Bramble v. State

42 A. 222, 88 Md. 683, 1898 Md. LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 A. 222 (Bramble v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bramble v. State, 42 A. 222, 88 Md. 683, 1898 Md. LEXIS 246 (Md. 1898).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, together with-Wm. A. Harrington and John S. Kirwan, was indicted June 20, 1898, in the Criminal Court of Baltimore for selling oysters on commission in November, 1897, without 'first obtaining a license therefor, as required by section 67 A, of chapter 380 of the Acts of 1894. On June 24 the case was submitted under plea of non cul. to Judge Stockbridge, sitting as a jury. On June 27 a nolle prosequi was entered as to Harrington and Kirwan. On September 10, [685]*685the case being still pending, a special plea of non cul. was filed nunc pro tunc, to which a demurrer was on the same day interposed by the State, and thereupon the demurrer was sustained, a verdict of guilty was rendered, and judgment was entered on the verdict and a fine was imposed of one hundred dollars and costs, on the 10th of September, 1898.

On the 13th of September a paper termed in the record “ an agreed statement of facts,” though more resembling a bill of exceptions, was filed nunc pro tunc, and on September 16 this appeal was taken.

The following alleged facts, admitted by the demurrer, appear in the special plea.

That the parties indicted constituted a firm under the name of Bramble, Harrington & Co.; that they were the owners, either in whole or in part of thirteen oyster boats, some of which were dredge boats and others were known as “ buy boats,” oysters being bought for the cargoes of the “ buy boats ”; that the dredge boats are licensed to take oysters, the licenses being paid for by the firm, and that the usual property tax is paid on all these boats; that the firm engages a captain for each boat under an agreement that each captain shall employ the crew and pay other incidental and running expenses, he receiving sixty per cent, of gross receipts from oysters, whether caught or bought, less one and a half cents on each bushel of oysters brought to market, the firm receiving forty per cent, of gross receipts, plus the one and a half cents on each bushel of oysters brought to market; that when a cargo of oysters arrives, a member of the firm is notified, who himself notifies the buyer of some packing house; and some member of the firm together with the buyer, visits the vessel, and that the oysters are sold by the captain who receives from the buyer a statement showing the quantity of oysters bought, the price paid, and the amount due the captain therefor, and that no member of the firm has the power to sell, nor attempts to exercise such power; that the firm usually pays the captain the amount due him by the buyer, and takes an assignment of the claim of the [686]*686captain against the buyer; and that the one and a half cents per bushel is reserved by the firm “ to insure some certain recompense for the boat and money and the labor given by the firm toward the accomplishment of the enterprise ”; that all money for the supplies of the dredge boats, and all capital required for the purchase of oysters for the buy boats is furnished by the firm to the captain, who gives the firm a note therefor. The plea further states that the firm has sometimes advanced money to captains of boats in which the firm had no interest, the oysters of which were disposed of in the same manner as those from their own boats, the one and half cents per bushel being received in like manner.

The agreed statement of facts shows that the State introduced as a witness C. C. Conway, a general inspector and measurer of oysters, under the Act of 1894, ch. 380, who testified that each week during the season of 1897-8, he, or some other general inspector, called at the office of the firm, and received from them a statement of the various inspection fees collected by the firm for the inspectors under that Act, and also received from the'traverser the money representing his fees and that the traverser signed such statements as follows:

“ Commission Merchants name — Bramble, Harrington & Co.”

He also testified that he was familiar with the business of selling oysters on commission, and that the regular fee charged by such firms was one and a half cents per bushel for such oysters as they handled, and that the firm name of Bramble, Harrington & Co., appeared in the city directory of 1897 as oyster commission merchants.

It also shows that the traverser to maintain the issue on his part introduced the testimony of each member of the firm, who testified verbatim as set forth in the special plea, and in addition thereto testified that the firm had never been engaged in selling oysters on commission and had never sold a single bushel of consigned oysters, and that the members of the firm denied all knowledge of their designation in the city directory as oyster commission merchants.

[687]*687It is suggested by the Attorney-General in his brief that “ the record does not measure up in some of the essentials required under the decision of Salfner v. The State, 84 Md. 299, but inasmuch as a number of other cases depend upon the decision of this case, it is hoped the Court will pass upon this appeal.” We do not discover anything in Salfner’s case which requires us to refuse the consideration of this appeal. In that case it was held that the Act of 1892, ch. 506, regulating appeals in criminal cases, and placing them on the same footing with appeals in civil cases, did not repeal sec. 2, of Art. 5 of the Code, which provides that in prosecutions for the recovery of any penalty, fine or damages, any party may appeal to the Court of Appeals; and it was also held that in such cases “ an appeal will lie to this Court upon questions of law apparent upon the face of the record.”

In the case now before us, the record shows a judgment imposing a fine, and the case was so presented in the Court below as to place the appellant’s defence upon the record, and this being so, the appeal should not be dismissed. Keller v. The State, 12 Md. 327.

In that case the Court said: “ If the defence that the defendant sold lager beer of his own brewing had been pleaded, and the State had demurred to the plea, the point would have appeared by the record. Instead of this mode of proceeding, however, the State and the accused made an agreement of facts according to a practice which has obtained in this State for many years, by which the case was submitted to the Court. The office of the Court was to declare the law upon the facts admitted. This proceeding with us has almost entirely taken the place of special verdicts as being more convenient, yet serving the same purposes, and is governed by the same principles. Like special verdicts, the effect is to place the facts on the record as part thereof, on which the Court decides as on demurrer.” Mr. Chitty says, “ The jury have a right in all cases whatever, to find a special verdict by which the facts of the case are put on the record and the law is submitted [688]*688to the judges ”; and the Court in Keller’s case, commenting on this citation, says, “ If in civil proceedings a different form has been generally adopted for submitting the law to the Court, why may not the same mode be resorted to in prosecutions? The considerations of convenience, and facility for trial, apply as well to one as to the other, and we think the same practice should be allowed in both classes of cases.”

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183 A. 526 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 A. 222, 88 Md. 683, 1898 Md. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bramble-v-state-md-1898.