Inhabitants of Rumford v. Boston Grocery Co.

Savage, C. J.

Debt on bond. On May 6, 1912, the defendant company was licensed 'by the municipal officers of Rumford to keep a pool room. By its terms, as -well as by .statute, R. 'S., di. 31, sect. 4, the license was to expire 'May 1, 1913. The defendants gave the bond required by section 5 of the same chapter, which is the bond in suit. The bond rwas conditioned that -the .licensee would- not permit gambling . . . in or about the premises, or permit the pool room to be opened o'r used between ten o’clock in the evening and sunrise.

The plaintiff claim-s that there were breaches of both of these conditions during -the term of the license. The defendant company did not deny the facts which the plaintiff claims constituted the breaches, but contended, .and offered evidence tending to show, th-at -prior to the alleged breaches it had rented the pool room, pool -tables, and paraphernalia connected therewith to one Cohen, -and that after such renting it did not keep the pool room, and h-ad no interest in the business, nor control or management of it. To -this the plaintiff’s reply is, first, ¡that the renting -or transfer to Cohen wa-s colorable only, and) not bona fide, and, secondly, -that, even if the renting to Cohen was real and bona fide, i,t did not relieve the -defendants from liability for breaches of -the bond during the entire period of the license, .which ended May 1, 1913.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the presiding Justice -directed a verdict for the plaintiff, with, a stipulation, agreed to by the parties, that if the ,Daw Court -should determine -that the direction was erroneous, judgment should be rendered for the defendants. The defendants excepted.

*118If the renting to 'Cohen- was colorable merely, and' the defendant company afterwards continued to be the real proprietor of the pool room, keeping it under the license, the -case shows indisputably that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, and that the verdict was properly directed. But whether the renting .was real, or merely colorable, was a question of fact, and there was sufficient evidence upon this issue of fact to go to the jury. -So that, so far as the plaintiff’s right to recover depended upon- this 'issue, the presiding Justice -erred in talcing the case -from the jury; and -the exceptions must be sustained, unless the plaintiff’s second point is tenable, namely, that the defendants are liable in any event for breaches during the term of the license, whether the defendant company continued to keep the pool room itself, -or rented it to another.

We ¡think this latter point- -cannot be sustained. The company was licensed to keep a pool room. lAt -the time it received its license it gave the bond. The two went together. The bond itself did not specify the period during which it should remai-n in -force. That period is specified in the license. The bond was to remain alive so long as the license Was alive, and being used. The bond was to secure the performance of the -conditions' -of -the license while, and so long as, the pool room was kept under the license. The license was not transferable. Only the defendant company could keep the room under that license. If it ceased to keep -the room, it no longer acted under the license, and the purpose for wh-i-ch the bond was given ceased.

We therefore 'hold that a bond given by the keeper of a pool room, under R. S., ch. 3-1, sect. 5, when he receives his license, remains in force only s-o long’as he continues to keep the room under ■his license, and that he ceases so to keep it, if he .actually rents it to another party, reserving no interest in it. The ruling below having been in effect contrary to these views, the exceptions must be sustained, and in adcord-ance with the stipulation, judgment must be rendered for the defendants.

Exceptions sustained.

Judgment for the defendants.