Pelton v. Drummond

Reese, J.

Plaintiffs in error filed with the clerk of the village of Arapahoe their petition for license to sell intoxicating liquors. Certain citizens appeared and filed their remonstrance and protest against the issuance of the license. The matter was heard by the village board and a license granted.' The remonstrants appealed to the district court, and upon a hearing there the order of the village board was vacated and the license refused. Plaintiffs bring error to this court.

, As shown by the abstract the. decision of the district conrt was based upon the finding that the bond filed and notice given by plaintiffs in error were insufficient. But one of these questions need be noticed here, for the reason that the decision thereon must result in an affirmance of the judgment of the district court. This question is as to the finding that the notice was insufficient.

The petition was filed in the office of the village board on the 3rd day of June, 1886. A notice of the filing of the petition was then published in the Arapahoe Pioneer. This notice was as follows:

*494“APPLICATION POE LICENSE.
Notice is hereby given that we, Ethamer Pelton and Frank Moore, have filed .with the clerk of the board of trustees of the village of Arapahoe, Furnas county, state of Nebraska, a petition for the sale of malt, spirituous and vinous liquors, for the ensuing municipal year, and that we will apply for such license at the regular meeting, on the third Friday in June, of said board of trustees.
Ethamer Pelton.
Frank Moore.
Dated June 3d, 1886.”
As shown by the affidavit of the publisher, the notice was published on the following dates, to-wit: June 5th, June 12th, and June 19, 1886. As will be observed, the'notice fixed the third Friday in June as the date of hearing. This day came on the 18th day of the month. One day before the last publication. On that day the board met in regular session and “ on motion, Tuesday, the 22d day of June, 1886, commencing at seven o’clock p.m., Was appointed for the hearing of said case.”

Section 2 of chapter 50 of the Compiled Statutes — re- ' lating to the license and sale of intoxicating liquors — is as follows:

“ No action shall be taken upon said application until ■at least two weeks’ notice of the filing of the same has been .given by publication in a newspaper published in said county, having the largest circulation therein, or if no newspaper is published in said county, by posting written or printed notices of said application in five of the most public places in the town, precinct, village, or city in which the business is to be conducted, when, if there be no objections in writing made and filed to the issuance of said license, and the county board is in session, and all other provisions of this chapter have been fully complied with, it may be granted.”

*495Section three provides that “ If there be any objection, protest, or remonstrance filed in the office where the application is made against the issuance of said license, the ■county board shall appoint a day for the hearing of said case, "etc.

By these provisions of the law we understand that when an application for a license is filed in the proper office, it is necessary to give notice of the fact in the manner provided by law. This notice must be given “at least two weeks' before” any action can be taken by the board. The language of the law is plain and imperative. “No action shall be taken, upon said application until at least two weeks' notice of the filing of the samé has been •given.”

What action could the board take until the expiration of that time? Simply none.

Section 895 of the civil code provides that “The time within which an act is to be done as herein provided shall be computed by excluding the first day and and including the last; if the last day be Sunday it shall be excluded.”.

The language of section two of the act, as above quoted, requires the application of this rule to the computation of the time during which the notice is to be given. Saturday the 5th of June — the day of publication — must be excluded. The two weeks, then,, would expire with Saturday, the 19 th. If Sunday must be excluded — and it must, for the board could not legally be in session on that day to appoint the time for hearing — Monday, the 21st, would have been the first day on which the board could take any action whatever on the application. The “action” was taken by the board on the 18th, three days before they had any authority or jurisdiction to act.

This objection was presentfed to the board by the remonstrance. It was clearly such an “objection” as should have defeated the license, at least under the order of the 18th of June.

*496The appeal brought the issue to the district court and its decision thereon was clearly right.

The judgment of the-district court is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

The other judges concur.