221 S.W. 925 | Tex. | 1920
Lead Opinion
The action is in the name of the State of Texas for the use and benefit of Potter County, and is for recovery of statutory penalties aggregating $5,000 upon a statutory retail liquor dealer's bond, executed and delivered on September 19, 1910 (under Art. 7452, Rev. Stats., 1911), for alleged breaches of its conditions occurring prior to the local option election on Sept. 5, 1911, in Commissioners' Precinct Number One, of Potter County, in which was located the place of business mentioned in said bond, by virtue of which election the sale of intoxicating liquors in that territory was duly prohibited pursuant to provisions of our Constitution and statute. The petition alleged violations of the terms and conditions of said bond by selling liquor to minors, by permitting minors to enter and remain in the place of business mentioned in said bond, and by placing in said place screens by which the view thereto was obstructed. The suit was filed after the local option law had been adopted, and had gone into operation, in that territory. *500
In connection with its statement of the facts our Court of Civil Appeals for the Seventh Supreme Judicial District, at Amarillo, certified these questions:
"First: — Under the above facts stated, did the trial court err in sustaining the plea in abatement and in abating and dismissing the suit filed by appellant, the State of Texas?
"Second: — Could the State of Texas maintain the suit for the penalties therein sued for after the adoption of the local option law in the precinct where the business of retail liquor dealer, by Mitchell, was carried on for the violation of the stipulation in the retail liquor dealer's bond, executed by appellees, before the adoption of the local option law, and which violations were alleged to have occurred prior to the adoption of the local option law in that precinct?"
The certificate refers to San Saba County v. Williams, 10 Texas Civ. App. 346[
The issue is, in substance, whether the fact that the local option law became effective in that territory after the dates upon which said breaches are alleged to have occurred justified the District Court in sustaining appellees' plea in abatement and dismissing the suit, the corresponding allegations of said plea in abatement being true admittedly.
The question seems not to have been definitely settled by this court, although in the above mentioned cause of Long v. Green, in dismissing the cause for want of jurisdiction upon the ground that inasmuch as the amount sued for was within the jurisdiction of the County Court the cause was one in which the jurisdiction of the Court of Civil Appeals was final, this court did say that, overlooking said jurisdictional point, the writ of error had been granted by this court because it did not agree with the view of the lower courts, which was that putting the local option law into operation had the legal effect of repealing the statute conferring the right of action for penalties for prior breaches of the bond, and, as a legal consequence, of abating the then pending action for such penalties.
San Saba County v. Williams is not relied upon, in the present case, by counsel for appellees, their contentions being, first, that the present action is for purely statutory penalties, and, second, that putting the local option law into operation repealed, in that territory, said general law regulating sales of intoxicating liquors, including all of its provisions relating to such bond and penalties.
Said first contention must be sustained. The present action is not one for enforcement of contractual vested rights. Such a bond does not create between its makers, upon the one hand, and, upon the other hand, the State or any beneficiary, a contractual relationship in such sense as to cause a vested right of action for penalties to flow from breaches of such bond. The contrary view announced in San Saba County v. Williams, has been abandoned by the court which entertained it in that case. Nolan v. Tennison, 21 Texas Civ. App. 332[
Whatever view may have prevailed, at any time, in any other State (Joyce, Int. Liq., Sec. 558), it is now well settled in this State that such actions are merely for purely statutorypenalties, of strictly punitory nature, which are provided by statute as aids in the enforcement of regulatory provisions of a criminal law, the primary purpose being to deter individuals from any future violation of the general law licensing the retail sale of intoxicating liquors. State v. Eggerman Co.,
Our statute itself expressly provides that when, as in this instance, the suit is in the name of the State for the use and benefit of the county, "the amount of five hundred dollars as a penalty shall be recovered" upon a breach of any condition of the bond. Rev. Stats., Art. 7452.
The brief of the District Attorney, for the State, frankly concedes that the nature of the cause of action is as hereinabove declared, and that any repeal of the statute which confers such right of action would abate the action; but he contends that putting the local option law into operation did not have such repealing effect.
Unquestionably the repeal of a criminal statute providing a penalty or penalties prevents enforcement of any such penalty, in the absence of a statutory provision preserving the right of action. Our Penal Code provides: "The repeal of a law, where the repealing statute substitutes no other penalty, will exempt from punishment *502 all persons who may have offended against the provisions of such repealed law, unless it be otherwise declared in the repealing statute." Art. 16.
To the same effect are the authorities generally. Wall v. State,
We have, it seems, no statute carrying express provision for keeping alive rights of action for penalties on such bonds for breaches thereof antedating such adoption of the local option law.
Article 602 (407) (378e) of our Penal Code, adopted after rendition of the decision in Mulkey v. State, supra, does provide that "When the sale of intoxicating liquor has been prohibited in any county, justice precinct, school district, city or town, or subdivision of a county, the repeal of such prohibition shall not exempt from punishment any person who may have offended against any of the provisions of the law while it was in force." Its constitutionality was affirmed by our Court of Criminal Appeals. Ezzell v. State, 29 Tex.Crim. R.,
But that provision of the statute deals exclusively with sales in local option territory, and its terms and provisions are, therefore, too restricted to embrace violations of the general statute regulating sales in territory not then under operation of the local option law. It is not cited in the District Attorney's brief in behalf of the State.
