149 Iowa 87 | Iowa | 1910
The defendants are the proprietors of a liquor saloon situated upon certain described lots in the town of Gushing and claim to be conducting the business in accordance with and under the protection of the so-called “mulct statute.” It is stipulated that defendants have complied with all the provisions of said statute, unless it be as to the matter of filing with the county auditor a certified copy of the resolution of consent adopted by the town council of Oushing and the further matter of procuring and filing the consent of all resident freeholders owning property within fifty feet of their saloon. Among the conditions to be complied with before the liquor
The town recorder as a witness testified that the motion or resolution thus indicated was presented to and adopted by the council and spread upon the record book, and that the paper is a copy of such record.- This testimony is objected to by appellant as incompetent. and not the best evidence, and for the purposes of this appeal we may concede the point. It may also be conceded that strict compliance with the terms of the statute is necessary to bar the prosecution of the defendants upon the charge of maintaining a nuisance. For instance, it would not be enough for the defendant to file a paper which is in fact an accurate copy of the resolution if it be not certified as such, nor would it be any defense to produce the recorder with his books and show that such a resolution was in fact duly adopted if it appears that a certified copy thereof had not been filed. We are therefore left to inquire whether the paper in question may fairly be said to be a certified copy of a resolution of consent by the town council. This involves a determination whether the action of the council which is thus recorded amounts to a resolution of consent. The motion or resolution is exceedingly informal, but we are disposed to hold that it is not fatally defective. No form is prescribed by statute, and any statement or language which fairly conveys the idea that the council consents to the establishment of the defendants’ saloon should be so construed by the courts. The word “license” employed in the resolution is not in all respects the equivalent of consent, but it certainly includes it, and it would be an exceedingly technical and
It is a time-honored practice to introduce or preface a resolution with the word “Resolved,” and the lack of such formality in this instance is submitted by counsel as sufficient reason for refusing to recognize the action of the council as amounting to a resolution. There is an occasional precedent giving some color to this contention. State v. Delesdenier, 7 Tex. 76; Galveston v. Morton, 58 Tex. 409. We are of the opinion, however, that the thing which the statute requires is an expression of the will of the council upon the question of consenting to the sale of intoxicants by the person applying for such permission, and that such consent be found recorded or embodied in the proper books of the municipality from which the recorder, as the official custodian, may make and certify the copy to be filed with the auditor. A “resolution” is something less formal than an “ordinance,” and, generally speaking, is a mere expression of the opinion or mind of the council concerning some matter of administration coming within its official cognizance, Railroad Co. v. Chicago, 174 Ill. 439 (51 N. E. 596), and no set form of words is essential if the requirement which calls for such expression is met. Subject to certain exceptions noted in Code, sections 683, '684, a resolution does not require a record of the yea and nay vote of the council, and a less formal record of its passage may be sustained than would be required to show the adoption of an ordinance. The record in the instant case is sufficient to show without reasonable doubt that the town council intended by its action to express its consent to the defendant’s proposal to establish
The copy was therefore sufficiently certified, and having been filed with the auditor in due time, and it being stipulated that defendants have in other respects complied with the law, the decree of the district court must be affirmed.