177 Mo. App. 223 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is a proceeding in the circuit court by certiorari having for its object the annulment
The statute, which is the basis of this proceeding, reads as follows: “Whenever it shall be shown to the county court, upon the application of any person, that any dramshop keeper of the county has not at all times kept an orderly house, such court shall order the license of such dramshop keeper to be revoked, and from the date of such order the dramshop' keeper shall be deemed to have no license, and to be without the authority to act as a dramshop keeper; but the dram-shop keeper shall be notified, in writing, of such application, five days before the order shall be made, and costs shall be awarded against the losing party. [R. S. 1899', sec. 3012.]”
The amended complaint filed by the prosecuting attorney charges: “That the said Arthur N. Carman as such licensee has not complied with the laws of the State of Missouri in the conduct and operation of said dramshop, but that he has violated the laws of said State and particularly section 7218 of the Revised Statutes of 1909 of Missouri in this: That he has not at all times kept an orderly house in the conduct and operation of said dramshop as provided in said section 7218; that he has sold and permitted to be drunk in and about said dramshop, intoxicating liquors on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday; that on the 2nd day of February, 1913, said 2nd day of February having been the first day of the week commonly called Sunday, and divers other Sundays pre
It is conceded that certiorari is the proper and only remedy available to a dramshop keeper whose license bas< been illegally revoked by the county court. [State ex rel. v. Shelton, 154 Mo. 670, 693, 55 S. W. 1008; State ex rel. v. Lichta, 130 Mo. App. 284, 109 S. W. 825; State ex rel. v. Dykeman, 153 Mo. App. 416, 134 S. W. 120.]
The sole office of the writ of certiorari is to determine whether or not the county court has acted within its jurisdiction, that is, has not acted without any jurisdiction or in excess of its jurisdiction. [State ex rel. v. Smith, 176 Mo. 99, 100, 75 S. W. 586; State ex rel. v. Reynolds, 190 Mo. 578, 588, 89 S. W. 877; State ex rel. v. Shelton, 154 Mo. 670, 691, 55 S. W. 1008; State ex rel. v. Dykeman, 153 Mo. App. 416, 418, 134 S. W. 120.] It is also held, following Black on Intoxicating Liquors, that: “A license to sell liquor is neither a contract nor a right of property, within the legal and constitutional meaning of those terms. It is no more than a temporary permit to do that which would otherwise be unlawful, and forms a part of the internal police system of the State. Hence the authority which granted the license always retains the power to revoke it, either for cause, of forfeiture, or upon a change of policy and legislation in regard to the liquor traffic. And such revocation cannot be pro nounced unconstitutional, either as an impairment of contract obligation, or as unlawfully divesting persons of their property or rights.” [State ex rel. v.
Certiorari does not reach mere ministerial acts, and, as it is held that it is. only in determining its own jurisdiction to act on the charges preferred that the county court- acts judicially, it is only this determination of its own jurisdiction that is subject to review on certiorari. [State ex rel. v. Lichta, 130 Mo. App. 284, 289, 291, 109 S. W. 825; State ex rel. v. Elkin, 130 Mo. 90, 30 S. W. 333, 31 S. W. 1037; Barnett v. County Court, 111 Mo. App. 693, 701, 706, 86 S. W. 575; State v. Seebold, 192 Mo. 720, 728, 91 S. W. 491.] That the county court acted ministerially and not judicially and that the proceeding is an investigation rather than a trial is important as bearing on the question of the sufficiency of the charges made and of the order of that court revoking the license, to be discussed later.
The county court in this case determined that the charges preferred against relator were sufficient to give it' jurisdiction to act in the matter and that was the sole question before the circuit court granting the writ of certiorari and of this court in reviewing by appeal the action of the circuit court in upholding the jurisdiction of the county court. The jurisdiction of the -county court over the subject-matter of revoking dramshop licenses for failure to keep an orderly house is fixed by statute, section 7218, Revised Statutes 1909, supra. The relator, however, challenges the jurisdiction of that court in this particular proceeding on two grounds: First, that the application of the prosecuting attorney to revoke relator’s license does not state facts sufficient to constitute his dramshop a disorderly house; second, that if it should be held that the application of the prosecuting attorney pleads facts sufficient to constitute the dramshop of relator a disorderly house, then it was the duty of the court to set out specifically, in its order revoking relator’s
This last contention is fully disposed of by this court in State ex rel. v. Dykeman, 153 Mo. App. 416, 423, 134 S. W. 120, where the court said: “It was not necessary that the court should have made any specific finding of facts. A general finding that relators were conducting a disorderly house would have been sufficient, and since this general finding was made it must stand unless the specific findings' upon which it is based contradict it, or are insufficient to support it>.” This follows the general practice, even in the trial of cases in courts of record, where a general verdict and judgment for one of the parties is sufficient without a finding or setting out in the record of the particular facts on which the verdict and judgment is based. It has also been ruled that it is sufficient in certiorari proceedings that the jurisdiction of the inferior tribunal, with which alone the review court has to deal', appears by any part of the record. [State v. Schneider, 47 Mo. App. 669, 676; State ex rel. v. Mayor of Neosho, 57 Mo. App. 192, 196.]
