State v. Hoover
State v. Hoover
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
At the April Term, 1895, of that court, the Common Pleas of the county of Warren granted a license to Eliphalet Hoover to keep an inn and tavern in the borough of Washington, in that county.
The prosecutor, with others, citizens and taxpayers in the borough, remonstrated against granting the license, and it is now sought by the prosecutor, by this writ of certiorari, to review and set aside the action of the Court of Common Pleas and the license thereby granted. The prosecutor has a standing in this court for this purpose. Dufford v. Staats, 25 Vroom 286.
The borough of Washington was incorporated by virtue of the provisions of an act of the legislature entitled “An act to incorporate Washington, in the county of Warren, into a borough or town corporate,” approved February 20th, 1868. Pamph. L., p. 76. By section 25 of this act, the common council of the borough, or a majority of -them, were vested with the sole and exclusive right and- power of licensing and assessing every innkeeper, tavernkeeper and retailer of spirituous, malt or vinous liquors within said borough, subject to the same provisions and in like manner as the same is or may be lawfully done by the Courts of Common Pleas in this state.
The defendants justify the action of the Court of Common Pleas in granting the license upon the provisions of an act entitled “An act concerning licenses to keep inns and taverns and to sell ale, strong beer, lager beer, porter, wine and other malt liquors in the boroughs of this state,” approved February 8th, 1892. Pamph. L.,p. 16 ; Gen. Stat, p. 1821.
The first section of this act provides that “hereafter, in addition to the power or authority to grant licenses to keep inns and taverns or to sell ale, strong beer, lager beer, porter, wine and other malt liquors that is or may be vested in the governing body of the boroughs of this state or any of them, the power to grant such licenses within and for such boroughs shall also be vested in the Inferior Court of Common Pleas of the county within which such boroughs is or are situate, such power to be exercised in accordance with the act of the legislature of this state entitled ‘An act concerning inns and taverns/ approved April 17th, 1846, and the act entitled ‘An act to'regulate the sale of'ale, strong beer, lager, porter, wine and' other malt liquprs in the State of New Jersey/ approved April 4th, 1872, and the several supplements to said act respectively.”
There , are boroughs in this state in which the governing body does not possess the power or authority to grant licenses of the character denominated in this act of 1892. To the borough of Washington, created- by special statute, this power ,was given. ' An examination of the special statutes passed previous to the year 1875 will show that in some boroughs created before that date the governing body did not possess this power; and that uniformity, in this respect, did not exist among these municipalities. Ho such power was conferred upon the governing body, which was the mayor and council, of the boroughs created and incorporated in accordance with the provisions of an act entitled “An act for the formation of borough governments,” approved April 5th, 1878. Gen. Stat, p. 179. Under this act many boroughs were constituted and incorporated in this state.
A supplement to the act concerning inns and taverns was also passed March 23d, 1883. Pamph. L., p. 221. This supplement provided that in all boroughs of the third class, each and every license to keep inns'and tavérns, ale and beer saloons, should be granted by the Inferior Court of Common Pleas of the county wherein the borough was situated.
The classification of boroughs upon which this supplement of March 23d, 1883, relating to licensing inns and taverns, ale and beer saloons, was based, was by this court adjudged illusory, and the statute was declared to be unconstitutional. Hightstown v. Glenn, 18 Vroom 105. The borough of Hightstown was one in which the couucil had the exclusive right to grant licenses prior to the passage of the supplement of March 23d, 1883.
By an act entitled “An act concerning licenses in boroughs of the second class,” approved March" 9th, 1891 (Pamph. L., p. 118), it was, by the first section -thereof, provided that “hereafter in addition to the power,or authority to grant licenses to keep an inn and tavern, or to sell ale, strong beer, lager beer, porter, wine and other malt liquors within the limits of the boroughs of the second class of this state, the power to grant the same shall also exist in the Inferior Court of Common Pleas of the several counties wherein such boroughs may be situate, such power to be exercised,” &c. (Then follows substantially the language of the act of 1892 in question in this case.)
This act has been under review in this court, and was decided to be a special law in violation of the constitutional prohibition against private, special or local laws for the regulation of the internal affairs of towns and counties, and that it was not distinguishable with regard to the point of objection from the supplement of March 23d, 1883.
By the twenty-sixth section of the act "entitled “An act for
Under the act entitled “An act for the formation and government of boroughs,” approved April 2d, 1891 (Pamph. L., p. 280; Gen. Stat., p. 236), the boroughs created are without power in their governing bodies to grant licenses of the character in question in this case. Neither is any such authority vested in the commissioners as the governing bodies in boroughs formed under the act entitled “An act for the formation of borough commissions” and the supplement thereto. Pamph. L. 1882, p. 48; Gen. Stat., p. 286.
It will thus be seen that there are two classes of boroughs in this state in this regard; in one class the power or authority to grant these licenses is vested exclusively in the council or other governing body, and in the other class the authority in this matter is vested in the Courts of Common Pleas or in some other tribunal.
The statute of 1892, now upon review, deals with this classification of boroughs as an appropriate one for the purposes of legislation, b.ut instead of establishing uniformity, in
In the case of Loucks v. Bradshaw et al., 27 Vroom 1, the Chief Justice says: “The fact that in'some counties licenses of the kind in question are granted by a court and in others proceed from other authorities, is a purely arbitrary distinction, and as such cannot be laid as a classification for the purposes of legislation regulating the internal affairs of counties.”
The classification of townships into those “governed under or by a special charter,” and those not so governed, is not of such a nature as to require or sustain exclusive legislation for each class. Goldberg v. Dorland, 27 Vroom 365.
The mere fact that certain boroughs in this state have at some time in the past, and by certain statutes, obtained greater power and authority than other boroughs are possessed of, is not the acquisition of such a substantial' difference or characteristic as will serve as a basis of classification as requires or will sustain exclusive legislation on behalf-of'either class.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE, HENRY JOHNSON, PROSECUTOR v. ELIPHALET HOOVER
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published