Blackwell v. State

36 Ark. 178
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 Ark. 178 (Blackwell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackwell v. State, 36 Ark. 178 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

English, C. J.

On the seventh of February,, 1878, William Blackwell was indicted in the circuit court of Yell county, for the Dardanelle district, the indictment charging that: “The said William Blackwell, on the

tenth day of January, 1878, in the incorporated town of Dardanelle, in the Dardanelle district, in the county of Yell, etc., unlawfully did sell one pint of whisky, spirituous liquor, to Dock Holland, within three miles of the Dardanelle Institute, an incorporated academy, while pupils were being taught in the same, without a certificate in writing from a regular practicing physician that said liquor was for use in a case of actual sickness, when the county court of Tell county had made an order, upon the petition of a majority of the adult residents of Dardanelle township, prohibiting the sale or giving away of spirituous or vinous liquors within three miles of said Dardanelle Institute, which said order was then of record, and in full force, against the peace,” etc.

j^ot °f Mddm/the liquor near academy, constitu- 2.Aeademy need not be j,“e¿orpor"

The defendant filed a demurrer to the indictment, which the court overruled. He was tried on a plea of not guilty, convicted and fined twenty-five dollars; filed motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, which were overruled, and he took a bill of exceptions and appealed.

I. The grounds of the demurrer were, that the county court had no jurisdiction, power or authority to make the order referred to in the indictment, and that the indictment . did not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense,

The county court was authorized to make such order by the act of March 2,1875 (Acts of 1875, p. £06), under which the indictment was drawn. The learned counsel for appellant has earnestly argued that the act is unconstitutional, but this question was carefully considered in Boyd v. Bryant, 35 Ark., 69, and the act was held constitutional, and that decision was followed in Wilson v. The State, 35 Ark., 414.

The indictment in this case, alleges all the material facts necessary to constitute an offense under the statute, and makes two unnecessary averments.

It was not necessary to allege that the Dardanelle Insti- * 0 tute, or academy, was incorporated. The statute does not make that material. It is sufficient to describe it in the language of the statute as an academy, college, university or institute of learning, and to mention the name, if any it has, by which it is known in the community where located, so as to identify it with reasonable certainty. Wilson v. The State, supra.

.Prescripsician to be proved by accused,

Nor was it necessary to allege that the accused sold the whisky without the written certificate of a physician, J J . required by the statute as a justification for the sale. This exception is not in the enacting section of the statute, but in a separate section, and is matter to be shown in defense, as held in Wilson v. The State.

II. The motion in arrest of judgment, presented the same objections raised on the demurrer to the indictment, and it was properly overruled.

III. On the trial, the court permitted the state to read in evidence, against the objection of appellant, the order of the county court referred to in the indictment.

The order appears to-have been made on the fourth of October, 1875, at a regular term of the county court of Tell county, and is, in substance, as follows:

“ Now, on this day, appear, in open court, here, W. D. Jacoway and Thomas Boles, and present the petition of George L. Kimball, Haynes A. Howell and Joseph Evans, and eight hundred and eighteen others of the adult residents of Dardanelle township, Tell county, etc., praying this court to make an order forbidding and prohibiting the sale, or giving away, .of vinous, spirituous or intoxicating liquors, within three miles of the Dardanelle Institute and the Dardanelle High school, institutions of learning in said Dardanelle township, under the provisions of an act of the general assembly of the state, etc., entitled, ‘An act to prevent the sale, or giviug away, of vinous, spirituous or intoxicating liquors, within three (8) miles of any academy, college or university in this state,’ approved March 2,1875; which petition is verified by the affidavits of "W. D. Jacoway and Thomas Boles. And the court, being fully advised in the premises, is satisfied and finds that said town of Dardanelle is not a city of the first or second class, in which a regular police force is maintained, and that the said institutions of learning are situated in said Dardanelle township, and that pupils are now being taught and instructed in the same, and that the said petitioners are a majority of the adult residents of said township; therefore, it is by the court here ordered, that the sale, or giving away, of vinous, spirituous or intoxicating liquors, within three miles of the said Dardanelle Institute and the said Dardanelle High school, in the said Dardanelle township, be, and is hereby, forbidden and prohibited, in accordance with the prayer of said petitioners, and the provisions of the act above mentioned,” etc.

3. Both petition?87

The order .was accurately framed, and shows a compliance with all of the provisions of section 4 of the act, under which it was made, and no good reason appears why it should not have been read in evidence.

IV. In the course of the trial, appellant produced the original petition on which the order was made, and offered to read it in evidence, and to prove by a witness, that four or five hundred of the persons whose names were attached to it, were women and girls; which the court excluded, and appellant excepted.

The statute authorized such order to be made upon the petition of a majority of the“ adult residents” of the township in which the school is located. The petitioners are not required to be males or electors. The legislature might, in the exercise of the police power of the state, have passed an act 'to prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors, etc., within three miles of academies, etc., without any provision for a petition from any number or class of inhabitants, or order of a county, court, as it has done by special acts applying to particular schools. But it thought proper, in the act in question, to leave it optional with a'majority of the adult residents of townships in which academies, etc., were located (not specially embraced in other acts — see sec. 5 of the act), whether they would, by petitions to, and orders of, the county courts, make the act operative in such townships. There is no good reason why women and girls, if adults, should not join in such petitions. They are as deeply interested in removing temptations to dissipation and vice from pupils of schools, and preserving good morals in communities where such institutions of learning are located, as men are- (Wilson v. The State, supra.) The county court judicially ascertained as a fact, that the petition was signed hy a majority of the adult residents of the township, and the correctness of its judgment in the matter could not be inquired into in this prosecution, being a collateral, and not a direct proceeding to review the judgment,

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ark. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackwell-v-state-ark-1880.