35 W. Va. 542 | W. Va. | 1891
The grand jurors of Jioane county, W. Va., on the 28th day of March, 1889, found an indictment against Harry Swift, in which it is charged that he did on the --- day of -, 1889, in said county of lioane, unlawfully and without a State license therefor, sell, offer, and expose for sale, and solicit and receive orden- for and keep in his possession for another, spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale and beer, and drinks of a like nature, and against the peace and dignity of the State.
The defendant demurred to said indictment, hut, it being in proper form, the demurrer was overruled; and thereupon the defendant pleaded not guilty, and issue was thereon joined, and the matters in issue were submitted to a jury,
The record discloses that the defendant took three bills of exception to the ruling and judgment of the court, numbered 1, 2, and 3, respectively, with a statement of the facts proved upon the trial, which were signed and made a part of the record.
The facts proven upon the trial appear to be as follows: It was proven by Harry Woodyard, a witness for the State, that he knew the defendant, Swift; had seen him in Roane county; that said Swift had never sold him any whisky or spirituous liquors of any kind, nor solicited orders from the witness for the same; that witness was a son of William Woodyard, who is a merchant of the town of Spencer; that some time within one year next preceding the finding of the indictment in the store-room a bill of goods Avas purchased from J. H. Murdock, a wholesale druggist of the city of Parkersburg, W. Va., through the defendant, TIarry SAvift, the agent and commercial traveler of said J. H. Murdock, including some tobacco and other goods;that at that time Avitness Avas clerking for said Woodyard, and sent the said Murdock, through said defendant, Swift, an order for two gallons of alcohol; that the time and place, as' Avell as remembered, was about November, 1888, in Roane eounty; that nothing Avas said about the price at all, and Avitness did not remember the price; that the alcohol was bought of J. N. Murdock, and he paid Murdock for it; that the alcohol was billed to Avitness; some two months afterwards Avitness paid said defendant, Swift, for said J. N. Murdock for said alcohol, and the defendant, Swift, gave him a receipt signed by J. H. Murdock for the defendant, SAvift; that the alcohol was shipped and billed by J. N. Murdock to Avitness, and other goods bought were billed and shipped to witness’ father. And the defendant proved by himself the following facts: That at the time spoken of by the Avitness for the State he was J. H. Mur-dock’s agent or commercial traveler, and as such took the
The indictment in this case appears to conform strictly to the language of the statute, and for that reason I consider it sufficient, and the court committed no error in overruling the demurrer.
It is assigned as error that the court gave instruction Eo. 1, asked for by the State, which instruction reads as follows :
“If the jury believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant received from Harry Wood-yard an order for two gallons of alcohol in the county of Roane within one year next preceding the finding of the indictment, then, in that case, you must find the defendant guilty.”
The question as to the propriety of this instruction must be considered in connection with the facts proven in the case. If it had been shown in evidence that the defendant was acting under a State license at the time he received the order for the two gallons of alcohol, the instruction would doubtless have been objectionable; or if it had been shown that the defendant was a licensed druggist, and said sale was made for mechanical or scientific purposes, or upon the written prescription of a practicing physician in good standing in his profession, and not of intemperate habits, in accordance with the requirements of the statute, it would have been proper to reject said instruction, as we find it has been held by this Court in the case of Shepherd v. McQuilkin, 2 W. Va. 90, that “it must be presumed that the court acted correctly in refusing instructions, unless it appears by facts or testimony incorporated in the hill of exceptions that the instructions were relevant or irrelevant to the cause;” which
Tbe language of tbe statute under which this indictment was found reads as follows : “ No person without a State license therefor shall* * * * offer or expose for sale, or solicit or receive orders for or keep in bis possession, spirituous liquors,” etc.
It is contended by counsel for defendant that the word “orders” was interpolated by tbe compiler of the Code without authority, and that tbe act passed February 23, 1887 (chapter 29, Acts 1887) does not contain auy provision against soliciting or receiving orders for spirituous liquors, etc., but upon examination of tbe act as enrolled it is found that tbe word “ orders ” was not omitted from the act as it was passed, and thaj, said act as enrolled corresponds precisely with tbe act as' published in the Code. It is true that the word “ orders ” was casually omitted in printing tbe first, section, chapter 29 of tbe Acts of 1887, but it is also true that said omission is enumerated among the errata published witb said acts, showing that tbe omission was discovered after the acts of that year were printed; so that we must consider the act as we find it in the Code.
In the case of State v. Gilman, 33 W. Va. 146 (10 S. E Rep. 283) this Court has held,-that portion of section 1, chapter 32, Code 1887, which provides “ that no person without a State license therefor shall * * * keep in his possession for another spirituous liquors,” etc., “ unconstitutional and void.” It is not claimed by counsel for the defendant that the portion of said section which makes soliciting and receiving orders for such liqnoi-s an indictable offence is unconstitutional, but it.is contended that the State failed to prove its case under the statute as it exists. Itisnot the province of the court to enact laws or to change them after they have been enacted, but to.construe and enforce them if they are not found repugnant; to,the constitution.
When the case of State v. Hughes, 22 W. Va. 743, was de
Since then, the legislature has seen proper to amend said section by making it an indictable offense to solicit or receive orders for spirituous liquors without first having obtained a State license, and, while we can readily perceive how common carriers and private individuals may often incur the penalty of the law by receiving such orders merely as an accommodation, yet the law exists, and, if it is regarded as objectionable, it can not be repealed by the courts. The only question, then, is whether, under the facts proven in this case, the defendant, without having a State license therefor, did receive orders for spirituous liquors.
The witness Harry Woodyard proved that some time within a year next preceding the finding of the indictment he sent said Murdock, through said defendant, Swift, who was the agent and commercial traveler of said Murdock, an order for two gallons of alcohol; and the defendant also testified that he at the time spoken of by said Wood-yard was J. N. Murdock’s agent or commercial traveler, and as such took the order for the alcohol; that he accepted it from said Woodyard, and sent it to J. N. Murdock as the agent of said Murdock.
The statute is very comprehensive. It says : “No person without a State license therefor shall * * * receive orders for spirituous liquors,” etc; and it clearly appears that such an order was received by the defendant, and sent, by him to J. N. Murdock, in whose employ he was acting as agent, and that such order was received by said defendant in the county of Roane.
The question in this case is not where the sale of the two
Affirmed.