68 W. Va. 142 | W. Va. | 1910
The defendant, a licensed druggist in the Town of Philippi, was indicted and convicted for malting an unlawful sale of spirituous liquors, and the court, proceeding on the theory that it was a second conviction, adjudged him to pay a fine of $500, sentenced him to be confined in the county jail thirty days, and revoked his license. On writ of error granted, defendant assigns numerous grounds which he insists call for a reversal of the judgment, and a setting aside of the verdict. It is not necessary to take them up seriatim, because they are all so nearly related that the decision of two or three of the leading questions involved will dispose of all the rest.
It is assigned as error that defendant was compelled, over his protest, to produce evidence 'against himself. It appears that when the witness, George Barnes, a registered pharmacist who was engaged in the service of defendant, was testifying on behalf of the State, he was asked if he had access to the physicians’ prescriptions on 'which whiskey, and other spirituous liquors, had been sold within the,year next prior to the indictment, and
“Dr. Davis: Give Mr. Peoples one half pint of spirits of some kind for a pain in his side. Ele is suffering. Add ZSS of ginger to it. 12-12-09.” '
Did the court err in compelling defendant to produce the orders and prescriptions, to be used as evidence against him? Was this compelling defendants to produce evidence to convict himself, in violation of the privilege secured to him by section 5 of Article III of the Constitution of West Virginia, which says, that “no person in any criminal case shall be compelled to be a witness against himself?” It is well settled that the spirit of this fundamental law protects a person against compulsory production of any of his private papers and documents, which Avould tend to criminate him. 3 Wigmore on Evidence, sec. 2264; Lawson v. Boyden, 160 Ill. 613; Minters v. People, 139 Ill. 363; Logan v. Railroad Co., 132 Pa. St. 403; Boyd v. United States, 116 U. S. 616; Entick v. Carrington, 19 Plow. St. Tr. 1029; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, (16th Ed.) sec. 469; 1 Wharton on Evidence, secs. 533-4. But are the prescriptions of a physician, on which a druggist is authorized to sell intoxicating liquors, and which the statute requires him to file and preserve, his private papers, within the meaning of this constitutional safeguard? We hardly think so. They partake too much of the nature of public documents. They constitute the only authority
Section 7 of chapter 33, Code, reads in part as follows: “Every • such prescription and statement shall be filed and preserved by the druggist selling such liquors thereon, and the same shall be open and subject to the inspection of the prosecuting attorney of the county, or any member of a grand jury thereof, or the husband, wife, or any relative of the person to whom such liquors were sold; and any druggist or person in charge of such prescriptions and statements who shall wilfully fail or refuse to produce the- same, when demanded for inspection by any of the persons aforesaid, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not less than twenty nor more than one hundred dollars.” The very purpose of the statute is to enable the prosecuting attorney, and the other persons named, to ascertain -whether or not, the druggist is acting in .good faith and is complying with the law under which he is exercising a privilege, not a right; and shall we say that the prescriptions may be examined in order to discover whether the law has been violated, but can not be used as evidence to prove the violation if one is discovered ? . This would be a very unreasonable view to take, we think. The statute, by giving to the prosecuting attorney, the right to demand an inspection of the orders and prescriptions, necessarily carries with it the right to use them as evidence in the trial against the druggist for unlawful selling. They are, at least, quasi public records, or documents; and the fact that the druggist is permitted to'retain possession of them, subject to the right of inspection
The State of Missouri has a statute similar to our own, except that it expressly says the druggist shall produce the prescriptions “in court or before any grand jury, 'whenever thereto lawfully required.” A druggist in that state was indicted for refusing to produce before the grand jury, for their inspection, the prescriptions in his possession when he had been lawfully summoned to do so. A demurrer to the indictment was sustained by the lower court, on the ground that the statute was in violation of both the Constitution of Missouri and the Constitution Of the United States. But the Court of Appeals reversed the lower court, and held that the prescriptions of physicians filed with a druggist 'were not the druggist’s private papers and that the law requiring him to preserve them and produce them- in court was constitutional. State v. Davis, 108 Mo. 666 (32 Am. St. Rep. 640.)
In Bradshaw v. Murphy, 7 C. & P. (Eng.) 612, it was decided that “A vestry clerk who is called as a witness, cannot, on the ground that it may criminate himself, object to produce the vestry book, kept under the stat. 58 Geo. 3, c. 69, s. 2.” In People v. Coombs, 158 N. Y. 532, the court of appeals of New York held that the defendant, a coroner, who 'was indicted for making false and fictitious inquest papers for the purpose of being filed with the county clerk at some future time, and on which he had fraudulently received fees, could not shield himself from producing such papers upon his trial, on the ground that they would tend to criminate him. The court took the view that these were public records, and were intended to be used as such, and that a public officer can not be privileged to retain in a public office a fraudulent record, made for the purpose of concealing a fraudulent claim for fees.
The following cases, however, are more particularly in point. Under a statute in the State of Iowa, regulating the sale of intoxicating liquor by druggists, they are required to make verified monthly reports of the number of sales made by them, and file them with the county auditor; and it was held by the supreme court of that state, in the two cases of State v. Smith,
A statute of North Dakota requires a druggist to “keep a book wherein shall be recorded, daily, all sales of intoxicating liquors made by him or his employees, showing the name and residence of the purchaser, the kind and quantity of the liquors, sold, the purpose for which it was sold and the date of the sale.” This record is, by statute, open for the inspection of the public at all reasonable times during business hours, and any person so desiring may take memoranda, or copies thereof. It is also made a misdemeanor, for which a penalty is imposed, if a druggist fails to keep such a record, or refuses an inspection of it. In State v. Donovan, 10 N. D. 203, which was an action to abate a liquor nuisance kept and maintained by the defendant, it was held that the trial court did not err in requiring the defendant to produce the record of sales made by him, as evidence against himself upon the trial.
The fact that our statute makes the prescriptions subject to examination by a few persons only, instead of by the public generally, does not constitute them private papers 'within the meaning of the constitutional privilege. If they were, in fact, private in their nature, and within the spirit of the constitutional guaranty they could not lawfully be made subject to inspection by any one, without the consent of the druggist.
Another ease very much in point, is McElree v. Darlington, 187 Pa. St. 593. In that case the Chester County Guaranty, Trust and Savings Deposit Company, a corporation, authorized by its charter to receive money on deposit, advertised that it would pay five per centum on deposits. Mary A. Burnett deposited with it $1,300.00 on December 2, 1896. Within two months thereafter a bill in equity was filed against it by some of its creditors, stockholders and depositors, alleging its insolvency and praying for an injunction restraining it and its officers from disposing of its assets, and also praying for an investigation of its affairs, and for the appointment of a receiver. It answered-admitting its insolvency, and receivers were appointed on the 12th of February, 1897. A large number of the depositors, includ
We are of the opinion that the prescriptions of a physician, on which a druggist makes sales of intoxicating liquors, and' which he is required to file and ¡Dreserve, are not privileged documents within the constitutional guaranty against compulsory self incrimination; and that the'lower court did not err in requiring the defendant to produce them in court. The order for whiskey, dated 12-12-09, and signed E. PI. Stump, is not a physician’s prescription on which defendant could lawfully sell intoxicating liquors, and the filling of the order by defendant constituted an unlawful sale.
There is another reason why the court committed no error in overruling defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict, which is entirely independent of the reason above given. A sale, in fact, a number of sales of. intoxicating liquors were proven to have been made by defendant, by the testimony of the prosecuting attorney who says that defendant had, previous to the trial, shown him his orders and prescriptions, and admitted to him that every one of them represented a sale. He further says that defendant claimed that he was entitled -to have prescriptions substituted for some of the orders. This testimony is not dis-
It is not necessary for us to decide 'whether, or not, the court ^rred in allowing the prosecuting attorney to testify in reía
This brings us to a consideration of the court’s judgment rendered on the verdict. The severe judgment was rendered, pursuant to section 5 of chapter 32, Code, on the theory that defendant had been convicted of a second offense. The indictment, however, does not allege that defendant had been previously convicted of a like offense. But the court’s order contains the following recital, viz: “and it being made to appear to the Court that there was a former conviction of the defendant at a former day of this Court,” etc. But, how it was made to appear is not shown by the record. The judge certifies that the transcript contains “all the evidence adduced upon the trial;” and it contains no proof of a former conviction; neither can we see how a former conviction could have been properly proven, as there is no such allegation in the indictment; there is no pleading on which to base such proof, if it had been offered. The matter of a former conviction is an essential part of the indictment; it must be alleged and proven by the record, if not admitted by the defendants plea, in order to warrant a judgment' for a second conviction. The court could not take judicial notice of a former conviction, as was apparently done in this ease, even though such former conviction may have been had in the same court, and on a previous da.y of the term at which the present trial was had. Pickens v. Boom Co., 66 W. Va. 10; United State v. Bliss, 172 D. S. 326. Defendant was entitled to be informed by the indictment of the matter with which he
The following authorities and decisions hold that the indictment must allege the first conviction, before the added penalty can he imposed; some of them go so far as to hold that the second offence must he shown to have been committed after the first conviction, on the theory that if the first penalty does not work a reformation of conduct in the guilty party, and he thereafter commits a second offence, he should be then dealt with more severely. But it is unnecessary for us to decide whether it is necessary that the former conviction should have been had before the commission of the second offence, as this point does not arise in this case. We, therefore, simply hold that it was error for the court to take judicial notice of a former conviction,, and that, in order to admit proof of a former conviction, it must be alleged in the indictment. Rand v. Commonwealth, 9 Grat. 738; People v. Butler, 3 Cow. (N. Y.) 347; Maguire v. State, 47 Md. 485; 1 Bish. Crim. Law, sec. 961; Rex v. Allen, Russ. & R. 513; Reg. v. Page, 9 Car. & P. 756; Wilde v. Commonwealth, 43 Mass. 408; Plumbly v. Commonwealth, Id. 413; Commonwealth v. Welsh, 2 Va. Cases 57; Long v. State, 36 Tex. 6; Garvey v. Commonwealth, 8 Gray 382; Walters v. State, 3 Iowa 507; Smith v. Commonwealth, 14 S. & R. (Pa.) 69; Kane v. Commonwealth, 109 Pa. St. 541.
The judge should have rendered his judgment upon the verdict, as for a single offence. Section 5 of chapter 32, Code, (1906), fixes the penalty in such case at a fine of not less than fifty dollars nor more than two- hundred dollars. Because of the discretion with which the law vests the trial court in regard to the amount of the fine, we will not enter judgment upon the verdict, but 'will reverse the judgment, and remand- the case for the entering up of a proper judgment on the verdict, by the court below.
Reversed and Remanded.