11 Haw. 18 | Haw. | 1897
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an appeal on points of law from a decision of the District Magistrate of Wailnkn, Mani, finding defendant guilty of the offense of selling spirituous liquors without a license at Lahaina, Maui. The gist of the points relied on is that there is no evidence of a sale at Lahaina. The contention is that the evidence shows a sale at Honolulu, Oahu, only.
The facts are substantially as follows: The defendant was an agent and keeper of a store at Lahaina for II. Hackfeld & Co., of Honolulu. One Shimisaki was a clerk in the store at Lahaina, under the defendant and subject to his orders. One Shimbo ordered a tub of saki through Shimisaki. He did not know where Shimisaki was to get it. Shimisaki wrote for the saki. A tub of saki arrived a few days later from Honolulu on a vessel of the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company, common carriers, and the defendant received from H.. Hackfeld & Co. a shipping receipt, the material portion of which reads as follows: “Received of H. Hackfeld & Co., in ap
The question is not, did the sale take place at Lahaina, but was there sufficient evidence to support a finding that the sale took place there? In other words, could the magistrate, in passing upon the facts as a jury would, find upon any reasonable view of the evidence that the sale took place at Lahaina? Defendant contends that the setting apart or appropriation of a particular tub of saki for the purchaser and the delivery thereof to the common carrier at Honolulu was a delivery to the purchaser and that thereupon the title or property or jus disponen di passed from the seller to the purchaser, thus completing the sale at Honolulu, subject only to the right of stoppage in transitu, and cites a number of cases, which, with other cases, may be found cited in 11 Am. & Eng. Enc. of
In Merchant’s National Bank v. Bangs, 102 Mass. 291, the court held that under circumstances somewhat similar to those involved in the case at bar, the question whether the property passed at the time of shipment, was a question for the jury, and that the trial court erred in holding as matter of law that the property had not passed. We are of the opinion that, in view of the evidence in this case, however correct may be the law relied on by the defendant, the decision of the District Magistrate cannot be reversed as unsupported by the evidence. It will be unnecessary to discuss The King v. Gaspar, 8 Haw. 233, and The Queen v. San Tana, 9 Haw. 106, referred to by counsel.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.