6 Kan. 379 | Kan. | 1870
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Such questions in this case as are identical with questions raised and decided in a former case between The Slate and this same defendant, (ante, p. 371,) we shall not again consider. But there is a new question raised in this case, to-wit: After due proof is made that the defendant has sold spirituous, vinous, fermented, and other intoxicating liquors without a license, is proof of a former conviction and judgment for a similar offense, before a justice of the peace, appealed from to the district court, or proof of a former conviction and judgment in the district court, appealed from to the supreme court, (such judgment not being satisfied by payment or otherwise,) sufficient evidence upon which to find the defendant guilty of a second or subsequent offense, as described in section three of the Dramshop Act? (G-en. Stat., 400.)
The State claims, first, that the defendant may become liable to the increased penalty attached to the second offense, by violating the law a second time, although no conviction has yet been had, nor even a prosecution commenced against him for the first offense; and second, that an appeal from the conviction and judgment for the first offense, does not destroy nor suspend the same as evidence
It appears from the record in this case that the defendant was convicted and sentenced for the first offense on the 8th of June, 1870, in a justice’s court, and from this he appealed to the district court. He committed the second offense June. 10th, 1870. He was tried again for the first offense in the district court, and was convicted and sentenced June 29th, 1870. Afterwards, but on the same day, he appealed to the supreme court; and after the appeal but on the same day he was charged, tried, convicted and sentenced for the second offense; and it is this sentence which he now seeks to have reversed.
The defendant had been convicted of the first offense in the justice’s court before the second offense was committed, and therefore was, and continues to be, liable to the increased penalty attached to the commission of a second offense, provided said conviction shall not finally be found to be erroneous.