84 Mo. App. 531 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
The substance of the petition is, that on the first day of July, 1899, the relator presented to Charles P. Higgins, the excise commissioner of the city of St. Louis, his written application for a license to keep a dramshop at number 100 North Jefferson avenue in said city for a period of six months, and thereafter on July 3 filed with said commisssioner the petition of the property owner in numbers, location, etc., as required by law, and that on his application and said petition a license was issued to him to keep a dramshop at said number for a period of six months: that at the expiration of his license, to-wit, on January 3, 1900, he made written application to the commissioner for a renewal of his said license for another period
.For return to the alternative writ which was issued and served, the commissioner admitted the issuance of the license for a period of six months from July 3 to January 3, 1900, admitted the application for a second or renewal license for another period of six months, and his refusal to issue the same, and as grounds for such refusal alleged that the petition for the license filed July 3 was signed by a bare majority of the taxpaying citizens and guardians of minors who were eligible to sign said petition; that when he issued the license on July 3 he believed relator to be a law-abiding citizen and a man of good moral character; that when the application was made for the second or renewal license he made inquiry and ascertained that relator was not a law-abiding citizen, nor of good moral character, and charged that relator, since the issuance of the -first license, had been guilty of the following misdemeanors and violation of the dramshop law, to-wit:
First: That he had in violation of the dramshop law kept a disorderly house during the period of his license; that shooting affrays had occurred in his saloon and certain persons named had been shot.
Second. That he had conducted or permitted to be conducted games of chance for money and property in his saloon, and had set up slot-machines therein for the purpose of being used for playing games of chance thereon for money or property, and that persons had been arrested for gambling in his saloon and had been convicted of the offense of gambling committed in relator’s saloon.
Third. That he kept a piano in his said saloon, and that the same was used for the purpose of making music therein.
The relator moved the circuit court to award him a peremptory writ of mandamus, notwithstanding the return. This motion was sustained and a' peremptory writ was awarded. After unavailing motions for new trial and in arrest the commissioner appealed.
2. The question of law presented by the pleadings is this: After having granted a first license for a period of six months on the application of the licensee and petition of a bare majority of the property owners in the block where the dramshop is kept, is the excise commissioner of the city of St. Louis, after the expiration of the first license, bound to issue a second license for six months, on the application of the licensee and a tender of the license fee and a good and sufficient bond? To correctly answer this question we must ascertain whether the Dramshop Act (Articles 1 and 2, chapter 22, R. S. 1899)’ in providing for the grant of a second license for a period of six months on a petition good under the law for twelve months confers on the commissioner a mere ministerial function, or whether he is invested with judicial or discretionary powers to grant or not to grant the second license. If the Act clothes him with the latter power, then it is clear he can not be compelled by the writ of mandamus to issue the license. State ex rel. v. Francis, 95 Mo. 44; State ex rel. v. Cramer, 96 Mo. 75; State ex rel. v. Board of Health, 103 Mo. 22; State ex rel. v. Smith, 105 Mo. 6; State ex rel. v. Flad, 108 Mo. 614; State v. Oliver, 116 Mo. 188; State ex rel. v. Rombauer, 125 Mo. 632; State ex rel. v. Lutz, 136 Mo. 633. The sale of intoxicating liquors being illegal because of its tendency to deprave public
Judgment reversed.