47 Me. 426 | Me. | 1859
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The defendant, after conviction, moves in arrest of judgment, because, as he alleges, the complaint on which he was tried does not set forth any offence against the statute. He avers that he may have done all the acts specified in the complaint, and not necessarily have violated any provision of the law; and that no man can be compelled to answer to a charge involving a criminal offence until the same is fully and formally set forth. The complaint is based upon the Act of 1858, c. 33, — “for the suppression of drinking-houses and tippling shops.” That statute contemplates several offences, and several distinct modes of proceeding against the offenders, and the liquor, which is the subject matter of the enactment. It is an offence to manufacture it, except under certain restrictions. It is an offence to sell it, unless as a duly appointed agent. It is an offence to deposit it, or have it in possession, with intent to sell it within this State in violation of law, or with intent that the same shall be so sold by any person, or to aid and assist any person in such sale.
The statute further provides that such liquor kept and deposited may be proceeded against in rem, and iipon due proof may be forfeited and confiscated.
It is important to observe that the statute, by section 12, and several sections next following, provides for a union of two prosecutions in one process, viz., a process in rem against the liquors, and a charge of an offence against the person in whose keeping they are found. The liquors must be libelled, and notice must be given to all persons to intervene by claim, if they see fit. The right to claim, or to con
But the charge in the original complaint of a personal nature, involving an accusation against the individual named, can only be made against the person who is declared to be the keeper or depositor, with the unlawful intent; and can only be sustained by proof that the liquors were found in his possession or deposit, and that he kept them with the unlawful intent named in the 12th section.
The two processes thus united seem to be, in many respects, distinct. The portion that relates to the forfeiture may be prosecuted to final judgment, although the person charged may be acquitted. The ground of forfeiture of the liquors is, that they are intended for unlawful sale in this State, by some person named or not named, known or unknown. If there is sufficient evidence that the liquors are intended for unlawful sale in the State, it is not necessary to prove by whom, or by what individual the sale is intended.
But the person charged as thus keeping liquors Cannot be convicted simply from the fact that the liquors are found in his possession, or that .they were intended for unlawful sale by somebody. He may be an innocent depositary. He can only be a guilty one, under this statute, by having this possession with an intent on his part to sell the same in this State in violation of law, or with the intent that the same should be so sold by any person, or with intent to aid or assist any person in.such unlawful sale; the intent being, under section 12, an essential element, in either case, in the offence charged against the individual.
The first question before us is whether any such offence is set forth in this complaint. It charges that, at a certain, time and place, “intoxicating liquors were and still are kept and deposited by the respondent in a certain place or places; that he was not authorized by law to sell said liquors in the places specified; that said liquors then and there were and now are intended for sale in this State, in violation of law.”
There is no allegation that the possession was such as rendered it unlawful. It might have been free from any just imputation of any design to sell, or to aid in selling. Mere possession of intoxicating liquors is no legal crime or offence against the statute. It is true, that it is alleged that the liquors were intended for unlawful sale in this State. But by whom intended ? It is not charged that the defendant had such intention. This allegation may be sufficient to justify proceedings in rem against the liquors; but it does not charge the person in possession with any offence. It is not a crime in any one to be in possession of liquors, even if another person may intend to sell them unlawfully, if the depositary had no such intention himself, and no intent that they should be so sold by any person, or to aid in such selling.
The defendant might be justly chargeable with all that is set out, and yet not be guilty of any of the offences described in the statute.
There may be some confusion introduced in construing these provisions, if we do not keep constantly in mind the fact that the charge against the liquor, and the charge against the individual,— or the charge in rem and the charge in personam,— are distinct and independent. The offence of the individual is set forth in section 12, and consists, as before shown, of an act and an intent. The act is a depositing or keeping intoxicating liquors by the person named; the intent is a purpose on his part to sell, or that some other person should sell, or to aid in selling the same liquors in violation of law. This section 12 does not say that it shall be an offence in an individual to deposit or keep liquors intended for unlawful sale in this State; but it must be with an intent on his part so to
The Legislature, that enacted the law now in question, was careful to avoid even the imputation of an intended violation of this great principle of right and justice. In their desire to suppress or prevent what they deemed grievous evils and public nuisances, and corrupting practices, they were not unmindful of the rights of the citizen, but carefully distinguished between what might constitute a ground for forfeiture of the offending thing, and what might be a crime in a person in possession of it. They, therefore, most significantly changed the form of expression, from “ with intent,” in the 12th section,'to “intended,” in the 13th. ' The first of these sections applying solely to the offence of the individual, the other to the offence of the liquors, if that which causes so many offences in others may be itself denominated an offender.
The liquor itself, however, if an offender, cannot have a will, purpose or intent. It is enough, if any person has an intent to sell it unlawfully. If it is “ intended” for unlawful sale, whether by the person named or any other person, it may be forfeited; and, as against the liquor, this complaint may be sufficient. The magistrate, by the subsequent sections,
It is no answer, to say that B might show his innocence. No man is bound to prove innocence until a crime, in all its essential particulars, is distinctly charged, and, at least, made out prima facie against him. How would it be on demurrer ? Might not the accused safely admit all that is charged in this complaint, and yet successfully contend that no statute offence is set out ?
