145 Mass. 248 | Mass. | 1887
The complaint contained an allegation of an unlawful sale of liquor by the defendant to a person unknown. The defendant at the trial put in evidence the statement of one
Upon this evidence, the court rightly refused the motion of the defendant to order the defendant acquitted, and submitted the case to the jury upon the inquiry whether the allegation that the name of the person to whom the sale was made was in fact unknown to the complainant was sustained by the evidence.
If the fullest credence be given to Morancy’s testimony, it does not necessarily follow that, at the time of making the complaint, about a week after, on April 24, the complainant then knew and remembered the name of the person. The question before the court was not what the complainant might with reasonable diligence have ascertained, or what he ought to and might have known if he had remembered what had been previously told him, but what he actually knew. This was to be determined by the jury as a question of fact. The presiding justice could not rule, as matter of law, that, because the complainant had been once informed of the name of, the person to whom the liquor was sold, it was known to him at the time of making the complaint.
For similar reasons, the defendant was not entitled to the second and fourth instructions asked.
Exceptions overruled.
The second and fourth instructions requested were as follows : “ 2. The complainant is bound to describe the person by such name as was given to him. He must give the best name he can.” “ 4. If the complainant was told, before making the complaint, that the person buying the liquor was Abe Taber, then he was bound to describe such person by such name in such complaint, if that was the best name he could give him.”