State v. Turner

125 Mo. App. 21 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907

GOODE, J.

This defendant was convicted of selling a half gallon of whiskey without having a license as a dramshop keeper. The defense was that he was a distiller of whiskey and sold not a half gallon, but three gallons at the distillery where it was made, and, therefore, was within the protection of section 3014 of the Revised Statutes of 1899, allowing intoxicating liquors to be sold in quantities of not less than one gallon at the place where made. [See State v. Hurd, 64 Mo. App. 334.] But one witness was introduced; the man who purchased the whiskey. He testified he went to defendant’s distillery and told defendant he wanted to buy three gallons of whisky, but could only take away a half gallon at a time. He purchased three gallons for $7.50, and on Ms first visit took away a half gallon, paying $1.35 to defendant, which was all the money he had; that on two other visits to the distillery he got the rest of the whisky, making’ two further payments in propor*23tion to the quantity he took each visit. The witness swore he noticed on the occasion of the first visit, when the sale was made, that the defendant measured out the three gallons ordered, and it was left in the building to be obtained by the witness whenever he called for it. If the agreement was in good faith as related, and three gallons of whiskey were actually drawn from the barrel and set apart in a separate vessel, to be obtained by the purchaser as wanted, the transaction constituted a sale and passed the title to the purchaser. [Benjamin, Sales (6 Ed.), sec. 308, et seq.; Tiedeman, Sales, sec. 89.] But the jury were not bonnd to believe the witness’s story, which had its inconsistencies. On the contrary, they might believe the arrangement was simply a ruse to evade the dramshop law; hence we overrule the contention that the court should have directed a verdict for defendant.

The' essential question in the case was whether there was an actual, bona fide sale of three gallons of whisky and a setting apart of that quantity for the buyer with his knowledge and consent, or whether the real intention was to buy a half gallon of whisky under a sham arrangement for three gallons. An exception was taken to a remark made by the judge in the presence and hearing of the jury of the following tenor: “I am inclined to think it was not a sale of three gallons; it was a sale of wha.t he got.” This expression of opinion by the court on the material issue in the case, in the hearing of the jury, was highly prejudicial to defendant and constitutes reversible error. [1 Thompson, Trials, sec. 219; Wright v. Richmond, 21 Mo. App. 76.]

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.