67 Iowa 27 | Iowa | 1885
One proposition involved in this instruction is that if the owner or proprietor of the building or place is engaged in the business of selling intoxicating liquors contrary to law, or keeping them with intent to so sell them, he is criminally liable for the unlawful acts of his servant or agent done in the course of the business. The soundness of this proposition cannot be doubted. But an unlawful sale of intoxicating liquors may be made by an agent or servant when such liquors are’ kept by the principal only for lawful purposes. This wmuld be the case where the principal held a permit to sell for medicinal, mechanical, culinary and sacramental purposes, and kept the liquors with intent that they should be sold only for those purposes, and his agent or clerk should, without his knowledge or authority, make sales of such liquors for other purposes. Under the evidence in this case, the jury might have found that very state of facts, and the instruction, we think, authorized them to convict the defendant on proof of that state of facts.
The question, then, is whether defendant, if he kept the liquors with intent that they should be sold only for lawful purposes, and himself made only lawful sales of such liquors, is'criminally liable on account, of unlawful sales thereof by his clerk. The offense’ of which defendant is accused is defined by section 1543 of the Code, which is as follows: “ In cases of the violation of the provisions of the three preceding sections, or of section 1525, of this chapter, the building or erection of whatever kind, or the ground itself, in or upon which such .unlawful manufacture or sale, or keeping with intent to sell, of intoxicating liquors is carried on or continued or exists, is hereby declared a nuisance, and may
It will be observed that the first provision of section 1543, quoted above, defines the conditions or circumstances which will render the building or place a nuisance and subject it to abatement, and that the following provision points out the particular acts which will subject the person committing them to the punishment prescribed by law for the crime of nuisance. The building or erection is rendered a nuisance by the act of keeping intoxicating liquors in it, with intent to sell the same contrary to law, or by the unlawful sale there of such liquors. And it is not doubted that it may be rendered a nuisance by the unauthorized act of the agent or servant of the proprietor or owner in selling intoxicating liquors in it contrary to law, when the motives and intentions of the proprietor are all lawful. But by the other provision the owner or proprietor is subjected to the punishment prescribed by law for the crime of nuisance, when he uses or occupies the building or place “ for any of the purposes prohibited in said sections;’1 that is, he is guilty of the offenses if he uses or occupies the place for the purpose of keeping
We think, therefore, that the instruction is erroneous, and the judgment is accordingly
Reversed.