3 Ga. 18 | Ga. | 1847
delivering the opinion of the Court.
The defendant was indicted for a misdemeanor, and was charged in the indictment with keeping an open tippling house on the Sabbath day, in the town of Lanier, in the county of Macon, on the -22d day of March in the-year 1846, and was found guilty. There was a motion in arrest of judgment in the Court below, on several grounds specified in the record, all of which were overruled by the Court; to which the defendant excepted, and now assigns the same for error in this Court.
We have examined the several grounds of error alleged upon the record to the decision of the Court below, but have not been able to discover much merit or force in them.
■ The indictment accuses the defendant of the offence of a
• The 6th section of the 10th division of the Penal Code, declares : “ Any person who shall be guilty of keeping open tippling houses on the Sabbath day, or Sabbath night, shall on conviction, be fined, or imprisoned in the common jail, or both, at the discretion of the court.” — Prince 646. To keep open tippling houses on the Sabbath day, is a violation of a public law, and is a misdemeanor, as declared by the first section of the first division of the Code.
The second ground was abandoned on the argument.
The third ground insists, that as the indictment only charges
The fifth ground was abandoned on the argument in this Court.
The offence which the statute contemplates is, the keeping open a tippling house on the Sabbath day. The object of the legislature was to remove all temptation to idle and dissolute persons who might be disposed to congregate at such places, and violate the Sabbath by any improper conduct; to say nothing of the te.mptation which such a practice would hold out to an unlawful traffic with slaves on that day. The law presumes an injury to the public by keeping open the doors of a tippling house on. the Sabbath day, or why prohibit it 1 The offence is complete under the law when it is established that defendant has kept ' open a
The eighth and ninth grounds of error assigned will be
It appears from the record that the verdict of the jury was 'written on the indictment, but was not'entered on the minutes of the Court at the term when it was returned. The' indictment was of file in the proper office, and constituted a part of the proceedings of the Court, and we do not think the neglect of the clerk to ■enter it on the minutes, affords a sufficient ground to arrest the judgment. The Court, at the next succeeding term, ordered the verdict to be regularly entered on the minutes of the Court, ñunc pro tunc, as in our judgment it was proper, for it to have done, ■notwithstanding the objections of the counsel for the defendant. Let the judgment of the Court below stand affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.