Territory of New Mexico v. Ricordati

18 N.M. 10 | N.M. | 1913

OPINION OP THE COURT.

HANNNA, J. —

The question presented is whether the 6th day of September, 1910, was a general election day within the meaning of the statute under which this indictment was framed. The statute appears in the compiled laws of 1897 as sec. 4138, and is.as follows:

“No license shall be issued under the provisions of the act during a period of not less than sixty days prior to any general election, and every liquor dealer shall close his place of business and not sell or allow to be sold, give away or allow to be given away, any intoxicating liquors from his said place of business, from the hour of twelve o’clock, midnight, last before the day of any general election, until the hour of 12 o’clock, midnight, upon such day of election, and shall’keep his said place of business closed between said hours, and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not less than twenty-five, nor more than five hundred dollars, or be imprisoned for not less than twenty days, nor more than one year, in the discretion of the court.”

The contention of appellee is that" the election of delegates to the convention, which framed New Mexico’s constitution, was a special election and was not “the day of any general election” within the meaning of the statute, forbidding sales of intoxicating liquor on those days. It is to be conceded that the legislative intent is controlling. Our attention is called to the first act of the legislature, upon the same subject, approved Feb. 6th, 1880, being section 1 of chap. 22, laws of 1880, and appearing as sec. 1272 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, said act being as follows:

“It shall be illegal for any person or persons in this territory to sell, use or give, drink or dispose of any intoxicating or spirituous liquors on the day of any general or special election in this territory.”

This act was entitled, “An Act prohibiting the sale of spirituous liquors on election clay,” and plainly included tlie day of any general or special election. Sec. 4138 first quoted above, was enacted as a portion of chap. 9, laws of 1891, which act was entitled “An Act licensing the sale of intoxicating liquors and regulating the same.”

The legislative intent, in connection with the act of 1880, is clearly shown to be a desire to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquor on the day of any election in the territory, whether such election be general or special. This act has never been repealed, and the legislature has simply reaffirmed its intention to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquor on election day by the passage of that section of the act of 1891, referred to supra as sec. 4138, C. L. 1897.

Are we to assume that because the word “special” does not appear in the second act that the legislature intended to prohibit the sale of liquor on the day of one territorial election, and to permit the sale on the day of a similar election, simply because it was a special election? On the other hand, was it not within the intention of the legislature, and the very reason for the passage of the laws in question, that on the occasion for the exercise of the highest franchise of a people, the right of suffrage, the public might be protected against the disorder that may result from the unrestrained sale and use of intoxicating liquor; that the polling places, where the public, of necessity gather on such days, might be free of rowdjdsm and not the resort of intoxicated or disorderly persons; that no person should exercise his high privilege while deprived of his reason, or natural intelligence.

It may be said that these reasons are good and doubtless furnish the object which inspired the legislature in the passage of the acts referred to, but that the legislature has limited the application of the second act by the use of the words “general election,” because we have but one general election, viz: the biennial election of November.

The statutes and constitutions of many states have defined one particular election as the general election. This was not done in New Mexico until the adoption of our constitution, though the term, “general election,” appears in a number of our election laws. In our opinion the legislature was not attempting to distinguish between different kinds of elections, or between regular or special elections when it passed the prohibitory law respecting the sale of liquor on the day of any general election. It had in mind such elections as were common to the people of the territory, as distinguished from a local election. It cannot be argued that the reasons pointed out for the existence of the law are any less applicable to an election for delegates to a constitutional convention, than to an election for a congressman or county officer.

While fully appreciating the strict interpretation to which the defendant is entitled in the construction of statutes of this class, we cannot indulge in the violent presumption that the legislature intended to classify elections which, though general in the sense that they might be co-extensive with the boundaries of the state, or territory, yet being special, were not to be subject to the same restriction and safeguards as are thrown about the so-called “general election.”

1 We find no other interpretation of the meaning of the term “general election,” as used in sec. 4138, consistent with the intent of the legislature, as we interpret it,-and sound public policy, than that a general election, referred to in said section, is one that is held throughout the entire state, or territory. See McKin v. State, 62 Mo. 244-245, and Downs v. State, 78 Mo. 128-131.

2 The election of September 6, 1910, for delegates to the constitutional convention was held in every county and precinct of the Territory of New Mexico,' and was as general as any November election ever will be, or ever has been, and in our opinion, was such an election as comes within the purview of sec. 4138.

In view of our opinion, the judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, and it is so ordered.

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