after stating the case: The ruling of the court was in all respects correct. The indictment was drawn under chapter 434 of the Laws of 1903 prohibiting the sale of liquor in Union County, or the keeping of it for sale, without a license. By chapter 497 of the laws of 1905, it is enacted that the sale of liquor and the keeping of it for sale shall be” prohibited, with certain exceptions not necessary to be stated. There is no clause in the latter act unqualifiedly repealing prior enactments upon the same subject, but by sections 26 and 27 it is provided that all laws and clauses of laws in conflict with the act are repealed, and that the act shall be in force and take effect from and after the first day of June, 1905. The decision of this case must, therefore, turn upon the question whether the Act of 1903 is repealed by the Act of 1905 to the extent of defeating this prosecution against the defendant.
Where a statute prescribing the punishment for a crime is expressly and unqualifiedly repealed after such crime has been committed, but before final judgment, though after conviction, no punishment can be imposed, because the act must be punishable when judgment is demanded, and authority to pass sentence must then reside in the court. This is the well-settled principle, and it is essential in order to give effect to the clear intention of the Legislature and to require that the decision and judgment of the courts shall be based upon existing law.
State v. Cress,
The quotations we have made from Lord Coke and the text writers are but forceful statements of the universal rule applicable to such cases. We find, though, that these general
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principles of statutory construction have been extended and applied to just sucb a case as we have presented in this record. This court, in
State v. Putney,
The question presented has been considered in the courts of some of the other States, and their decisions sustain the conclusion we have here reached. In
Pittman v. Common
wealth, 2 Rob. (Va.), 804, the court said: “It is agreed, however, that though there is no express repeal of the previous laws, there is an implied one; that the act prescribes a new punishment for past offenses — an aggravated punishment— by increasing the fine from $20 to $30; that it is inconsistent with the former laws, and, being the last expression of the legislative will, must abrogate them upon the principle,
leges posteriores priores contrarias aibrogant.
The authorities cited at the bar show that implied repeals are not favored; that two affirmative statutes shall co-exist if they can, and this notwithstanding the use of general words, whose grammatical construction might imply the contrary. 6 Bac. Abr., 439. Let us then inquire why we are obliged to imply a repeal of the previous laws and discharge the previous offenses ? Did the Legislature intend such repeal and discharge ? For we admif that in this act, as in all others, we must inquire into the legislative intent and give effect to it if we can. Admitting then that the act varied and increased the punishment prescribed by former laws, the question occurs, to what offenses does' it apply? Does it apply to violations committed before its passage or to those committed afterwards ? If it applies only to offenses committed after its passage, it does not conflict with the former law and consequently both will stand. If it applies
*805
or can be legally applied to previous offenses, then the conflict will arise and the last law only will have effect.” And Field, J., in the same case, said: “This law, therefore, so far as it was intended to apply to offenses which had been committed before its passage, was void and, being void, it cannot have the effect of repealing by implication any previously existing law, with which it would have been in conflict if it had been a valid law. It is not in conflict with any law against unlawful gaming, as to offenses theretofore committed, because it is void, and as a piece of blank paper. But as to offenses committed after the passage of the act, it is in conflict with the old law, because it increases the penalty from $20 to $30. From this view of the case it follows that as to offenses of which the defendant has been convicted (both of which were committed before the first of March, 1842), the old law was in force and is yet in force, and judgments shall be rendered against them for the fine of $20 only and costs.” In
Pegram's
case, 1 Leigh, (Va.) 569, it was said by the court: “Although the principle is correct that
leges posteñores priores contrarias abrogant,
yet they only"abrogate them from the time that the latter law is passed or goes into effect. The principle on which this rule prevails is that the latter statute being incompatible Avith the former, they cannot exist together, and the latest expression of the will of the Legislature is the law. But there is no incompatibility in the statutes now under consideration. A punishment affixed to an offense prior to the first of May, 1828, is not incompatible with a different punishment, either lighter or more severe, affixed to the same offense subsequent to that date. They may well 'stand together. The punishment prescribed by the Acts of 1827-28 being different from that prescribed by the Act of 1822-23 is certainly an implied repeal of it, as to new offenses, from the time it goes into effect, but, by the very terms of the law, the neAV punishment is only applied to the offenses happening
*806
after
the first of May, 1828, leaving the old punishment to be applied to the offenses happening before that day.” There are decisions in Alabama to the same effect. “No court,” it is said in
Miles v. State,
It follows that the defendant can derive no aid from the last enactment in making good, his contention that the Act of 1903 has been repealed and, therefore, that there is no law now under which he can be punished for his unlawful act, committed in 1904. There was ample authority for the sentence imposed.
No Error.
