130 Mass. 68 | Mass. | 1881
This is a complaint for exposing and keeping for sale intoxicating liquors, on March 29, 1880, with intent to sell the same unlawfully. The defendant is an apothecary and druggist, having no license to sell liquors. Upon the evidence, the jury found specially that “the defendant kept the liquors only for the purpose of mixing them with other ingredients, according to prescriptions of physicians, to be used as medicine, and also for the purpose of manufacturing such compounds as are commonly used by druggists, to be sold for the purpose of being used as medicines for remedies for sickness and disease.” The court instructed the jury that, if the liquors were kept and used by the defendant solely for these purposes, he was guilty; and the jury accordingly returned a verdict of guilty.
If the construction of the statute upon which these instructions are based is the correct one, then every sale, by a druggist or other person, of any medicine or compound or preparation, in which spirituous or intoxicating liquor enters as one of the
cited Commonwealth v. Kimball, 24 Pick. 366; Commonwealth v. White, 10 Met. 14; Commonwealth v. Sloan, 4 Cush. 52; Commonwealth v. Bathrick, 6 Cush. 247; Commonwealth v. Boynton, 2 Allen, 160; Commonwealth v. Goodman, 97 Mass. 117; Commonwealth v. Hallett, 103 Mass. 452; Mills v. Perkins, 120 Mass. 41; St. 1878, c. 203.
Fxcejotions sustained.