76 A. 192 | N.H. | 1910
The court has power to issue the injunction asked for, if on the date of the complaint the premises complained against were used, within the meaning of the statute, for the illegal sale or keeping for sale of intoxicating liquor. P.S., c. 112, s. 15; Ib., c. 205, ss. 4, 5; Laws 1899, c. 81, s. 1; State v. Strickford,
The premises are located in Seabrook upon the Massachusetts border, and the method of business outlined in the case appears to have been devised to evade the laws of both states, in each of which, in the towns in which the several parts of the transactions take place, the sale and the keeping for sale of intoxicating liquor is forbidden by law. But it may be that in the effort to evade the laws of both states the defendant has become subject to the penalties imposed by the laws of each. The liquors are kept here; they are kept for sale. Can it reasonably be found that in no part of the keeping is there an intent to sell here? "Keeping spirituous liquor for sale is having possession and control of it with intent and readiness to make a sale or sales — a combination of the means and purpose of being a vendor. It may be a long continued practice or occupation; it may be instantaneous. It may be proved by evidence of a series of sales or other acts. Like the possession of counterfeit money with a fraudulent intent, . . . it is a physical and mental condition that may cease when it has existed in violation of law but for a moment. The keeper of a single parcel of liquor, or of different parcels, may frequently discontinue and resume that state of things which constitutes the offence." State v. Havey,
The liquors are kept in Seabrook. The defendant receives in *461
Newburyport, Massachusetts, orders for the shipment of liquors, express paid, to purchasers in that city, and receives payment in full. The orders are addressed to the defendant's establishment in Seabrook and are transmitted there by the defendant. From there the liquors are shipped to the purchasers by a common carrier. From this statement it must be inferred that at Seabrook the liquors ordered are selected from the common stock and appropriated as the subject of sale under the orders of shipment. The contract tendered by the purchaser's order is therefore accepted and performed in New Hampshire, in which district the defendant has paid the federal tax as a retail liquor dealer. Upon these facts, the only conclusion the jury could reach would be that the defendant sold and kept liquor for sale in this state, the delivery to the common carrier being a delivery to the purchaser. Upon this statement of facts it might well be held in Massachusetts that no sale had been made in violation of Massachusetts laws. But before the courts of this state, to establish that New Hampshire law has not been violated, the defendant relies upon an agreement between the common carrier and himself that the goods so shipped shall remain the property of the defendant until actually delivered in Newburyport, and may be recalled or stopped in transit by the defendant at any time before actual delivery. Thus contending that the sale was not completed until delivery in Massachusetts, the defendant upon this admission could doubtless be convicted of a violation of the law of Massachusetts. Suit v. Woodhall,
The agreement with the Express Company was, however, no part of the contract of sale, and as between the parties to a valid sale would be immaterial. The seller had already received payment, delivery to a common carrier under the law and the contract was a delivery to the purchaser, and the seller had no longer any interest in or responsibility for the subject of the sale. The only purpose or object of the alleged agreement with the Express Company must have been to make it the basis of a claim, in the event of litigation in New Hampshire, that the sale was not completed by delivery in this state. The contention in short is, that the defendant when in Massachusetts intended to sell the liquors in violation of New Hampshire law, he changed his intent he came into New Hampshire to carry out the orders involving in terms the violation of New Hampshire law, he changed his intent to one of violating Massachusetts law. Admitting the legal possibility of such change of intent upon crossing the state boundary, the intent to sell in New Hampshire is conclusively shown by the admitted acceptance of the orders for such sale. "As there may be a sale without an offer to sell, . . . so there may be *462
a keeping for sale without a sale or an offer to sell." State v. Havey,
As the evidence leads to only one conclusion, the jury should be instructed that the agreement was merely a "shift or device to evade the provisions of chapter 112 of the Public Statutes," and that the transactions constituted a sale in violation of the provisions of that chapter. Laws 1903, c. 122, s. 8; State v. Harrington,
Injunction ordered.
All concurred. *463