182 A. 191 | Vt. | 1936
The respondent was convicted in the Franklin municipal court of the illegal sale of intoxicating liquor. The evidence showed that the alleged sale was made at the respondent's dwelling house. The only exception insisted upon is the one saved when the court refused to charge that the jury should acquit the respondent unless it found that the house had become a place of public resort or that the purchaser was an habitual drunkard.
As now written, the liquor law, No. 197, Acts of 1935, provides that one shall not "furnish or sell, or expose or keep with intent to sell" intoxicating liquor except as therein provided; but that this prohibition "shall not apply to the furnishing of" such liquor by a person in his private dwelling, "unless to an habitual drunkard, or unless such dwelling becomes a place of public resort." So the question presented turns on the scope and meaning of the word "furnishing" in the clause last quoted.
In former statutes, the law punished one who "sells, furnishes or gives away" intoxicants. Under those statutes, it was held that the thing prohibited consisted in the unlawful providing of intoxicating liquor, and that this could be done in any of the three ways specified. State v. Hodgson,
We hold, therefore, that the sale of which the respondent was convicted was illegal and that the refusal of the requested instruction was without error.
Exceptions overruled and judgment affirmed. Let execution bedone.