107 Ala. 76 | Ala. | 1894
The indictment in this case charges that
1st. The indictment charges, in the disjunctive, two or more offenses, and the verdict of the jury is a general finding of guilty as charged in the indictment.
2nd. The verdict fails to show what offense the jury found the defendant guilty of.
• 3rd. The verdict is insufficient to uphold a judgment of conviction in this : the finding of the jury is general— guilty as charged in the indictment — without specifying which offense they found him guilty of, while the indictment charges more than one offense, the punishments of which are different.
The court overruled the motion, and its ruling is assigned as error.
Section 629, subdiv. 3, Code of 1886, provides that the State license for retailing spirituous, vinous or malt liquors in any city, town, village, or any other place of less than one thousand inhabitants, shall be one hundred and twenty-five dollars; but that dealers in lager beer, exclusively, shall be charged one-fourth of the above rates.
Section 3892 of the Code, 1886, provides that any person who, after the 15th day of January in any year, engages in, or carries on any business for which a license is required, without having taken out such license, must, on conviction be fined three times the amount of the State license. The fine then for engaging in or carrying on the business of a retail dealer in vinous, spirituous or malt liquors, otherwise than as a dealer in lager beer exclusively, is fixed at three hundred and seventy-five dollars (three times State license), while the fine for dealing in lager beer, exclusively, is fixed at one hundred and twenty-five dollars (three times State license). The verdict 'shows then with sufficient certainty the offense of which the jury found the defendant guilty.—Davis v. State, 52 Ala. 357. Malt liquor is a
The only other question, raised for the first time in this court, is on the organization of the grand jury. It appears from the record that Anderson J. Job was drawn and summoned as a grand juror, and Andrew J. Job was empanelled as a grand juror, and participated in the finding of the indictment. Section 4445, Code of 1886, provides that no objection can he taken to an indictment, by plea in abatement, or otherwise, on the ground that miv member of the grand jury was not legally qualified, or that- the grand jurors were not legally drawn or summoned, or on any ground going to the formation of the grand jury, (except that the jurors were not drawn in the presence of the officers designated by law. See also section 4446. See case's cited in note to section 4445; also 89 Ala. 40 ; 82 Ala. 68 ; 83 Ala. 9.
Affirmed.