delivered the opinion of the court.
Two questions are presented: first, is the ordinance valid
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The first question must be answered in the affirmative. The precise question, on the very ordinance, was presented to the Supreme Court of Illinois', and determined by it in the case of
Dennehy
v. Chicago, 120 Illinois, 627. Counsel for defendant in error strenuously insist that that decision is not controlling on this court in this case, because it was not announced until May, 1887, and- after this purchase had taken place. They say that this is a controversy between citizens of different States, in which the parties have a right to the independent judgment of the Federal tribunals; that, prior to such decision, there had been no determination by the courts of Illinois of the validity of the ordinance; and that the decision in. the
Dennehy Case
was in disregard of the general course of the legislation of the State of Illinois in respect to the liquor traffic, and of the spirit of at least two decisions of that court,
Strauss
v.
Pontiac,
40 Illinois, 126, 301, and
Wright
v.
The People,
101 Illinois, 133. They refer us to the cases of
Pease
v.
Peck,
While not disposed to limit or -qualify in any respect vrhat has been said so frequently as to the right and duty of independent judgment, we think that this is a case in which the decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois should control. The questionjs one of a particularly local character, affecting solely the internal police of the State, in respect to which we have no reviewing power, and in Which, is involved no matter of .a Federal character, or of general commercial law. The question as to what licenses shall or shall not be required of those who engage in the liquor traffic, is a matter properly submitted to the States for determination. There is no natural or Federal right claimed 'to have been trespassed upon by this ordinance, and the regulations as established and upheld by
There has been no change in the rulings of the Supreme Court on this question. The prior, cases referred to contain nothing inconsistent with the
Pennehy Case.
In
Strauss
v. Pontiac, the court held that authority in the charter to prohibit “ tippling-houses and dram-shops,” did not sustain an ordinance to prohibit generally the sale of spirits or beer. In other words, the charter power was directed towards the character of the house, and not • to the matter of sales; and the ruling was, that the former did not include the latter. In
Wright
v.
The
People, it was held that the dram-shop act applied to sales made by a druggist in good faith and for medical purposes. There is no force in the argument, that because the court in the course of its opinion said that the city council had authority under the charter to grant permits to druggists to sell intoxicating liquors by the retail—it is to be .implied that the court intended to decide that the council had no power to grant like permits to sell at wholesale. The statement was simply by way of argument to show that the drug
It must not be implied from what we have said, that we differ from the Supreme Court of Illinois .as to the validity of this ordinance. The charter authority is given in broad and comprehensive terms, “ to license . . . • the selling or giving away .of any intoxicating, malt, vinous, mixed or fermented liquor.” There is no limitation or qualification as to the manner of sale, whether at wholesale or retail, or as. to the character of the house at which the business is to, be carried on, whether a dram-shop, a grocery or a drug store. If it was intended, and doubtless it was, to give to the city council full authority over the sale of intoxicating liquors, words more broad or- comprehensive could not easily have been selected. There is no doubtful language in either the charter or the ordinance. Plainly as words can express is full power given by the one to -the city council, and as plainly a license of a wholesale dealer demanded by the other.
We do not, however, place our decision so much on this latter ground, nor do we care to follow counsel in their ingenious effort to read into this section of the charter words of limita-, tion. It is enough that the language being upon its face clear, full, and comprehensive, the Supreme Court of the State has decided that it gave power to the council to pass this ordinance, and that it is valid. That decision concluded this plaintiff, a citizen of the State, not only in criminal prosecutions, -but also in civil actions, not only in the state, but also in .the Federal courts.
Passing to the other question, that must be answered in the
In the light, of these authorities the solution of the-present question is not difficult. By the ordinance, a sale without a license is prohibited under penalty. There is in its language' nothing which indicates an intent to limit its scope to the exaction of a penalty, or. to grant that a sale may be lawful as between the parties, though unlawful as against its prohibitions ; nor when we consider the subject matter of the legislation, is there anything to justify a presumed intent on the part of the. lawmakers to relieve the wrongdoer from the ordinary consequences of a forbidden act. -By common -consent the liquor traffic is freighted with peril to the general welfare, and the necessity of careful regulation is universally conceded. Compliance with those regulations by all engaging in the traffic is imperative; and it cannot be presumed, in the absence of express language, that the lawmakers intended that contracts forbidden by the regulations should be as valid as though there were no such regulations, and that disobedience should be attended with no other consequence than the liability to thé penalty. There is, therefore, nothing in the language of .the ordinance or the subject matter of the regulations, which excepts this case from the ordinary rule that an act done in disobedience to the law creates no -right of action which a court of justice will enforce. -
For these reasons the judgment of the Circuit Court will be
•Reversed, and the ease remanded, with instructions to overrule the demurrer to.the answer.
