The petitioner is .the assignee of one Amandus E. Bresler, to whom had been issued a liquor tax certificate. No. 3,726, by which said Bresler was authorized to traffic in liquor under subdivision 1 of section 11 of the Liquor Tax Law * at Mo. 2627 Third avenue, borough of The Bronx, city of Mew York, for the year ending April 30, 1907. The petition alleged that on or prior to the 26th day of June, 1906, said Bresler "and all persons holding under or through him voluntarily ceased to traffic in liquors during the term for which the tax was paid under such certificate, and that said certificate was duly surrendered to the Special Deputy Commissioner of Excise for the boroughs of Manhattan and The Bronx, city of Mew York; that at the time of such surrender the said certificate had more than one month to run; that said surrender was made under a petition for the surrender and cancellation thereof and for the payment of a rebate thereon; “ That at the time of the surrender of the said ' liquor tax certificate no complaint, prosecution or action was pend
The notice of motion asked that if the court refuse such peremptory writ then that an order be granted directing an alternative writ to issue. The respondent moved to dismiss the petition and quash the proceedings and from the order granting said motion relator appeals.
Subdivision 1 of section 25 of the Liquor Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 112), as amended by chapter 486 of the Laws of 1903 (now
This right to a rebate is to be construed as resting upon a contract between the licensee and the State. (People ex rel. Stevenson Co. v. Lyman, 67 App. Div. 451.) This court said, upon examination of the cases in People ex rel. Munch Brewery v. Clement (117 App. Div. 539): “ To entitle the holder to the rebate there are certain conditions precedent, the fulfillment of which must be completed at the time of the surrender, and being conditions precedent their fulfillment must be alleged, and the burden of establishing them is upon the certificate holder. These conditions are as follows: First, there must be no complaint, prosecution or action pending on account of a violation of the Liquor Tax Law; second, the person surrendering must not have violated any provision of the Liquor Tax Law during the excise year for which the certificate was issued; third, the certificate must be surrendered before arrest or indictment for a violation of the Liquor Tax Law; fourth, the person surrendering must have ceased to traffic in liquors during the term for which the tax was paid.”
The appellant claims that as subdivision 3 of section 34 of the Liquor Tax Law * (now Consol. Laws, chap. 34, § 36, subd. 3) provides that “ If there shall be two convictions of clerks, agents, employes or servants of a holder of a liquor tax certificate, for a violation of
We do not think there is any conflict between these provisions. .Construing all the provisions of the Liquor Tax Law and giving full force and effect to each, as is the duty of the court in -considering a statute, they can all be harmonized. The right to a rebate depends upon the fundamental fact that the holder of a liquor tax certificate shall not have violated any of the provisions of the Liquor Tax Law during the year for which it was issued. That does not mean that he shall not personally have violated the law. In civil proceedings growing out of the Liquor Tax Law, brought either by the Excise Commissioner for the revocation of a license or by the certificate holder for a rebate, the principal is charged with and responsible for the acts of his agent or servant. Nothing need be added to the reasoning of Mr. Justice Hiscook upon this proposition in Cullinan v. Burkard (93 App. Div. 31), the conclusion being : “ Reasoning by analogy from such principles and decisions we see no good mason why the holder of a liquor tax certificate should not be held responsible for the act of his clerk in improperly selling liquor while engaged in the performance of his master’s business, even though in such act he violated his specific instructions.”
It seems to me that the proper interpretation of section 34, subdivision 3, in connection with section 25, subdivision 1, and section 28, subdivision 2, * comes down to a question of proof. Under subdivision 3 of section 34, in an action upon a bond or in a proceeding to forfeit and.eancel a liquor tax certificate, or in a proceeding to compel the payment of a rebate, proof of two convictions of Clerks, agents, employees or servants of the certificate holder is sufficient to forfeit the certificate and to deprive the principal of any right to a rebate. Here two convictions of employees is made conclusive proof of the
Therefore the Commissioner may prove a violation by a judgment of conviction of the principal; or by common-law evidence of the facts may prove a violation by the principal on his own acts or those of his servant or agent. He may not establish the violation by the principal by one conviction of the certificate holder’s agent or employee, because that conviction is res inter alios acta, but he may prove dehors the record the violation by the agent or employee for which that employee had been convicted ; or, as pointed out, he may by force of the statute prove the violation by the certificate holder by proof of two convictions of his agent or employee. It seems to me, therefore, that a question of fact is presented by this petition upon which an alternative writ of mandamus may issue. The petitioner alleges that neither the certificate holder nor petitioner has violated any provision of the Liquor Tax Law during the excise year for which such certificate was issued. He alleges on information and belief that an employee of Bresler, the certificate holder, was convicted of a violation and that said violation, if any, was the only violation of the Liquor Tax Law upon the premises covered by the said certificate.
I think the fair interpretation of the petition is that while there was one conviction of an employee, there was no violation of the Liquor Tax Law, and as, in the absence of the statute, the proof of a conviction of the employee would not be proof of a violation by the employer, he has sufficiently alleged no violation to put the respondent to his answer. By this interpretation the several provisions of .the statute alluded to may all stand, each being given
The order appealéd from, should, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and a motion for an alternative writ of mandamus granted.
Ingraham, Laughlin, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted.