104 So. 304 | La. | 1925
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *500 The information charged that on or about December 10, 1924, defendant "did unlawfully sell and dispose of intoxicating liquor for beverage purposes."
Defendant thereupon asked for the following particulars, to wit: (1) The kind and the amount of liquors sold; (2) the time when the sale took place; (3) the person to whom the sale was made; and (4) the place where the liquor was sold.
On this the trial judge ruled (1) that defendant was entitled to be informed of the kind of liquor sold, but not of the amount; (2) that the state would be restricted in its proof to the date set forth in the information, but would not be confined to any precise hour of that day; (3) that the state would not be compelled to name the person to whom the sale was made; nor (4) the precise place where the liquor was sold. And, accordingly, the state furnished the particulars ordered by the court, but none other, and defendant thereupon reserved his bill of exception.
But the amount of liquor sold can have no such bearing on the case, since "the quantity of the intoxicating liquor manufactured [or sold, or possessed] is not an element of the offense of manufacturing [or selling, or possessing] intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes." State v. Pete,
But the hour at which intoxicating liquor is sold has no more bearing on the offense of selling intoxicating liquor than has the hour at which such liquor is possessed upon the offense of possessing intoxicating liquor. Hence we think the state was not required to set forth in detail whether the sale took place in the daytime, or in the night, or to specify the particular hour at *502
which said sale took place. State v. De Arman,
But it is equally obvious that, by accounting for his whereabouts during the said 24 hours, the alibi, if truthful, will suffice for a defense, regardless of where the sale be *503
said to have taken place. Hence, for the purpose of such alibi, the defendant has no need to be informed of the place where the sale is alleged to have been made, since his presence at any given place or places is a complete alibi as to all other places at the time. And, since the precise place where the intoxicating liquor is sold is not an element of the offense of selling intoxicating liquor for beverage purposes, it follows that the defendant is not entitled to be informed of the place. State v. Burkhalter,
In this respect State v. Rollins,
Concurrence Opinion
I subscribe to the decree in this case because the bills of exception do not disclose that the defendant was denied any substantial right or defense by the district attorney's refusal to inform him of the name or identity of the alleged purchaser, or the hour of the alleged sale, of the intoxicating liquor. But I do not concur in the opinion that the only purpose of giving particulars or details in an indictment or bill of information is to enable the defendant to demur if the indictment or bill of information does not set forth a crime. The purpose of the indictment or information is to give the accused party all fair and reasonable means of defending himself; for that is vouchsafed by the Constitution (article 1, section 10), viz.:
"In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation against him."
In some instances it might not be important, and in other instances it might be very important, for the defendant to be informed of the hour or the place of an alleged offense on his part, or to be informed of the name or identity of the party with whom or upon whom the offense is alleged to have been committed. There is no rule with regard to the proving of an alibi, for a day, but not for an hour, and I am averse to the suggestion of having such rule.