Commonwealth v. One Dodge Sedan

14 A.2d 600, 141 Pa. Super. 34, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 261
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 26, 1940
DocketAppeal, 108
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 600 (Commonwealth v. One Dodge Sedan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. One Dodge Sedan, 14 A.2d 600, 141 Pa. Super. 34, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 261 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This is an appeal by the Commonwealth from the refusal of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County to order the forfeiture, and delivery to the Liquor Control Board, of a Dodge Sedan motor vehicle alleged to have been unlawfully used by its owner within this Commonwealth in the illegal importation, possession and transportation of intoxicating liquors.

The following facts in evidence are not disputed:

Ambrose Clark, Jr., the owner of the vehicle, operated a retail licensed store in Millville, New Jersey, his business being similar to that of a retail liquor dealer in this State. On December 13, 1939 about 5:45 o’clock P. M. his Dodge Sedan car was observed by a Pennsylvania Liquor Control Enforcement officer and a Federal Agent cooperating with him—who were on the lookout for violations of the laws regulating intoxicating liquors —in front of the Dealers Liquor Company, Ninth Street and Atlantic Avenue, Camden, N. J., being loaded with a large supply of liquors. The officers had reason to believe that liquors were being unlawfully imported into *36 Pennsylvania from this wholesale distributor’s store. About 6:15 or 6:30, the car moved from the loading platform to about 3040 Ninth Street, and after a few minutes another car bearing a New Jersey registration pulled in front of the Dodge Sedan and both cars proceeded in a roundabout way toward Philadelphia, crossed the Delaware River Bridge and drove to Vine Street, Philadelphia. There the first car, which was driven by one Cohen, the owner or proprietor of Dealers Liquor Company, pulled to a side and the Dodge Sedan was driven as far as Sixteenth and Vine Streets, when the officers stopped it, about 6:45 o’clock, found Clark driving it and a stock of liquors under the rear seat of the car, viz., two cases of whiskey, one case Pomeroy G-reno, sixteen bottles Benedictine, four Cusenier Apricot, four Cusenier Cocoa, six quarts Fleisehmann’s Gin, four bottles Hennessy Brandy, two gallons Vineyard Sherry and one case Signet, costing (including New Jersey tax, 118.74) 1258.94.

They seized the car and the liquors, and instituted this proceeding for the forfeiture of the vehicle.

Clark’s story was that he had gone to Camden to get his Christmas holiday supply of liquors, etc., and brought his wife with him, who wanted to do some Christmas shopping in Philadelphia; that he left her at the Bridge trolley station at Broadway, Camden, under an arrangement to meet her at the Reading Terminal, Philadelphia, (12th and Market Streets) at 9:00 o’clock. He gave no explanation of what he was doing on Vine Street four squares west of Twelfth Street and three squares north of Market Street, beyond that he was going to park his car on a lot on Chestnut Street, and was passing the time until 9:00 o’clock, when he was going to meet his wife. The officer went to the Reading Terminal about 9:00 o’clock and found Mrs. Clark there, who corroborated her husband’s story.

Clark testified that he knew he had to have a trans *37 portation license in New Jersey in order to be able to transport any liquor in that State; and had such transportation insignia on his car; that after he met his wife, it was his intention to drive back into New Jersey and take the liquors to his store in Millville.

The court below was of opinion that there were many suspicious circumstances in connection with the indirect drive to the Delaware Biver Bridge and Clark’s journey up Vine Street over two hours before he was to meet his wife at Twelfth and Market, but found that he was not intentionally violating the law and dismissed the proceeding and ordered the car delivered to him.

We are of opinion that the forfeiture of the vehicle does not depend upon a wilful and intentional violation of the liquor laws; that if Clark was violating the laws when the vehicle was seized, the seizure was properly made and it was the duty of the court to order the vehicle forfeited and delivered to the Liquor Control Board: that there was a violation of our liquor laws by Clark, and that the forfeiture and delivery should have been ordered by the court.

Appellee’s counsel contends that the liquor was moving in interstate commerce and that the law enforcement officers in this State had no legal authority to seize it. Neither the premise of fact nor the conclusion of law is valid.

The liquor was not being transported into or through Pennsylvania for the purpose of delivery in New Jersey. Appellee testified that it was bought in New Jersey for delivery and use in New Jersey. He brought it into Pennsylvania, according to his story, not for the purpose of a more convenient delivery to some point in New Jersey, but to meet and pick up his wife, and when he had done so, it was his intention to go back to Camden and thence to Millville, which is almost due south of Camden and most conveniently reached from *38 central Philadelphia by way of that city. See Blackmore v. P. S. C., 120 Pa. Superior Ct. 437, 183 A. 115; Waer Bus Co. v. P. S. C., 117 Pa. Superior Ct. 514, 517, 178 A. 157. His legal conclusion is likewise unsound. In support of it he cites an excerpt from our opinion in Com. v. One Dodge Motor Truck, 123 Pa. Superior Ct. 311, 330, 331, 187 A. 461, affirmed in 326 Pa. 120, 191 A. 590, where we said: “As nothing to the contrary appears in the case we may take it for granted that Transcontinental Carriers, Inc. [which transported the five cartons in question from Louisville, Ky. to Pittsburgh, Pa.] was legally authorized to transport these liquors from Louisville, Kentucky, to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Had it continued their transportation from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Baltimore, Maryland—without such detention at Pittsburgh, for the use and profit of the owners, as to subject it to the police power of this Commonwealth (General Oil Co. v. Crain, supra, [209 U. S. 211])— it would not have been in violation of any law of this Commonwealth and the whiskey would not have been subject to seizure, condemnation and forfeiture. But if Transcontinental Carriers, Inc. did not see fit itself to carry this whiskey from Pittsburgh to Baltimore, and, instead, transshipped it at Pittsburgh to another carrier, it was its duty to see that the carrier thus selected to complete the transportation and delivery was authorized by our law to transport and deliver the same.” Counsel overlooks that we assumed in that case that Transcontinental Carriers, Inc., in transporting the whiskey from Louisville to Pittsburgh, loas legally authorized to do so—that is, that it possessed a federal permit recognized by the laws of this Commonwealth, which authorized it to carry liquors into and out of this State in interstate commerce. The statute involved in that case was the Act of December 8, 1933—Special Session of 1933-34, P. L. 57, amending the Act of February 19, 1926, P. L. 16, which was a supplement to the *39 Act of March 27, 1923, P. L. 34, and which provided, inter

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 600, 141 Pa. Super. 34, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-one-dodge-sedan-pasuperct-1940.