126 Ky. 279 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907
Opinion cf the Court by
Reversing.
Section 2572, Ky. St. 1903, is in these worts: “The person in possession of the premises on which liquor is sold, disposed of, obtained or furnished in violation or evason of law, by any trick or method whatever, on conviction, shall he fined not less than twenty nor more than one hundred dollars for each offense, and each time such liquor is sold, disposed of or furnished in violation or evasion of law, shall be deemed a separate offense under this act against the person in possession of the premises on which said liquor is obtained, furnished, or disposed of. ’ ’ The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company was indicted under this statute. The charge in the indictment is that it unlawfully, and knowingly suffered and permitted the Adams Express Company and its agent, Bill Sams, to sell to Robert Ridings from its depot and office in
The facts shown on the trial' are as follows: William Sams was the agent of the railroad company and also of the express company at Pittsburg, in Laurel county. lie delivered to Robert Ridings a box containing four quarts of whisky, for which he received $3.80. Ridings had not ordered this whisky. He got it from William Sams the agent. His testimony is as follows: Q. What amount of money did you pay him? A. Three dollars and eighty cents. Q. How did you happen to know the whisky was there? A. Why the boxes would just come there in my name, and I would go and get them and pay for them. Q. Did you order this box of whisky that you speak of? A. No, sir. Q. Did you know that it was going to be shipped there to you? A. No, sir; just when one would come in my name I would go and get it and pay for it.” On cross-examination he testified as follows: “Q. Do you know how the party who shipped this whisky to you — do you know how he happened to-find out there was such a fellow as you? A. I heard there was fellows going through there and getting names of fellows, and shipping whisky to them. Q. Did you ever find a package there that you did not take out? A. He might have sent some back. Q. How was this put up, Mr. Ridings ? A. In a square box. I believe it said ‘Glass’ on the box. Q. Is that all it said? A. I don’t-remember anything else. Q. Your name was on it? A. Yes, sir; my name was on it. Q. And your
Pittsburg in Laurel county is a mining town of several hundred inhabitants, and, while the proof in the case is not as full as in the case of Adams Express Company v. Commonwealth, 124 Ky. 182, 92 S. W. 932, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 630, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 224, the proof indicates much the same manner of doing business. In Adams Express Company v. Commonwealth, 87 S. W. 1111, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 1096, it was held by this court that whisky was s.old where it was delivered and paid for, though it was shipped C. O. D., if there was no order for the whisky and the consignor shipped the whisky to the consignee without his knowledge. But on appeal to the United States Supreme Court of that ease it was held that the indictment was not a charge of selling the whisky, and that the
But the railroad company cannot be fined under the statute for suffering the express company to do what the law authorized it to do. If the express company was authorized by law to deliver the whisky and collect the money for it, then section 2572, Ky. St.
The instructions of the court were not in accord with the principles laid down by the United States Supreme Court, and, as this was an interstate shipment, the rules announced by that court must control.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new* trial.