Strauss v. City of Galesburg

203 Ill. 234 | Ill. | 1903

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

Using the language of appellant, the two main reasons urged ag'ainst the validity of the ordinance are: “(1) By imposing a license fee on wholesale liquor dealers and none on dram-shops (other than what they paid before) it discriminates in favor of the dram-shop keeper and against the wholesaler; (2) municipalities have no power to cover, by license, dram-shop keeping and wholesaleing, or any two or more licensed callings.”

The city of Galesburg is organized under the general laws of the State and its charter powers are defined by the City and Village act. By that act express power is conferred upon the city to license, regulate and prohibit the sale or giving away of intoxicating liquors, etc., and by the same section conferring the power the limitation upon that power is fixed by a proviso that “in granting licenses such corporate authorities shall comply with whatever general law of the State may be in force relative to the granting of licenses.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1899, chap. 24, art. 5, sec. 1, par. 46, p. 276.) The only general law of the State relative to the granting of licenses for the sale of liquors is the Dram-shop act, there being no general law applicable to or controlling the regulation of the sale of liquors at wholesale, and whatever authority cities and villages have with reference to- that class of business is found under the organic law of such municipalities and contained in paragraph 46, supra, under authority to license, regulate and prohibit the selling or giving away of intoxicating liquors. It is not urged that appellee did not have authority to regulate the sale of liquors at wholesale and impose a license fee upon such business. Appellant concedes to appellee that authority, but, among other things, urges, that appellee had no authority to restrict the sale, by license, to any given locality, or, in other words, to restrict the sale as to locality within the corporate limits. That contention need not be further noticed than to call attention to the fact that the same question has been fully considered by this court in previous cases, and it has been held that municipalities have authority, under their power to regulate, to define the territory within which the business may be conducted. Schwuchow v. City of Chicago, 68 Ill. 444; People v. Cregier, 138 id. 401.

The validity of the ordinance in question, by the provisions of which the dram-shop keeper or the holder of a dram-shop license shall be permitted to keep a dram-shop and sell liquor in any quantity thereat, is challenged upon the ground that it is in conflict with the Dram-shop act, and particularly section 1 thereof, which defines a dram-shop as “a place where spirituous or vinous or malt liquors are retailed by less quantity than one gallon.” As we understand the argument, it is that the statute having defined a dram-shop and having enacted certain laws relative to it as regulating the dram-shop business, as found in chapter 43 of Hurd’s Statutes of 1899, that statutory definition is exclusive, and that no authority or power could be conferred by ordinance upon the holder of a license to keep a dram-shop to sell liquor in any quantity other than the quantities specified by the definition, namely, by less quantity than one gallon.

In giving a construction to a statute for the purpose of arriving at an interpretation of its meaning, all its provisions and the object to be attained by it are to be considered. The Dram-shop act does not purport to in any manner deal with the subject of the sale of liquors at wholesale or their sale for any other purpose than to be drunk, but relates solely to the keepers of places it denominates dram-shops, and which are commonly known as tippling houses, where liquors are sold in small quantities for immediate use upon the premises, and that use being no other than the drinking of the liquor at the time and place of purchase. The law is only attempting to provide against and in some degree mitigate the evils of intoxication. It could matter little how much liquor might be in any house or what name the business bore, if the sales were to be drank upon the premises where sold the character of the business would be that of a dram-shop; and though one might hold a license to keep a dram-shop, if in fact he sold no liquor in less quantities than one gallon, and sold no liquor to be drank upon the premises or premises adjacent thereto, his business would, in fact, be a wholesale business. The Dram-shop act was aimed at an evil, and the definition given in the act was broad enough to cover the provision of the statute aimed at that evil; but there is nothing in the act itself, or any of its provisions, from which the inference can arise that the legislature by the definition intended to restrict municipalities in their classification of the liquor business for the purpose of regulation and license. The drinking of liquors is not their only use; in fact it is but a small portion of their use, taking the total consumption into consideration. Their consumption in the mechanical, medical and other branches of business is highly beneficial to society, but because of the injury to society by the single use of drinking, the State, under the police power, finds authority to regulate the business even to the extent of exclusion or prohibition, and in making such regulations the character of the business is the thing that is controlling, and not the name under which it may be conducted. (Dennehy v. City of Chicago, 120 Ill. 627.)

