165 P. 225 | Or. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is first contended that defendant’s demurrer to the indictment .should have been sustained because the statute which forms the basis of the prosecution permits the sale, under certain specified restrictions, of ethyl alcohol by registered pharmacists and that in order to sufficiently describe a crime, the indictment should disclose the fact that defendant was not then one of the privileged class or that the sale was in violation of one or more of the restrictions. Section 33 of the act referred to contains the following provision:
“And it shall not be necessary in the first instance, for the state to allege or prove that the party charged did not have legal authority to sell such liquor, or was not within any of the exceptions provided by this act. ’ ’
"We need not consider what merit might be found in defendant’s contention in the absence of this clause; but, since it exists, there was no error in overruling the demurrer. The next contention is that since the evidence disclosed merely a sale of alcohol, without any specific evidence that it was ethyl alcohol, there
It is also urged that the trial court erred in permitting the state to offer in evidence the judgment-rolls of five prior convictions for the unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor after the defendant had admitted upon cross-examination that he had been convicted of a crime. The defendant had testified that there had been but one such conviction and in rebuttal the state was permitted to show that there had been five. In State v. Bacon, 13 Or. 143 (9 Pac. 393, 57 Am. Rep. 8), Mr. Justice Lord says:
“On the subject of the impeachment of a witness, the code provides ‘that it may be shown by the examination of the witness, or the record of the judgment, that he has been convicted of a crime.’ (Code, § 830, p. 274.) And the word ‘crime’ as defined by the code, includes both felonies and misdemeanors. It may therefore be shown by the examination of the witness that he has been convicted either of felony or a misdemeanor, and the record may also be introduced to prove that fact.”
We can see no good reason for the contention that it was error to admit the evidence of more than one conviction. If the fact that a witness has been convicted of one criminal offense has a tendency to discredit his testimony, we may fairly infer that several
It is further insisted that there was error in refusing' to give to the jury the following requested instruction :
“I instruct you, gentlemen of the jury, that there is no evidence in this case, that defendant made an unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor, on the 11th day of January, 1917, to the person mentioned in the evidence as a fireman, that witness Hickey claims furnished with a hottle of alcohol; and you will not consider any testimony on this trial concerning any sale claimed to have been made by defendant to said alleged fireman, or that any such person may have furnished any intoxicating liquor to said witness, or that any liquor said witness may have received from such alleged fireman was intoxicating liquor, or that the same was ever purchased from defendant.”'
The court very properly refused this request for there is evidence to the effect that Hickey and a man, whose name is not disclosed but who was understood by the witness to be a fireman in the railroad service, went to a point across the street from defendant’s place on the same day that the sale charged in the indictment is alleged to have occurred; that there they each contributed fifty cents for the purchase of alcohol; and that the fireman went into the defendant’s store and came out in a short time with a bottle of alcohol from which the witness Hickey drank. We are not concerned as to the credibility of the evidence; that is for the jury, and it is sufficient to say that in the face of this evidence it would have been decidedly improper for the court to have given such an instruction.
Affirmed,