The petitioner was convicted of intoxication before a justice of the peace. Thereupon, he was duly sworn and required to disclose the person of whom he obtained the liquor which produced such intoxication. He refused to do so on the ground that it would tend to criminate him. He was adjudged to be in contempt, and was committed to jail. He then brought these habeas corpus proceedings, which were duly adjourned into this Court agreeably to the provisions of G-. L. 2221. The importance of the question here submitted for our determination is obvious. On the one hand, a nullification of No. 203, Acts of 1921, which specifically requires a disclosure from all persons convicted of intoxication, will seriously embarrass the enforcement of the liquor law; on the other hand, a denial of the immunity from self-incrimination with which every person is clothed by the Constitution, is not to be tolerated. If the act referred to results in such denial, it is void, and there is nothing for this Court to do but so declare and thus give vitality and effect to the fundamental law, however much the administration of the criminal laws may be thereby impeded.
The validity of the petitioner’s commitment depends upon the authority of the court which ordered it; and having resorted to
habeas corpus
proceedings, the petitioner only challenges the jurisdiction of that court to send him to jail. For, while the writ here asked for is not in the nature of, nor can it be used as a substitute for, a bill of exceptions or writ of error,
In re Hook,
The provision invoked for the protection of the prisoner is found in Article 10 of our Bill of Rights: "Nor can he be compelled to give evidence against himself. ’ ’ This simple declaration of ten words embodies a safeguard of civil liberty as sacred and inviolable as any of the fundamental guaranties for the protection of personal rights.
People
v.
Forbes,
Whatever the rule formerly may have been in this country or elsewhere, it is now fully established that it is not left to the witness, exclusively, to say when he is entitled to the privilege of silence. The right of the state or of individuals to have the benefit of the testimony of every person having relevant knowledge is not to be disregarded to that extent, nor are the enforcement and administration of the laws to be so unduly embarrassed. The ultimate decision of the witness’ right to refuse to testify, is for the court.
State
v.
Wood,
99
*346
Vt. 490, 492,
The law governing such cases was laid down by Chief Justice Marshall in the trial of Aaron Burr,
We are here, of course, dealing solely with a provision of our own Constitution, the corresponding clause of the Federal Constitution not being applicable.
State
v.
Felch,
In
State
v.
Thaden,
So deep an impression has the Marshall rule made on the appellate judges of the country that Head, J., in
Com.
v.
Bolger,
We approved the Marshall rule in the
Consolidated Rendering Co. Case,
A simple illustration shows the soundness of this doctrine: Suppose one suspected of murder was called before the grand jury and asked the direct question, “Did you kill this man?” Would anybody claim that his motive for claiming his constitutional protection from self-incrimination could be inquired into ? Of course not. A fair and convincing statement is found in Janvrin v. Scammon, 29 N. H. 280, 290, as follows: “When he places himself upon his privilege, he will be protected, unless the court can see from the circumstances of the ease that he is in error, or that it is a mere pretext of the witness to avoid answering, and that his answer cannot, from the nature of things, criminate him.”
Tested by the rule in any of its slightly different forms, the ease before us is free from difficulty. Nothing could be plainer than that this petitioner could not disclose the facts called for by the justice of the peace without definite and manifest danger of making out his own violation of the criminal law. By the terms of No.-204, Acts of 1921, one cannot, speaking broadly, make, import, transport or possess intoxicating liquor without being subject to the penalties therein provided. It would be extremely difficult for one who is proved to have had enough of such liquor to cause intoxication, to tell a true and believeable story about where it came from that would show that he was wholly clear of the criminal law embodied in this comprehensive statute.
In re January,
*350 We hold, then, that the Legislature, in its zeal to make effective the prohibitory features of No. 204, above referred to, went too far when it passed No. 203, and that the latter act is unconstitutional and void. It follows that the petitioner is in unlawful restraint, and he is discharged therefrom,.
