33 Wis. 107 | Wis. | 1873
Counsel for the respondent frankly concede the constitutional power of the legislature to entirely prohibit the selling or giving away of ardent or intoxicating liquors or spirits to be used as a beverage, and attack only certain provisions of the act as being inconsistent with the authority to. sell conferred, and repugnant to the constitutional rights of the citizen engaged in an authorized and lawful traffic and business. The point thus yielded, and as to which there would seem to be little room for controversy at the present day, of the general power of the legislature over the subject acted upon, not only very much narrows the field of contest and investigation, but, as it appears to us, also takes away all grounds of constitutional support for the objections specially urged against particular clauses and portions of the act Assuming the general power of the legislature over the subject to the extent of prohibiting entirely the traffic in intoxicating, liquors or drinks, necessarily involves, as it seems to us, the admission of the ut
And herein, as this court conceives, consists the chief defect and fallacy of the position assumed and argued with so much ingenuity and research by the learned counsel for the respondent. They forget, as it appears to us, that the subject with which we are dealing is not one of those pertaining to the primary and fundamental rights of the citizen, and as to which no unlimited control has been vested in the legislature. They seem to overlook this principal ground of distinction, and argue as if the action of the legislature was an infringement of the natural and inalienable rights of the citizen, declared and guarantied by the constitution, instead of the exercise of a discretionary power against which no limit has been set by that instrument. And this, we think, is the very turning point of the controversy, namely, that the legislature may grant or withhold authority to sell at its pleasure, and, granting such authority, it is held by the licensee at the mere pleasure or grace of the body granting it. It is held by him, not as a matter of primary and absolute right, but as a favor, which, like all favors, must be received upon such terms and conditions, and subject to such burdens and inconveniences as the donor thinks proper to impose, and the donee elects to accept Unlike other trades and employments which it is the right of the citizen to pursue, undisturbed by arbitrary legislative interference and control, the person who engages in this, must, within the limitations
It is fallacious, therefore, to argue from the incompetency of the legislature in other cases, that there exists no legislative power to make harsh and unjust discriminations, or to enact inequitable and oppressive conditions, upon a subject like this. Conceding that the operation of the law will be what counsel say, and that their criticisms of its provisions are well founded and true, still these do not annul the law or affect its validity in a constitutional sense, but only render it “ void in its obligatory quality on the mind, and therefore determine it as the proper object of abrogation and repeal, so far as regards its civil existence.” They are proper arguments to be addressed to the legislature, but not to this court. This court must accept the law, as counsel must, and as all citizens must, just as the legistature has deemed expedient to enact it. Speaking in the sense of that “immovable principle” of natural justice which should govern all legislative bodies in their enactments, but not in that restricted sense of the constitution which leads to the disregard or abrogation of the expressed will of the legislature by any other than the legislative body itself, it has been observed by one of the greatest statesmen and wisest political philosphers of modern times, that “in reality there are two, and only two, foundations of law; and they are both of them conditions without which nothing can give it any force ■ — I mean equity and utility. With respect to the former, it grows out of the great rule of equality, which is grounded upon our common nature, and which Philo, with propriety and beauty, calls the mother of justice. All human laws are, properly speaking, only declaratory; they may alter the mode and application, but have no power over the substance of original justice. * * * Law is a mode of human action respecting society, and must be governed by the same rules of equity which govern every private action.” — Burke’s Works, vol. 6, p. 22.
The foregoing observations, we believe, meet all the constitutional objections which have been urged, and leave only one of that kind, concerning which more particular notice and comment seem to be required. It is assumed that the law legalizes or sanctions, in an unqualified sense, the act of sale by the party who has complied with the formal requirements prescribed, and obtained a license in the manner provided for by it; and then it is argued that the legislature has no power to inflict penalties or mulct the party in damages for the performance of a lawful act. The difficulty with this proposition is, as will be seen from the course of reasoning above adopted (if such reasoning be correct), that it assumes that to be an absolutely lawful act, which is so conditionally, or with qualifications only — expressly so made by the very terms of the law which authorizes the sale. It enters into and becomes a part of the license or authority to sell, that the individual accepting
The court has thus, at the urgent solicitation of counsel on both sides, considered and expressed its opinion upon the constitutional questions presented and argued upon the motion to quash the alternative writ of mandamus, and it has done so without first adverting to the question, preliminary in its nature, whether the case made by the petition is in any way a proper one for the application of ■ the remedy, which question, bad it first been considered, would have resulted in the decis
The licenses issued without the giving of the bond being void, of course no revocation of them by the mayor is necessary. It would be a merely idle act for him to do so, and a still more idle act for the law or this court to require it to be done. But whether the licenses were void or not, there existed ample remedy by suit or prosecution at law to test the questions and settle the controversy, which of itself is always sufficient cause for refusing the writ, or for quashing it, if it has been improperly issued. /
It is a circumstance not perhaps unworthy of observation here, that almost at the commencement of our existence as a state a law was enacted the very same in principle as that under consideration, although in some respects far more stringent and exacting in its provisions, and that it remained upon the statute books for the period of two years or thereabouts, without, so far as we know, its constitutionality being in any manner brought in question. It will be found in chapter 29, of the R. S. of 1849, the first systematic code of, laws enacted by the state after its admission into the Union.
By the Court.— Motion to quash denied.