Our statutory provisions ifi respect of licensing retailers, the effect and authority of the license, etc., etc., are now substantially what they were when the case of Long v. The State, 27 Ala. 32, was decided, at least- so far as the question involved here is concerned; and that case is decisive of this against the appellant. It is there declared that “a license to retail affords protection only for those acts which, in law,-are merely the acts of the person to whom it is granted. If it is granted to an individual, it affords protection only for those acts which, in law, are merely his acts as an individual. If it is granted to a partnership, it affords protection only for those acts which, in law, are the -acts of the firm. A license to an individual cannot be a license to a partnership.” And further: “We concede that when a license has been granted to an individual, he may exercise the privilege it confers by his clerk or agent; for' the acts of his clerk or agent are, in law, his acts, and nothing more. And so, when a license has been granted to a. partnership, the firm may exercise the privilege it confers by its clerk or agent; for the acts of its clerk or-agent are, in law, its acts, and nothing more. The clerk or agent is entirely under the control and influence of the principal. But one partner is not the
Affirmed.