The- ordinance in question classifies the traffic in liquors by a division into two branches or classes, as dram-shop keepers and wholesale dealers; but it specifically states what, under the ordinance, a dram-shop keeper is, and defines him as a man who sells liquor in any quantity at a dram-shop, and specifically defines the wholesale dealer as one who sells in quantities of a gallon or more, not to be drank upon the premises, or in any adjacent room, yard, premises or place of public resort. The two businesses are confined to the same territory. The dram-shop keeper who sells in any quantity pays an annual license of $1000 and the wholesale dealer pays an annual license of $500. In referring to the general act in relation to dram-shops it is said to be a limitation upon the powers of the city. We find the provision that a dram-shop license shall not be placed at a sum less than $500 per annum. It cannot be said, then, of the ordinance in question, that it is in conflict with the statute because it fixes the license at a sum below the minimum there authorized. Whilst the authority of such municipalities to combine under one license the business of a dram-shop, as defined by the statute, and the business of wholesaleing, is challenged by appellant, no authority so holding is adduced. There is nothing in the general law inhibiting the combination of such sales, and unless by so doing it can be said that an unjust discrimination is created we can see no reason for denying the authority. ’

The principal argument of appellant is addressed to the proposition that the ordinance in question unjustly discriminates against classes of persons who are engaged in or may engage in the same business, and in formulating the objection the appellant says that it is unjust discrimination to allow the dram-shop keeper to sell at wholesale and retail and pay no more license than he paid before, and to require the wholesale dealer to pay §500 per annum. Unless some former ordinance of the city could be said to be a limitation upon its power to pass the ordinance in question, we are unable to see what application the provisions of the former ordinance, by which the dram-shop keeper was to pay §1000 annually, could have-to the question now before us. It is not, and certainly will not be, contended by appellant that though the city may have seen fit to license dram-shops at §1000 per annum and required no license of wholesale dealers, it was not also within its power to pass another ordinance absolutely prohibiting the sale, either at wholesale or at retail; and the ordinance in question is to be tested, not by the provisions of former ordinances, but by its own provisions. Under the power to regulate and license the business the classification was made. It can hardly be said there were natural lines upon which the business should be classified. Unless some law was contravened it was within the discretion of the city authorities to so classify as best to attain the end the city had in view, which was the regulation of the business. The two classes were named and authorized to engage in the business under the provisions and restrictions of the ordinance, and all other persons were prohibited from engaging in it at all. All persons desiring to engage in the business could alike select which of the two classes they preferred. They could sell at wholesale only and pay §500, or they could sell in any quantity and to be drank on or off the premises and pay §1000 license. By the ordinance the minimum license required by statute was imposed on the dram-shop keeper, and at the same time he was required to pay as much in addition thereto as did the man who sold only at wholesale. The classification was necessarily arbitrary, as there were no natural laws of classification; but such arbitrary classification did not invalidate the ordinance, unless the fact that it was arbitrary made the ordinance itself unreasonable or contravened the organic law of such municipalities or the general law applicable to the business. The sale of liquor in all its forms and in any quantity was the genus and the sale in all its forms in restricted quantities was a species thereof, and when it is said that the wholesale and retail businesses are entirely distinct, it must be kept in mind that they are distinct not because they do not belong to the same general class, but because the general legislative authority has seen fit to impose no restrictions upon the dealer who handles liquor at wholesale and has imposed restrictions upon the keeper of a dram-shop. But when the city, under the power delegated to it to regulate the liquor traffic, which is the broad, general class or genus, and when dealing with that subject for the purpose of regulation, sees fit to enact ordinances affecting and regulating both the'wholesale dealer and the dram-shop keeper, it cannot then be said that their businesses are so distinct that they cannot be regulated or affected by the same ordinance, or that they may not be'classified in the manner done in the ordinance in question, by allowing the one who sells in any quantity, representing the general class, to pay the greater license, and the dealer who sells only in quantities of one gallon or more, and the use and consumption of the latter sales to take place remote from the place of sale and delivery, to pay the lesser license. Absolute equality in trade can not be attained by law, but absolute opportunity to all alike to engage in the trade is the requirement within which ordinances must come to be sustained.

