35 Mo. 103 | Mo. | 1864
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was indicted for selling liquor on Sunday. The evidence was that he sold beer, but did not sell distilled liquors. He was found guilty and fined, and appealed to this court. He claims a right to keep open his beer-house and sell beer on Sunday, under a supposed permission by the corporate authorities of the city of St. Louis. The General Assembly, by an act approved March 4, 1857, enacted “ that the corporate authorities of the different cities in the county
This act does not directly repeal the act making it criminal to sell fermented liquor on Sunday; and the power of the city of St. Louis to grant permission for the opening of any establishment for the sale of beer on Sunday, very clearly depends upon a previous authorization by a majority of the legal voters of the city. The act expressly requires a majority of the legal voters; that is, of all the legal voters of the city, and not merely of all those who might at a particular time choose to vote upon the question. The defendant did not give in evidence any permission specially to himself, but gave in evidence an ordinance of the city of St. Louis, approved on the 24th day of March, 1858, which provided for an election to be held in the city of St. Louis on the first Monday in April, then next, to determine by vote “ the question whether the city of St. Louis shall or may grant permission for the opening of any establishment or establishments, within the corporate limits of said city, for the sale of refreshments of any kind (distilled liquors excepted) on any day of the week,” in accordance with the act above quoted.
The defendant also gave in evidence the returns of the election held on the said firs.t Monday of April, 1858, of city officers, and tipon the question of the authority of the city to grant permission to open establishments for the sale of refreshments on Sunday, by which it appeared that more than thirteen thousand voters participated in that election, and that only five thousand and thirty-five persons voted in favor of giving to the city authority to grant permission to open establishments for the sale of refreshments on Sunday, and two thousand and one persons voted against it.
Even if such an election were the proper mode by which
Judgment affirmed.