State v. Freeman

27 Iowa 333 | Iowa | 1869

Cole, J.

l. criminal venue. I. The question presented by an application for a change of venue in a criminal case is one intrusted, by our statute, to the District Court in the exercise of a sound discretion, when fully advised, etc. Rev. § 4733. And, as was held in the case of The State v. Ingalls (17 Iowa, 8), and cases there cited, we cannot interfere with the discretion vested in the court below, unless it is shown to have been improperly exercised. There is nothing appearing in this ease, except the affidavit of the defendant himself, “that, owing to the prejudice of the judge against him, he cannot, as lie verily believes, receive a fair trial.” This, the judge, “when fully advised,” denied by overruling the motion. We cannot say, upon this alone, that the court improperly exercised its discretion. There must be something more, in the nature of facts and corroborating circumstances, and supporting affidavits, to justify the interposition of an appellate tribunal in such cases.

*336s. liquors : indictment for nuisance. * II. Notwithstanding the marked skill and acumen manifested by appellant’s counsel in the argument to show the of the indictment, we yet feel constrained to hold that it is good. The charging part of the indictment, in plain language, is this: that Peter Freeman, on the first day of January, 1866, in Johnson county, did use and keep a room and place for the purpose of selling therein, and did then and there sell, intoxicating liquors in violation of section 1562 of the Revision.

By section 1561 of the Revision, the manufacture of intoxicating liquors in this State is prohibited; by section 1562 the sale of them is prohibited, and by section 1563 the owning or keeping with intent to sell is also prohibited. Then follows section 1561, under which this indictment was framed; which declares that, in cases of a violation of either of the three preceding sections, the building in which such unlawful manufacture, sale, or keeping for sale, is carried on is a nuisance, and may be abated as such; and, in addition to the penalties prescribed by them, whoever shall use any building, etc., for any of the purposes prohibited in said sections, shall be deemed guilty of a nuisance, and may be prosecuted and punished accordingly, in the manner provided by law.

This indictment is “for keeping a nuisance;” and it describes the offense thus named and defined in section 1561, as having been committed by using and keeping a room and place for the purpose of selling mid by selling therein intoxicating liquors in violation of section 1562. The indictment is not for a simple sale, or manufacture, or keeping with intent to sell, as prohibited by the three preceding sections, but for keeping a room <md place in which to sell and selling therein. It seems to us that the offense is charged “in such a manner as to enable a per*337son of common understanding to know what is intended,” and this, by our statute, is sufficient. Rev. § 4659.

3 _quantum of proof. III. The proof showed the sale of whisky to various persons by the clerks of the defendant, and once by him, in the defendant’s cellar; it was drawn from a parrei and drank there, hut defendant did not keep a saloon, nor was it shown that his cellar was a place of public resort for drinking.

The court instructed the jury, among other things, that such sale was presumptive evidence of defendant’s guilt, and, unless rebutted, was conclusive, and required a verdict accordingly, and refused to instruct them that occasional sales, without testimony that the place was notoriously or publicly known as a place for the sale of liquors, was not sufficient to convict.

There was no error in this action of the court. Section 1564 provides that proof of the sale in violation of the act shall be deemed sufficient as presumptive evidence of the offense provided for in this section ; and besides, upon general principles, a violator of the law cannot escape its penalties by committing the offense secretly instead of notoriously and publicly.

4 reducUoneof: punishment. IV. The defendant was fined $500, and we are asked to reduce this penalty. Section 4925 of the Revision provides that the Supreme Court “ may reduce the punishment, but cannot increase it.” This p0wer reduce the punishment should only be exercised in cases where the court below has manifestly visited too severe a penalty, one disproportioned to the degree of guilt, as shown by the proof, and this because the court trying the cause and having the witnesses before it, together with all the circumstances attending the case (very many of which can never be presented to an appellate court), is thereby the better qualified to properly measure the merited punishment.

*338In this case we have not all the evidence before us, but only ah abstract or the substance of it. Under such circumstances we cannot properly interfere, even though the penalty may seem, as it does in this case, to some of the members of the court, to be on the very limit of propriety.

Affirmed.