39 Mo. App. 251 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890

Gill, J.

The defendant, a licensed merchant, d.oing business at Carrollton, 'Missouri, was indicted, tried and found guilty, in the circuit court of Carroll county, of failing to file an affidavit with the county clerk that he would not adulterate the liquors to be *254sold by him, and of failing to give bond for the payment of all costs arising from prosecutions for violations of the law providing for such affidavit, etc., contrary to the requirements of sections 1601 and 1605, Revised Statutes, 1879.

The defense interposed by the defendant is to the effect, that as a merchant selling liquors at Carrollton, Missouri, he is by law subject only to such regulations in the prosecution of said business, as is, or may be, prescribed by the legislative authorities of said city of Carrollton, and is not subject to the provision of the general law as contained in said sections 1601 and 1605.

The offense with which defendant is charged is, that in July, 1888, he sold intoxicating liquors in Carrollton without having hied the affidavit and bond required by the sections of the general statutes above noted. The town of Carrollton seems never to have organized under the general law for the government of cities and towns, but is governed by its special charter enacted by the legislature of Missouri in 1871. By the terms of said special act, it is provided, that the “council shall have sole and exclusive power to tax, license and regulate dramshops and tippling-houses,” etc., in said town. The well-established rule is, that municipal corporations may exercise such, and only such, powers as are delegated to them in express words, and such as follow therefrom necessarily, and by fair implication from the powers so expressly granted. 1 Dillon Mun. Corp., sec. 89. It is also well understood, where the legislature vests certain powers in a municipal corporation, and the subject-matter is one likewise open for general legislative control, that such powers given to the municipality will not be deemed exclusive unless so expressly named in the act of incorporation. And it is equally as well established, that while such exclusive control, so granted by the legislature, remains unre-pealed and not withdrawn, the state will not be *255permitted to dispute the existence of such exclusive power. Harrison v. State, 9 Mo. 530; Baldwin v. Green, 10 Mo. 410; State v. Gordon, 60 Mo. 383; State v. Wister, 62 Mo. 392. Now the state here has, by the special act of incorporation, expressly granted to the authorities of the town of Carrollton “sole and exclusive power to tax, license and regulate dramshops ” in said town.

And, in pursuance of such power, it seems, by the ordinance introduced at the trial of this cause, the said municipality has prescribed such “regulations,” as were thought proper by its council, for the traffic of the dram-shop keeper. The corporate authorities of Carrollton have, in the exercise of their wisdom and discretion, thrown about the sale of intoxicating drinks by the dramshop keeper such restrictions as to them seemed proper. But the legislature, it is said, has annexed further regulations, — has imposed other conditions, necessary to be observed and performed before such dramshop keeper can be allowed to engage in the sale of his liquors in the town of Carrollton. It is clear that this regulation,- — providing for affidavit and bond filed with the county clerk before a dramshop keeper shall be permitted to prosecute his business for which he is licensed by the town of Carrollton, — cannot be held to apply to the dramshop keeper, unless the “sole and exclusive power” granted to said municipality has been withdrawn, or unless said special act, in so far as the power to regulate was made exclusive, has been repealed by the subsequent enactment of sections 1601, etc., supra. We do not think that this general statute, passed as it was in 1877, had the effect to repeal this special law of 1871. There is no express repeal, and “it is a principle of very extensive operation that statutes of a general nature do not repeal, by implication, charters and special acts passed for the benefit of particular municipalities.” 1 Billon, Mun. Corp., sec. *25687; St. Louis v. Ins. Co., 47 Mo. 146, and cases cited on page 149; State v. Vastine, 38 Mo. 529; State v. DeBar, 58 Mo. 395; Smith v. Clark County, 54 Mo. 58. We are of opinion, then, that a dramshop keeper, plying his business at the town of Carrollton at the time of the alleged offense charged on defendant, was subject only to such regulations as were, or may be, prescribed by the council of said town, and was, therefore, not amenable to the provisions of said sections 1601 and 1605, Revised Statutes, 1879.

Still, this does not cover the case of this defendant, since, by the admitted facts, he appears to be a licensed merchant and not a dramshop Iceeper, doing business as a licensed merchant, with no pretense of being a dram-shop keeper. The “sole and exclusive power,” entrusted to the council of Carrollton, is not to regulate the sale of liquors by merchants generally, but only to regulate the sale thereof by dramshop Iceepers and tippling-houses, under neither of which is it proper to classify this defendant. The law may permit the licensed merchant to sell intoxicating drinks — may permit, too, and in fact does permit, the sale thereof by druggists, and would it be contended that the power delegated to the authorities of Carrollton “to regulate” the sale of liquors by dramshops, carried with it the power to regulate such sales by druggists; that the state, while delegating a control over one class, intended, likewise, to part with its control over another and different class % The rules for construing such delegations of authority are all opposed to such contention. See 1 Dillon, Mun. Corp., sec. 89, supra.

It results, then, from the foregoing observations, that this judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.

All concur.
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