178 Ky. 567 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The appellant, Jake Celli, was indicted in the Letcher circuit court for the offense defined and denounced by section 2557b, subsection 2, Kentucky Statutes, viz., having in his possession spirituous, vinous and malt liquors for the purpose of selling them in territory where local option was in force. By consent of the parties a jury was waived and the case submitted to the court upon the law, and an agreed statement of facts; the trial resulting in a judgment finding appellant guilty as charged and fixing his punishment at a fine of $100.00 and imprisonment in the county jail ten days. Complaining of that judgment and of the refusal of the circuit court to grant him a new trial, he has appealed.
•It is equally clear that in thus having charge of the selling and delivery of the beer, appellant acted as, and was in legal effect, the local agent of the Fesenmier Co. and Cumberland Brewing Co. at Jenkins, in the local Option territory. If his employers had not through him exercised control over the beer after its' delivery to the common carrier at Cumberland, Maryland, there might have been greater reason for appellant’s contention that their' shipment of it into the local option territory was permissible under the interstate commerce law, but, as we have seen, their connection with the beer did not end with its delivery to the common carrier in another state, but continued to Jenkins and after its arrival there, because it went into the hands of their local agent who had previously contracted for its sale, and was by him delivered to the customers to whom it had been sold. This ■ was true not only as to the particular carload of beer, the possession of which by appellant gave occasion for the finding of the indictment under which he was convicted in this case, but of numerous other previous consignments of beer which had in like manner been sold and delivered by him. The rule that the carrier of goods, upon receiving them for shipment, becomes the agent of the consignee, has no application where the consignor or his agent assumes or takes control of the goods at the point of destination and there exercises such control in delivering the goods to the purchasers.
■ We do not overlook the claim of appellant that the deliveries of beer made by him at Jenkins after its arrival there, were because of his having obtained from each purchaser, when he took his order for the beer, an order directing the express company to deliver it to appellant for delivery to such- purchaser. It is not claimed by appellant, however, that the purchaser of the beer paid him for such deliveries, but it is not consonant with reason to infer that the considerable labor performed by him in delivering the beer was gratuitously performed. He
Kentucky Statutes, section 2570, provides:
“No trick, device, subterfuge or pretense shall be allowed to evade the operation or defeat the policy of the law against selling spirituous, vinous and malt liquors without license, or in violation or evasion of any local option laws prevailing in any county, town, city, precinct or municipality of this Commonwealth.”
In Logan v. Commonwealth, 171 Ky. 570, the rule applicable to the state of case here presented is thus announced (quoting from the syllabus):
“If any part of a transaction ending in a sale of intoxicating liquors occurs in local option territory, though some essential part is done elsewhere for the purpose of evading the penalty of the statute, it is to be deemed in prosecutions under the statute, that the whole transaction occurred within the prohibition, district, if the effect or result is that the seller furnishes the liquor to the buyer so that at least he gets it in that district by reason of the whole transaction.”
Commonwealth v. Adair, 121 Ky. 689; Lemore v. Commonwealth, 127 Ky. 480; Merritt v. Commonwealth,
Viewed in all of its aspects the case in hand impresses us much as it seems to have impressed the circuit court; that is, that the method employed by appellant and his associates participating in the transactions to supply the citizens of Jenkins- with beer, was but a cunningly conceived plan to evade the provisions of the local option law in force in Jenkins and Letcher county, constituting such a device as Kentucky Statutes, section 2570, -declares shall not be resorted to for that purpose.
As it was admitted by appellant that he had in his possession, at the time or shortly before he was indicted, two hundred casks of beer which were thereafter delivered by him to persons in Jenkins, these facts were, in the opinion of-the trial court, sufficient to show that his possession of the beer was, as charged in the indictment, for the purpose of selling it in the local option territory, including the town of Jenkins. In our opinion the record warrants our concurrence in the circuit court’s findings of law and fact and in the punishment inflicted for appellant’s violation of the local option law; hence, the judgment is affirmed.