13 Wend. 341 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1835
By the Court,
The fifteenth section of that portion of the revised statutes, which treats “ Of excise and the regulation of taverns and groceries,” declares, that whoever shall sell any strong or spirituous liquors, or any wines, in any quantity less than five gallons at a time, without a license, shall forfeit $25. The sixteenth section imposes
Where a statute creates a new offence, by making that unlawful which was lawful before, and prescribes a particular penalty and mode of proceeding, that penalty alone can be enforced. The offence in such case is not indictable. But where the act was an offence at common law, acumulativo sanction may be imposed by statute ; and in such case, the common law punishment is not excluded—either or both may be enforced. . Cro. Jac. 644. 1 Salk. 45. 2 Burr, 803, per Lord Mansfield. ■ In this case, although a specific penalty is imposed for a violation of these section of the act, the legislature have thought proper to declare that such violations shall also be deemed misdemeanors, and be punishable by fine and imprisonment. They stand upon the same footing as though they had been misdemeanors at common law, and the statute had then, in addition, imposed a penalty. 1 Burr. 543.
It is undoubtedly competent for the legislature to subject any particular offence, both to a penalty and a criminal prosecution ; it is not punishing the same offence twice. They are but parts of one punishment; they both constitute ¿/tepunishment which the law inflicts upon the offence. That they are enforced in different modes of preceding, and at different times, does not affect the principle. It might as well be
Judgment affirmed.