Case ID: w-va_56/html/0215-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "\n      POEEENBARGER, PRESIDENT:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

CHARLESTON.
    State v. Good.
    Submitted June 10, 1904.
    Decided November 15, 1904.
    1. Iktoxicatiiíg Dbinks — Unlawful Bale.
    
    Proof of an unlawful sale of a mixture, preparation or liquid “which, will produce intoxication” will sustain a conviction upon an indictment charging the unlawful sale of “spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, heer and drinks of like nature” without a State license therefor. Por the purposes of chapter 32: of the Code of 1899, such mixture, preparation or liquid is, in law, spirituous liquor, whether it be such, in fact, or not. (pp. 217, 218).
    2. Intoxicating Deinks — Unlawful Bale.
    
    When such mixture is sold in labeled bottles, as put up by the manufacturer, and has a commercial name or designation, the evidence of persons who have purchased it from the defendant and drunk it, whether at the same time or on different days and occasions, as to whether it is intoxicating, is admissible both for the S.tate and the defendant, (p. 218).
    Error to Circuit Court, Hancock County.
    Elmer S. Good was convicted of an unlawful sale of intoxicating liquors, and brings error.
    
      Reversed.
    
    JOHN B. DoNEhoo, for plaintiff in error.
    The ATTORNEY GENERAL, for the State.
   POEEENBARGER, PRESIDENT:

Beversal of a judgment of conviction of the unlawful retailing ■of spirituous liquors is asked here, because the indictment charges the unlawful selling of spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, beer and drinks of a like nature, while the proof shows a sale of an intoxicating liquid called “rikk,” it being urged that as the .article sold was not in fact one of the prohibited liquors, mentioned in the indictment, the charge is unsustained by proof. In addition to the liquids named in the indictment, the law prohibits the sale of “all mixtures, prepartions or liquids which will produce intoxication, whether they be patented or not,” and declares that they “shall be deemed spirituous liquors within the meaning” of the statute; but the contention is that the indictment, to sustain a conviction of a sale of such mixture, preparation or liquid, must contain a count specifically covering such mixture; prepartion or liquid.

No authority directly confirming this view has been produced. The argument is one of deduction only. State v. Oliver, 26 W. Va. 422, is referred to, and an attempt made to show that, if the indictment had charged the selling of an intoxicating mixture, preparation or liquid, proof of sale of crab-cider would have made out an offense. But that clause is referred to in the opinions, and the case, made by the, evidence, tested by it, just as if an offense under it had been specifically charged in the indictment. Judge Wood said, “Not being a distilled liquor, neither is it a mixture known as Titters’ or otherwise, which will produce intoxication and therefore declared for the purposes of the act ‘spirituous liquor.’ ” Judge Sktdee, in his dissenting opinion, said, “The very section under which the indictment here was found'uses the terms ‘intoxicating drinks’ and mixtures ‘which will produce intoxication’ and expressly prohibits their sale without a license.” He opposed a reversal of the judgment, and it was reversed by the other judges, because, in their opinion, the statute did not, bj? any terms used, prohibit its sale. If that decision, or the views expressed by the Court, has any bearing upon the question, its effect is exactly the reverse of what is claimed in respect to it.

The legislative declaration that intoxicating mixtures “shall be deemed spirituous liquors” is equivalent to a declaration that they are spirituous liquors for the purposes of the act. An unli■censed sale of spirituous liquors is made an offense, and, as an intoxicating mixture, preparation or liquid is, by force of the ■statute, such a liquor, an unlicensed sale thereof constitues the offense. This is admitted, but it is said this statutory classifi-cation does not make a mixture which contains no alcohol, spirituous in fact. It cannot change the nature of the preparation, .■and it was not the purpose of the statute to prescribe a mode of ■pleading, but only to create and define an offense. All of this .may be true, but the courts have uniformly held that, under such ■statutes, a conviction may be had upon an indictment alleging the acts constituting the offense, without reciting the means, by which it was committed. One court has gone so far as to say ■that “An indictment for larceny by embezzlement must allege “that the defendant “feloniously did steal, take and carry away ■the property, which is the subject of the indictment.” Com. v. Pratt, 132 Mass. 246. Commencing with Dowdy v. Com., 9 Grat. 727, in 1852, the Yirginia court of last resort has asserted and adhered to principles of criminal pleading which render it impossible to sustain the position taken for plaintiff in error, and they have been followed by this Court. For obtaining money ■or other property which may be the subject of larceny, by false ■pretense, the indictment may be in the common law form, or 'it may charge the specific acts which the statute declares shall 'be deemed larceny. Leftwich v. Com., 20 Grat. 716; Fay v. Com., 28 Grat. 912. “Upon an indictment for simple larceny, the state may convict by proving either that the subject of the larceny was received with knowledge .that it was stolen, or that it was obtained by a false token or false pretense.” State v. Halida, 28 W. Va. 499; State v. Edwards, 51 W. Va. 220. The principles announced in Dowdy v. Gom. are declared to extend to embezzlement also, Pitsnogle v. Com., 91 Va. 808, the statute ■saying if any person embezzle any money, etc., he shall be ■ deemed guilty of the larceny thereof.