The whole case, therefore, turns on the question of the sufficiency of the charges made against relator to warrant the county court in acting on the same; for, if it had power to act at all on the charges preferred, its order revoking the license is immune from attack in this proceeding. “While it is fair to hold that the charges preferred must be in writing, so as to inform the party proceeded against as to the nature of the proceeding and afford him an opportunity to be heard, yet, the county court is not trying a case and should not be hampered by the technical rules governing pleadings or proceedings in trial courts. The proceeding is an informal and summary investigation rather than a trial. It is said in Black on Intoxicating Liquors, sec. 194, that: “The proceeding may be summary and the authorities are not required to take the
The statute is so worded as to give the county court large powers in this regard. It is given power to revoke a dramshop license whenever it is shown that the holder thereof “has not at all times kept an orderly house.” The term “orderly house” is one of hroad meaning, as will be seen from the definitions collected by the learned judge who wrote the opinion in the Dykeman case just quoted from. Those definitions need not be repeated here but will be found to include all acts which “annoy or scandalize the public,” “are contrary to law and subversive of public morals,” “draws together idle, vicious, dissolute or immoral persons,” or “the young and unwary into it to indulge in or witness anything corrupting,” etc. A disorderly house as applied to a dramshop- must, of course, be understood to mean something more than permitting the evils or allowing the doing of those things tending to immorality which necessarily flow from selling and drinking intoxicants; otherwise, the doing of the very thing which the license permits the dramshop- keeper to do, to-wit, the selling of intoxicants to, and the drinking of the same by, customers, would, of itself, constitute the same a disorderly house. The law does require however, that the dram-shop be so conducted and controlled as to a reasonable extent, at least, minimize such evils and tendency to immorality. Our statutes have wisely prohibited certain things having an obvious tendency to increase the evils attending dramshop-s; as for instance-, the selling of intoxicating liquors- to minors, permitting minors to enter and remain in dramshops, keeping the same open on Sundays and election days, selling to habitual drunkards, keeping musical instruments therein, or permitting games of chance or gaming tables, boxing or wrestling matches', keeping the same open at cer
Several of the things charged against the relator are clearly within the definitions of “disorderly house ’ ’ above given, as well as being a direct violation of the statutes governing dramshops. It is true that the court in State ex rel. v. Lichta, 130 Mo. App. 284, 109 S. W. 825, held that a single violation of the law in selling to minors would not constitute a disorderly house, because the term disorderly implies successive and continuing acts (State ex rel. v. Dykeman, 153 Mo. App. 416, 421, 134 S. W. 120), but the court significantly remarked: “Open, repeated and continuous sales of intoxicating liquors to minors- to the annoyance and disturbance of the inhabitants of the vicinity, might come within the legal definition -of a disorderly house”—and that is practically what is charged here with reference to selling on Sunday. The court also cited in that case the case of Commonwealth v. Bessler, 97 Ky. 498, holding that it would be a good indictment for keeping a disorderly house to use words showing a repetition of improper conduct “on divers other days and times.” It certainly comes within the definition of a disorderly house to charge and prove that the keeper “conducted his dramshop in such manner as to attract idle, vicious, dissolute and immoral persons, and in such, manner as to promote violations of the law and to promote immorality.” So too of the charge that relator left his saloon entirely to the management of two other persons, naming them, who
The relator claims that these charges are, in part at least, too general and are mere conclusions. That might be a fatal objection were this proceeding a trial instead of a mere investigation resulting in a mere ministerial act. These charges, are not near so general as the statute and are, we think, sufficiently specific for the purposes of such an investigation as the statute authorizes and contemplates. It results that the action of the circuit court in refusing to quash the order of the county court is sustained.