115 Minn. 100 | Minn. | 1911
Action for conversion. The complaint alleged that on the day therein named the plaintiff -was the owner and in possession of twenty-two half barrels of malt, six dozen bottles of Purity malt, one bar, one back bar, and one ice box, which the defendant, as sheriff of the county of Hennepin, wrongfully took from plaintiff’s possession, and thereafter destroyed the liquor, and sold the balance of the personal property, and converted the proceeds to his own use.
The answer admitted that the plaintiff, was the owner of the property, and that the defendant, as sheriff, took it from his possession, destroyed the liquors, and sold the balance of the property. The answer, as a defense, alleged, in effect, that at the time stated in the complaint the plaintiff was keeping an unlicensed drinking place in the village of Excelsior, contrary to the provisions of section 1550, R. L. 1905, and that each article of personal property mentioned in the complaint was by the plaintiff then used in keeping and maintaining such unlicensed drinking place; that complaint was duly made in the municipal court of the city of Minneapolis, cliar
The plaintiff interposed a general demurrer to the answer, and appealed from the order of the district court of the county of Hennepin overruling his demurrer. The contenti.on of the plaintiff in support of his appeal is that sections 1553 and 1554, R. L. 1905, are unconstitutional, in that they provide for the disposition of the property seized without due process of law.
The demurrer admits that the plaintiff was violating the law— that is, keeping an unlicensed drinking place, which was also a public nuisance (R. L. 1905, § 1549) ; hence the traffic in intoxicating liquors at the place was contraband. It also admits that each item of the property seized was' used in the commission of the crime; that the court had jurisdiction of his person, and'that the property seized was in the possession and control of the court, to be dealt with as an incident to his trial, of which'he had notice by the personal 'service of an 'inventory of the property so seized 'and held; and, further, that the defendant in all that he did‘was acting as sheriff in strict compliance with the law and the judgment of' the court. Upon a careful consideration of the allegations of the answer and the brief of plaintiff’s counsel, we are unable to distinguish this case on principle from that of State v. Hanson, 114 Minn. 136, 130 N. W. 79, which
Order affirmed.