69 Ga. 54 | Ga. | 1883
The defendant was indicted for, and found guilty of, the offence of keeping open a tippling house on the Sabbath day. His motion for a new trial having been denied by the court below, the case is brought here on errors assigned on all the grounds of the motion.
It makes no difference in law whether the place be called a bar room, or a glee club resort, or a parlor, or a restaurant, if it be a place where liquor is retailed and tippled on the Sabbath day, with a door to get into it, so kept that anybody can push it open and go in and drink, the proprietor of it is guilty of keeping open a tippling house on Sunday. It makes no difference if the drihking be done standing or sitting — at a bar or around a table—
On the whole, we repeat, that the case is wholly without excuse or the pretence of palliation. The very fact of the effort to hide the bar and the liquor shelves, and yet keep the restaurant room open for tippling, shows the consciousness of knowing that the law was being violated, and that some attempt was necessary to keep it dark, arid to shut out the light. But “ the way of the transgressor is hard,” and sooner or later light will be let in upon his dark places, and exposure and .punishment will follow.
Judgment affirmed.