87 Me. 518 | Me. | 1895
This case comes to the law court upon report, the court to render such judgment as the legal rights of the parties may require. The plaintiff in the original action recovered judgment upon default for $382.37 debt and costs. The action was upon an account annexed amounting to $330.38, for intoxicating liquors sold by the original plaintiff to the defendant, and three dollars for packing.
The plaintiff in review'relies upon R. S., c. 27, § 56, which, so far as it is material, is as follows : " No action shall be maintained upon any claim or demand, promissory note, or other security contracted or given for intoxicating liquors sold in violation of this chapter, or for any such liquors purchased out of the State with intention to" sell the same or any part thereof in violation thereof.”
In answer to which the defendant in review' says that the sale of intoxicating liquors was not made in this State, and that consequently the statute does not apply. It may be conceded that the sale was made in Massachusetts. An agent of the vendor took the purchaser’s order in Belfast, but there was no payment, no memorandum in writing, and the order was filled in Boston, where the liquors were separated from the general stock, packed, marked and delivered to a steamboat company, in accordance with the purchaser’s instr-uctions, directed to him.
It is a general principle of law that the validity of a contract must be tested by the law of the place where the sale is made. Wore it not for the statute, which expressly forbids the maintenance of such an action, the price could be recovered, such a sale not being invalid, even if the vendor knew that the. purchaser intended to put the things sold to an illegal use, unless he participated in that intention, or, in some way, beyond the mere sale, did something to assist or facilitate the violation of law, or at least, in the language of some of the cases, made the sale with the knowledge that the thing sold wras to be resold by the purchaser in another state contrary to its laws, and with a view to such resale. Webster v. Manger, 8 Gray, 584; Graves v. Johnson, 156 Mass. 211.
The distinction between selling a thing with the mere knowledge that it is to be resold in violation of law, and in any way aiding in such illegal act is sound and well recognized. Upon this principle were decided the cases in this State relied upon by the counsel for the defendant in review. Torrey v. Corliss, 33 Maine, 333, and Banchor v. Cilley, 38 Maine, 553. But when Torrey v. Corliss, was decided, there was no such statute as is now in force. The act of June 2, 1851, which was somewhat similar to our present statute, was passed while that action was pending, and the court expressly held that it did not apply ; and Banchor v. Cilley, was decided under the statute of 1846, which did not refer at all to sales made in other states. Some remarks made in the recent case of Wasserboehr v. Boulier, 84 Maine, 165, are also relied upon, but that cáse was decided upon
This very question was decided in Meservey v. Gray, 55 Maine, 540, in which Mr. Justice Walton says: "It -will be noticed that our present statute makes the fact that the liquors were purchased with intention of selling them in violation of law, and not the seller’s knowledge of the fact, the criterion -by which to determine whether the contract will support an action in this State or not. . . . If, therefore, the sale was made in New York, and the plaintiffs had no knowledge of the illegal purpose of the defendant to sell the liquors in this State in violation of law, yet, inasmuch as the evidence satisfies us, as a matter of fact, that they were intended for such illegal sale, the plaintiff's cannot recover for them.”
In McGlinchy v. Winchell, 63 Maine, 31, it is decided that it matters not that the liquors are purchased out of the State ; if purchased with intent to sell the same in violation of law within the State, an action for the price cannot be maintained. These cases are decisive of the question at issue. There is no question of their correctness. The statute is explicit, and it is one which it was entirely competent for the legislature to enact.
The further contention is made that this statute is unconstitutional, or was prior to the act of Congress, approved August 8th, 1890, making interstate commerce relating to intoxicating liquors subject to the police powers of the several states, because in violation of that clause of the Federal Constitution which gives Congress the power to regulate commerce between the states. The case of Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100, is relied upon in support of this proposition. We think that there is no principle decided in that case which has any bearing upon the question under consideration. If the purchaser had bought the liquors with the intention of selling them in this State in the original packages, it would not, at that time, have been an intention to violate the law. Leisy v. Hardin, supra; State v. Burns, 82 Maine, 558, and consequently not within the terms of the statute; but in this case, as we have before said, we find that the liquors were bought with the intention of reselling them in this State in violation of law.
Judgment for the plaintiff in review for the amount of the former judgment for debts and costs, with interest thereon from the time of rendition of said judgment. Costs in the review will follow.