It is admitted in the agreed case that Burke broke the condition of the bond. He permitted one not a licensee to illegally sell liquor upon the licensed premises during the period covered by the bond. State v. Cote,
The deceit practiced by Burke upon his sureties is no defence for them against the innocent taker of the bond. State v. Salvail, ante, 351. Lyman v. Schermerhorn,
In the present instance the license was revoked and cancelled because of a fraudulent statement in the application. The applicant was not a person disqualified to hold a license. If the state could have elected to treat the whole transaction as void from the beginning, it did not do so, but proceeded under the statute to extinguish future rights under the license. The statute makes no distinction between false statements in the application and violations of law in the exercise of the privileges subsequently granted. In either case the license is to be revoked and cancelled. Laws 1903, c. 95, s. 14. There is nowhere a suggestion of the theory now *Page 355 advanced, that in one case the license is made void ab initio, while in the other it is valid until revoked. The provision for a revocation is common to both, and as to both it means that the license is in force until revoked.
In State v. English,
Exception overruled.
All concurred.
