51 N.H. 361 | N.H. | 1871
The question presented is, whether the purchase constituted a crime. If it did, the purchaser cannot be compelled to testify. Constitution of N. H., Bill of Rights, article 15.
“ If any person shall sell * * * spirituous liquor * * * * he shall be fined * * * ” &c. Gen. Stats., ch. 99, sec. 18. It is argued that the purchaser aids in or procures the sale, and thus makes himself criminally liable under sec. 1 of ch. 266, Gen. Stats., which provides that “ if any person shall aid in, counsel, hire, or procure the commission of any offence, or shall be accessory thereto, before' or after the fact, he shall be punished in the same manner as the principal offender, and may be tried and convicted thereof, either before or after the conviction of the principal.” Probably the chief purpose of the original enactment of this statute in 1842 (Rev. Stats., ch. 221, sec. 1) was, to remedy the defects in the common law relative to the trial of accessories, to which public attention had been directed by the trial of Knapp for the murder of Joseph "White, at Salem, Massachusetts, in 1830. See 1 Bishop Crim. Law, 3d ed., sec. 614. So far as the statute declares aiders and procurers criminals, it is, in the main, only a reenactment of the common law. An enactment “ in its nature declaratory of the common law” “will be construed, as far as may be, according to the common law.” “A statute, general in its terms, is always to be taken as subject to such exceptions as the common law requires.” 1 Bishop Crim. Law, 3d ed., secs. 191, 192. It could not have been the intention to repeal by this' statute the established rules of interpreting and construing penal statutes. If, prior to
The statute itself, “ by the distinction it makes,” in the section imposing the penalty, has marked the seller as the only criminal. “ Every sale implies a purchaser; there must be a purchaser as well as a seller; and this must have been known and understood by the legislature.” Yet the penalties for selling are all imposed upon one of the parties, the seller. In most offences, the cooperation of two persons, occupying different and, in one sense, antagonistic relations, is not requisite to the commission of the crime. The criminality of an assault, for instance, does not depend on the mental concurrence or physical cooperation of the assailant and the assailed. In such cases it cannot be contended that the omission to insert in each penal statute the general rules of law relative to accomplices and accessories, evinces the legislative intention to except such persons from criminal liability. But the case at bar is different. Here is an offence, created by statute, which cannot be committed except by the physical cooperation and mental concurrence of two persons who occupy different, not to say antagonistic relations, and act from widely differing motives. There may be very slight foundation, in abstract reason, for making any discrimination as to the relative guilt of these parties; but it is matter of common knowledge, that the public at large do make a marked distinction between them, believing the purchaser by far less culpable than the seller, and frequently regarding the former as the victim of the latter. Under such circumstances, does not the imposition of the penalty upon that one of the two indispensable parties to the commission of the of-fence, who is, in popular estimation, much the more culpable, imply an intention to allow the other party to. go unpunished ? "Expressio unius est exclusio altering.”
This construction is strengthened by considering the probable purposes of the legislature in enacting the prohibitory liquor law. Conceding that one object was the protection of the community at large, it is still undeniable that another and a prominent object was the
The rules of statute interpretation, enunciated prior to the enactment of the prohibitory liquor law, and still recognized as sound, justify the court in giving weight to the above considerations. In cases of mala prohibita, the fact that the penalty is in terms imposed upon only one of two parties whose concurrence is requisite to the commission of the offence, and that the statute was niade for the protection of the .other party, who is generally regarded as the less culpable of the two, has repeatedly been considered good ground for giving the statute a construction exempting the party not named from criminal liability. See Browning v. Morris, Cowper 790; Williams v. Hedley, 8 East 378; Tracy v. Talmage, 14 N. Y. 162, pp. 181-186; Curtis v. Leavitt, 15 N. Y. 9, pp. 285-289; Sacketts Harbor Bank v. Codd, 18 N. Y. 240; Buffalo City Bank v. Codd, 25 N. Y. 163; Richardson, C. J., in Roby v. West, 4 N. H. 285, pp. 288, 289; Perley, C. J., in Prescott v. Morris, 32 N. H. 101, p. 105; White v. Franklin Bank, 22 Pick. 181; Sargent, J., in Butler v. Northumberland, 50 N. H. 33, pp. 38, 39.
