181 Mo. App. 18 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is a proceeding in prohibition issued by virtue of the original jurisdiction of this court, under the Constitution, pertaining to such matters.
The writ is directed to the county court of Cape Girardeau county and the judges thereof, for it pertains to a proceeding pending in that court whereby it is sought to revoke a dramshop license.
The petitioner, Sidney Verble, owns and maintains a dramshop at No. 723 S. Fountain street in the city of Cape Girardeau. Several citizens filed a petition in the county .court of that county seeking to revoke Verble’s dramshop license on numerous grounds therein set out. Among other things, this petition so filed contains averments of matter which was adjudicated at the time the dramshop license was issued, and seeks a revocation of the license thereon. It is to prohibit the county court from proceeding with respect to this matter so averred that the prohibition is sued out here, on the theory that, though the county court possesses authority to revoke dramshop licenses, no jurisdiction whatever to do so obtains in that tribunal at a subsequent term after issuing the license, on the grounds that the court was deceived or imposed upon when the license was issued, and that the county court, in attempting to do so, is exercising a judicial function beyond its power, in pursuing a course that may result in vacating .a valid judgment given at a prior term.'
It appears that Sidney Verble, the petitioner, filed his application for a dramshop license in the office of
“That the said petition did not contain the names of a majority of the assessed) taos-paying citizens' and guardia/ns of minors owning property in the block and square where said dramshop was to be kept, and the license was therefore wrongfully granted.
“That there was fraud a/nd collusion practiced by the said Sidney Verble in procuring the court to count the name of Mrs. Minnie Smith in favor of said dram-shop petition; that the said applicant, Sidney Verble, offered testimony before this court touching the qualification of Mrs. Minnie Smith as a signer on said petition, tending to show that the said Minnie Smith was a real estate owner in said block and square where said dramshop was tobe kept, when in truth and in fact she had long prior thereto sold and disposed of the real estate, formerly owned by her, by deed made to one Mrs. M. E. McCormick, late widow of Esau McCor-, mick, deceased. That the said Minnie Smith was not a legal signer on said dramshop petition.
“That the said Sidney Verble procured the cowniy court to reject the name of Mrs. McCormick, which should have been counted against said petition, by fraudulent testimony tending to show and prove to the court that the said Mrs. McCormick was not the owner of property in the said block or square where said dramshop was to be kept, and that said testimony toas false.
*26 “Your petitioners would further represent and show to this honorable court that the said Sidney Verble is not a legally qualified person to receive a license and to keep a dramshop under the laws of this State and that petitioners verily believe and represent the fact to be that the said Sidney Verble is the agent, representative, partner or employee of persons engaged in the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors and that in truth and in fact the said Sidney Verble is not the owner of the dramshop, operated under the license heretofore granted to him,
“Tour petitioners would further represent and show4to this honorable court as .they verily believe and represent the facts to be that said Sidney Verble has violated section 7218, Revised Statutes 1909 of Missouri, in this, that he has not at all times kept an orderly house at the place where he has operated and is now operating a dramshop, that he has permitted minors and persons under the age of twenty-one years to enter, remain in and loiter in his dramshop and that he has sold, given away and disposed of intoxicating liquors and permitted the same to be done in and about the premises and his dramshop to minors and persons under the age of twenty-one j^ears; that the said Sidney Verble on various and divers occasions has permitted persons to sing and dance in and about the said dramshop' premises, make loud and unusual noises and that the manner in which he has conducted said dramshop constitutes the place a nuisance, that persons have frequently become drunk and disorderly, who habitually visit the dramshop and carry on in a loud, noisy and boisterous manner.
“Wherefore the premises considered, your petitioners pray the court to revoke the license heretofore granted to the said Sidney Verble.
“Respectfully submitted.
“Ivan Lee Holt,
“L. L. Dalton.”
