Opinion by
The question in this case is whether a screen exhibition by means of television on the premises of establishments licensed under the Liquor Control Act qualifies as one of the types of entertainment which is subjected by the Act to regulation by the Liquor Control Board.
The plaintiffs appeal from a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County dismissing their bill of complaint which sought to restrain the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, represented by its individual members, from enforcing a regulation of the Board which requires a liquor licensee to obtain an Amusement Permit as a prerequisite to his use of television devices in his licensed establishment. The case was tried together with a similar suit by other plaintiffs (Jacob.Stern et al. v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board). The adjudication, decree nisi and final decree were filed in the latter case but, by stipulation, were made to apply with the same force and effect to the case here involved. It is from the final decree so entered that the plaintiffs took this appeal.
Pursuant to these statutory authorizations, the Board, on March 3, 1947, issued to “All Retail Licensees (Except Clubs)” its Bulletin No. A-62 notifying such licensees that the use of television devices in licensed establishments is unlawful unless the licensee is a holder of a valid Amusement Permit issued by the Board. That is the regulation which the plaintiffs presently seek to obviate.
It is the appellants’ contention that television devices are not within the meaning of the term, “moving picture exhibitions,” as used in paragraph (14) of Sec. 602, supra; that the Liquor Control Board is without power to adopt any regulation controlling the operation of television devices in licensed establishments; and that the regulation under attack was promulgated without any statutory authority.
The appellants base their argument upon the assertion that television and moving picture exhibitions are
As the Liquor Control Act itself expressly states (see Sec. 3 (a)), it is “an exercise of the police power of the Commonwealth for the protection of the public' welfare, health, peace and morals of the people of the Commonwealth”; and the Act further provides that “all of [its] provisions . . . shall be liberally construed for the accomplishment of this purpose.” To the same end, the Board is clothed with broad regulatory power over licensees and the legislature expressly enjoined that “every section and provision of the act shall be construed accordingly.”
With these legislative admonitions in mind and recognizing also that “The object of all interpretation and construction of laws is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the Legislature” (Statutory Construction Act of May 28, 1937, P.L. 1019, Sec. 51, 46 PS § 551), we have no hesitancy in holding that what the legislature intended by paragraph (14) of Sec. 602 of the Liquor Control Act was to place under the Board’s
The appellants argue that, because television was unhnoAvn or, at -least, not practicably usable, when the Liquor Control Act and its pertinent amendments were enacted, the legislature could not have intended to subject to the Board’s supervision and regulation exhibitions by television. The contention is without merit. In Commonwealth v. Quaker City Cab Co.,
So far, we have treated the question which the appellants raise on the broad ground of the general legislative intent with respect to the character of entertainment in licensed establishments subject to Board control. There is, however, a further reason why the decree in this case would have to be affirmed. The learned court below found and it is not disputed that television is used to broadcast moving picture exhibitions. In.that connection, an expert witness called by the plaintiff admitted that when a motion picture is shown on a television set, the same picture there appears as would be seen on the screen where the televised motion picture is