The conclusion that proof of a sale of an intoxicating mixture without a license will sustain an indictment for selling spirituous liquors, under our statute, is readied by a more direct and ■shorter method of reasoning. The statute does not say a. sale of :such mixture shall be deemed a sale of spirituous liquor, or that .a person making such sale shall be deemed guilty of the offense ■of selling spirituous liquor. It- says all such mixtures, preparations or liquids shall be deemed spirituous liquors, and it prohibits the sale thereof as a sale of spirituous liquors. In law, whether in fact or not, it is a spirituous liquor, and the legislature no doubt intended to eliminate all cavil and controversy about the composition and definition of the many intoxicating', drinks then existing, and thereafter to come into existence, by the classification and declaration referred to.

The state having introduced witnesses who testified to having' purchased from the defendant the bottled preparation called. “Rikk,” and found the effect of drinking it to be stimulation-such as is produced by beer or any similar liquor, the defendant offered to prove by other witnesses that they had purchased from-him at other times, near the same date, bottles of the same description, and containing what was called the same lrincl of drink,, and used it without experiencing any stimulation therefrom, and the court ruled that what they proposed to introduce as evidence-was inadmissible. He was of the opinion that it must be shown that these purchases were made on the same day, and probably on the same occasion, as the purchases referred to by the witnesses for the state. This view is clearly erroneous. The identity of the liquor as well as its effect in use is for the jury and not for the court, and the weight of the evidence is also for the-jury. Its weight, whether great or slight, a question for the-jury, is a thing entirely different from its admissibility. Owing • to the difference in time and occasion, the character of the witnesses and other circumstances, the jury may not give the evidence much force, but that is immaterial on the question of admissibility. The defendant is entitled to have it go to the jury to have such weight as they may deem it entitled to. The admiss- - ability of this evidence is clearly established by Com. v. O’Donnell, 8 N. E. 509; Com. v. Goodman, 97 Mass. 117; Com. v. Pease, 110 Mass. 412. “In a criminal prosecution for the sale-of intoxicating liquors in violation of a local prohibitory law, the article sold being compounded by a druggist, and the bottles' labeled ‘Elixir Cinchona ’ or ‘Cinchona Bitters/ it is permissible-"iov the prosecution to prove that it was bought and used by many persons as a beverage, the use to which it was applied being illustrative of its nature and properties; and a person who had swallowed it may state its exhilarating effect on himself, and,, though not technically an expert, may testify that, fin his-opinion., it would produce intoxication.’ ” Carl v. State, 87 Ala. 17. Evidence of this character being proper for one side, it'must be for the other. The rule must work both ways. “In a prosecution for selling intoxicating liquors, in violation of a local prohibitory law, a witness for the prosecution having testified that the liquor, or beverage, sold by the defendant, produced on him effects similar to those produced by whisky, it is competent for the defendant to prove by other witnesses who had drunk it, that it had no intoxicating effect on them.” Knowles v. State, 80 Ala. 9. In the case just quoted from, the purchases testified to by the witnesses were made at different times and the witnesses gave the same description of the article purchased.

Certain remarks of the court, on refusing to admit this evidence, are excepted to. If this ruling had been correct, the remarks would have been harmless and not improper. The evidence will go in on the new trial, and we do not presume the-court will nullify or impair its effect by improper comment.

An exception is grounded upon the refusal of the court to-admit testimony as to what a government inspector had declared as the result of an analysis of “Rikk,”’ made in witness’ presence.. The ruling of the court on this was right. It is mere hearsay.

It is urged the court should have compelled an election by the-state as to the sale relied upon. As there is to be a new trial, in which the motions may be different from those made in the one-which has been had, and the law on the subject is fully elucidated in State v. Chisnell, 36 W. Va. 659, it is useless to consume time-on that subject.^

Eor the error aforesaid, the judgment will be reversed, a new trial allowed, and the case remanded.

Reversed.