delivered the opinion of the court:
The. first question in the case is, whether or not section 1 of the ordinance of June, 1897, is valid. Counsel for the city admits in his brief that no other section of the ordinance in question has been violated. Said section 1 is as follows:
“Whoever, not having a license to keep a dram-shop or druggist permit, shall, by himself or another, either as principal, agent, servant, clerk or otherwise, directly or indirectly, sell or give away, in any quantity, to any person, any intoxicating, malt, vinous, mixed or fermented liquors, shall for each and every offense be fined in any sum not less than twenty ($20.00) nor more than fifty ($50.00) dollars.”
At this time, and during the period from June 27,1897, to the commencement of this suit, the ordinance, designated in the record as article 37 of the municipal code of the city of Monmouth, was in force, and is referred to and made a part of the agreed statement of facts made in writing between the parties. Article 37 of the municipal code, is referred to in the briefs of counsel as the “Dram-shop ordinance.” Section 943 of article 37 provides, that “the city council may in its discretion grant license to such persons as it may deem proper for the sale of spirituous, vinous, fermented and malt liquors in quantities less than one gallon within the corporate limits of the city of Monmouth, under the restrictions of the statute in such cases made and provided, subject, however,” to certain regulations set forth in section 944 and other succeeding sections of said article 37. Section 946 of . article 37 provides, that the license fee shall be $800»00 for one year.
Section 957 of article 37 provides for a fine ag'ainst any person- convicted of keeping a place within the city for selling, giving away, or in any manner dealing in any such liquors in quantities less than one gallon, without a license for that purpose. But said section 957 contains a proviso, “that druggists or persons, whose chief business is to sell drugs and medicines, shall not be deemed to be within the provisions thereof in selling quantities less than aforesaid, for purposes purely medical, mechanical or sacramental, when such druggists shall first obtain a permit in writing from the city council, specifying the place where, and the purposes for which, such permit is granted.”
The city of Monmouth, in its charter, the City and Village act, has the right “to license, regulate and proMbit the selling or giving away of any intoxicating, malt, vinous, mixed or fermented liquor.” (Starr & Cur. Stat. —1st ed. — p. 467). The city undoubtedly had the power to permit the sale of liquors in quantities of one gallon or more, and to prohibit the sale in quantities less than one gallon. It, also, had the power to permit the sale in quantities less than one gallon, and to prohibit the sale in quantities. of one gallon or more. It had no power,' however, to say, by ordinance, that one person could engage in the sale of liquor in quantities of one gallon or more, and that another person could not do so. Such an ordinance unjustly discriminates between persons coming within the same class, and imposes burdens on some, from which others are, by its terms, exempt; and it is, therefore, void. (City of Cairo v. Feuchter, 159 Ill. 155).
Section 1 of the ordinance of June, 1897, as above quoted, refers to the selling or giving away of the kind of liquors therein mentioned in any quantity, and, therefore, includes the selling or giving away of the same in quantities of one gallon or more. It cannot be otherwise construed than as prohibiting all persons from selling or giving away the kinds of liquor therein mentioned in quantities of one gallon or more, except persons having, a license to keep a dram-shop, or having a druggist permit. In other words, a person who has a license to keep a dram-shop, that is to say, who has a license to sell liquor in quantities less than a gallon, may sell liquor in quantities of one gallon or more, or by wholesale, and any person having a druggist permit, as such permit is described in' said section 957, may sell-liquor in quantities of one gallon or more, but all other persons, except those having such license or permit, are prohibited from selling liquor in quantities of one gallon or more. Therefore, the ordinance of June, 1897, unjustly discriminates between persons coming within the same class.
The ordinance of June, 1897, cannot be regarded as an amendment of the “Dram-shop ordinance,” known as article 37 of the Municipal Code, and does not, in anyway, change any of the provisions of said article 37. That this is so, appears.from the fact that the “Dram-shop ordinance,” or article 37, was amended by an ordinance passed December 6, 1897, and the said amendment did not, in any way, mention the ordinance of June, 1897, although the amendment was passed after the passage of the ordinance of June, 1897.
The ordinance of June, 1897, was evidently intended to regulate sales in quantities of one gallon or more, and the “Dram-shop ordinance,” or article 37, was intended to regulate sales in quantities less than one gallon.
