84 Pa. Super. 481 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1924
Argued December 8, 1924.
The appellant, Harry Weiler, was jointly tried with Liberty Products Company [103 April Term, 1925,
We held in Com. v. Liberty Products Co., supra, that the defendant corporation having undertaken to manufacture and sell a product, which required the initial manufacture of intoxicating liquor, was bound by the strict provisions of the Act of March 27, 1923, supra, to see that none of this product was released from its brewing and storage vats until the unlawful percentage of alcohol had been reduced to a legal quantity; and that the mistake of the brew master or storage foreman in charge of the work furnished the corporation no legal justification for escape from the penalty imposed for a violation of the law.
We are also of opinion that where a violation of the Act of 1923 of this character is proven the jury may infer that the officers in charge of its operation had knowledge of the illegal act and that on a prosecution against them it is not necessary to prove that they were present and participated in the violation of law or had expressly directed its commission. It may be inferred that acts done by employees in the regular course of their employment, and in the exact line of their prescribed duties, which were violative of police regulations of the State prohibiting them, were committed with the knowledge and acquiescence of the officials in charge: State v. Burnam,
The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.