Section 3a of the Dram-shop act, in classifying dram-shops, provides that the minimum license fee for running a dram-shop shall be $500, and also provides that a license to sell malt liquors may be granted at a minimum fee of $150. As applied to dram-shops, the licensee paying $500 sells malt, vinous, fermented and all kinds of liquors, or may do so if he likes, and his business represents the genus. If he wants to sell anything besides malt liquors he must pay §500, and although he may want to keep a dram-shop and may not want to,sell malt liquors, which is a species of the general class, he must nevertheless pay §500, §150 of which is fixed by the statute as the amount he should pay if he wanted to deal in malt liquors only. Still, the validity of that law has not, to our knowledge, been attacked on the ground of unjust discrimination. Appellee calls our attention to the provisions of this statute, and says that if the ordinance in question is a discrimination because of the method of classification, the statute is subject to the same objection, and we think the illustration apt and the point well made.

The cases of City of Cairo v. Feuchter, 159 Ill. 155, and City of Monmouth v. Popel, 183 id. 634, do not seem to be in point. In the former case the city of Cairo passed an ordinance requiring a license fee of §100 of wholesale dealers but excepted from its operation all having a license to sell liquors in less quantities than one gallon, the effect of which was to require $100 a year of any one who wanted to engage exclusively in the wholesale business, and as the dram-shop keepers were only required to pay $500, the minimum allowed by the statute for such business, we held that there was discrimination in favor of the dram-shop keeper upon two grounds: First, as the dram-shop keeper paid only $500 and was allowed to sell both at wholesale and retail when the statute required him to pay §500 for keeping a dram-shop only, by excepting him from the operation of the ordinance as to wholesale dealers he got the privilege of selling at wholesale for nothing, merely by virtue of having a dram-shop license, while all other persons had to pay §100 for that privilege; secondly, the ordinance attempting to regulate the sale at wholesale did not restrict the dram-shop dealer to his dram-shop as the place where he might sell at wholesale, but, as we considered it, being excepted from the operation of the ordinance and the only qualification being that he should hold a dram-shop license, he might start one or as many wholesale places outside or apart from his dram-shop as he saw fit and pay no license therefor. We held the ordinance an unreasonable discrimination against persons engaged in the same class of business. In the Popel case, supra, the ordinance provided that no person not having a license to keep a drará-shop or a druggist’s permit should sell intoxicating, malt, vinous, mixed or fermented liquors, and contained no provision authorizing the conducting of the wholesale business by any person under any condition. The dram-shop keeper was required to pay $800 license fee. It did not appear that the druggist was required to pay any license fee. A wholesale dealer was arrested for selling at wholesale. We held such an ordinance invalid because of unjust discrimination, in that it conferred the right to sell at wholesale upon the druggist who held a permit, and the dram-shop keeper who merely paid $800 license for running a dram-shop, and prohibited any wholesale dealer, on any terms, from engaging in the business. Such vices cannot be attributed to the ordinance in question. Its provisions are specific, clear, equal, and alike applicable and open to all persons who want to engage in either business, and except no one from its operation, and confine the business of each to the same certain or specific territory and the sales, of each to specific places of business.

Under the tests we have applied and the views we have expressed it would seem the ordinance in question is valid, and that the judgment of the Appellate Court should be and the same is hereby affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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