The appellant was indicted in the Howell circuit court of selling intoxicating liquors to one Charles Compton, in violation of the dramshop act of 1891. The venue was changed to Shannon county on the application of appellant, where at the September, 1895, term a trial was had, resulting in the conviction of appellant, who after an unsuccessful motion for new trial, brings the case here by appeal.
The charging clause of the indictment is substantially that Besheer on the twentieth day of April, 1895, in the county of Howell, sold intoxicating liquor, to wit, one pint of beer to Charles Compton, without having a dramshop keeper’s license, or any authority so to do. The witness, Compton, testified that about the second day of April, 1895, he got a pint of beer from Besheer at Willow Springs, in Howell county, and he “guessed he paid him a nickel for it.” The other witness testified that Besheer kept an open saloon in Willow Springs at that time. The appellant offered and read in evidence a dramshop keeper’s license issued to himself, and one I. S. McDonald, by order of the county court of Howell county, to keep a dramshop at lot 23, block 6, in the city of Willow Springs, beginning on February 8, 1895, and ending August 8, 1895, which contained this clause in parenthesis, “not delivered until April 15, 1895, for the
“I. If you believe from the evidence-, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, at any time between the eighth day of February and the fifteenth day of April, 1895, in Howell county, Missouri, did sell to Charles Compton any beer, in less quantity than three gallons, you should find him guilty and assess his fine at not less than $40 nor more than $200.”
“II. Although you might believe defendant sold beer, if he did so at a time covered by a license had in his possession, he would not be guilty.”
*75 “III. Defendant is presumed to be innocent of the offense charged and such presumption attends him until he is proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
In People v. Wheelock, 3 Park, 9, the supreme court of New York held, that the word “beer” in its ordinary sense, denotes a beverage which is intoxicating.
The Kansas City court of appeals in the case of State v. Heinze, 45 Mo. App. 403, held that section 4395, Revised Statutes, 1889, in effect defines beer to be intoxicating liquor. To the same effect is State v. Houts, 36 Mo. App. 265.
In the light of these authorities and in obedience to the legislative will, as interpreted by the Kansas City court of appeals in State v. Heinze, supra, we construe the word “beer” as used in the indictment, and instructions given in this case, to mean a fermented and intoxicating liquor. It follows from what has been said, that no error was committed by the trial