70 Minn. 99 | Minn. | 1897
The defendant was indicted under G. S. 1894, § 2002, for selling spirituous liquors to an Indian in 1895. The statute provides that “whoever sells * * * any spirituous liquors or wines to any Indian within this state shall on conviction thereof be punished,” etc. The person to whom the spirituous liquor was sold was by blood an American Indian, formerly belonging to the Sisseton and Wahpeton band of Sioux Indians, but in 1891 he had severed all his relations with his tribe, adopted the habits and customs of civilization, and taken up an allotment of land in severalty, under the provisions of the United States “Land in Severalty Act,” of February 8,1887,
The questions certified to this court are substantially two: First, whether the statute under which defendant was indicted applies to Indians who have thus become citizens of the United States under the act of congress, or only to those who retain their original status as members of “domestic dependent nations”; and, second, if the statute applies to the former, whether it is in contravention of the provisions of either the state or federal constitution, particularly section 33 of article 4 of the former and section 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the latter.
General yrords in a statute may be limited by the object of the act, but, in view of the nature and manifest purpose of this statute and the well-known conditions which induced its enactment, there is no warrant for limiting it by excluding from its operation sales of
The act stands on the same footing as laws prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors to minors, habitual drunkards, etc. The sale of intoxicating liquors is a subject within the police power of the state, and the legislature may prescribe such reasonable limitations and conditions upon the traffic as, in their judgment, public welfare requires, or they may prohibit the traffic entirely. It is unnecessary here to enter into any discussion of the question what privileges and immunities are guarantied by the federal constitution; for nothing is better settled than that, whatever they are, they are all subject to the proper exercise of the police power of the several states. That power has not been abolished or limited by the fourteenth amendment. People v. Bray, 105 Cal. 344, 38 Pac. 731. It can hardly be necessary to add that, if the sale was made in this state, it was prohibited by section 2002, whether the Indian was a resident of the
The cause is therefore remanded to the lower court for further proceedings.
24 Stat. c. 119, p. 388.