Sexton v. Goodwine
Decision Date | 18 November 1903 |
Citation | 33 Ind.App. 329,68 N.E. 929 |
Parties | SEXTON v. GOODWINE et al. |
Court | Indiana Appellate Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Appeal from Circuit Court, Warren County; Joseph M. Rabb, Judge.
Application for a liquor license by John Sexton; John C. Goodwine and others, remonstrators. From a judgment denying the application, applicant appeals. Affirmed.
Eli Stansbury, for appellant. C. V. McAdams, for appellees.
Application by appellant for a liquor license. The court found appellant to be a fit person to be intrusted with such license, and that he gave the required notice of his intention to apply for a license at the September term, 1901, of the board, commencing September 2, 1901. Prior to August 30, 1901, remonstrances had been circulated, and signed by 173 legal voters. The remonstrances were filed in the county auditor's office on August 30, 1901, at 9 o'clock p. m. The total number of votes cast in the township for the highest office at the November election in 1900 was 332. Prior to the 30th day of August, 1901, Victor White, Lewis Reynolds, Charles Lape, William P. Dowell, and James M. Tharp, who were legal voters, had signed the remonstrance. After attaching their names to the remonstrance and delivering the same into the custody of other remonstrators who were circulating the same, they signed, at the request of the applicant, a paper reading: After signing this paper, it was delivered to appellant, the applicant, and was by his attorney filed in the auditor's office at 5:30 o'clock p. m., August 30, 1901. Appellant's application for a license was filed in the auditor's office August 31, 1901. Upon these facts the court denied the application.
The only question presented is whether the five names should have been counted as remonstrators. As the remonstrance was filed on Friday, August 30, 1901, before the meeting of the board on Monday, September 2, 1901, it was filed in time. Flynn v. Taylor, 145 Ind. 533, 44 N. E. 546. The remonstrators, having the right to file the remonstrance on Friday, had the right to file it at any time during that day; that is, they had the whole of Friday to file it. Adams v. Dale, 29 Ind. 273. The word “day” in a statute means the entire 24 hours. “It commences at 12 o'clock p. m. and ends at 12 o'clock p. m., running from midnight to midnight.” Benson v. Adams, 69 Ind. 353, 35 Am. Rep. 220. As a general rule, the law knows no division of a day. But this rule is never allowed where it will promote injustice or wrong, and fractions of a day will be regarded when important in the settlement of conflicting interests, as in determining the...
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