54 Barb. 311 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1863
By the Court,
The duties devolved upon commissioners of excise by the “ act to suppress intemperance and to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors,” (Laws of 1857, ch. 628,) call for the exercise of discretion and judgment, and are, to some extent, discretionary and
W An indictment for willfully and corruptly granting a' license to a person to sell spirituous liquors as an innkeeper, the commissioners knowing that the applicant was not a man of good moral character, nor a person of sufficient ability to keep a tavern, was sustained, on demurrer, in The People v. Norton, (7 Barb. 477,) and the reasoning of Judge Willard is entirely conclusive. And see, to the same effect, The State v. McDonald, (4 Harr. 555,) and Russell on Crimes, 116. The act of 1857 (supra, § 6) absolutely prohibits the granting of a license to any person to sell strong and spirituous liquors to be drank on his premises, “ unless such person proposes to keep an inn, tavern or-hotel, and unless the commissioners are satisfied that the applicant is of good moral character; that he has sufficient ability to keep an inn, tavern or hotel, and- the necessary accommodations to entertain travelers, at the place where such applicant resides or proposes to keep the same.” And the same statute (§ 8) requires every keeper of an inn, tavern or hotel in a city to keep at least three spare beds, and the necessary bedding, for the accommodation of travelers.”' The terms “inn, tavern or /hotel,” mentioned in the statute, are used synonymously, to designate what is ordinarily and popularly known as an inn or tavern, or place for the entertainment of travelers, and where all their wants can be supplied. The words “inn or tavern” were so used in the prior corresponding enactments. (1 R. S. 679, § 10. Overseers of the Poor of Crown Point v. Warner, 3 Hill, 150.) A “hotel” is an inn or house for entertaining strangers'or travelers. An “inn” ■ is a house for the lodging and entertainment of travelers.
It is very evident that the place of Allen was not an inn, tavern or hotel, and could not have been connected with one, and that he had not the ability at that place to keep a tavern with the necessary accommodations for travelers, or in any way to comply with the statute; and there is no pretense that he proposed, or that it was expected, to use his license at any other, place. It is equally evident that a tavern was not required for the accommodation of travelers, at that place; and that the license was not wanted- for the convenience of a house of entertainment for travelers. But it by no means follows" that because the place wás an unfit place for a tavern, or the license was improvidently or improperly granted, the defendants were necessarily guilty of a criminal offense in granting the license. To constitute an offense the license must have been granted with full knowledge of the facts, and willfully. (See King v. Holland, supra.) The offense consists in the motive and intent with which the act was done. The mere granting of a license which a court or jury might say ought not to have been granted, is not an offense; but the jury must he able to say, from the evidence, that the commissioners,
For this error in the charge the conviction' must be reversed, and a venire de nova awarded to the sessions of Oneida county.
Allen, Muffin, Morgan and Bacon, Justices.]