11 S.D. 64 | S.D. | 1898
Upon an information filed by the state’s attorney, the plaintiff in error was tried and convicted of the crime of selling intoxicating liquors without a license. After the jury had been impaneled, and a witness sworn, counsel for plaintiff in error objected to any evidence under the informa
It is further contended that the information should have stated to whom the liquors were sold. But such a statement is not required in this class of cases. As before stated, it is the engaging in the business of selling that constitutes the offense. The statute now under consideration is analogous to statutes in which the offense consisted in being a “common seller of intoxicating liquors,” and under such statutes it has been held sufficient to state generally that the accused ‘ ‘was, without being duly authorized or appointed thereto according to law, a common seller of intoxicating liquors.” Com. v. Hoye, 11 Gray, 462; Com. v. Edwards, 4 Gray 1; Com. v. Hart, 11 Cush. 130; Com. v. Pray, 13 Pick. 359; State v. Stinson, 17 Me. 154; State v. Churchill, 25 Me. 306; State v. Nutt, 28 Vt. 598; State v. Burchard, 4 S. D. 548, 57 N. W. 491; State v. Boughner, 5 S. D. 461, 59 N. W. 736 — were decided under entirely a different statute. ‘ ‘Whenever the crime consists of a series of acts, they need not be specifically described; for it is not each or all the acts of themsdlves, but the practice or habit, which produces fthe principal evil and constitutes the crime.” Com. v Pray, supra. In the case at bar, it is not material to whom particular sales were made. It is sufficient to allege and prove that the accused'was engaged in the business of selling intoxicating liquors at retail without having procured a license therefor as provided by law, and proof that he was so engaged in the business of making sales at retail would sustain the charge. We
Two grounds for a motion for a new trial were: (1) Misconduct of the state’s attorney in conversing with two of the jurors in regard to the case while the same was on trial; (2) in commenting in his argument upon the fact that defendant did not take the stand as a witness in his own behalf/and deny the statement of the witnesses for the prosecution.
It appears from the affidavits and oral evidence that at the supper table in the hotel, while the case was on trial, the state’s attorney was seated at the same table with two of the jurors, and, while so at supper, made some remarks. As to' the precise nature of these,' there is a conflict in the evidence. The state’s attorney, in his affidavit, which is corroborated by the two jurymen, makes a statement of what occurred. . The statement so made, with his explanation, shows the affair was not. of any serious importance, and shows that it was an excusable inadvertence on the part of the state’s attorney, that could not have worked any serious injury to the defendant.
The second ground of misconduct alleged on the part of the state’s attorney presents a more serious question. The facts in regard to this misconduct are thu"s stated in the bill of exceptions: “That T. H. Null and N. J. Dunham, in their remarks to the j ary, laid stress upon the fact that one--Brown who the state claimed had sold intoxicating liquors at the business place of the defendant, Mark Williams, was not agent of defendant. That Wm. F. Kenfield, state’s attorney of Sanborn county, S. D., in reply thereto, stated, in substance, to the jury all the facts and circumstances of the case, to show that Brown was the agent of the defendant. ‘If this is not true, why didn’t the defense put witnesses upon the stand to deny it? Mark
• The other questions discussed may not arise in another trial, and will not therefore be considered. The judgment of the court below is reversed, and a new trial is ordered.