Case Name: Cadey Geuing ads. The State
Court: Constitutional Court of South Carolina
Jurisdiction: South Carolina
Decision Date: 1822-05
Citations: 1 McCord 573
Docket Number: 
Parties: Cadey Geuing ads. The State.
Judges: Justices Colcock and Huger, concurred.
Reporter: South Carolina Law Reports
Volume: 12
Pages: 573–574

Head Matter:
Cadey Geuing ads. The State.
A husband, whose wife in his presence retails spirituous liquors, without a license, is liable for the same.
On an indictment for retailing spirituous liquors, without a license, the State need not prove that the defendant had not a license, as the defendant must prove he had one.
Tried before Mr. Justice Ganit, Chester district,. Spring-Term, 1822.
m X HE defendant was convicted on a charge for rc tailing spirituous liquors, without license, contrary to the act of assembly. He appealed for a new trial on several grounds :
1st. That it ought to have beep proved that the defend ant, either sold the liquorj^jferson, or authorized the sale of it; and
2dly. That it ought also to have been preved, that the defendant had not a license to retail.
May, for the motion,
Evans, contra.

Opinion:
Mr. Justice Gantt
delivered the opinion of the court.
From the report of the evidence which the trial furnished, it appears that the defendant was present when his wife sold liquor and received the money for it; and it was distinctly left to the jury to determine from the circumstances attending the transaction, whether the sale thus made, was with the privity and assent of the husband. Without this, they were told the husband was not answerable lor the improper conduct of his wife. The verdict of the jury, therefore, on this ground, is conclusive of the fact, that the act'of the wife in this instance, must be considered as the act of the hushand himself.
On the 2nd. ground, the testimony furnished was abundant to shew that the defendant did sell without a license. y'ohn Blakely, a witness sworn on the trial, proved that the defendant, on being advised by him to get a license, after having been in the practice of retailing for five or six years, declared that he would not.
But independent of this evidence, which is of itself sufficient to shew that the defendant sold without a license ; ^ it is the opinion of the court, that the burthen of the proof ; lay on the defendant, and that it was incumbent on him to !, shew that he had been licensed to retail; a fact, which if it ' existed, could easily have been made to appear by the ad-.duction of his license.
The motion for a new trial is refused.
Justices Colcock and Huger, concurred.