123 Ky. 507 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
Affirming.
The appellant corporation, Jung Brewing Company, was indicted by the grand jury of Laurel county, charged with maintaining a public nuisance on its premises in the town of Pittsburg, Laurel county, Ky. Upon trial it was found guilty by the jury, and a fine of $500 inflicted by the verdict.
The evidence on the trial showed that Pittsburg is a small mining town without police or town authorities, situated in a local option district; that some months before the indictment herein was found, the Jung Brewing Company rented the house referred to, which is near the center of the town and not far from the church or schoolhouse on one of the main thoroughfares of the town; that it kept in the house beer for sale by the case or keg (one Hocker being the agent), and also kept a wagon to deliver the goods. A keg of beer was sold for $2.00, and a case for $3.30; the case consisting of 36 quart bottles, which were to be returned by the purchaser. Crowds of men, mostly miners, ranging from 10 to 25 or over in number, would collect in the street in front of the house; some one would go in and get a case of beer and bring it out in the street, or on the railroad property just across the street, where, in view of the house from which it was purchased, it Would be divided among those who had made up the money, and the beer would then be drunk, the crowd getting intoxicated, boisterous, and disorderly, and continuing in the street and about the porch of the house for hours. This was a frequent occurence, so that women avoided the street, and the pub lie passing there was disturbed. The town postoffice was nearby, and the schoolhouse was not far off. The crowd sometimes went in the house or on the porch. The agent, Hocker, to get rid of them, on some occasions closed up the house. Sometimes the beer was carried off in sacks and sometimes in the original case. The disorderly crowd could be seen
The question involved on the trial of this case was not whether the defendant violated the local option law. It is not charged with that offense, but whether or not, within the time mentioned in the indictment, it had maintained a common nuisance at the place named therein. The evidence of the commonwealth upon the trial, if true, established the offense with which the defendant was charged beyond doubt. Conceding that it had a right to sell liquor by wholesale, or even that it was an authorized retailer, it had no right to allow the assembling around its premises of noisy, drunken, boisterous crowds, whose “swilled insolence” and profanity made the use of the highway in that neighborhood, by women, always unpleasant and sometimes dangerous. The saturnalian orgies described by the women who testified for the
A careful reading of this record convinces us that the appellant had a fair and impartial trial, and that no injury was done it, either in the rulings of the court, or by the verdict of the jury.
Judgment is affirmed.