But it is urged that this complaint is in the form set forth in chap. 48, of the laws of 1858. Upon inspection, such appears to be the fact. That statute provides that “ the
The defendant, admitting that this complaint is in the form set out in the Act, denies the right of the Legislature to prescribe a form which, in fact, charges no crime, and holds the accused bound to answer to such a charge, and liable to be convicted upon proof of matters not alleged.
We do not doubt the power and right of the Legislature to prescribe, change or modify the forms of process and proceedings in all civil actions, and to determine what shall be deemed a sufficient allegation, in form or substance, to bring the merits of a case before the Court. But, in criminal prosecutions, the exercise of this right is limited and controlled by the paramount law in the Constitution. It has for centuries, since the declaration in Magna Charta, been the boast of tlie common law, that it protects with .jealous care the rights of the accused. It not only secures a speedy and impartial trial by jury, but it requires that no person shall be held to answer, until the accusation against him is formally, fully and precisely set forth, — that he may know of what he is accused, and be prepared to meet the exact charge against him. This right of the respondent has ever been regarded as sacred and essential to the protection of the individual citizen. In all the changes of forms, and in the principles and practice of the law, this right has remained untouched and unchanged. The people have not been willing to leave it without the express sanction of the Constitution. In the Declaration of Rights, it is set down as one of the rights of the accused, “in all criminal prosecutions, to have a right to demand the nature and cause of the accusation, and have a copy thereof; and that he shall not be deprived of his life, liberty, property or privileges, but by the judgment of his peers, or the laws of the land.” Or, as it is expressed in the Constitution of the United States, “ without due process of law.” This “ law of the land” is not simply the existing statute law of the State, but, as has been often decided, it is
“ By the process and proceedings of the common law, the accused has the right to know the charge in the whole form and substance against him, to contest it, and, if not proved to the satisfaction of a jury, to demand an acquittal.” Saco v. Wentworth, 37 Maine, 172. Will any one maintain that the Legislature might dispense with a written accusation, or enact that any written charge, however vague or indefinite in its terms, should be sufficient? That, for instance, a general charge, that the accused had violated the law, should be sufficient to hold a man to answer to any crime, from a simple assault to murder ?
We do not intend-to say that the Legislature may not modify or simplify the forms in criminal proceedings, provided the essential matters which clearly set forth an offence, and which, being proved, constitute the offence, are retained. The case before us does not require us to determine how far the Legislature may go in substituting a general description of an offence for minute specifications. What we do decide is, that the Legislature cannot dispense with the requirement of a distinct presentation of an offence against the law. It cannot compel an accused person to answer to a complaint which contains no charge, either general or particular, of any offence.
The form, and this complaint which follows it, it will be observed,- does not make a general charge of a violation of a particular statute, or a particular section, but undertakes to charge specifically all the acts complained of. These acts, as we have shown, do not constitute any offence in the person charged.
Is it not most clearly a. violation of the rights of the individual, under the Constitution, to compel him to answer, under this complaint, for matters not specified, and to suffer punishment for acts never presented, either generally or specifically, in any written accusation, or in any record ? It would present the absurd record of a case where a person is sen
Useless forms, and redundant expressions, and minute specifications, may, doubtless, be dispensed with. But the essential rights of the citizen would be impaired, if men could be tried and sentenced for matters not set out clearly and distinctly on the record. It is a right belonging to the humblest to meet his accuser face to face, and to know that whereof he is accused. If, to effect what is deemed a desirable end, the salutary, and protective, and long established doctrines of our laws may be dispensed with, the precedent may be drawn in to sanction, at some other time, the usurpations of tyranny, or the punishment of innocent men, obnoxious to the ruling powers, — and who. could only be convicted by an arbitrary and complying Court, disregarding or overruling the requirenents of law in this matter of distinct allegation of all material charges. It is not matter of form, but matter of substance, that is in question. No matter, that it .is essential to set forth to show that an offence has been committed, can be mere matter of form. When our Legislature, some years since, enacted that motions in arrest of judgment should not be entertained,’ they were very careful to confine' the provision in terms to “civil actions;” thus plainly indicating that no relaxation of the . protective rules that had long existed in criminal cases was to be allowed.
We cannot believe that the Legislature, in enacting the form in question in this case, intended to dispense with any essential allegation, or designedly to infringe the constitutional right of the accused. We have no doubt that, in their desire to simplify and condense the forms, they unintentionally omitted the few words which are necessary to set forth the offence.— That this’was an unintentional omission is manifest by reference to the forms next following this, of the warrant, based on the complaint, and the recognizance. In both these forms the allegation is distinctly made of an intent on the part of the person named, to sell the liquors. But in the form of the libel, in rem, against the liquors, the allegation is general
The statute, (c. 48,) does not require the use of these forms; it simply provides them, to be used if preferred. The insertion, into the form as it now stands, of a distinct allegation that the liquors are unlawfully kept and deposited by the person named, and that they are intended by him for sale in this State, in violation of law, or with intent that the same shall be so sold by any person, or to aid or assist any person in such sale thereof, (as the case may be) would probably render the complaint sufficient. Perhaps the omission of the words “are unlawfully” kept, would not be fatal, if the acts charged distinctly made out a case within the statute.
The exceptions must be sustained, and
Judgment arrested.