183 Wis. 404 | Wis. | 1924
The following opinion was filed February 12, 1924: •
But one of the several questions presented need be considered and that may be thus stated:
May a person having a license to sell non-intoxicating liquors under sub. (29), sec. 1543, Stats., be subjected to a penalty as for a violation of the provision found in sub. (30), sec. 1543, reading, “No such person shall have in his possession on or about said' premises any intoxicating liquor,” when the proof shows that such liquor was obtained for medicinal purposes and under proper compliance with sub. (9), sec. 1543, providing for the issuance of prescriptions by physicians?
Both the national and state prohibition laws have separated into two distinct classes liquors having more than the designated maximum alcoholic contents: one, the manufacture, sale, or transportation whereof is prohibited; the other includes wines for sacramental purposes (sub. (4), sec. 1543) and those for medicinal purposes (sub. (9), sec.
Those in both classes are recognized as being within the definition of intoxicating liquors, but in the latter class they are not within the penal provisions of the law so long as held and used for the expressly recognized lawful uses and purposes. We think the latter class retains the recognized exemptions and privileges while and wherever possessed for such purposes and uses.
That which may be lawfully obtained upon a physician’s prescription is 'nevertheless described by the same term in sub. (9), supra, “Prescriptions for intoxicating liquors may be issued,” etc., as the same term is- used all through the chapter; yet it is manifest that it is the intent to place such liquor when so prescribed into a separate and distinct class from the same intoxicating liquors when in the proscribed class.
The substantial difference between the two classes is well defined in the opinions in two recent cases of Lambert v. Yellowley, 291 Fed. 640, and U. S. v. Freund, 290 Fed. 411.
In Walsh v. State, 180 Wis. 356, 192 N. W. 1004, it is held that the term “premises,” when under license for the sale of non-intoxicating liquors, extends to other rooms in the same house permitting of access from the room where sales are made. Such ruling extended to a kitchen on the second floor in Wibmer v. State, 182 Wis. 303, 195 N. W. 936. If the possession of the prescription liquor is unlawful in the present instance it would have to be unlawful if possessed on the second floor of such premises, if such are convenient of access from below, and would therefore be subject to penalty if in a sick chamber on such a second floor.
The possession, therefore, of intoxicating liquor on licensed premises declared to- be unlawful under sub. (30), sec. 1543, supra, is 'to be construed to be such intoxicating liquor as is put by the law itself into the first of the above
It follows that the conviction cannot be sustained.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to discharge defendant.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, without costs, on April 8, 1924.