Kentucky Club v. City of Louisville

JUDGE LEWIS

DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.

Against tbe appellant in each of these two cases, which will be considered and determined together, an ordinance warrant was issued; under it each was tried in the City-Court of Louisville, and judgment rendered against each for $55. The offense charged against them, respectively, is that of unlawfully keeping a- club-house in the city of *310Louisville wherein malt and spirituous liquors were sold by retail without first having obtained a license so to do.

The ordinance they are charged to have violated is as follows: “ Any club-house and club-room and every place of resort generally known as such, wherein malt, fermented, vinous or spiritous liquors are sold by retail within the city of Louisville, shall pay a license of $200.”

Express power is given by the city charter to the general council to fix, and require paid, licenses under adequate penalties by “ each tavern or hotel, coffee-house, club-room or any other establishment wherein malt, fermented, vinous or spiritous liquors are sold by retail within said city.”

But though it is admitted that each of appellants, who were respectively created by law corporations, regularly purchased by wholesale or in large quantities spirituous, vinous and malt liquors, which were taken to and kept at its club-house and disposed of by retail to its respective members or stockholders, for which each paid according to the quantity called for and consumed .by him, yet it is contended that the process devised for accomplishing the end of exchanging the money of the drinker for the liquor, by the small, of the owner and keeper of the clubhouse, does not amount to a sale by retail in meaning of either the charter or ordinance mentioned.

It is made to appear from agreed state of facts that each association or club is composed of members who each pay an admission fee of twenty-five dollars, and besides three dollars monthly; and that it was organized “ for the social pleasure of its members, and for furnishing them the convenience of a place of meeting for amusement, conversation or rest, and facilities for reading, writ*311ing, eating, drinking, smoking, etc., and that the club is bona fide a social club and not organized for the purpose of evading the license tax.”

It further appears that “ wines and liquors are served by the drink or bottle, and the members receiving them sign a ticket with the cost price marked thereon, which tickets are paid monthly, but the members may pay cash, and this is occasionally done.”

Although according to the by-laws of each club none but members are permitted to purchase liquor directly, though a member may carry a stranger there and “ treat” him to one or more drinks, still the decisive fact exists that in each case the corporation purchases by wholesale and distinctly owns the liquor, and no member is permitted to drink or consume any of it without paying directly out of his individual means to the corporation the price per drink or bottle fixed and charged therefor. To say that under such circumstances the defendant in each of the cases, the corporation and owner of the liquor, has not violated the ordinance in selling by retail without license, would be an abuse of terms; for the privilege of selling by retail is essentially exercised by each corporation, how much profit being made makes no difference, and liquor may be purchased and drunk there by the bottle or glass if paid for, in the same way it is done at a .coffee- house.

Judgment affirmed in each ease.