Pascoe v. State
Pascoe v. State
Opinion of the Court
Intoxicating liquor was found on the premises in which defendant conducted a soft-drink parlor. The
(1) Defendant was granted a license by vote of the common council on June 29, 1926, which by its express terms licensed the defendant to sell non-intoxicating liquors from July 1, 1926, to June 30, 1927. The fact that sub. (29) of sec. 165.01 of the Statutes of 1925 provides that the license “shall expire on the thirtieth day of June thereafter,” i. e. after the license is granted, does not lead to the absurd conclusion that the license here in question had expired and become of no effect the day before it became effective by its own express terms.
(2) Sub. (29) of sec. 165.01 requires that the license “shall designate the specific premises” for which such license is granted. Defendant’s application for a license did designate the specific premises for which a license was in fact granted to the defendant by the city council. But in issuing the written license the city clerk failed to insert this designation in writing.
“The document commonly called a ‘license’ is but the evidence of the license or permission to carry on a particular business, and is not essential to the existence of the authority itself.” Moore v. St. Paul, 61 Minn. 427, 63 N. W. 1087, 1088.
“The word ‘license’ is used in the statute to signify the intangible right granted to the licensee, as well as to signify the writing signed by the commissioners, which is the instrument and evidence of that grant.” Connecticut B. Co. v. Murphy, 81 Conn. 145, 70 Atl. 450, 452.
It is only when the writing is the sole evidence of the grant of the privilege that the paper itself constitutes the license. This rule is applied in the case of certificates or
The identical question here presented was considered in Goforth v. State, 60 Miss. 756, where the statute required the license to designate “the particular place” where liquor was to be sold by the licensee. It was held that the provision was directory and that the failure to insert the description in the writing did not invalidate the license, where the place was specifically described in the application and order of the board which granted the license. See, also, Black, Intoxicating Liquors, § 145.
The Massachusetts cases holding that licenses are void unless the writing specified the room or rooms in which liquor was to be sold are distinguished by the fact that the statute prohibited the sale of liquor “in any room or part of the building not specified” in the license. Comm. v. Cauley, 150 Mass. 272, 22 N. E. 909, 910.
The defendant did all that he was required to do. He made application in proper form which described “the specific premises.” The council acted upon that application and granted a license for the “specific premises” described in the application. We are satisfied that under this state of the record the defendant could not have been convicted for conducting a soft-drink parlor without a license, merely because the clerk has failed to properly perform a ministerial duty in issuing the written evidence of the license which was in fact granted by the city council. The defendant accepted the writing, displayed it in his place of business,
Now that. he faces the charge of violating the law under which his license was granted, he cannot prevent the introduction of' evidence that establishes his guilt by asserting that the officers had no right to search his place because the license granted to him, under which he operated his business for six months before the search was made, was invalid simply because the clerk failed to insert a specific description of his place of business in the writing which was merely evidence of the license which was in fact granted to him by the common council.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Pascoe, in error v. The State, in error
- Status
- Published