73 Ark. 218 | Ark. | 1904
(after stating the facts.) This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction for selling whisky without license, and there are several reasons why this judgment must be affirmed.
In the first place, if the affidavit, the filing of which was a prerequisite to authorize the defendant to prescribe and furnish alcoholic stimulants to his patients, was lost at the time of the trial, there was nothing to prevent him from showing by other evidence that it had been properly filed. But he made no attempt to do this, and made no reference to the affidavit whatever. As he neither asked for a continuance, nor offered to show by other evidence that he had filed this affidavit, although it was a matter of which he must have had knowledge, he is not now in a position to ask for a new trial on the account of the absence of such evidence. 14 Enc. Plead. & Prac. p. 802.
Again, if the affidavit had been introduced and proved at the trial, it would still' have been incumbent on the defendant to show that the whisky was prescribed or furnished to a patient under his treatment, and that he at the time in good faith believed that it was'necessary for the treatment of the disease with which the patient was afflicted. But about all the evidence introduced by defendant amounts to is that the family of the prosecuting witness was sick, and that he let him have whisky. The witness testified that he purchased whisky many different times from the defendant, as much as a quart at a time, and the defendant admits that he sold him whisky as many as three or four times, when his family needed it. When asked to tell the character of sickness with which the family was afflicted at the time the whisky was furnished, he stated that on one occasion the wife of the witness miscarried, and he let him have whisky; that another time, when his infant child of three or four months old.was operated on for hair-lip, he again let him have whisky. • But he nowhere says that whisky was prescribed or furnished to the wife or child because he considered it necessary for the treatment of the disease under which they suffered, and the evidence leaves it a little uncertain whether this whisky was sold to the witness to be used in the treatment of his wife and child, or whether it was intended for the use of the witness, in order to fortify and enable him-to bear his domestic troubles.
The statute, forbids the sale1 of whisky without license, and makes no exception, but under certain conditions it permits regular practicing physicians to prescribe and furnish such stimulants to patients under their charge in prohibited districts when deemed necessary for their treatment. If we admit that the sale of whisky by a physician for the purposes named, and after he has complied with the conditions of the statute as to the filing of his affidavit, would not be unlawful, still the statute clearly does not authorize the sale of whisky to a man simply because some member of his family was sick, and the evidence in this case falls, we think, short of bringing the defendant within the exception of the statute. As he admitted a sale, and showed no defense, it was not error for the court to direct a verdict.
Judgment affirmed.