If any doubt still remains as to the meaning of section 13, chapter 99, we think that doubt can be removed by examining other portions of the chapter.
Section 25 of chapter 99 imposes a fine of from one to ten dollars, or imprisonment not over thirty days, as a penalty for drunkenness in certain places or under certain circumstances. The drunkenness thus punished might, of course, result from the use of liquors imported by, or given to, the consumer ; but it is not unlikely to be the result of the use of liquor sold to the drinker in violation of law; and the 26th section of chapter 99 (as well as the 9th section of the original prohibitory law, P. L., 1855, chapter 1658) clearly indicates that the legislature contemplated the possibility, or, rather, the probability, of such a state of facts. If, then, the purchaser is liable under section 13, he may, in some instances, be subjected to a double punishment. Such a result is not beyond the power of the legislature, but it is not to be easily presumed that they intended to accomplish it. It has been forcibly observed, that “ it seems hardly consistent with the obvious general purport of the law, which in terms is levelled almost exclusively against the seller, to say that the legislature intended to punish the unfortunate buyer with the same severity as the seller, and, in addition, to pursue him with a further penalty for consequences which would never have befallen him but for the prohibited act of the principal offender.” On the contrary, the contingency that the purchaser may be punished under section 25 increases the probability that the legislature intended that he should be exempted from the penalties of section 13 ; tending to show that the omission in section 13 to impose the penalty upon the purchaser as well as the seller was intentional.
Section 26 of chapter 99’provides that if the person arrested for drunkenness shall, before conviction, “ disclose of whom and where he
In the case at bar, the court at the trial term have found, as matter of fact, that the witness requested the defendant to sell the liquor ; that the sale was made in consequence of the request; and the witness, by his request and the usual promise of payment understood and implied-therefrom, induced and procured the defendant to make the sale. If it were material to the decision of the question raised, we should be inclined to remand the case to the trial term for a further and fuller finding of facts. Upon such further finding it might perhaps appear that the defendant had, prior to the sale to the witness, held himself out as engaged in the business of liquor-selling ; that it was in conse
Yery few direct authorities have been cited by counsel. Doran's case, 2 Parson’s Select Cases (Penn.) 467, referred to by the counsel for the witness, is not in point. The Pennsylvania statute of Feb. 17, 1762, made it a crime for any person “ to buy, sell, or expose to sale ” tickets in lotteries. In 1846 tbe question was raised, whether the purchaser could be compelled to testify against tbe seller. The court held that that part of tbe statute of 1762, which makes it an offence to buy a lottery ticket, was still in force, and, of course, excused tbe purchaser from testifying. In State v. Bonner, 2 Head (Tennessee) 135, the remarks of McKinney, J., which are accurately quoted in the note to 1 Bishop on Crim. Law, 3d ed., 605, directly sustain the refusal of the witness. The Tennessee statute prohibited the sale of liquor by slaves; and the case decides that a white man, who purchases from a slave, commits a criminal offence. Com. v. Willard, 22 Pick. 476, decides that a witness is not excused from testifying to a purchase of liquor from an unlicensed vendor. Wo are not prepared to adopt the view there advanced, that one who approximates so nearly to the direct act, as a purchaser does, is not liable as an aider or accessory because of the comparatively insignificant character of the main offence. There are, however, other reasons assigned by Shaw, C. J., not dissimilar to some grounds taken in this opinion. In Com. v. Downing, 4 Gray 29, the court, without any statement of reasons, recognized the decision in Com. v. Willard, as applicable in prosecutions under the more stringent prohibitory law; and this decision has been followed in later cases. See Cobb v. Farr, 16 Gray 597, p. 598; Walan v. Kerby, 99 Mass. 1, pp. 2, 3; Adams v. Goodnow, 101 Mass. 81, p. 82.
• In this State, statutes have been in force “ almost from the foundation of the government,” inflicting penalties under certain circumstances upon sellers of liquor. Hundreds of prosecutions and convictions of sellers have been had under these statutes, “ most of which have been sustained by the testimony of buyers.” The sellers have often been highly indignant with the buyers for testifying truly, and have sometimes resorted ta personal violence to gratify their
The witness should be directed to answer, and, if he refuges, should be punished for contempt.
Case discharged.