23 A. 793 | N.H. | 1891
The plaintiffs are entitled to recover for the liquors ordered by the defendants and delivered to them in Boston and New York. Their mere knowledge of the defendants' purpose to bring the liquors into this state and sell them here in violation of law does not make the contract invalid. Hill v. Spear,
The rest of the liquors were delivered by the plaintiffs in New York and Boston upon orders taken of the defendants here by the plaintiffs' agents, who knew or had reasonable cause to believe the liquors would be brought here and sold in violation of law.
"If any person shall, within this state, solicit or take any order for any spirituous liquor, to be delivered at any wharf, depot, or other place without this state, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that if so delivered the same will be transported to this state and sold in violation of the laws thereof, he shall be fined," etc. Gen. Laws, c. 109, s. 18. In Dunbar v. Locke,
It was not claimed or suggested in either case that the statute was in conflict with the provision of the federal constitution authorizing the congress to regulate commerce among the states, and the question was not considered. The reason the plaintiffs did not move the question was doubtless because they understood the validity under the federal constitution of a state statute prohibiting within its borders the sale in the original package by the importer of spirituous liquors imported from other states, or otherwise discouraging or restricting the importation of such liquors from; other states, to be established conclusively by the decisions of the federal supreme court. In Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419, it was held that a state can impose no restrictions upon the sale in the original package by the importer of goods imported from foreign countries under the authority of congress, and in Pierce v. New Hampshire, 5 How. 504, it was held that a state may prohibit the sale in the original package by the importer of spirituous liquors imported from another state, on the ground, among others, that congress had not exercised its *117 power under the constitution to regulate interstate commerce as it had foreign commerce. In other words, the sale in the original package by the importer of liquors imported from foreign lands could not, while the like sale of liquors imported from other states could, be subjected by state laws to restriction or prohibition. Hence "the sale or keeping for sale by the importer thereof, in the original casks or packages in which it was imported, of foreign spirituous or intoxicating liquor imported under the authority of the laws of the United States" was excepted from the operation of the prohibitory liquor law first enacted in 1855, while such sale or keeping for sale of liquors imported from other states was not excepted. Laws 1855, c. 1658, s. 1; G. S., c. 99, s. 24; Gen. Laws, c. 109, s. 30.
The judgment in Pierce v. New Hampshire is distinctly overruled in Leisy v. Hardin,
The transactions in question were had in 1887, 1888, and 1889 and are not affected by the act of congress passed August 8, 1890. In re Rahrer,
It is not necessary to consider the question whether the statute is invalid for the reason that it discriminates against the citizens of other states. Voight v. Wright,
Judgment for the plaintiffs.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *118