70 P. 385 | Or. | 1902
delivered the opinion.
An information having been filed against the defendant, James Gulley, charging him with the crime of selling intoxicating liquor to a minor, he entered a plea of not guilty, and, a trial being had, the court, over his exception, charged the jury, in effect, that guilty knowledge by the defendant in respect to the minority of the person to whom the intoxicating liquor was sold is not an element of the crime; that the defendant’s ignorance of the fact of such person being a minor is no defense; and that, if they should find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant sold intoxicating liquor to a person who, at the time, was not twenty-one years old, they should find the defendant guilty as charged. An exception was also taken to the court’s refusal to give the following instruction: “I instruct you in this case that if you find from the evidence that the defendant, in making sale of the liquor to the minor, as charged in the information, had no knowledge of such person being a minor, and that after the exercise of proper caution, and acting in the reasonable belief that the purchaser was of full and lawful age at the time of such sale, and made such sale as charged, although said person was in fact a minor, you have a right to take these facts into consideration, and, if you should so find, your verdict should be for the defendant. If you should find from the evidence that at the alleged sale of the liquor as charged in the information the defendant honestly believed from the appearance of the minor and his answers to questions touching this subject that he, the said minor, was of full and lawful age, and that the defendant, under all the circumstances, used reasonable and due diligence,
Whichever may be the better rule, we think this court is committed to the doctrine that the vendor’s belief, however honestly entertained, that a purchaser of intoxicating liquor is of lawful age, constitutes no defense to a violation of the statute prohibiting such sales to minors. Thus, in State v. Chastian, 19 Or. 176 (23 Pac. 963), it was held that statutes prohibiting the sale of liquors without first having obtained a license therefor are in their nature fiscal and police regulations, and make their violation indictable, irrespective of guilty knowledge. In that case the defendant, as a bartender, employed by one Scott, sold intoxicating liquor, honestly believing that his principal had secured a license to conduct the business, and in reaching the conclusion announced Mr. Justice Lord, speaking of the defendant, says: “Standing in the place of his principal, the barkeeper is bound to know, to ex
It is insisted by defendant’s counsel, in his argument, that the decisions in these cases are not controlling, because, in the first instance, an examination of the records of the county court would have disclosed that no license to sell intoxicating liquor had been issued, and, in the second case, an inspection of the sheep would have demonstrated that they were infected with scab. The latter case is not exactly parallel with the one at bar, so far as the appearance of the applicant for intoxicating liquor is concerned, for the immediate transition of a person from minority to majority is not so distinctly'marked