This is a proceeding instituted by the Sabbath Committee, which is a domestic corporation, for the revocation of a *2license granted by the police department to the firm of Sullivan & Klaus to give dramatic performances or exhibitions at the Dewey Theatre, situated at No. 126 East Fourteenth street, in this city. The license was granted under section 1473 of the Greater New York Charter, and is to continue until the 1st day of May, 1900.
The ground of the application is that entertainments were given-by the licensees at the theatre in question on the 26th day of' November, 1899, which was Sunday, in violation of section 1481 of the same act, which declares that it shall not be lawful to-give any such exhibition on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday, in such a place, and that every such exhibition or performance shall of itself forfeit, vacate and annul and render void and of no effect any license which shall have been previously obtained. This proceeding, however, is instituted under section 1476, which reads as follows:
“ § 1476. Any license provided for by the preceding sections-may be revoked and annulled by any judge or justice of any court of record in said city upon proof of a violation of any of the provisions of this title; such proof shall be taken before such judge or justice, upon notice of not less than two days to show cause why such license should not be revoked; said judge or justice shall hear the proofs and allegations in the case, and determine the same-summarily; and no appeal shall be taken from such determination; and any person whose license shall have been revoked or annulled shall not thereafter be entitled to a license under the provisions of said sections; on any examination before an officer, pursuant to a notice to show cause as aforesaid, the accused party may be a witness in his own behalf.”
As section 1481, prohibiting exhibitions on Sunday, is a part of the title which includes section 1476, the court has power to-entertain this application on the ground assigned for the revocation-of the license in question. The proof is ample and convincing; indeed, it may be said it is quite beyond reasonable doubt that there was a clear violation by the licensees of section 1481 above-mentioned; and were it not for objections which have been made to the right of the court to proceed in the matter, which I am constrained to find are well founded, I should have no hesitation in granting the order applied for.
The proceeding, as its title shows, describes the licensees as Timothy D. Sullivan and George J. Kraus. The latter is the only *3one who has been personally served with the order to show canse, no personal, service thereof having been made upon Sullivan. In. addition to the service upon Kraus, however, the petitioners caused the order in question to be also served upon an employee of the Eeensees, who was, at the time of such service, in charge of the box-office and selling tickets for entrance to the theatre. The objections which are made to the proceeding are twofold: First, That George J. Kraus was not a member of the firm of Sullivan & Kraus, but that the Kraus referred to in the copartnership name was one Maurice Kraus, who is a son of George J. Kraus; that George J. Kraus had been the manager of the business for the partnership, under a regular wage, from June, 1898, to October 6, 1899, but that since that time his business connection with the place had ceased, and that he had never had any interest whatsoever in the Dewey Theatre except during the period above mentioned; second, that the order to show cause had not been personally served upon Sullivan.
With respect to the first objection, the proofs are, I think, entirely convincing that George J. Kraus was not a licensee or a member of the firm of Sullivan & Kraus. There has been submitted to me a copartnership agreement, made and entered into between Timothy D. Sullivan and Maurice Kraus, bearing date the 15th day of June, 1898, under which they agree to enter into a copartnership under the firm name or style of Sullivan & Kraus, for the purpose of carrying on a “ garden, theatrical and café business ” at ¡Nos. 126, 128 and 130 East Fourteenth street, in the city of New York, and in such other places as might thereafter be agreed upon, for a term of ten years. The paper contains other provisions, to which it is .unnecessary to refer, bearing upon the rights and obligations of the partners, and is signed and duly acknowledged by both of them. The place specifically referred to in this agreement is that known as the Dewey Theatre, with respect to which this proceeding has been taken. It also appears from the affidavit of the deputy treasurer of the board of police that the check which was received by the police department for the license fee, required by law to be paid where such a license as the one in question is issued, was drawn by Maurice Kraus, and the original check so signed, existing now as a returned voucher from the bank, is attached to the papers. It further appears from the affidavit of the Special Deputy Commissioner of Excise for the *4county of New York that the tax required to be paid upon the issuance of the liquor tax certificate, which was issued to Sullivan & Kraus for the same place, was received in the shape of a check signed by Maurice Kraus, and that the application for such liquor tax certificate was made by Maurice Kraus as a member of said firm. The original check also forms a part of the opposing papers, and bears date September 16, 1899. It also appears that the internal revenue tax was paid in the same way. In addition to these proofs, there are several affidavits which are made by employees of the firm, tending to support the contention that it was Maurice Kraus and not George J. Kraus who was a member of such copartnership, to whom said license had been issued.
There is some evidence given on behalf of the petitioner tending to throw doubt upon the respondent’s claim, but the evidence in support of it is too clear to justify me in coming to any other conclusion than that the petitioner was mistaken in making George J. Kraus a party to this proceeding.
The only question, then, which remains for consideration is whether the service of the order to show cause upon the person in ■charge of the box-office was sufficient. It will be observed that the only reference to the notice which the section contains is that the proofs to be made upon such application shall be taken “ upon notice of not less than two days to show cause why such license should not be revoked.” It is entirely silent with respect to the manner in which such notice must be given, leaving the question to be determined as a matter of statutory construction. The rule is well established that where this is the case the notice must be personal. McDermott v. Board of Police, etc., 25 Barb. 635. At page 646 of the report the court saysr “ It is competent for the legislature to prescribe the mode and manner of giving notice, where they require as a condition precedent to the doing of an act that notice shall be given. The legislature has the power to say in a given case that the notice may be given by publication, or by leaving it at the place of business or dwelling-house, or last place of abode of the party to be notified. ■ But it is equally well settled that in the absence of any such legislative provision, whenever the legislature require notice to be given it must be personal notice.” See, also, Mitchell v. Clary, 20 Misc. Rep. 595; People ex rel. N., B. & C. R. R. Co. v. L. & B. R. R. Co., 13 Hun, 211.
The_ necessary construction, then, of the section is that the notice *5therein required to he given must be personally served upon the parties to whom it is directed, or, in a case where the licensees are partners, upon at least one of them. The proceeding is purely statutory in its nature, and the jurisdiction of the justice to whom the application is made is dependent upon a proper compliance with all of the requirements of the statute. The Legislature might, with great propriety, have provided for various methods of serving the notice, and thus have made impossible the embarrassments which have arisen here and which are likely to arise again in similar cases, in giving proper notice of the commencement of the proceeding. But it has not seen fit to do so, and it is my duty to adhere to an established rule of construction and to apply it in this case, however disadvantageous it may prove to be to an efficient enforcement of this wholesome remedy.
My attention has been called to the provisions of section 1479 of the Greater New York Charter, which relates to the right of the corporation counsel of the city of New York to apply for an injunction to restrain public exhibitions in cases where such exhibitions, to be lawful, must be licensed, but where no such license has been obtained. That section provides that any such injunction may be served “ by posting the same upon the outer door of the theatre or circus or building wherein such exhibitions may be proposed to be held * * * and in case of any proceeding against the manager or proprietor of any such theatre, circus or building, or garden or grounds, as aforesaid, it shall not he necessary to prove the personal service of the injunction, but the service hereinbefore provided shall be deemed and held sufficient.” But this provision by no means affords any support to a contention that the notice under section 1476 might be served in any such way; on the contrary it illustrates a legislative exception to the general rule to which I have already referred. Had the Legislature intended that the notice in such a proceeding as this need not be personal, it would have said so, as it did in the case provided for under section 1479.
It results from what has been said that the application must be denied, but without prejudice to a renewal of the same against the proper parties.
Application denied, but without prejudice to a renewal of same.-