28 F. Cas. 363 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin | 1878
(charging jury). The law makes every proprietor or possessor of. and every person in any manner interested in the use of any still, distillery or distilling apparatus, liable for the taxes imposed by law on the distilled spirits produced therefrom. The government, who is the plaintiff in the case, alleges that the defendant, during the time in question, was the owner and proprietor of the still and had an interest as partner, or otherwise, in its use. The defendant admits, and the evidence shows, that he was the owner of the premises on which the distillery was situated, but he denies that he was the proprietor in the sense in which that word is used in the statute, and denies that he had any interest in the use of the still. And this constitutes the issue which the jury are to try. The issue is simple, and all I desire is to call your attention to it, and to state the law applicable to the case without restating the evidence which is fresh in your minds and has been fully and ably discussed by counsel on both sides.
First, then, was the defendant the proprietor of the distillery from August 11, 1873, to May 1, 1874, during the time when it is charged the spirits were manufactured on which the taxes have not been paid? The evidence shows that he was the owner of the distillery premises and had let them out by written lease to one Alexander L. Rogers, who was in possession of and running the still., I think the word “proprietor” is used in the statute in the sense of an owner, who, whether in personal possession or not, has the exclusive right to, and the control over, the premises. A person in possession of premises as lessee under a lease for years, has himself, as against the general owner and all the world, the right to the exclusive possession, control and management of the same during the continuance of the lease, and is for all such purposes as much the proprietor of the premises, for the time being, as though he held the legal title in fee. And I think it was never the intention of the law to make the general owner of premises so leased, and not himself having any right to the possession, control or management of the premises or business carried on, and having no interest in the distillery business except to receive his stipulated rent, liable for the payment of the taxes imposed by the government on the spirits distilled. I think, on the contrary, the purpose of the law is to make every person, whether possessor or proprietor, who has any control of the business, and every person having an interest in the use of the still, whether possessor, owner, partner, or otherwise, liable for the payment of taxes so imposed. So, I think, if you should find the facts to be that Rogers or Rogers and Bunker, during the time in question, had the exclusive possession of the distillery under the lease from the defendant, and the exclusive control and management thereof, and that defendant had no other interest than to get the rent or to obtain payment of the indebtedness due from Rogers, or Lentz & Rogers, to the bank on account of the then present or previous deal, the fact of his being the owner of the real estate and letting it to Rogers, would not render him liable to the payment of the-taxes imposed on the highwines produced at the distillery. And in that case you will next inquire and determine from the evidence whether the defendant was in any manner interested in the use of the distillery during that time; for if he was, then he should pay the taxes. But I think there is no doubt that the interest, to make defendant liable, should be a direct interest in the business, and not merely an indirect interest in the success of the business as-belonging to other persons. If the business was in fact his, or he was interested as a secret partner, or otherwise in the profits, then he will be liable for the taxes on the products of the still. But if the business-belonged to Rogers, or Rogers & Bunker, and they alone were entitled to the -proceeds, and the defendant was only interested in having them succeed because their success would the better enable Rogers or Bunker to pay moneys advanced by the bank of which defendant was president and stockholder, to Rogers, or to Lentz. & Rogers, or to Bunker, for the purpose of paying taxes on the highwines, or to carry-on the business, then I think the defendant would not be liable. Nor is the fact of his having bought cattle to be fed at the still, sufficient of itself to show such an interest in the distillery business as would make him liable for the taxes; but of course the evidence upon that subject should be considered by the jury in connection with the rest of the testimony in considering and determining what the true character of the whole transaction was, and whether or not defendant had in fact an interest in the profits of the distillery business. That question the jury are to determine fairly from a full and comprehensive view of the whole case, and from the weight of the testimony taken as a whole. What do you believe? What is the conviction produced in your minds by the evidence? You are the sole judges of the weight to be given to the testimony of the several witnesses, and upon the testimony, taken in connection with the contracts, papers, and record evidence in the case and all of the circumstances, you
The business of rectifying is distinct in the law from the business of distilling; and has no necessaiy connection with it, and if .you shall believe from the evidence that •defendant had an interest either alone or with Bunker in the business of rectifying, that of itself would not render him responsible for taxes on the highwines used in that business, though he may have known that the taxes on the wines received from the distillery had not been paid. But it would be necessary to go further and show that he had an interest in the distillery business itself. But this, of course, should not prevent a full consideration by the jury, of the circumstances attending the defendant’s relations with Bunker in respect to the rectifying business, and the real nature •of the transaction between them, as bearing upon the main question at issue in the case-^ to-wit: whether or not defendant was in .any manner interested in the use of the still. For in determining that question, as before said, it will be your duty to consider .all the evidence and circumstances in the case. Again, the jury will understand that the defendant’s liability to the payment of the tax, turns upon the question of his being a proprietor or possessor of the still, or interested in the use of the still, and not upon the question of his knowledge or want of knowledge, as to how the distillery was being run, whether “straight” or “crooked.” So that the fact of defendant’s having notice that illicit wines were being made by Rogers at the distillery would not make him liable for the tax, if all the interest he had in the success of the business was to collect the debt due the bank for rent and for moneys advanced. But his knowledge, if he had such knowledge, that the distillery was being run contrary to law and that the taxes were not being paid, and his conduct in relation thereto, are all to be considered as part of the evidence in this case, and it is for you to say how far they bear upon the question of his interest in the distillery business.
Nor would the fact, if such were the fact, that Bunker after he went into the rectifying business, formed a secret partnership with Rogers in the distillery business, unknown to defendant, though you may believe that defendant was interested in the rectifying business alone or with Bunker, render the defendant liable for the taxes on the spirits distilled at the distillery.
Verdict for defendant.