9 F. 689 | W.D.N.C. | 1881
(charging jury.) It is conceded that the stamp on the cask was not effaced and obliterated as required by law. The only controverted question of fact which you have to determine is, was the cask empty when discovered by the deputy collector ? The affirmative allegation is made in the indictment, and is material in constituting the offence charged; and, before a conviction can properly be had, you must be satisfied from all the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the allegation is true.
As the statute upon which this indictment is founded is highly penal, a general rule of construction requires that it shall be strictly construed, and not extended by implication. The words in a statute, if of common use, are to be taken in their natural, plain, obvious, and ordinary meaning. The offence charged in this case is a failure to efface and obliterate a stamp “at the time of emptying such cask,” etc. You will consider what is meant by the words “emptying such cask.” The ordinary signification of the verb “to empty” is to “make void;” “to exhaust;” “to deprive of the contents.” If this ordinary signification of the word used in the statute is adopted, the defendant cannot be convicted unless the evidence shows that the cask was,completely deprived of its contents — not a pint left. I am not disposed to adopt this strict literal construction, as there is another important rule in the construction of statutes which must be observed. We must consider the object and spirit of the statute, and try to ascertain, from the language of the whole and every part of the statute, what was the intent and purpose of the legislature in making the statute. The
I am also inclined to the opinion that the words “at the time of emptying such cask” ought not to receive such a strict coristruction as to require the effacing and obliterating of the stamp to be done eo instanti that the cask is emptied; but the act ought to be done in a convenient time, considering the surrounding circumstances affording evidence of reasonable excuse for delay.
If you should be satisfied from the evidence that the wife of the defendant, on the morning of the day when the cask was discovered, had emptied the cask as far as could be done by the faucet, and had removed it from the place where it had been used in the course of business, and had failed to efface and obliterate the stamp because she regarded the cask as still containing distilled spirits. of value, which she desired to save, when she could procure the necessary assistance to pour it out of the bung-hole, then I charge you that there was reasonable cause for delay, and the defendant is entitled to a verdict.
If, however, you become fully satisfied from the evidence that the cask was entirely empty at the time it was discovered by the deputy collector, or that it contained a small quantity of spirits of little value,
The counsel for the defendant insisted that even if the jury should be fully satisfied that there was a violation of law, the defendant is not guilty, as the offence was committed by his wife in his absence, and without his knowledge and consent. As a general rule, the husband is not criminally liable for offences committed by the wife in his absence, and without his consent or procurement. If he is present with his wife, and participates in the crime, he may be indicted. In most cases of felony, but not in misdemeanors, where the husband is actually or constructively present at the time of the commission of a crime, the wife may be excused, although she participated, on the ground of the actual or presumed command and coercion of the, husband compelling her to- the commission of the crime. But this is only a presumption of law, and may be rebutted by evidence showing that she was not acting under compulsion, but was a voluntary and principal actor.
The rules of law as to the joint and separate liability of a husband and wife in the commission of crime do not govern this case, and they are only referred to as they were strongly insisted on in the argument of counsel. This is not a crime of commission, but the offence consists in a failure to perform a legal duty. The emptying of the cask was not-'criminal, — the failure to efface the stamp is the gist of the offence.
The defendant had undertaken a public business under a license from the government, and his wife was his agent in carrying on this business, and she omitted to perform a duty imposed by law upon persons engaged in such licensed employment.
As a general rule, a criminal act of a servant or agent does not subject the master or employer to any criminal responsibility, unless he directed or co-operated in such act, or the employment necessarily resulted in such unlawful act. It is, however, well settled that where a master, owing a certain duty to the public, entrusts its performance to a servant, he is responsible criminally for the failure of his servant to discharge that duty, if the non-performance of such duty is a crime.
The wife in this case was the agent of her husband, and he is criminally responsible, if, without reasonable justification and excuse, she failed to perform the duty imposed upon him by the law. '
There is some direct conflict between the testimony of the witnesses