From the foregoing it follows that if putting the local option law into operation in said precinct is to be treated as havingrepealed, outright, in that territory, said general law which formerly provided for licensing and regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors, and for the giving of such bond, and for actions for penalties for breaches thereof, a right of action for such penalties cannot be successfully asserted in court, after such repeal, both because of said provisions of said Art. 16 and for the all sufficient reason that said statute is no longer operative, in that precinct. And, very clearly, for the latter reason, the same status, as to recovery of such penalties, exists, if said general liquor statute is to be treated *503 as having been in all respects suspended in said precinct during the operation therein of the local option law.
Upon principle there seems to be force in the view that the local option provisions of our Constitution and statutes were never intended to operate, in even local option territory, as a technical or actual repeal of all or of any portion of said general law regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors. In its support it may be said that adoption of the local option law in said precinct certainly left said general law in full and unrestricted operation throughout the State, except in local option territory; and in even said precinct said general law would have become again effective, in all respects, upon cessation of the local option law, in that precinct, as a result of a subsequent local option election.
Whether the legal effect of the adoption of the local option law was merely to suspend, rather than to repeal, in said precinct, said general liquor law, seems not to have been definitely determined, or set at rest, by the decisions of the courts of this State.
As tending to support said suspension theory, see the following Texas cases: Rathburn v. State,
But said repeal theory is strongly supported by several holdings by our former Court of Appeals. In Boone v. State, 12 Texas, App., 184, that court held, squarely, that the effect of the adoption of local option was to repeal a preexisting statute authorizing the sale of intoxicating liquor, in so far as its operation in the local option territory was concerned, and that, as a consequence, Art. 16, Penal Code, was applicable, and statutory penalties for prior violations of that statute could not be enforced. See, also, Donaldson v. State, 15 Tex. App., 25; Ex parte Lynn, 19 Texas, App., 293. That theory is supported, to some extent, by various general expressions of more or less incidental nature in various opinions in cases decided by our Court of Criminal Appeals, some being in dissenting opinions; but in several opinions by various members of that court there are, incidentally, various general expressions which are consistent with the idea that adoption of the local option law merelysuspends, within that territory, conflicting provisions of the general liquor law. *504
Gibson v. State, 34 Tex.Crim. R.,
Which of those theories is sound we need not now determine, the present action being, as we have held, for purely statutory penalties in the nature of a punishment designed to prevent future violations of regulatory provisions of said general liquor law.
Under such circumstances it is undeniably true that either a repeal or a continuing suspension of said general law, which required said bond and prescribed said penalties, and conferred a right of action thereof, will, if found to exist, require that said plea in abatement of such action be sustained.
Were the right relied upon in this action a contractual vested right, it might, perhaps, be urged, with force, that repeals or suspensions by implication are not favored in law, but arise from necessity only, and that the full operation of the local option law is not impeded by contemporaneous operation of so much of said general liquor law as authorizes a recovery for breaches of said bond, and that, as a result, said plea in abatement should not prevail. But such, we have held, is not the nature of this action; and, as a consequence, that course of reasoning is inapplicable.
The broad purpose of said general liquor law was to license and otherwise regulate the general sale of intoxicating liquor at retail. Said bond was merely incidental and ancillary to that purpose. The right to sell liquor under the provisions of that general law, even in conformity with the conditions of said bond, does not presently exist, and could not legally have been exercised during the operation of the local option law in said precinct. Under such circumstances what continuing purpose of the law calls, now, for infliction of such penalties, even though they were incurred prior to said adoption of the local option law in that precinct? Can it be said that present enforcement of said penalties will tend to prevent, in said precinct, violations of regulatory provisions of said general liquor law, the main purpose of which law is not and cannot longer be operative or effective in that territory? How, if at all, would present or future infliction of said penalties tend to promote, as originally intended, due observance of the regulatory provisions of said general liquor law, thereby bringing into conformity with its provisions, and, more particularly, into conformity with the terms and conditions of said statutory bond, the sale of intoxicating liquor thereunder in said precinct? Very plainly said bond was required with a view to bringing all sales of intoxicating liquor at retail into strict conformity with the provisions of said general liquor law, including those relating to the *505 conditions set out in said bond; but from and after the moment when, because of the paramount nature and operation of said local option law, any and all sales, in that precinct, under said general liquor law, became prohibited, what further concern had the law — the State — in the future observance, in that precinct, of the provisions of said general liquor statute, or of the conditions of said bond? In that moment in which the local option law became exclusively operative in said precinct the law's concern in the due enforcement of said general liquor law in that precinct became inoperative, and, as a corollary, the law's concern for the infliction of penalties as a means solely to the due enforcement of said general liquor law became, and still remains inoperative. That being true, said plea in abatement should have been sustained.
Between our conclusion in this case and the decision of this court in State v. Drake,
Each of said certified questions is answered negatively. Opinion delivered May 5, 1920.
Concurrence Opinion
The only question in this case is whether at the time it was sought to adjudge the penalties there was in force, where the offenses occurred, the law without which the penalties could not be adjudged. It plainly was not so in force, and therefore the suit for the infliction of the penalties could not be maintained.
In my opinion this is the correct ground for the decision, and other considerations are immaterial.