92 W. Va. 222 | W. Va. | 1922
Mandamus is applied for by petitioner to require the town ■of Cass and the county court of Pocahontas County, in which ■said municipality is situated, and the public officers thereof, to issue him a certificate or license to operate a pool room in ■said town of Cass.
It is averred in his petition and in the alternative writ ■that petitioner owns a lot and building in said town, worth about $10,000.00, in which he has operated a pool room for ■some four years prior to July 1, 1922, and up to that time had had no trouble to procure a license from the proper municipal and county authorities; but that when he made
He further avers that he had therefore conducted his business properly, so that the members of the county court and the mayor and council of said town had no legal or other reason for refusing him a license to maintain and operate a pool room in said town; that realizing the powerful political influence of the said company in said town and county, he at all times specially guarded and cared for his business, and had at all times carefully and earnestly complie'd with the laws of the State and the ordinances of said town.
It is further averred that the said town and county officials had in denying petitioner such license arbitrarily and without any good reason therefor abused the discretion granted them by sections 35a and 35b of chapter 109 of the Acts of 1921, and moreover that said sections of the statute, in so far as they undertake to grant the discretion to grant or refuse licenses, are in contravention of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, guaranteeing to every one within their bounds the equal protection of the laws; also of section 1 of article N, and of section 10 of article III of the constitution of this State.
It is also averred that petitioner is a proper person to be granted the license applied for, and was a fully qualified applicant therefor.
The town of Cass and the mayor and council thereof, and the eounty court of said county and the president and other commissioners thereof, made separate returns to said writ,
Section 35a of said chapter controlling the issuing of such license provides: ‘ ‘ Every person desiring a license for the purpose of keeping, for public use or resort, a bowling alley, pool table, billiard table, bagatelle table or any table of like kind, shall apply in writing to the county court, and such writing shall state the house and fully describe the place for which such license is desired, and the court may at its discretion grant or refuse such application.” (Italics ours).
Section 35b provides that where the place in which such business is to be conducted is situated in an incorporated city or town, the council or other governing body thereof shall have exclusive power and right to grant such license and all the other powers therein granted to the county court. The town of Cass is a municipality created under chapter 47 of
• The question now presented is: Do these authorities condemn the statute which purports to give respondents the discretion to grant or refuse licenses to keep for public use or resort a pool table? If we can, it is our duty to give such construction to the statute as will uphold it against attack upon constitutional grounds. While by its language arbitrary power might possibly be inferred, we think it must not be given such construction as would render it void on constitutional grounds.
The charges of specific violations of the law by petitioner, supported by affidavits, are not specifically denied by him. He contends himself for the most part by affirming his fitness to have the license applied for and by asserting his constitutional right thereto. He tendered and filed in support of his character, and in rebuttal of the specific charges of violations of the law by him, the unsworn statement of quite a number of p ''sons, alleged customers of his, to the effect that he had alwa,,.> conducted his business in a clean, fair and business like manner. But such statement is too general, and not being sworn to, can not be regarded as evidence. The
Section 19 of chapter 32 of the Code, now repealed, required the county court or other licensing tribunal, as á condition precedent to granting any license authorized in the first section, which included pool tables, to be satisfied and to so enter upon its record or minutes, that the applicant was not of intemperate habits and had not been convicted of a felony, etc. Certainly if respondents did so act in determining in advance that the petitioner was not a fit person to have such license and had violated the law in any of the particulars inhibited by the statute, it can not be said that they acted arbitrarily, but with the discretion which was intended to be conferred by the' statute. The exercise of such discretion does not necessarily involve the conformance of the applicant to certain definite standards which can be made known in advance, but requires' the exercise of personal judgment and the discretion of the licensing officers, and which honestly, made can not be made subject to review by the courts, by writ of mandamus or otherwise. All that is required in such ease is that the discretionary decision shall be the outcome of examination and consideration. 19 R. C. L. 967, paragraph 265.
If therefore, the statute does not, as we now hold, authorize the exercise by respondents of arbitrary discretion in the granting or refusing of licenses, and they have not so acted with respect to the application of petitioner, as we now find, the statute is not invalid nor has the relator been deprived of any constitutional rights justifying the relief by mandamus. which he now seeks at our hands.
Writ refused.