency at Neenah, and sold a half barrel of beer, without local license, to a licensed saloon-keeper, and tbe conviction was affirmed without discussion save a reference to the Peitz Case and tbe statement that no distinction is made in tbe law between a sale to a consumer and to a dealer. Tbe law at this time was tbe same in all essential particulars as in 1886, when tbe Peitz Case was decided.
Since the last decision cited tire law has been changed so as to provide but one form of license, and tbe distinction between licenses for the sale of liquors to be drank upon tbe premises and not to be drank upon tbe premises has been abolished. It is not perceived that this change affects tbe question at issue here.
Tbe Scanlan Case not having been overruled, but limited to its own exact facts, tbe condition of tbe law as deduced
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
I cannot avoid the conviction that the decision in this case amounts practically to ex post facto legislation, and that thereby burdens are cast upon one of the important industries of the state, and the persons engaged therein are made conmináis against the meaning of the legislature as fixed and established by fifty years of construction, both practical and judicial. In 1851 (Laws of 1851, ch’. 162, secs. 1, 2, 5) the legislature vested authority in municipal officers to grant licenses — first, to those who kept saloons, groceries, and other
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the foregoing opinion by Mr. Justice Dodge.