Historical Note
State law in 1891 created a Municipal Court system that included a
Justice Court and Police Court. The Justice Court was a “court of limited
jurisdiction” under the purview of King County. (In contrast, the city of
Seattle was the parent agency for the Police Court.) The justices of the peace
on the bench of the Justice Court dealt with misdemeanors, traffic offenses,
minor civil suits, and small claims, and also heard liquor-related cases during
Prohibition. More serious cases were referred to the county’s Superior Court.
In 1961, the Washington State Justice Court Act combined the Justice Court and
the District Court into one entity, a change that was adopted by King County in
1962.
Prohibition in Washington State began in 1916, three years before the
U.S. Constitution was amended to outlaw the manufacture, transportation, and
sale of alcohol on a national level. The state law was less draconian – county
auditors were allowed to grant permits to import limited amounts of alcohol –
but was still widely violated. Bootleggers and rumrunners did a thriving
business supplying Washingtonians with illegal liquor, and many people built
stills to manufacture their own. Until Prohibition was repealed in 1933,
Seattle civic leaders cracked down on this activity to varying degrees. Mayor
Hiram Gill was among the more severe, establishing a widely criticized “Dry
Squad” to raid businesses and homes suspected of violating the ban.
Content Description
Record of warrants issued by Justice Court to search for illegally
possessed alcohol. Includes address of search, date, officer’s name, and
description of seized liquor and equipment (if any). Volume 8 (Liquor Search
Docket) and Volume 2 (Liquor Search Warrant Docket) also contain names of
individuals who were targets of searches. Seized liquor varied from amounts as
small as half a pint to thousands of bottles. Officers also seized stills,
mash, funnels, and jugs.
Liquor Search Dockets from 1938 to 1942 are held by the King County
Archives. In addition, the Puget Sound Branch of the Washington State Archives
holds one Liquor Search Docket dated 1924-1926 and one journal listing liquor
search warrants dated 1923-1925.