State v. Kartz

13 R.I. 528 | R.I. | 1882

This is a complaint for the violation of Public Laws R.I. cap. 889, § 23, of April 29, 1881, as follows: "Every person who shall keep a place in which it is reputed that intoxicating liquors are kept for sale, without having a license therefore, except as provided in section 56 of this *530 chapter, shall be fined not more than twenty dollars, or imprisoned not more than thirty days, or both." The case has been certified from the Justice Court of Westerly, under Gen. Stat. R.I. cap. 209, on the question whether the section is constitutional. The question is, Can a man be constitutionally fined or imprisoned for keeping a place which has the reputation of being used for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors simply because it has the reputation? Can he be so fined or imprisoned merely because it is the talk and belief of other people that he keeps such a place? If he can, then it follows that, without any criminal misconduct, he can be punished because others, over whom he has no control, impute such misconduct to him or believe it of him. For instance, a place which has once been used for the sale of intoxicating liquors and acquired the reputation of being so used, will be very likely to retain the reputation after it has ceased to be so used, and even after it has passed to a new owner. Again, a place where intoxicating liquors are freely used may easily get the reputation of being a place where they are sold. Or the reputation may originate in malice, mischief, mistake, or irresponsible rumor. The rapidity with which such a reputation, once set agoing, gathers vigor and volume, is proverbial.

"Mobilitate viget viresque adquirit eundo."1

In the cases above supposed, the owner or keeper of the place, reputed to be a place used for the sale of intoxicating liquors, will be innocent of so using it, and may even be ignorant that the reputation exists, and yet he will be utterly powerless to protect himself from punishment, for he he can only prove that his place is not in fact so used, which will avail him nothing, since it is not the fact but the reputation which makes him a criminal. We are of the opinion that any law which is justly obnoxious to such a characterization is so repugnant to the fundamental rules of our jurisprudence, and so utterly at variance with the general spirit and principles of the Constitution in regard to the rights of property and personal freedom, that it must be held to be unconstitutional, *531 even though no particular provision can be pointed out the literal terms of which it violates. To introduce into the law the principle that a person can be punished for what other people say about him is to render all the constitutional safeguards of life, liberty, and property unavailing for his protection; for it is impossible to say to what purposes so pernicious a principle may not be applied if it is once permitted to take root. But if some particular clause which the law violates must needs be pointed out, then we are of the opinion that to fine or imprison a person for such cause is to deprive him of his property or liberty without due process of law, and consequently that the law violates the tenth section of the first article of the Constitution.

Our attention has been directed to certain decisions of the Supreme Court of Connecticut in which a similar statute of that State has been pronounced constitutional. State v. Thomas,47 Conn. 546; State v. Morgan, 40 Conn. 44; State v. Buckleyet al. 40 Conn. 246. The Connecticut statute, however, though essentially the same as ours in terms, has been construed to be different in meaning. The Supreme Court of Connecticut hold that the word reputed means more than simply reputed, to wit: truly reputed, so that a person is not punishable for keeping a place which is reputed to be used for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors unless it is in fact so used. We do not think the statute so construed would be unconstitutional if carried out as construed; but in order to carry it out so, it would be incumbent on the government to charge the accused with keeping a placetruly reputed to be used for the sale of intoxicating liquors, and to prove, in support of the charge, both that the place was reputed to be so used and that it was so used in fact. Of course the statute so construed and carried out would not differ in effect from the ordinary statutes. The Supreme Court of Connecticut, however, do not so carry out their construction, but hold that it is enough for the government, in the outset, to prove the reputation, leaving the accused to prove if he can its falsity. In The State v. Thomas the court say "the crime consists in the character of the place, and its reputation, unexplained and uncontradicted, is taken as conclusive evidence of its character as a place where intoxicating liquors are infact sold." Under this construction *532 the reputation, instead of being the offence, is converted intoprima facie proof of the offence, and the statute becomes in effect not distinguishable from the statute which was condemned as unconstitutional in State v. Beswick, ante, p. 211. The court, moreover, do not tell us how, if the offence consists in the fact and not in the reputation, the complaint in State v.Thomas, which simply charged the reputation, could be upheld consistently with the constitutional provision which secures to the accused the right "to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation."

We do not, as is apparent, adopt the Connecticut construction. The statute is plain, simple, unambiguous. If it means what it says, it means that any person who "keeps a place in which it is reputed that intoxicating liquors are kept for sale," c., shall be punished for it. We do not see, therefore, how under the statute, if it were valid, a court could refuse to convict on proof of the reputation, unless the reputation were shown to have been manufactured for the purposes of conviction, and so were a fraud upon the law. We certainly do not see how it could refuse to convict simply on proof that the reputation did not correspond with the fact, for that would be to make fact and not reputation the criminal element.

The cause will therefore be remitted to the Justice Court of Westerly, with directions to proceed no further against the respondent, and to dismiss the complaint.

Order accordingly.

1 Fama, malum qua non aliud velocius ullum, Mobilitate viget viresque adquirit eundo.

Virg. Aeneid. iv. 174.