120 Ind. 483 | Ind. | 1889
Section 5317, R. S. 1881, being section six of an act to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors, and limit the fee to be charged by cities, etc., which went into force March 17th, 1875, Sp. Acts of 1875, p. 56," limited the amount which cities.might demand for a license to sell intoxicating liquors within their corporate limits to one hundred dollars per annum.
By an act approved March 11th, 1889, Acts of 1889, p. 395, the above section was amended so as to fix the limit at $250. While the section first above mentioned was in force, the ordinances of the city of Indianapolis fixed the license fee to correspond therewith, and made it unlawful for any person to retail intoxicating liquors within the city limits without having first procured a license from the city clerk. On the 19th day of June, 1889, an ordinance was duly adopted raising the license fee to $250, the limit fixed by the act of March 11th, 1889. This last ordinance, by an express provision to that effect, repealed all prior ordinances in conflict therewith, and prohibited, under penalties prescribed, any person from thereafter retailing intoxicating liquors within the city, or within a distance of two miles of the corporate limits, without having first obtained a license pursuant to the provisions of the ordinance. It was provided, in the first section of the ordinance, in substance, that every person who should thereafter procure a license to sell intoxicating liquors from the board of commissioners of Marion county, and should pay into the treasury of Marion county for the use and benefit of the city, the sum of $250, should bé entitled, on presenting to the city clerk the county treasurer’s receipt for the amount paid, and a license from the board of commissioners, to receive a license to sell within the city, at the place designated in the license issued by the county board. The second section provided, in effect, that any person holding an unexpired license issued to him by the county board, and an unexpired city license issued under prior ordinances of the city, might obtain a license under the later ordinance for the unexpired
As a defence he relied on an unexpired license issued by the city clerk, and held by him at the time of the alleged sale, which he had received in pursuance of the provisions of the ordinance in force prior to that adopted in June, 1889.' The court held the proposed defence insufficient, and the appeal from this ruling involves an inquiry into the validity of the act of March 11th, 1889, and the ordinance adopted by the city of Indianapolis in pursuance thereof.
It is contended that the act above mentioned is invalid and void for failing to conform to the requirement of the Constitution, in that it contains no reference, in the body thereof to the title of the act to which it purports to be an amendment. This branch of the case is fully considered in Bush v. City of Indianapolis, ante, p. 476. After careful consideration, the point was decided adversely to the appellant, and needs no further attention here.
The appellant insists, however, that even if the act above mentioned should be held valid, yet the ordinance passed in pursuance thereof is beyond the authority conferred on the city council, and hence void. The first objection to the ordinance is predicated on section 5319, R. S. 1881, in which it is declared that “No license herein provided shall be granted for a greater or less time than one year.” Taking this section as a premise, it is argued, in effect, that said section two of the ordinance in question makes provision for issuing a license for a period less than a year to any person
With the exception of section 5317, as amended by the act of March 11th, 1889, the act of 1875 relates exclusively to licenses issued by the several boards of county commissioners. The sole purpose of that section, and of the amendment thereto, is to placé a limitation upon cities and towns in respect to the amount which they might thereafter demand as a'license fee in addition to the sum paid for license from the county board. Thus it has been held again and again that the act of March 17th, 1875, conferred no authority upon cities or incorporated towns to regulate or license the sale of intoxicating liquors, and that cities derive their power to demand license fees from Sections 3106 and 3154, R. S. 1881, which sections are found in the general statute regulating the incorporation and providing for the government of cities. Walter v. Town of Columbia City, 61 Ind. 24; Cowley v. Town of Rushville, 60 Ind. 327; Lutz v. City of Crawfordsville, 109 Ind. 466 ; Wagner v. Town of Garrett, 118 Ind. 114.
The Legislature has conferred the power to regulate the liquor traffic in cities upon the municipal authorities in the broadest terms, the only limitation being upon the amount of the license fee which may be demanded. Concerning all matters of detail in the manner of regulation cities are left untrammeled.
The power of municipal corporations to exact-license fees is not confined to requiring payment from persons who have State or county licenses, but extends to all persons, whether licensed by the county board or not, who keep shops for the sale of intoxicating liquors within the prescribed limits. The power exists altogether independently of the act of 1875. City of Frankfort v. Aughe, 114 Ind. 77; Lutz v.
The second objection urged against the validity of the ordinance is, that it requires the applicant for a license to pay a sum in excess of that allowed by the statute. By the terms of the ordinance it is made the duty of the city clerk, after certain conditions are complied with by the applicant, to issue to him a license. Section 3 requires the clerk to keep a register of the names of all persons to whom licenses are issued, together with the date when issued, and the time when each license expires, also the number of the street and
It is next contended that the municipal authorities had no power, under the statute in question, to enact an' ordinance increasing the amount of the license fee, and make it applicable to unexpired licenses, thereby practically annulling permits theretofore issued by the city. While conceding that a license is not an absolute contract in which the licensee obtains a vested right, during the full period for which it was granted, to sell' upon the same terms as when the license was issued, it is contended that it is, nevertheless, in some sense, a contract between the city and the licensee, under which the latter acquires an absolute right to sell liquors during the term, subject to municipal regulation, without being required to pay an enhanced price, simply for the purpose of increasing the city revenue. Moreover, it is contended that a license to retail intoxicating liquors is a thing
It is essential, therefore, that the power to regulate should be a continuing one, ever present and available, to be exercised by the State as emergencies may require. „ Hence the rule that neither the State, nor any of its agencies to whom the power has been delegated, can divest itself of the right to impose such other or additional restrictions upon the-sale
Those powers which are inherent in all governments, and the exertion of which, as emergencies may demand, is essential to the well-being of organized society, can not be abridged or weakened, or their vigor impaired by contract or bargain. Boyd v. Alabama, 94 U. S. 645.
