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Boys' Clubs of Detroit v. Pakula

Supreme Court of Michigan
Mar 9, 1955
69 N.W.2d 348 (Mich. 1955)

Summary

In Boys' Clubs of Detroit v. Pakula, 342 Mich. 150 (49 ALR2d 1097), where the institution was held to be a school, a large number of students between the ages of 7 and 21 years were instructed in a 2-story building containing classrooms, gymnasium, swimming pool, locker rooms, library, and other facilities. The educational activity was even thinner than in the present case because the classes at the Boys' Club were not offered in contemplation of achieving mastery of a particular vocation, but were recreational in their outlook.

Summary of this case from Surowitz v. City of Pontiac

Opinion

Docket No. 36, Calendar No. 46,323.

Decided March 9, 1955.

Appeal from Wayne; Ferguson (Frank B.), J. Submitted January 11, 1955. (Docket No. 36, Calendar No. 46,323.) Decided March 9, 1955.

Bill by Boys' Clubs of Detroit, a Michigan nonprofit corporation, George L. Nankervis and Zion Lutheran Church against Benny J. Pakula, the Liquor Control Commission of the State of Michigan, and its members, to enjoin transfer of Class "C" license to location in close proximity to school and church. Decree for plaintiffs. Defendant Pakula appeals. Plaintiff church cross-appeals. Affirmed.

Butzel, Eaman, Long, Gust Kennedy ( Philip T. Van Zile, of counsel), for plaintiffs.

Stanton, Sempliner, Dewey Knight, for defendant Pakula.


Three questions are presented in the appeal of defendant and appellant Benny J. Pakula:

(1) Was the southeast corner of Michigan and Military avenues, where appellant Benny J. Pakula sought to operate a bar under a class "C" liquor license, less than 500 feet from the Boys' Club of Detroit?

(2) Was the Boys' Club of Detroit a "school" within the meaning of section 17a of the liquor control act which provides "any request to transfer location of an existing license, shall be denied in the event the contemplated location is within 500 feet of a church or a school building"? and

PA 1933 (Ex Sess), No 8, § 17a, as added by PA 1945, No 133, and amended by PA 1949, No 106 (CLS 1952, § 436.17a, Stat Ann 1953 Cum Supp § 18.988[1]).

(3) Does laches on the part of the plaintiffs and appellees estop them from enjoining the transfer of the class "C" license?

At the hearing before the circuit court the assistant attorney general representing the defendant liquor control commission and its members advised the court that they were "not taking sides in this matter at all," and were willing to abide by whatever decision the court might make in the case.

Appellant Pakula contends that the legislature intended "schools" to be restricted to institutions teaching "subjects required by law to be taught to children of that age." Appellees contend that the legislature inserted no such restrictive language and that the purpose of the act was "to protect those of tender years attending institutions contributing to the educational needs of a community."

The club was organized in 1926 as a nonprofit corporation for the purpose of promoting the physical, mental and moral well-being of the boys of Detroit by providing such means of education and amusement as the directors deemed advisable. Its corporate name now is Boys' Clubs of Detroit.

One of the 3 buildings operated by the Boys' Club is the building involved in this appeal, known as the Bloomer building, located at 3910 Livernois. This is a 2-story building resembling in appearance public school buildings, and contains classrooms, gymnasium, swimming pool, locker rooms, library, auditorium and stage, print shop, woodworking shops, art room and special events room. For convenience, the building affected by this litigation is referred to as the Boys' Club.

Over 2,300 boys between the ages of 7 and 21 are enrolled at the Bloomer building Boys' Club; 900 in the 7-to-10-year-old class; 700 in the 11-to-13-year-old group, there are 500 in the 14-to-17-year-olds, and the senior membership, 18 to 21 years of age, is 150.

The average number of boys using this building daily is about 600, and all of the members live within a radius of a mile and a half of the building. The Boys' Club hours are Monday through Friday from 3:30 to 9:30 p.m., and on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The Boys' Club has a schedule of regular hours for classes in music, woodworking, photography, arts and crafts, printing, motion picture projection, dramatics, radio and television. A physical education program consisting of basket ball, baseball, football, swimming, boxing and wrestling is provided. There is also a health program under the supervision of a full-time doctor, dentist and nurse. The educational program is supervised and carried forward by a full-time staff of 14 paid employees.