By the terms of the stipulation, the appellees made no sales in quantities less than one gallon. They might, therefore, be called wholesale liquor dealers. The city of Monmouth might have provided by ordinance, that intoxicating- liquors could not be sold in Monmouth in quantities of one gallon or more, and might have provided for dram-shops where it could be sold in quantities less than one gallon. In such case, it would have exercised the right given it by law. to license, regulate and prohibit the traffic. It has, however, required certain things to be done before a license can be procured to sell liquors in quantities less than a gallon, such as paying a license fee, giving bond, etc.; but it also provides that, in the case of persons selling liquor in quantities of one gallon or more, they must have a license to keep a dram-shop or a druggist permit. There is no reason why a person, who has a license to keep a dram-shop, or has a druggist permit, should have any greater privileges in the matter of selling liquor in quantities of one gallon or more, than any other person not having such license or permit. The business of selling liquor at retail, or in quantities less than one gallon, is separate and distinct from the business of selling at wholesale, or in quantities of one gallon or more; there is no connection between the two. One is prohibited by statute, unless such permission is given by the city; and the other is permitted by statute, unless prohibited by the city. The “Dram-shop ordinance” declares the business of selling liquors in quantities less than one gallon to be criminal, except so far as it is expressly authorized and made lawful by. license. (People v. Cregier, 138 Ill. 401; Rev. Stat. chap. 43). The holder of a dram-shop license obtains thereby the right to sell in quantities of less than one gallon only; and, when he pays for that license, and is allowed to sell in such quantities, he has received all that he has paid for, and has no more right or privilege with reference to sales of one gallon or more, than the grocer, merchant or any other citizen. The retail dealer of liquor gets what he pays for, when he is permitted to sell in quantities of less than one gallon, and he should be accorded no greater privilege under the ordinance relating to sales of one gallon or more, than would be extended to a licensed auctioneer, or peddler, desiring to engage in the wholesale liquor business. (City of Cairo v. Feuchter, 54 Ill. App. 112).
By article 37, above mentioned, those desiring to sell in quantities less than one gallon can obtain a license therefor upon the payment of a license fee of $800.00. The mere payment of the fee required by such license, and the obtaining of the license, form no basis of exemption from a prohibition against the making of sales in larger quantities. The mere compliance with the “Dram-shop ordinance” cannot be made'the ground for discrimination and exemption from burdens imposed upon persons not having a license to keep a dram-shop. Although the city has power to classify, yet the ordinance of June, 1897, makes an unjust discrimination between persons coming within the same class.
The facts of this case bring it within the doctrine laid down by this court in the case of City of Cairo v. Feuchter, 159 Ill. 155, where it was held, that a city ordinance, providing for a fee for the licensing of wholesale liquor dealers, which, by its terms, did not apply to persons having a retail liquor license under another ordinance of the city, was unjust, unreasonable and void. The reasoning in the Feuchter case, supra, applies to the case at bar, and is decisive of it, and need not be here repeated. It is said that the ordinance of June, 1897, is not open to the objection made to the Cairo ordinance in the Feuchter case, and is not subject to the objection that it makes an unjust discrimination between persons coming within the same class, upon the alleged ground that any one, who gets a license to keep a dram-shop, may sell in any quantities, and that, therefore, all are treated alike. The distinction contended for does not exist. It was as true of the ordinance in the Feuchter case, as of the one here in question, that any one who has a dram-shop license can sell in any quantity, and, consequently, there is discrimination in both ordinances in favor of the keeper of the dram-shop. A law, which permits a party who pays §800.00 for the right to sell liquor in quantities less than a gallon, to sell in quantities of one gallon or more without paying anything for the privilege, while other persons cannot obtain the privilege at any price, is subject to the charge of unjust discrimination. Under the ordinance of June, 1897, a man in Monmouth, who desires to sell liquor in quantities of one gallon or more, must first purchase a dram-shop license by paying §800.00 as a license fee; but the dram-shop keeper enjoys the same privilege without being obliged to pay anything therefor, inasmuch as the license fee of §800.00 which he has already paid is for the right to sell in quantities less than a gallon. It cannot be- said, that the ordinance of June, 1897, confines all dealing in liquor in Monmouth to places where their-dram-shops are located; on the contrary, the ordinance does not, in any way, fix any limits or boundaries as to the place where the .sales in quantities of one gallon or more may be made. It does not provide, that sales in quantities of one g'allon or more, made by the dram-shop keeper, shall be made on the premises where his dram-shop is located. This same contention was made in City of Cairo v. Feuchter, supra, and was there held to be without force.
The same observations, made in regard to the holder of a license to keep a dram-shop, apply to the holder of a drug'gist permit. Under section 957 of article 37, and under the law of the State, a druggist, having such permit, can sell liquor in the city of Monmouth in quantities of less than one gallon, but for purposes purely medical, mechanical or sacramental, and not for any other purpose whatever. As to sales in quantities of one gallon or more, the ordinance of June, 1897, permits-the druggist, having the permit in question, to sell in such quantities, but prohibits his neighbor from doing so without being subject to a fine. No good reason can be given for this discrimination in favor of the druggist.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the Appellate Court was correct in holding said section 1 to be invalid, and in reversing the judgment of the circuit court, the latter court having held it to be valid in the propositions submitted to it to be held as law in the decision of the case.
But we are of the opinion that the Appellate Court erred in rendering judgment against the appellant, the city of Monmouth, for costs. The city is not liable for costs in súch a case. (City of Carrollton v. Bazzette, 159 Ill. 284; Anderson v. Schubert, 158 id. 75; Town of Nokomis v. Harkey, 31 Ill. App. 107; City of Petersburg v. Whitnack, 48 id. 663; People v. Village of Chapin, id. 643; Fosselman v. City of Springfield, 38 id. 296; City of Centralia v. Nagele, 181 Ill. 151).
For the error indicated, the judgment of the Appellate Court is modified, so far as the costs are concerned, in accordance with the views herein expressed, and in all other respects the judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
Modified and affirmed.