The indictment charges the defendant with the violation of the first section of ch. 133 of the revised statutes, by having been for a certain period a common seller of wine, brandy, rum and other strong liquors by retail, without being duly licensed. The question is, whether the charge is maintained by the evidence as reported. It appears that the defendant, dining the alleged period, was a duly licensed common victualler, though not innholder or retailer. The first section prohibits any person from being a common victualler, as well as a seller of spiritous liquors, without being licensed for the purpose. The fifth section declares that no innholder, victualler or retailer shall suffer any person to drink to drunkenness or excess in his or her house or shop, on pain of forfeiting five dollars for every offence of that kind. This section has reference to those persons of the above-mentioned descriptions who are duly licensed,: and by its language does not prohibit either an innholder, retailer or common victualler from supplying customers with any of the spiritous liquors described, in moderate quantities and under proper circumstances. This may be lawfully done, by a common victualler, allowing no improper indulgence to those wlio are supplied. By the report it appears, that the defendant kept a bar in his victualling cellar, where he sold therefrom, to bo there drunk, to such as he victualled, and to all other persons who might call (excepting they had already taken too much) spiritous liquors in small quantities, to be drunk by those who called for such. We cannot say that such supplies, thus furnished, amounted to a violation of the statute. As a licensed common victualler, he was authorized to furnish supplies of spiritous liquors, to a certain extent, to customers: what was allowed and done by him in his cellar, in this respect, was not a violation of the fifth section : and he did not presume to be a common seller of wine, brandy, rum and other spiritous liquors, within the true intent and meaning of the first section : but he was a limited seller of such liquors to those who frequented his victualling cellar, which was duly
Rogers, Attorney General.
Paries, for the defendant.
