34 Vt. 323 | Vt. | 1861
The respondent was tried in the county court upon a general complaint for violations of the liquor law, under which, by the statute, the jury may return a verdict for so many offences as are established by the evidence, and was convicted of three offences ; one for furnishing liquor to Ordway, and two for liquor furnished at his house to Davis and Hadley, and drank by them there.
The fair definition of habitual drunlcard, as used in the statute, we suppose to be, “ one who is in the habit of getting drunk, or one who commonly or frequently is drunk,” and we do not suppose it necessary to satisfy those terms that a man should be constantly or universally drunk. The common term or phrase, uses liquor to excess, when applied to a person, is. ordinarily understood to mean the same as saying that he gets intoxicated or drunk ; and saying that such a person did so at particular times
The language of these witnesses /by the strict rules of lexicography might not necessarily mean quite so much as this, but the jury would have the right to understand the language in its common and popular sense, because they might well presume the witnesses used it in that sense, and they would also have the right to draw all fair and reasonable inferences from the facts stated by the witnesses.
We think this evidence did legally tend to show that Hadley was an habitual drunkard ; its sufficiency in amount was wholly a question for the jury.
In relation to the evidence as to the defendant’s house having become a place of public resort, the evidence of several of the defendant’s neighbors, who had proper means of observation, proved that for a considerable period of time, a very large number of persons had been in the habit of going to Pratt’s house, many more than went to the houses of other persons in the same neighborhood, and many more than any business in which he was openly and honestly engaged furnished any occasion for ; that many of these persons came from other towns, and many called there at unusual hours, and under suspicious circumstances.
We think the evidence makes just the case the statute intended, and raises a fair presumption that the true reason why the defendant was so favored with customers or visitors was because his house contained peculiar inducements and attractions, at least until the defendant should show some other reason for it, that being peculiarly within his knowledge.
If any error was committed in submitting the question to the jury as to Hadley’s being a common drunkard, we do not see that there would be any necessity of reversing the conviction as to that offence, because the jury having found that the defendant’s house had become a place of public resort, that would make him equally liable on that ground for giving to Hadley, as well as to Davis.