Citation Numbers: 47 A.D. 320, 2 Liquor Tax Rep. 235, 62 N.Y.S. 25
Judges: Bartlett
Filed Date: 1/15/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This proceeding was instituted under subdivision 2 of section 28 of the Liquor Tax Law by two non-official citizens to procure the revocation and cancellation of a liquor tax certificate issued to Millard F. Van Evera by Charles L. Mead, as county treasurer of Orange county. It resulted in an order revoking the certificate and directing that it be delivered up to be canceled on the ground that material statements in the application of the holder were false and that he did not have the necessary consents required by the statute. The order of revocation charged the county treasurer with the costs and disbursements of the proceeding,, to be paid out of any liquor tax funds in his hands or which may hereafter come into his hands. There is no appeal by the liquor dealer whose certificate has been revoked, and the only respect in Which the propriety of the order is questioned upon the appeal of the county treasurer is in regard to the provision awarding costs against that officer.
The county treasurer was necessarily made a party to the proceeding. “Upon the presentation of the petition,” says the statute, “ the justice or court shall grant an order requiring the holder of .such certificate and the officer who granted the same, or his successors in office, to appear before him, or before a special term of the. supreme court of the judicial district, on a day specified therein, not more than ten days after the granting thereof.” (Laws of 1896, chap. 112, § 28, subd. 2, as amd. by Laws of 1897, chap. 312.) The appellant, being the officer who granted the certificate, had to be brought into the proceeding by the petitioners. Being thus made a party, the judge or court was authorized, in the exercise of a judicial discretion, to charge him with costs by virtue of the final clause of the subdivision cited, which provides: “ Costs upon such proceedings may be awarded in favor of and against any party thereto, in such sums as in the discretion of the justice or court before which the petition is heard, may seein proper.”
That portion of the order of revocation which charges the appellant with costs payable out of excise moneys is preceded by a recital that it has been made to appear to Mr. Justice Barnard that, somd time prior to the institution of the present proceeding, the county treasurer had been notified that Millard F. Van Evera was traffick
The propriety of the award of costs in the present case is made to-depend solely" upon the single reason recited in the order of revocation, and we do not see how it can be sustained.
The authority to direct the costs to be paid out of the excise moneys is also questioned. It is argued that inasmuch as the Liquor Tax Law -directs the distribution of all excise moneys within ten days after they are received, there is no judicial power to provide for the disposition of any portion of such moneys by way. of costs, as is attempted in the order of revocation here. In section 29 of the Liquor Tax-Law, relating to injunction proceedings for unlaw
For these reasons the orders, so far as appealed from, must be reversed.
All concurred.
Orders appealed from, so far as they charge the appellant Mead with costs and disbursements, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements of this appeal.