delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе appellant was convicted in the county court of DeKalb county of a violation of sections 2 and 3 of a municipal ordinance of the town of Cortland and was fined $25 for the violation of section 2 and $30 for the violation of section 3. Propositions of law which were submitted by the defendant and refused by the trial court raised the question of the constitutionality and validity of the ordinance under which the defendant was convicted. He has appealed directly to this court on the ground that the validity of the ordinance is involved, .the trial court having made the necessary certificate.
The sections of the ordinance involved are as follows:
“Sec. 2. Whoever shall within said corporate limits, directly or indirectly, keep or maintain by himself or by associating or combining with others, or shall in any manner aid, assist or abet in keeping or maintaining, any clubroom or other place in which any intoxicating liquor or spirituous, vinous, malt or fermented liquor, in any quantity whatsoever, is received or kept for the purpose of use, gift, barter, exchange or sale as a beverage, or for distribution or division among the members of any club or association by any means whatever, and whoever shall use, barter, exchange, sell or give away, or assist or abet another in bartering, exchanging, selling or giving away, any intoxicating liquor or spirituous, vinous, malt or fermented liquor, or any mixture of any of the said liquors, or any drinks which contain any spirituous, vinous, malt or fermented liquor, in any quantity whatsoever, so received or kept, shall upon conviction thereof be fined not less than twenty-five dollars ($25) nor more than fifty dollars ($50) for each and every offense.
“Sec. 3. All places within the said corporate limits where orders are taken or agreements made for the sale or delivery of any intoxicating liquor or spirituous, vinous, malt or fermented liquor, or any mixture of said liquors, or any drinks which contain any spirituous, vinous, malt or fermented liquor in any quantity whatsoever, or where any said liquors are sold, given away, bartered, exchanged or in any manner disposed of, or are kept for sale, or are received or kept for the purpose of use or distribution or division among the members of any club or association by any means whatsoever, shall be taken and held and are declared to be a nuisance and may be abated as such; and whoever shall keеp any such place, either as principal, clerk or servant, shall on conviction thereof be fined not less than thirty dollars ($30) -nor more than fifty dollars ($50), and it shall be part of the judgment, upon the conviction of the keeper, that the place so kept shall be shut and abated by the constable until the keeper shall give bond, with sufficient security to be approved by the court, in the penal sum of one thousand dollars ($1000) payable to the said town, conditioned that he will, not violate or permit any violation of this ordinance at such place: Provided, thаt if the keeper refuses or neglects to abate such nuisance instanter after being notified so to do by the president or constable of said town, the president may order any such place summarily shut up and abated.”
The facts were stipulated as follows: “The claimed violation of said ordinance charged against defendant in this case is, that he did, within the corporate limits of said town, keep or maintain, by himself or by associating or combining with others, or assist or abet in keeping and maintaining, a certain clubroom in which intoxicating liquor was received and kept for the purpose of use as a beverage and did use intoxicating liquor so received and kept. The facts are, that the defendant is a resident of said town and a citizen of the State of Illinois and a citizen of the United States of America, and is a member and officer of a certain club having its rooms in a building situated upon the south three-fourths of lot 4 in block 11, in said town of Cortland, within the corporate limits thereof, which said building is neither the residence nor store building of defendant or any other member of said club but is used exclusively by said club; that as such member and officеr, the defendant, by associating with the other members, keeps or maintains, or assists and abets in keeping or maintaining, the clubrooms; that in said clubrooms intoxicating liquor is received and kept by defendant in his individual locker, to which he alone has access, for his own individual, personal use as a beverage, and that other members of said club receive and keep their own individual liquor in indi-, vidual lockers in said clubrooms for their individual personal use as a beverage. It is not contended that intoxicating liquor is sold, bartered, exchanged or given away at, in or by said club or by defеndant, or any member thereof, or received or kept there for any of said last mentioned purposes. Defendant orders and purchases his own intoxicating liquor for himself, only, by United States mail, in places outside said town of Cortland where it is not unlawful to sell or,purchase same, and said liquor is forwarded and delivered to him by a common carrier and is received, kept and stored by defendant at said club for his own individual, personal use as á beverage and is there drank by him only. The members of said club who keep liquor there, order, receive, keep and drink their own individuаl liquor in the same manner. Each orders, receives, keeps and drinks his own individual liquor, and that only. The defendant and other members of said club are men of good standing in the community and their behavior has been orderly and gentlemanly. There has been no breach or disturbance of the peace nor any fighting, brawling, carousing or drunkenness at or about said club. Only members of said club enter the clubroom. There is no ‘treating’ nor any distribution or division of liquor among the members.”
