124 Ky. 160 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Knox county, Ky., for a violation of the prohibition law prevailing therein. The indictment contains much surplusage with reference to what is called the “C. O. D. Statute,” and as to the manner in which the Adams Express Company received th'e whisky said to have been sold by it in contravention of law. Stripped of all unnecessary verbiage, the indictment contains a statement sufficient to charge the defendant company with a sale of liquor by retail, in violation of the prohibition statute applicable to Knox county; and as to the unnecessary allegations, they may be dismissed from view under the shelter1 of the maxim “utile, per inutile non vitiatur. ” The defendant company pleaded not guilty, and the case was submitted to the court on the law and facts — the intervention of a jury being waived — resulting in an adverse judgment against it:
The evidence showed, for the commonwealth, the delivery by the defendant’s agent, J. A. Owens, to one J. D. Main, of a gallon of whisky, for which he •paid $3.85, which the agent at once transmitted to the shipper of the whisky in Cincinnati; also that Main did not order the whisky, and did not know the name of the consignor, but it was shipped to him at Barbourville, Knox county, Kv., from Cincinnati, by
The first and crucial question in this case is whether or not the shipment and delivery of the whisky was. an act of interstate commerce. If so, it may be conceded that the defendant should go acquit; if not, it is practically conceded that the acts of the defendant constituted a sale of liquor in Knox county in viola.tion of the prohibition law. We do not think the amendment of the prohibition law commonly denominated the “Farris,” or “C. O. D.” law has any bearing upon the merits of the offense under discussion.' The learned counsel for appellant hinge the whole defense on the fact that the act of the express company constituted the carrying on of inter-state commerce, and the C. O. D. law, being an attempt to regulate inter-state commerce, which admittedly is' under the exclusive regulation of the Congress of the United States, is for that reason void.. This may be conceded. However, if the C. O. D. amendment was stricken from the statute book entirely, it would not affect in any way the merits of the transaction under investigation as we see it. The prohibition statute, without the amendment, forbids, under penalty, the sale of liquor by retail in Knox county; but neither the statute itself, dor the amendment thereto, under
We do not agree to the proposition that the transaction which took place between the express company and J. D. Main in Knox county was interstate commerce. Nor do we agree with the Attorney General in his view of the effect of the Wilson bill upon the transaction in hand. As we understand him, he insists that, although the shipment from Cincinnati be conceded to have been a legitimate act of interstate commerce in its original inception, yet after the goods arrived in Barbourville, if kept overtime in a wareroom, then the transaction ceases to be one of interstate commerce, and becomes one of local commerce. We-do not understand the Wilson bill, as construed by the Supreme Court of the United States, to' have this effect upon a shipment of the kind under discussion. Without naming the decisions, or discussing them with minute particularity, we understand the Supreme Court to have decided, in the various cases cited in the briefs of counsel, that, where the whisky is purchased in a foreign State, it may be shipped by the seller to the buyer into a State where the sale of liquor is prohibited by law; that it is interstate commerce, unaffected by the local law, until it is delivered to the consignee, and the mere lapse of time, or the particular place where the goods are kept until called for, have no effect to change the quality of the transaction so that it ceases to be interstate commerce before the delivery. If this were not true, then if the consignee happened to be absent from home, or refuse to call for his goods promptly, that which was a legitimate transaction in its original inception would become vicious and illegal by the mere lapse of time occasioned by the negligence of the
But was this transaction interstate commerce? No contract of purchase is even pretended to have been made in Cincinnati. So far as the consignor is-concerned, he simply shipped his illegitimate goods into the State of Kentucky to a point where the prohibition law prevails, and through the instrumentality of the express company there made a sale to J. D. Main. No one disputes, or can dispute, that the transaction, so far as the consignor was concerned, was illegiti«mate and in violation of the law. He shipped forbidden goods int.o a prohibition district of Kentucky for the chance of being able to sell it after it reached its destination to Main. So far as he is concerned, the transaction in substance is the same as if he had brought the whisky himself to Barbourville and there sold it to Main. This being true, the transaction was not interstate commerce.. The commonwealth proved facts which, of themselves, established the guilt of the defendant company. It showed the existence of the prohibition law in Knox county, the delivery of liquor by the defendant to Main, and the payment of the price by the latter to the company’s agent. These facts constituted an offense- under the prohibition laws prevailing at the place of sale, and the 'defendant is guilty unless it has a defense which takes the transaction from without the operation of the State statute. It seeks to do this by alleging that the transaction was interstate commerce. The burden to establish this fact is upon the defendant. There can be no doubt of the soundness of this proposition. When the commonwealth has established facts which show the guilt of the accused, if the defendant seeks to avoid the- legal effect of this evidence, it must do
In the case of State v. Robinson, 49 Me., 285, four baskets of champagne were seized under the laws of the State, and the question arose whether or not they, being in the original packages, were subject to seizure, and the question of interstate commerce was involved. It was said: “It is not pretended, in the case at bar, that the wine was imported by Robinson. If he claimed the right to sell it on that ground, the burden of proof was on him to show that he was the importer. No evidence on that point was offered. The instructions given to the jury, that he had shown no right to sell, were correct, and the exceptions must be overruled.” The case of Commonwealth v. Zelt. 138 Pa. 615, 21 Atl. 7, 11 L. R. A. 602, in principle involved the same question as the Maine ease above cited. The court, on the question in hand, said: “The fourth assignment is not sustained. The fact that defendant Porter was the agent of an importer Was a matter of defense, and the burden was upon him to establish it by competent evidence, to such an extent as to throw a reasonable doubt upon the commonwealth’s case. This is substantially what the court below said to the jury. ’ ’
Suppose, instead of the defense being interstate commerce, it had been license, and the appellant had undertaken to defend the sale in question by showing that it was the agent of the seller, and that the latter
But, passing this, while there is no direct evidence upon which one could lay his finger and say this showed knowledge, or that showed knowledge, on the part of the express company, that the business in which it was engaged was a 'criminal one, we think, taking the evidence as a whole,- and looking at the circumstances from the point of view in Baihourville, there was enough to show that the defendant was bound to know that the consignors were carrying on,
The question involved here is a most important one for the people among whom the offense was committed. The mountain counties of . Kentucky are thinly populated, and the arm of the law is necessarily weak, and the passions of men correspondingly strong’. We do not transcend the bounds of judicial conservatism in saying that a very large number'of the cases involving violent crimes which come to this court, on appeal from that section of the State, are directly caused. by the use of whisky. Largely influenced by this, consideration, no doubt, the good people of a majority of the mountain counties have sought to control crime by the enactment of prohibition laws, and the welfare of the whole community is bound up in the enforcement of these laws. It goes without saying, however, that if, by the instrumentality of such transactions as we have under discussion, whisky can be introduced and sold by retail through the aid of the express company, which makes itself the agent to deliver the spirits and collect the pay therefor, the law is reduced to a nullity. We do not believe that an express company can legitimately thus thrust the shadow of its greed between the people and their uplift.
The judgment is affirmed.