The defendant was tried on an indictment for a violation of the 15th section of the title
It was decided by this court, in Nevin v. Ladue, (3 Denio, 43,) that ale was included in the terms strong or spirituous liquors as used in the statute, and a conviction founded simply on the defendant’s confession that he had sold ale, strong beer or fermented beer, without a license therefor, was affirmed. That case was subsequently taken to the court for the correction of errors. (3 Denio, 437,) where the judgment of this court was reversed, on the ground that the defendant’s confession was in the alternative, and did not prove that he had sold any thing stronger than common table beer. For that reason the majority of the members of'the court of dernier resort who delivered written opinions, declared that the question whether' ale or strong beer was within the prohibition of the excise law, did not arise in the case. Although, therefore, the opinions of the .late judges of this court, and of Chancellor Walworth, who concurred with them, are entitled to great respect, yet as they were expressed upon a question not necessarily involved in the case before the court, they have not the force of authority, and we are at liberty to adopt and follow our own conclusions.
Clearly, ale is not comprehended within the term wines, as it is generally understood and applied. That term includes
After all, perhaps the statute is its own best expositor. The words “ strong” and “ spirituous” are connected sometimes by the disjunctive, and at others by the copulative conjunction, but both are uniformly prefixed to the term liquors, without any
It was contended by the counsel for the people, however, that the provision in the 29th section of the statute relative to excise, that no person shall be subject to be prosecuted under that.act for selling metheglin, currant wine, cherry wine or cider, proved that the legislature intended to include other than spirituous liquors and wines in the regulations prescribed by the statute. Currant wine and cherry wine were undoubtedly included in the general term wines, and there was of course a sufficient reason for specially exempting them, if they were to be exempted at all. But the reason is certainly not so clear for excepting metheglin and cider, unless they had been previously included. The counsel for the defendant supposes that they were particularly excepted because spirituous, liquors are applied to a considerable extent for their preservation. Possibly that may have been the reason, but provisos and exceptions are frequently inserted in our statutes to prevent the extension of some general term beyond the intent of the legislature, pro majori cautela ; and it is
The design of a statute is often illustrative of the meaning of its phraseology. Clearly, in the instance under consideration it was to promote the cause of temperance, by regulating the sale of a portion of the intoxicating liquors in general use. The particular aim would naturally be to prevent the indiscriminate sale of those which were supposed to be the most detrimental. Spirituous liquors were the most dangerous, then wines, and lastly inferior fermented, including malt, liquors. The statutory regulation included all spirituous liquors,, and all wines except currant wine and cherry wine, which were deemed to be the weakest and the least prejudicial. The act allowed' the unrestricted sale of those two liquors, and also of cider and metheglin. All of those, as we have seen, are stronger than ale, and it seems to me that our legislature could never have designed to sanction the unrestricted sale of those different kinds of liquor, and at the same time to prohibit the free sale of that which was weaker and less prejudicial. That would have been absurd; and although our legislative bodies have sometimes made strange enactments, yet in matters of implication it is better to infer that they intended to act consistently.
In my opinion the conviction in the court below was wrong, and it must-be quashed.
Conviction quashed.
Brown, S. B. Strong and Rochwell, Justices.]