88 S.E. 343 | N.C. | 1916
This is an action by the plaintiffs, wholesale liquor dealers in Cincinnati, Ohio, to recover of defendants in Raleigh, N.C. the price of a large quantity of whiskey sold and shipped to them during 1913 and 1914. The defendants' defense is that the whiskey was sold and delivered with the knowledge that it would be resold in North Carolina in violation of the criminal law of the State.
The issues submitted were in the same language as those submitted inBluthenthal v. Kennedy,
The whole matter has been so fully and so recently discussed in the cases above cited that it is unnecessary to repeat what is said therein.
It is true that the defendants have a license to sell intoxicating liquor, issued by the United States Internal Revenue Department, but that is no protection against the State law prohibiting the sale of whiskey, and amounts to no more than a receipt given the defendants that they have paid the taxes required by the Federal Government. It is also true that the defendants hold a license from the sheriff to sell intoxicating liquors, *267
but as fully set out in Smith v. Express Co., supra, the license does not authorize "the delivery of intoxicating liquors for the purposes of sale when it does not comply with the requirements of Revisal, 2063, 2064, and 2066. And such license is therefore void." That case was decided even prior to our decision in Glenn v. Express Co.,
The judge properly told the jury that if they responded "Yes" (216) to the third issue, above set out, to answer the issue as to indebtedness "No."
This was the last case tried at that term of court, and the verdict was rendered on Saturday and recorded. At the next term, which began on the following Monday, the judgment on the verdict was signed and entered nuncpro tunc. This was entirely regular. Ferrell v. Hales,
In Aladdin's tower Some unfinished window unfinished must remain.
"Not so in legal proceedings, which deal with matters of fact, not fancy. The judge, at the next term, seeing the record complete up to and including the verdict, properly rendered judgment nunc pro tunc. This was practical common sense, and is justified by precedent. Bright v. Sugg,
No error.
Cited: McDonald v. Howe,