118 N.E.2d 548 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1953
The defendant was convicted by the court, a jury having been waived, of violating Section 12960, General Code, in that he sold beer to a minor under 18 years of age. He was sentenced to imprisonment in the county jail for 60 days and to pay a fine of $150. This appeal is from that sentence.
The contention of the defendant is that proof of knowledge that he was selling to a minor under 18 years of age is an essential element of the crime and that there was no substantial evidence of such knowledge. *237
The language of Section 12960, General Code, is:
"Whoever sells * * * beer to a minor under the age of eighteen * * * shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than three hundred dollars, or imprisoned not more than six months in jail, or both."
It will thus be seen that the statute contains no express language making knowledge that the buyer was under 18 years of age an essential element. The question then is whether guilty knowledge, or, in the language of the common law, scienter, must be implied in order to make the statute conform to common-law conceptions. It is argued that it must, and, further, that the Supreme Court has so held in construing former statutes, of which the present is a re-enactment.
A consideration of this subject of the necessity of averment and proof of guilty knowledge in prosecutions for violations of statutes which contain no reference to intent or knowledge seems to have started with the case of Birney v. State,
"* * * it can not be assumed that an act which, independent of positive enactment, involves no moral wrong, nay, an act that in many cases would be highly praiseworthy, should be made grievously criminal, when performed in total unconsciousness of the facts that infect it with crime."
In Miller v. State,
"To convict for a violation of the 2d section, it is necessary to aver in the information, and prove on the trial, that the seller knew the buyer to be a minor; and to convict for a violation of the 3d section, it is necessary to aver and prove, in like manner, that the seller knew the buyer to be intoxicated, or in the habit of getting intoxicated. (Birney'scase, 8 O. R., 237.)"
However, in Aultfather v. State,
In Crabtree v. State,
In considering whether the General Assembly intended to require guilty knowledge as an element of a crime, the distinction between a fact susceptible of exact determination, such as age, and one that consists more of a matter of degree and opinion such as a habit of intoxication, is a matter of some importance. The burden placed upon the public of determining the limits of lawful conduct is not so great in the former as in the latter.
In State v. Kominis,
"It is almost universally held that when a statute makes an act an offense irrespective of guilty knowledge, then ignorance of fact, no matter how sincere, is no defense. There are annotated in 115 A. L. R., 1230, many authorities which hold that `in a prosecution for selling liquor to a minor, under a statute which forbids or makes unlawful such a sale, but does not expressly or by clear implication make ignorance of minority a defense, the seller's ignorance that the buyer was a minor,or bona fide belief that he was of legal age, is not available as a defense.'
"This is the general rule, and the Ohio statute forbidding sale of liquor to minors (Section 12960, General Code) does not make ignorance of minority a defense, and therefore a saloonkeeper or bartender in this state who sells liquor to a minor for his consumption violates the statute even though he may honestly believe the minor is of legal age."
That lack of knowledge is not a necessary element of a crime in Ohio unless made so by the statute defining the crime is shown by State v. Kelly,
"`Considering the nature of the offense, the purpose to be accomplished, the practical methods available for the enforcement of the law, and such other matters as throw light upon the meaning of the language, the question in interpreting a criminal statute is whether the intention of the Legislature was to make knowledge of the facts an essential element of the offense, or to put upon everyone the burden of finding out whether his contemplated act is prohibited, and of refraining from it if it is.'"
In view of the fact that Section 12960, General Code, is entirely silent as to knowledge of the minority of the buyer, we are inclined to hold in accord with these later authorities that lack of knowledge is neither an element of the crime nor a defense thereto.
The trial court found, as quoted in defendant's brief, that there was sufficient evidence that defendant did have knowledge that the buyer of the beer was under 18 years of age. It is earnestly contended that this conclusion is not supported by evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial court had the opportunity of seeing and hearing the witnesses and, of course, was in a better position to judge their credibility than is this court. We cannot say that the conclusion of the court is manifestly against the weight of the evidence.
For these reasons, the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
MATTHEWS, P. J., ROSS and HILDEBRANT, JJ., concur. *241