107 Ind. 152 | Ind. | 1886
Section 2093, B. S. 1881, provides that “Whoever, directly or indirectly, sells, barters, or gives away any spirituous, vinous, malt, or other intoxicating liquor to any person who is in the habit of being intoxicated, after notice-shall have been given him, in writing, by any citizen of the-township or ward wherein such person resides, that such person is in the habit of being intoxicated, shall be fined,” etc.
The appellant was prosecuted and convicted for a violation of this statute. The affidavit and information charged that John Miller, on a day named, sold intoxicating liquor to one John Stevenson, “ who was then and thére a person in the-habit of being intoxicated, and after notice in writing had been given him, the said John Miller, by Fannie Stevenson, who was then and there a citizen of the township in which-he lived, to wit, Troy township, in said county, that said John Stevenson was then and there a person in the habit of being intoxicated.”
The objection to the affidavit and information is, that ac
The statute contemplates that the notice in writing shall be given by a citizen of the township or ward wherein the person who is in the habit of being intoxicated resides. Engle v. State, 97 Ind. 122.
In the case of Steeple v. Downing, 60 Ind. 478, this statement is found: “ There is no rule of legal or grammatical construction, which necessarily -requires that a pronoun shall relate to the last noun, or nouns, mentioned for its antecedent. This is a matter which is governed by the sense and meaning intended to be conveyed.” Applying this rule to the construction of the language quoted, it is fairly evident that “he” refers to John Stevenson. State v. Hedge, 6 Ind. 330. The motion to quash the affidavit and information was properly overruled.
A bill of exceptions, purporting to contain all the evidence given in the case, is set out in the record. On two material points there is an entire failure in the evidence as it appears in the record to sustain the finding of the court. There is not a syllable of testimony tending to prove that John Stevenson was a pei’son who was in the habit of being intoxicated. No evidence was given on that subject. It was admitted of record that notice in writing had been given the appellant, prior to the date of the alleged sale, by the wife of Stevenson, that he was in the habit of being intoxicated, but to sustain a conviction some proof of the fact that he was so habituated must have been made. In this regard the proof fails wholly. The other point upon which proof is entirely lacking is this: There is a total absence of evidence to show that the appellant at any time, either directly or indirectly, sold, bartered or gave to Stevenson any intoxicating or other
Judgment reversed.