The statute, for a violation of which the plaintiff in error was convicted, prohibits any person or persons, except taverners, from keeping “ any house, store, shop, or other place for the purpose of selling any wine or spiritous liquor, to be drank thereat.” Stat. of 1846.p, 46. The information charged, that he, “on &c., at &c., not being a taverner, kept a certain store or shop, situate in Church street, in New-Haven, for the purpose of selling wines or spiritous liquors to be drank thereat.”
The first question which arises on the assignment of errors, respects the sufficiency of this information, which, the plaintiff in error claims, is defective for want of certainty; first, in the description of the place alleged to have been kept by him, for the purpose therein mentioned ; and, secondly, in the description of the liquors for the purpose of selling which it was kept.
He insists, that it is not sufficient to allege in the alternative, with respect to the first, that he kept either a store or shop ; and with respect to the second, that it was kept for the sale of either wines or spiritous liquors ; but it should be stated, as to the one, whether he kept a store or a shop, and as to the other, for the sale of which of those kinds of liquors it was so kept. Perhaps, as to the latter, the allegation is not unfairly susceptible of the construction that he kept the place for the sale of each of those two kinds of liquors, whichever of them should be applied for, and is thus equivalent to an allegation that he kept it for the sale of both. If that were its true meaning, we have no doubt it would be sufficient. The Commonwealth v. Bolkom, 3 Pick. 281. Rex v. Middlehurst, 1 Burr. 399. But we prefer to consider it on the construction claimed for it, by the plaintiff in error, which makes it an alternative averment that he kept the place for the sale of only one, or the other, of them. The keeping of either of the places mentioned, for the purpose of selling of those kinds of liquors, is a breach of the statute on which the information is founded ; so that the plaintiff in error was charg-
But we do not deem it necessary to determine whether this information would be good, if the offence were charged alternatively, as the plaintiff in error claims. Considering the mode of using the words store and shop in this country, and the meaning usually attached to them, especially when they are applied to a place where goods are bought and sold, in which sense they are obviously used in the act on which this information is founded, we think that they are to be considered, in that statute, and also in this information, which is in the very words of it, as synonymous terms; ancj that therefore, although the words are connected, by the disjunctive particle, and the allegation as to the place kept is in an alternative form, it is not in substance and sense an allegation that the accused kept one or another of two different places, but that he kept one place, called by the name of a store or shop. And, as these words are, in connexion with the business of selling, to which they are here applied, commonly used indiscriminately and synonymously, in this country, it is much more proper to consider them as used in the same sense in this information, and also accords more with the meaning of the allegation as indicated by its frame, than to consider it as importing that the accused had two distinct buildings, ope of which was kept by him for the purpose there mentioned. By a reference to the lexicographers of this country and England, ii appears, that the word shop is used in the same sense in both; but that the word store, as applicable to a building, is
As to the other objection to the information, that the purpose for which the shop was kept, is not stated with sufficient certainty, because it is alleged to be kept for the sale of “wines or spiritous liquors,” without designating which of them; — it is certainly very questionable whether, if it were an information for the sale of liquors, such an allegation, in view of the authorities, would be sufficiently particular ; although in that case, if the sale were stated to be of wines and spiritous liquors, it would, as has been already said, be held good. The Commonwealth v. Bolkom, 3 Pick. 281. In that case, it would be sufficient to prove, and therefore it would be necessary for the defendant tobe prepared to disprove, the sale of either: — and he would be subjected to greater inconvenience where the statement is in the alternative. The authorities, however, would, perhaps, be too inveterate, in that case, to be disregarded. We are not disposed to apply the rigour and niceness of the ancient rules on this subject any farther
Further ; the allegation here excepted to, is descriptive of the manner in which the offence was committed, rather than the act constituting the offence, and is therefore within the principle of Stevens v. Commonwealth, 6 Metc. 241. where it was held, that stating the commission of the offence in different modes, is not objectionable. The allegation here, moreover, is in the words of the statute, which, as a general, although not universal rule, is sufficient, and does not fall within any of its exceptions. This objection, therefore, should not prevail.
The result is, that the superior court should be advised, that there is no error in the judgment complained of.
In this opinion the other Judges concurred.
Judgment to be affirmed.