The defendant was indicted as a druggist for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquor, tried and convicted. . Erom the judgment he has appealed. On the trial it was admitted that defendant at the time the alleged illegal sale was made, was a pharmacist and dealer in drugs in the town of Lawson, Ray county, Missouri; and that one Henry Gordon in his employ as clerk and pharmacist was a registered pharmacist in said county and state.
A witness by the name of Hightower testified that he bought of said Henry Gordon one pint of whiskey for which he paid twenty-five cents in defendant’s said drug store, in July or August, 1907; that he had no written prescription from a physician; and that there was no one in the store at the time except himself and said Gordon. Another witness for the state testified that he was in said drug store several times -during the summer of 1907; that he saw both the defendant and Gordon sell intoxicating liquor in the store without prescriptions and that he also bought liquors from both of them without having a prescription. Several witnesses testified that Gordon had the reputation of selling liquor in defendant’s drug store during the summer without prescriptions.
The defendant testified that he instructed his pharmacist, Gordon, in good faith not to sell liquor without the written prescription of a physician. And •defendant further testified that if Gordon did- sell liquor in the summer of 1907, without a prescription, he had no knowledge of it. His son, David, testified that he heard his father instruct Gordon not to sell liquor without a prescription.
The prosecuting attorney in his address to the jury used the following language: “If you men want the criminal laws of this county enforced, convict this man.” Defendant asked the court to repremand him for using such language, which the court refused
The appellant contends that it was the drug clerk who was tried instead of the defendant, there being no evidence offered to contradict the defendant’s evidence that the liquor was sold contrary to his instructions and no effort to impeach his reputation or that of his witnesses for truth and veracity. It- is held in this state that where a person acts as clerk or agent of another in selling intoxicating liquors in violation of law either may be indicted. [State v. Brown,
It is a rule in tMs state to confine the prosecution to evidence relating to the sale alleged. [State v. Seigenthaler,
The language used by the prosecuting attorney to which exceptions are taken was somewhat unusual on such occasions. It was a strong appeal to the jury to perform their duty and enforce the law, and to convict the defendant. And when we take into consideration the reluctance of jurors as a rule to enforce the laws prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors, we are not prepared to say that the prosecuting attorney in his remarks went outside of the pale of legitimate discussion. There is nothing in what he said that can properly be construed to mean that the jury should convict the defendant whether he was guilty or not guilty, but that they should enforce the law because he was guilty. The cause is affirmed.
