The defendant was indicted for selling spirituous liquor to a slave contrary to the statute in such case made and provided. The alleged offense was found to have been committed on the 10th day of October, 1855, at a time when the testimony, which the State was able to produce, was not sufficient, in law, to justify a conviction. The 90th section of the 84th chapter of the Revised Code, which was enacted at the session of the General Assembly held in 1854, but was not to go into operation until the first day of January, 1856, provides as follows: “ Every species of unlawful trading with a slave, which is forbidden by this chapter, shall, when done by the agent or manager of another in the course of the business in which he is employed, be deemed to have been done by the consent and command of his principal or employer, unless the contrary be proved,” &c. Upon the finding of the facts set forth in the special verdict, the Attorney General contends that by the effect given to the evidence by this section, the guilt of the defendant is clearly established, while it is insisted for the defendant that, as to him, the enactment is an
ex post facto
law, and therefore void, both by the 24th section of our Bill of Rights, and by 10th section of the 1st Article of the Constitution of the United States. We. are entirely satisfied that the objection taken by the defendant’s counsel is valid, and that if the section of the 34th chapter of the Revised Code to wlijch we have referred, were intended to operate upon cases liké the present, (which may well be doubted,) it is an
ex post facto
la\v within the meaning of the Constitution. "What such a law is, we are not left now to ascertain. In the early case of
Calder
v.
Bull,
Pisk CukiaM. Judgment affirmed.