In determining this question as to what is meant by the word "school" we must keep in mind the fact that in Morse v. Liquor Control Commission, 319 Mich. 52, 65, this Court said that the act must be liberally construed to "preserve the rights of schools and churches as provided for" in the act as this Court regards such rights as paramount.

Webster's New International Dictionary (2d ed) defines "school" as "a place for instruction in any branch or branches of knowledge; * * * an institution for teaching children."

We have carefully considered the cases cited in appellant's brief, among which is Matter of Townsend, 195 N.Y. 214 ( 88 N.E. 41, 22 LRA NS 194), holding that a liquor law prohibiting the location of a place for the sale of liquor within 200 feet of a school would not include a building used as a training school for nurses. In this case the New York court stated (pp 222, 223):

"This phase of the statute indicates that the legislature, in using the term `schoolhouse,' had in view primarily the common public schools devoted to such general elementary and intermediate instruction as is adapted to the education of our children and youth; and perhaps secondarily such semipublic and private schools as are conducted for the same purpose. Broadly classified this includes all `schoolhouses' in which our so-called grammar and high schools are conducted. While we can find no express warrant in the words of the statute for placing private and semipublic schools in the same category with common public schools, we are satisfied that it was not the intention of the legislature to exclude the former from its wholesome protection. That is the utmost limit, however, to which the language of the statute can be extended. The evident intention of the legislature was to remove the masses of our school-going children and youth as far as possible from the influences of the liquor traffic, and the most effective means of accomplishing this end was thought to be the interdiction of the traffic within a certain radius surrounding the ordinary school-house. It is obvious that, unless we draw a line with reference to schoolhouses at the point thus indicated, we must go to the extreme length of holding that the term `schoolhouse' includes every place where instruction is given of any kind or degree, and to persons of any age. These considerations, applied to the conceded facts of this case, lead us to conclude that a building used as a training school for nurses is not a schoolhouse within the purview of the liquor tax law."

We have also considered the following cases cited in appellees' brief giving to the word "school" a broader construction, particularly where instruction is imparted to the young: People v. Collins, 191 Misc. 553 ( 83 N.Y.S.2d 124); Livingston v. Davis, 243 Iowa 21 ( 50 N.W.2d 592, 27 ALR2d 1237); Langbein v. Board of Zoning Appeals of the Town of Milford, 135 Conn. 575 ( 67 A.2d 5).

This Court was called upon to define the word "school" in Bastendorf v. Arndt, 290 Mich. 423 (124 ALR 445). In that case we said (pp 425, 426):

"There is no serious question that defendant is conducting a `school.' The word is a generic one and, where not affected by its context, means little more than an institution with educational purposes or activities. Although defendant is teaching for profit, she is engaged in the promotion of a particular branch of knowledge. * * * It is not contended that because the student body is small or because the course of study is devoted more to the arts than to the sciences that the establishment does not fulfill the requirements of an educational institution."

We reaffirmed this decision last year when in Norton School District v. Municipal Finance Commission, 339 Mich. 96, we said:

"The word school means little more than an institution with educational purposes and activities. Bastendorf v. Arndt, 290 Mich. 423 (124 ALR 445). Education, principally and primarily of the children of the district, is the one general objective of the plaintiff."

Appellant contends that the Bastendorf Case should not apply to the present case because it was a case involving building restrictions. We cannot agree with this contention. There is no reason why the word "school" should receive a more restricted definition under the act in question than in building restriction cases.

The statute here involved does not construe the word "school." If the legislature had intended "school" to be restricted to institutions teaching subjects required by law and thereby confined to public and parochial schools, the legislature would have so provided. The record justifies the trial court's decision that "the Boys' Club is a school within the meaning of the word as it is used in the liquor law."

The Boys' Club building in question is located on land bounded by 2 streets that run north and south, namely, Livernois avenue and Military avenue. The front entrance of the school is on Livernois.

The original liquor control act of 1933 contained no restriction as to the proximity of a liquor establishment to a church or school building. The legislature by PA 1945, No 133, added section 17a to said act, which read as follows:

"Any new application for a license to sell alcoholic beverages at retail, or any request to transfer location of an existing license, shall be denied in the event the contemplated location is within 500 feet of a church or a school building, by the regularly traveled thoroughfare."