If by authorizing a license or permit for one year, the State could deprive itself of the right to impose new restrictions upon the licensee during that period, a law authorizing licenses might bind successive Legislatures for three, five, or even ten years. If the legislative discretion could be fettered or bargained away for one year, it could upon the same principle be bargained away for an indefinite period.
It is, however, abundantly settled that a license or permit ' issued in pursuance of a mere police regulation has none of the elements of a contract, and that it may be changed, or entirely revoked, even though based upon a valuable consideration. Cooley Const. Lim. 5th ed., p. 343.
A license issued under the law regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors has neither the qualities of a contract nor of property, but merely forms a part of the internal police system of the State. Metropolitan Board v. Barrie, 34 N. Y. 657. No one can acquire a vested right in a mere statutory privilege so as to bind the State, or prevent a change of policy as the varying interests of society may require. Cooley Const. Lim. 5th ed., p. 473.
“Sovereigns may make contracts which, under our Constitution, will preclude them from impairing vested rights by subsequent legislation, but ’this result never follows the exercise of a purely police power.”. McKinney v. Town of Salem, 77 Ind. 213, and cases cited. “As the power to grant, withhold or annul licenses to sell liquor is an exercise of the police power, it follows that no limitation can be placed upon its exercise by any statutory provision.” State, ex rel., v.
“ The law is now settled,” said the Supreme Court of Georgia, “ that the Legislature has the power to revoke licenses granted to retail liquors. Such a license is in no sense a contract by the State, county, or city with the person taking out the license. It is simply a permit granted by the authorities to do business under the license; and the license may be revoked by the Legislature at any time.”. Brown v. State (Ga.), 7 S. E. Rep. 915; Fell v. State, 42 Md. 71. Calder v. Kurby, 5 Gray, 597; Commonwealth v. Brennan, 103 Mass. 70; Martin v. State, 23 Neb. 371; Pleuler v. State, 11 Neb. 547.
In the case last cited it was held that licenses granted under a former law, which had been repealed, were absolutely revoked upon the taking effect of the later law. Thus it follows that by enacting the ordinance of June 19th, 1889, and repealing the former ordinance, the appellant’s license was revoked.
The enactment of a law placing restrictions upon the sale of intoxicating liquors, and requiring the payment of a specified sum of money, and that a license be obtained before the business of selling can lawfully be entered upon, is not to be regarded as a proposition on the part of the State to contract for privileges, or to sell indulgences, but rather as a public proclamation, announcing that the State regards the unrestricted sale of intoxicating liquors as prejudicial to the general welfare, and that in the exercise of its police power, the traffic has been placed under regulation and restraint. Those who engage in the traffic, after the enactment of such a law, must be regarded as having notice from the beginning,
They are bound to know that tbe license or permit has no force or vitality except as it derives it from the law under which it was issued, and that if the public good requires that the law be modified or repealed, no incidental inconvenience which they may suffer can stay the hand of the State. No one can acquire a vested right in the law. Bryson v. Mc-Creary, 102 Ind. 1; Edwards v. Johnson, 105 Ind. 594.
Even if it were conceded that a permit to sell intoxicating liquors was possessed of some of the characteristics of property, or that it was a thing of value, in the eye of the law, it would still offer no impediment against the exertion of the police power of the State. “ The acknowledged police power of the State extends often to the destruction of property.'* License Cases, 5 How. 504 (577); Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623 (658).
Even though the enforcement of an ordinance may operate to destroy a business theretofore lawful, and to seriously impair the value of property acquired under the sanction of a special law or charter, these considerations do not render the ordinance invalid or prevent its enforcement, when the protection of the public health or the promotion of the general welfare requires it. Fertilizing Co. v. Hyde Park, 97 U. S. 659 (667) ; Beer Co. v. Massachusetts, supra.
There is a broad distinction between tbe taking of property under the power of eminent domain for a public use, and the incidental injury or inconvenience which results to property or business on account of the exertion of the police power of the State, when its purpose is the promotion of the public welfare. In the former case, compensation must be made ; in the latter, no such obligation arises. A' wide distinction exists, too, between an ordinance enacted in the ex
The contention that the ordinance is retrospective or retroactive is not sustained.
A law can only be said to be retrospective or retroactive, or ex post facto, when it makes acts which were committed antecedent to its enactment criminal, or when it is to be applied to past transactions so as to create a new duty or impair vested property rights acquired under existing laws. Anderson Law Diet., p. 897.
The ordinance in question does neither. It is altogether prospective in its operation. It declares that all sales of intoxicating liquors thereafter made within the corporate limits by persons who fail to comply with its provision shall be unlawful. The appellant was prosecuted for a sale made after the ordinance in questión took effect. He was bound to know at the time he made the sale that he was violating the ordinance. He took the chance of defeating the ordinance, and he can not now complain that it was either an ex post facto or retroactive law. State v. Isabel, 40 La. Ann. 340.
As we have already seen, he acquired no vested right under the previous ordinance which was taken away, nor was there any contract relation existing, the obligation of which was impaired. When the premise is once established that one can acquire no vested right or contractual interest in a police regulation, the conclusion follows that subsequent regulations on the same subject can not be retrospective in a technical sense. “The contracts which the Constitution
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.