116 P. 1013 | Wyo. | 1911
In this case the county and prosecuting attorney of Sheridan county filed in the district court of that county an information charging the plaintiff in error, James Vines, with selling intoxicating liquor without a license. The information contained fifteen counts, each count charging a separate and distinct sale. He was tried and convicted on ten counts and fined in the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars on each of said ten counts, and he brings the case here on error.
The first count of the information is as follows: “Comes now Chas. A. Kutcher, County and Prosecuting Attorney of the County of Sheridan and State of Wyoming, and in •the name and by the authority of the State of Wyoming, informs the court and gives the court to understand that James Vines, late of the •county aforesaid, on the 4th day of August, A. D. 1909, at the County of Sheridan in the State of Wyoming, not having then and there a license so to do, did then and there wilfully and unlawfully sell to one George English intoxicating liquor, to-wit, beer, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the. peace and dignity of the State of Wyoming.”
The second count is as follows: “And the said County and- Prosecuting Attorney, who prosecutes as aforesaid, in the name and by the authority aforesaid, further informs
The defendant moved to quash the information and each and every count thereof, for the reasons, “1. Because the same does not allege with fullness and precision the nature and character of the offense or offenses for which the defendant is being prosecuted. 2. Because the same fails to státe any definite place or places in the county at which the alleged sale or sales was or were made. 3. Because the same does not state in what place in the county 'the said alleged sale or sales was or were made, and whether by wholesale or retail. 4. Because the same fails to state or allege what kind of license defendant is accused of not having, whether wholesale or retail. 5. Because the same fails to state or allege whether the liquor said to or alleged to have been sold was so sold to be drunk on the premises where sold or at the place where sold or otherwise. 6. Because the same does not state or allege that said alleged sale or sales of liquor was or were for money or state the amount of money for which the same was or were sold.”
This motion came on for hearing before the District Court of Sheridan county, Judge C. H. Parmelee, the judge of said district, presiding, and was denied, and exception to the ruling taken. During the same term of said court, Judge Roderick N. Matson, judge of the First Judicial District, was called in to try the case and it was tried before him and a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment as above stated. A motion in arrest of judgment, and a motion for a new trial were denied, and by an order of the court the
The defendant was prosecuted under the following provisions of Sec. 2832, Comp. Stat.: “No person or persons within the state, directly or indirectly, in person or by agent
It'is urged, that the court erred in instructing the jury “that in the absence of proof to the contrary, beer is regarded as an intoxicating liquor.” The courts have arrived at different conclusions as to whether or not a charge of unlawfully selling intoxicating liquor is sustained by proof that the liquor sold was “beer,” without evidence that it was intoxicating. A citation and review of the cases would aid but little, and we deem it sufficient to say, that, in 'our opinion, the weight of authority and the more reasonable view is, that when the word “beer” is used, without any restriction or qualification, it denotes an intoxicating malt liquor, and that it is generally so understood and used. It is also contended that as the court admitted testimony tending to prove that the beer in'question was intoxicating, the
Counsel for defendant also contend that the court erred in instructing that each sale of intoxicating liquor without a license therefor constitutes a separate and distinct offense. However, in their brief they say, “while the courts have generally held, under a statute like ours-, that each actual sale of liquor is an offense under the law, yet- it seems to us that the statute should have a broad and fair interpretation.” We have no disposition to depart from what counsel correctly state the courts have generally held in that respect, and have not been seriously impressed with their able argument to the contrary. The instructions correctly stated the law on that point.
The bill o-f exceptions, .after the evidence was all in, recites that “the state moves to dismiss the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th counts contained in the information. Motion granted by the court and those counts stricken out.” The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that under the law and the evidence it must find the defendant not guilty. And it is argued that because the second and all subsequent counts of the information failed to allege that the prosecution was “in the name and by the authority of the State of Wyoming,” and as the first count containing that statement was dismissed and stricken out, it left the remaining counts fatally defective. We do not think so. The information is in the usual form where the indictment or information contains more than one count. The averment of the authority by which the case is prosecuted • is a matter to be stated in the caption or commencement of the.information and need not be repeated at length in the subsequent counts, but may be referred to, as was done in this case, as “in the name and by the authority aforesaid.” In Davis v. State, 19 O. St. 270, the indictment was in two counts, and the identical question here presented was determined.
Numerous errors are assigned in reference to the admission of testimony; but a careful reading of the entire testimony satisfies us that while the court admitted some testimony, over objection, the materiality or relevancy of which does not appear to us; yet, it was o,f a nature that it equally appears to us not to have been prejudicial to the defendant.
The only remaining question is, whether the verdict and judgment are sustained by the evidence. As to the second count, which charged a sale of beer to Jim Reynolds, there is the testimony of one witness only; the substance of which is, that he saw Reynolds and another -standing at the bar; that there were beer glasses on the bar in front of them with beer in two of the glasses; that Reynolds remarked, ‘T will have to tap the till to pay this fifty cents, or something like that he said,” and at that time the bartender rang up fifty cents on the cash register. There is no evidence that either of those men called for- beef, that any was delivered to them, that they drank or took away .any beer, or that they touched the glasses in front of them; and the only evidence of a payment or promise to pay for anything was as above stated. That being all the evidence to sustain that count, we do not think it amounted to proof of a sale, or that the jury was warranted in so finding. As to the eighth count charging a sale to one Coleman, the state produced a witness who had been a police officer at the time of the alleged sale, and who had been requested by the county attorney to procure evidence of unlawful sales of intoxicating liquor by defendant, and who had made a written report of what he saw to the county attorney. On the stand he denied any recollection of what he had seen or that he had seen Coleman buy beer. He admitted making a written report, dated the day the sale was charged to have been made, but what that report contained is not
The other counts of the information on which the defendant was found guilty, we think are sufficiently sustained by the evidence. '
The judgment of the district court is reversed as to the second and eighth counts of the information, and the cause, remanded with direction to set aside and vacate the judgments upon those counts. The judgment, so far as. it relates to the other counts, is affirmed.