87 Mo. App. 577 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
The defendant was convicted of a violation of the law regulating the sale of liquor by merchants. He has appealed and has assigned for error, first, the instifficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding, in that it failed to show that he had a merchant’s license at the time of the sale.
I. The evidence is that he gave a merchant’s license bond covering the period of the sale, and it was in the possession of the county clerk whose duty it was to keep such bonds. These bonds in practice are taken when the license is delivered, and it must be presumed that when the bond is given the license was delivered and he is estopped to deny in this character of action that he had no license. Hence, there was inferential evidence
II. Secondly, he insists that such demurrer should have been sustained, because he was not indicted for violating the law applicable to the sale of liquor by 'druggists, since there was evidence on the trial tending to show that he owned a drugstore and kept a registered pharmacist in said drugstore. Conceding that there was evidence in this direction, still, it was merely matter of affirmative defense, and the jury had the right to refuse to give it credence, which their verdict shows they evidently did. It is not for us to usurp the province of the jury in weighing testimony, consequently there was no ground for a demurrer to the evidence upon the theory that the defendant was amenable solely to the druggist’s law.
III. It is finally contended that the court erred in not quashing the indictment for duplicity. There is no merit whatever in this assignment; first, because the motion is wholly vague in its terms and fails to point out wherein more than one offense was charged in the indictment. State v. Marshall, 47 Mo. 378. Second, because the record shows the prosecuting attorney elected to try the defendant on the single charge of violating the law under a merchant’s license.
No other grounds of reversal being urged, the judgment herein is affirmed.