The town of Cortland was incorporated under a special charter conferring upon it all the rights, powers and privileges granted to the town of Belvidere in the act under which the latter was incorporated, section io of that act being as follows:
“Sec. io. The board of trustees shall also have power to make regulations to secure the general health of the inhabitants; to declare what shall be nuisance, and prevent and remove the same; * * * the exclusive power to regulate, prohibit or license the selling of spirituous, vinous and malt liquors of any kind within the corporate limits; * * * to make all such ordinances from time to time, and alter, amend and repeal the same, as shall be necessary to carry into effect and execution the powers specified in this act, so that the same be not inconsistent herewith nor with the laws or constitution of the United States or of this State; to impose fines, forfeitures and penalties for the breach of any ordinance of the incorporation, and to provide for the recovery and appropriation of any such fine or forfeiture and the enforcement of any such penalty; * * * to regulate the police of the town.” * * *
The appellant contends that the town of Cortland was without power to adopt the ordinance in question and that the ordinance is in violation of the constitution of the United States and of the State of Illinois. The power of a municipal corporation to pass an ordinance must be found expressed in its charter or must be necessary to carry out the powers granted. By section xo quoted above, the board of trustees of the appellee are given the exclusive power to regulate, prevent or license the sale of spirituous, vinous or malt liquors of any kind within the corporate limits, to declare what shall be a nuisance and prevent and remove the same, and to make all such ordinances as shall be necessary to carry into effect and execution the powers specified, so that the same be not inconsistent with its charter or with the laws or constitution of the United States or of this State. Under the stipulation of facts on which appellant was convicted it is conceded that he did not sell, barter, exchange or give away any intoxicating liquor at said club. The only portion of the ordinanсe, therefore, of which the appellant was found guilty is embraced within the following portion: “Whoever shall within the corporate limits, directly or indirectly, keep or maintain by himself or by associating or combining with others, or shall in any manner aid, assist or abet in keeping or maintaining, any clubroom or other place in which any intoxicating liquor, * * * in any quantity whatsoever, is received or kept for the purpose of use * * * as a beverage, * * * and whoever shall use * * * any intoxicating liquor * * * so received or kept, shall upon conviction thereof be fined,” etc.
Appеllant, then, was convicted for assisting or aiding in keeping a clubroom, at which place he, like other members of the club, received his own liquor for his own individual use as a beverage and kept such liquor there for such purpose only, and used such liquor so kept for his own individual use as a beverage. Appellant was an officer of the club, but what office he held or what officers the organization had, or their several duties, if any, is not shown, nor is the admission in the stipulation of facts that he was an officer material, as it is the theory of counsel for appellee that his actions, as a mere member of the club, in keeping and using intoxicating liquor there, were in violation of the provisions of the ordinance. And so they were. In brief, the appellant was convicted for assisting in keeping a place in which intoxicating liquor was received and kept for the purpose of use and for using such liquor.
