110 Iowa 1 | Iowa | 1899
There is no- dispute but that during the time ¡alleged, namely, from July 1 to September 2, 1898, the «defendant Zermuehlen did keep a place for the sale of intoxicating liquors in the city of Crestón, on the premises 'described, and sold such liquors- therein. It appears that ■on the 14th day of March, 1898, the firm of Ohlschlager & 'Co-., composed of William .F. Ohlschlager and Wm. Zermuehlen, filed a written consent o-f the resident freeholders ■owning property within fifty feet of said place with the board of supervisors of the county and the city council of Crestón, «consenting “that said Ohlschlager & Co. may engage in and -carry on such traffic on the premises herein above described, -subject to all the provisions of an act entitled ‘An act to fax the traffic of intoxicating liquors and regulate and control ¡the same.’ ” Therewith they filed a “list of names of all persons employed in and about the saloon or place occupied ¡by Ohlschlager & Co. for the sale and keeping for sale of intoxicating liquors,” giving the names of said partners and M. A. Stevens. This list was certified as correct- by 'Ohlschlager & Co. They also filed a bond, wherein W. F. ■Ohlschlager and William Zermuehlen are named as prin«cipals, and others as sureties, conditioned that “if the said W. F. Ohlschlager and Wm. Zermuehlen shall well and ■.faithfully observe and keep all the provisions of the said law, .and shall well and truly pay any and ¿11 damages that may iresult from the sale of intoxicating liquors upon the premises above described, as provided by said law, then this obligation shall be- null and void, otherwise the same shall be sand remain in full force and effect.” This bond is signed:
Question is made as to' the sufficiency of the conseut and -of the bond, but, in the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary that we consider those questions.
I. Appellee’s counsel state..the question as follows: •'‘Now, the question is whether or not Mr. Zermuehlen, buying out the interest of his co-partner, Mr. Ohlschlager, and running the business in his own individual name, and paying the license, does that fact destroy the consent given by the -city council to Ohlschlager & Co., and destroy the bond given by Ohlschlager & Zermuehlen ?” The consent was that Ohlschlager & Co. might engage in and carry on said business on the premises described;‘the list of employes was -of employes, of Ohlschlager & Co.; and the bond, whether technically so or not, was intended as the bond of Ohlschlager I: Co., and for the benefit and protection of that firm. By the withdrawal of Ohlschlager from the firm it was dissolved, and the entity known as Ohlschlager & Co. ceased to exist. The firm could not have transferred its right to