On these matters being made to appear here, the. preliminary rule was issued against the county court of Cape Girardeau county on December 12, 1913, prohibiting- further proceedings with respect to such matters set forth in the petition of Holt and Dalton and as appears above italicized. Upon the return coming in, it appears that William Paar, one of the judges, confesses the absence of power in the county court to
There is no controversy about the facts, and the record before us invokes a conclusion of law with respect to the power of the county court to proceed at a subsequent term to revoke a dramshop license issued at a prior term on a sufficient showing and finding of fact as by reviewing such showing, finding of fact and judgment at a subsequent term, on grounds of either error or fraud. There can be no doubt that in whatever capacity the county court may assume to act in the matter of revoking a dramshop license, it acts judicially in granting one. This question was long since-settled in the jurisprudence of the State. It is unnecessary to extensively discuss it. The Supreme Court and the several Courts of Appeals have frequently so-decided. The county court is a tribunal authorized by the Constitution, and while it does not proceed according to the course of the common law, it is empowered by the statute to perform judicial functions in some cases and administrative and ministerial functions pertaining to some other matters.
The statute authorizing the issue of dramshop licenses commits the hearing and decision with respect to them to the county court in the several counties of the State other than St. Louis and the city of St. Louis. Among other things, the statute imposes the duty upon •the county court to hear the evidence and ascertain whether or not the petition of the applicant for license •is signed by a majority of the tax-paying citizens and guardians of minors in .the block or square in which the dramshop is sought to be established in cities such as Cape Girardeau. It requires the court to ascertain and determine, too, whether the applicant is over twenty-one years of age and a law-abiding assessed
This judgment of the county court, though one of an inferior tribunal, moving within its statutory sphere, like other judgments of courts of competent jurisdiction, is immune from collateral attack. [State v. Evans, 83 Mo. 319. See, also, State ex rel. Schade v. Russell, 131 Mo. App. 638, 110 S. W. 667.] It is certain that it may not be reviewed for error nor set aside for fraud at a subsequent term of the same court, for the very sufficient reason that the county court possesses neither common law nor equity jurisdiction essential to attend to such matters. However, the judgment of a county court granting a dramshop license may be vacated and set aside for fraud in procuring the judgment by a court of equity on a proper bill therefor, as has been heretofore determined. [See Kochtitzky v. Herbst, 160 Mo. App. 443, 140 S. W. 925; Burkharth v. Stephens, 117 Mo. App. 425, 94 S. W.
The statute referred to is as follows:
“Whenever it shall be shown to the county court, upon the application of any person, that any dram-shop 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 of law to act as a dramshop keeper; but the dramshop 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.” '
It is to be observed that the latter portion of the petition of Holt and Dalton counts upon this section of the statute and'charges that Yerble did not keep an
But it is argued that, though the county court acts judicially in passing upon the application for and in granting a dramshop license, it is well settled that it acts ministerially only in revoking such license under the statute. In this view, it is urged that prohibition will not lie here, for it is said the remedy is not available against the performance of a ministerial act, because the writ is purely a judicial one and may only be invoked when judicial functions are assumed, not rightfully belonging to the person or tribunal assuming them. The propositions thus asserted are entirely true, but not so with the conclusion, for it is obvious the county court acted judicially when it determined
In the same view, this court, on a prior occasion, determined, too, that though the county court of Montgomery county was authorized to revoke a dramshop license for the causes enumerated in the statute, and in so proceeding it invoked ministerial power only, it nevertheless acted judicially when moving to revoke a license on other grounds than those enumerated in the statutes. [See State ex rel. v. Lichta, 130 Mo. App. 284, 109 S. W. 825.] So it is here, for though the act of revoking a dramshop license under section 7218 is a ministerial act, the act of the county court in determining that it would proceed on the portion of the petition above italicized and review the finding and
It is true this proceeding seems to be unusual in awarding prohibition to restrain the county court from moving on a portion of a petition only, but the case is an extraordinary one in character, for no appeal or writ of error may be had from the final judgment of the county court thereon and relator is without a remedy otherwise. This being true, the preliminary rule in prohibition should be made absolute and the writ awarded to restrain the county court of Cape Girardeau county from inquiring into the matters set forth in the portion of the petition above itálicized alone find leaving it free to proceed in the discharge of its ministerial functions under the concluding paragraph of -the petition of Holt and Dalton in accordance with the provisions of section 7218, Revised Statutes 1909. It is so ordered.