Under its charter the town of Cortland had the exclusive power to license, regulate and prohibit the selling of spirituous, vinous and malt liquors of any kind within the corporate limits, and also had the power to regulate the police of the town. The question to be determined is, did it have any power or authority, by reason of its charter, to prevent the receiving, keeping or using of intoxicating liquors under any and all circumstances ? In People v. Village of Oak Park,
We have heretofore held that a club, or assembly of individuals or association as a club, cannot be used as a means to accomplish a violation of the provisions of the Dram-shop law or the Local Option law or city or village ordinances of similar import. (People v. Law and Order Club,
While the selling or giving away of-intoxicating liquor may be regulated or altogether prohibited by municipalities and by appellee under its charter, intoxicаting liquor is not contraband and is recognized as property. Under the strict terms of this ordinance, if it is constitutional and valid, a person could be penalized, for keeping liquor for use or for using liquor in his private home. As far as an unlawful sale or giving away of liquor is concerned, it is the fact of selling or giving away that makes the act unlawful and a violation of the law, no matter how, where or when such unlawful selling or giving away takes place in any locality in which the Local Option law is in force or where a valid ordinance has been-enacted forbidding the sale or gift of intоxicating liquor. It is just as unlawful to make such sale in a private home as it would be in a club or a store or on the street A club is an assemblage of individuals for a common purpose and may be an entirely lawful organization, and there are many such. Clubrooms are the rooms or quarters used by a club, and the word has no other meaning. If it is still the law that a man may lawfully bring liquor into or receive liquor in territory where its sale is prohibited by statute or ordinance, and may lawfully own liquor and consume or use such liquor as long as he does so in such a manner that the rights of others are not interferеd with, what difference does it make whether he receives or keeps or drinks or uses such liquor at his house, or at his barn, or at his club? He would have the same right in a house that he leased as in a house that he owned. Accordingly, if he rented a room at a club and lived there he would have the right to keep liquor there and use it there; and if he rented a locker at the club instead of a room, would he not have the same right? In Sullivan v. City of Oneida, supra, on page 248 of the opinion, it is said: “Spirituous liquors, ale and beer are property,—as much so as money or lands. They аre chattels—are articles of consumption and of commerce. The ordinance recognizes them as property and directs their sale on execution and permits druggists to keep them. Their abuse may be restrained and punishment inflicted upon those who sell them to the injury of others. They may, as well as other chattels, come under the designation of nuisance and to a certain extent lose their quality as property, but they cannot per se lose their quality as property.” In People v. Young,
As to the right of appellee to enact the ordinance in question under its police powers, conceding that the provision of its charter “to regulate the police of the town” gives it all the power counsel claim for it in this case, it could not, under the guise of the police power, assume to regulate and control the acts and conduct of a citizen by which the public or others are in no way affected in any of their rights and interests. Black, in his work on Intoxicating Liquors, (sec. 38, p. 50,) says: “But it is justly held that a provision in such a law that no persоn, without a State license, shall ‘keep in his possession, for another, spirituous liquors/ is unconstitutional and void. The keeping of liquors in his possession by a person, whether for himself or for another, unless he does so for the illegal sale of it or for some other improper purpose, can by no possibility injure or affect the health, morals or safety of the public, and therefore the statute prohibiting such keeping in possession is not a legitimate exertion of the police power. It is an abridgment of the privileges and immunities of the citizen without any legal justificаtion, and therefore void.”
In Haskell v. Howard,
It has been generally held that the police power does not extend to the deprivation of a citizen of the right to have intoxicating liquor in his possession for his own use. (Commonwealth v. Campbell,
There can be no doubt that if it were possible by law to prevent any intoxicating liquor from being introduced into a town or kept there under any circumstances it would be most effective as a prohibition measure, as there would be no drinking if there were nothing to drink. The power of the appellee, however, extended only to licensing, regulating and prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquor by adopting such ordinances as would be reasonably necessary to accomplish that purpose, and not to the depriving of residents or persons within the municipality of their property. The ordinance in question made it unlawful to keep or use what the law recognized as property, and under circumstances in which the public and others weré in no way affected or interested. It amounted to depriving appellant and others similаrly situated of their property, and to the extent to which it affected appellant, under the stipulation of facts in this case, was ultra vires and invalid.
What has been said about the second section of the ordinance applies to the third section. The power delegated to cities to determine what are nuisances does not include the power to declare something a nuisance which is not a nuisance per se or recognized as a nuisance by common law or statute. (City of Chicago v. Weber,
Section 3 in effect declares any place a nuisance where two persons keep liquor to be divided between them. If any place is maintained within said town where persons assemble for the purpose of drinking liquor, and in so doing conduct themselves in a disorderly manner or in such a way as to interfere with the peace, comfort and rights of others,—or, in other words, if such place is, in fact, allowed to become a nuisance,—it can be abated as such, but under the stipulation in this case there was nothing of that kind.
The sections of the ordinance in question, in the particulars that have been shown, were invalid and void, and for that reason the judgment of the lower court will be reversed.
T Judgment reversed.
