
    In re R. H. Macy et al.
    Sup. Ct., App. D., 1 D.
    May 1, 1896.
    The facts in this case were the same as in the other case 73 S. R., argued at the same time as this, except that the relators had, at the time this application was made, closed and locked the entrance and door to their building on West Thirteenth street. There was an entrance also on Sixth avenue, 173" feet only distant from the entrance of the school on West Thirteenth street; and the respondents assigned an additional reason for refusing this application that, considering the number of existing licensed places in the neighborhood for which the license was sought, they were satisfied that there was no public necessity or convenience to be served by granting such license.
    
      Daniel G. Thompson, for relator; Julius M. Mayer, for resp’ts.
   Williams, J.

—We think the license was properly refused upon this application, for the first reason assigned, and which was considered in the other case argued with this. The views of the courts are fully stated in the opinion in that case and need not be repeated here. The door was not walled or boarded up, but merely closed, and locked. It was still an entrance, within the statute as fairly construed. This writ should therefore be dismissed, with costs. We have not regarded it as necessary to consider the other reasons assigned by the respondents for refusing the license, because this reason was sufficient, and the other reasons become unimportant in view of the-fact that the law, cease to be in force beyond April 30, 1896;' and under the new law, these reasons will be unimportant. The reason' we have considered may be important under that law.

All concur.  