By PA 1949, No 106, the legislature eliminated the words "by the regularly traveled thoroughfare," and substituted the following:

"Such distance between the church or school building and the contemplated location shall be measured along the center line of the street or streets between 2 fixed points on said center line determined by projecting straight lines, at right angles to the said center line, from the part of the church or school building nearest to the contemplated location and from the part of the contemplated location nearest to the church or school building."

Appellant submits "that ambiguity is present in the application of the statute. The statute does not purport to say what is the nearest part of the school building. Is such to be determined mathematically, or is such part to be determined with regard to the main entrance?"

Appellant contended in the lower court and here contends that the measurement should have been made by projecting a line at right angles from the northerly part of the school building fronting on Livernois avenue (front entrance) to the center line of said avenue, thence north on Livernois to the center line of Michigan avenue, thence southeast along the center line of Michigan avenue to the center line of Military avenue, thence south to a right angle projected from the nearest point of appellant's contemplated location. It is conceded that if this is the proper way to measure, appellant's property is more than 500 feet distant from the Boys' Club building.

The trial court held that appellant was in error in his construction as to how the measurement should be made, and concluded that the nearest part of the Boys' Club was the northeast corner of the building (rear); that by drawing a line from this point to the center of Military avenue and then measuring north to appellant's contemplated bar would be the proper way to determine the distance between the Boys' Club building and appellant's location. It is conceded that using this method the distance would be 223.28 feet.

A similar question was presented to this Court last year in the case of Elliott v. Liquor Control Commission, 339 Mich. 78. Commenting upon the construction of section 17a this Court said:

"A former attorney general had ruled, `Measurement should commence on the center line of the street on which is located the main entrance of the building.'

"The designation of the regularly travelled thoroughfare as having a part in determining the measurement of 500 feet was stricken out of the statute by PA 1949, No 106, and the defendant commission was in error in applying the ruling of the attorney general so far as expressed in the words just above quoted, which ruling is incorrect under the present form of the statute.

"The location of the entrance to either building is to be disregarded, not being an element in the statute."

We reaffirm that decision in this case. The location of the entrance to the building is to be disregarded, not being an element in the statute. The trial court used the proper method of measuring the distance between the Boys' Club and appellant's location, and was correct in determining that appellant's location was within 500 feet of the Boys' Club.

The record does not sustain appellant's claim that plaintiffs were guilty of laches estopping them from enjoining the transfer of appellant's liquor license. The question was first raised by the defendant in his answer as an affirmative defense and was denied by plaintiffs in their reply. The burden of proving laches was on the defendant, but no evidence was introduced to support this claim. Certain allegations in regard to the publishing in newspapers of the application for transfer of license and the construction of the building by defendant on the disputed site are referred to in appellant's brief, but are not supported by the record. The record discloses that the Boys' Club objected to the bar when its officials were contacted by the liquor control commission in the spring of 1952 and by the Detroit police department in January, 1953.

Zion Lutheran Church, a Michigan nonprofit corporation, an appellee and cross appellant herein, contends that the court erred in determining that the church was 532.50 feet distant from the bar. Its contention that the parish house is a church building and within 500 feet of the bar is not passed upon in this opinion due to our decision that the Boys' Club is within 500 feet of appellant's contemplated bar and that the lower court's decree should be affirmed enjoining the liquor control commission from approving transfer of class "C" license to appellant at said premises.

Judgment affirmed. Costs to appellees.

CARR, C.J., and SMITH, SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, and DETHMERS, JJ., concurred.

BUTZEL, J., did not sit.


Summaries of

Boys' Clubs of Detroit v. Pakula

Supreme Court of Michigan
Mar 9, 1955
69 N.W.2d 348 (Mich. 1955)

In Boys' Clubs of Detroit v. Pakula, 342 Mich. 150 (49 ALR2d 1097), where the institution was held to be a school, a large number of students between the ages of 7 and 21 years were instructed in a 2-story building containing classrooms, gymnasium, swimming pool, locker rooms, library, and other facilities. The educational activity was even thinner than in the present case because the classes at the Boys' Club were not offered in contemplation of achieving mastery of a particular vocation, but were recreational in their outlook.

Summary of this case from Surowitz v. City of Pontiac
Case details for

Boys' Clubs of Detroit v. Pakula

Case Details

Full title:BOYS' CLUBS OF DETROIT v. PAKULA

Court:Supreme Court of Michigan

Date published: Mar 9, 1955

Citations

69 N.W.2d 348 (Mich. 1955)
69 N.W.2d 348

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