63 So. 607 | La. | 1913
The accused was tried before the judge of the district court on the - day of May 1913, and convicted of selling whisky without a license, and sentenced by the court to pay a fine of $500, and to serve six months on the public works, and in default of payment to serve six months additional.
The accused relies for reversal on two bills of exceptions taken during the trial, and on an assignment of errors.
The contention of the accused is that his counsel had a right to submit the motion, and that it was the duty of the court to pass upon it, and, if he found no evidence produced by the state showing a sale of the intoxicants to have been made, then the defendant had the right to his discharge from further prosecution, and that his motion should have been sustained.
The district court held that, if the defendant had desired, he could have closed the case, and submitted it on the state’s evidence, but that this was not done.
The question is one of fact — whether the accused was or was not guilty.
This court will not review questions of fact.
There had been evidence submitted, and the judge determined that it was sufficient to justify him in refusing the motion.
We must decline to interfere with the court’s decision on this point. The question would be one for our consideration had there been no evidence at all introduced. It would then have fallen within the dicta in State v. Green, 111 La. 90, 35 South. 396; but it is not thinkable that a judge of one of the district courts of this state would undertake to convict an accused, although not the least evidence had been presented against him.
Learned counsel for the accused has submitted a number of decisions rendered in other jurisdictions, which are not persuasive at all in this .state, where the practice has always been different. We will not review the decisions submitted by learned counsel, for they are just as stated by them; but they are not pertinent in view of the fact that with us jurisprudence is different upon the subject from what it is in other jurisdictions.
To say the least, the statement of the trial judge leads to the conclusion that there was no evidence whatever justifying the application for a new trial.
The following authorities on the subject of the application for a new trial are in point: State v. Wilson, 114 La. 398, 38 South. 397; State v. Young, 107 La. 618, 31 South. 993.
New trials on the ground of newly discovered evidence are not favored and very seldom granted on appeal; it being the rule that the judge of the district court has special opportunity to judge of the merits of the application.
The trial judge, in his reasons for judgment, states that the sale took place at night between 8 and 9 o’clock at Cedar Grove, a suburb of Shreveport, thus showing, as stated in the brief of defendant’s counsel, that the crime was committed, if at all, in Shreveport, and not in the parish.
The district attorney urges: That the statement was inadvertently made by the trial judge. That Cedar Grove is not a suburb ' of Shreveport. That defendant’s place of business was at Cedar Grove, three or four miles from the limits of Shreveport.
That, at any rate, the point raised in the assignment of error is not shown by the record, and cannot be considered in an assignment of error which requires the error assigned to be apparent on the face of the record. State v. Major, 8 Rob. 553; State v. Adams, 8 Rob. 571; State v. Bob, 11 La. Ann. 192.
“An error of law, apparent on the face of the record” (897, O. P.), is the requirement.
Furthermore, the crime is sufficiently charged if the indictment sets forth that the defendant “did retail intoxicating liquor without first obtaining a license.” State v. Brown, 41 La. Ann. 771, 6 South. 638.
Act 66 of 1902 is analyzed in the brief, and compared with Act 83 of 1886. The title of the latter is:
“An act to amend and re-enact section 910 of the Revised Statutes.”
The penalty in Act 1886, No. 83, is a fine not less than §100, and in default of payment imprisonment for not less than 30 days nor more than four months.
Under this law the imprisonment was to be imposed only in the alternative; i. e., if the accused paid the fine, there was no imprisonment.
Act 66 of 1902 contains provisions authorizing the judge to impose a fine and in addition imprisonment.^ In ease of default, he shall be imprisoned for a term “within the discretion of the court,” or shall suffer fine and imprisonment as the court may deem proper.
The first alternative — punishment—is not a penalty for the crime, but a penalty for the failure to carry out the sentence of the. court by paying the fine.
As we read the statute, the last alternative follows the first, and the statute taken as a whole reads:
“Shall be fined, or shall suffer fine and imprisonment as the court may deem proper, and in default shall be imprisoned within the discretion of the court.”
There was no intention in the act of 1902 to lessen the penalty.
Annotators have found similarity between statutes to regulate tippling houses and those to regulate or prohibit the sale of intoxicants. Under Act 1818, p. 168, § 7, penalty was fine and imprisonment; also under Act 1855, No. 120, § 92. Act 83 of 1886. This last above cited act, amending section 910 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, added “imprisonment.”
Act 66 of 1902, amending both the acts of 1855 and 1886 and Revised Statutes, § 910, of 1870, twice mentioned imprisonment.
No good reason suggests itself under Act 66 of 1902 to hold that it was the intention to eliminate the repeated word “imprisonment.” With one exception found in Act 83 of 1886, the “imprisonment” has always been provided in all the acts.
A similar question is decided in State v.
For reasons stated,, the judgment is affirmed.