Commonwealth v. Seventeen & One-Half Barrels & Seventy-Two Tanks of Beer

93 Pa. Super. 84, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 282
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 21, 1927
DocketAppeal 53
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 Pa. Super. 84 (Commonwealth v. Seventeen & One-Half Barrels & Seventy-Two Tanks of Beer) 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. Seventeen & One-Half Barrels & Seventy-Two Tanks of Beer, 93 Pa. Super. 84, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 282 (Pa. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The proceeding in the court below: was in rem by the Commonwealth for the forfeiture and condemnation, under sub-section (D) of section 11 of the Snyder Act of March 27, 1923, P. L. 31, of seventeen half barrels and seventy-two tanks of beer, seized under a search warrant by police officers of the City of Philadelphia on June 3, 1926. The seventeen half barrels were seized in a portion of a dismantled brewery, located at the southwest corner of 31st and Master Streets, occupied at that time by J. Bloom and Sons under a lease (dated about six months prior to the seizure) from the Bergner and Engel Brewing Company and used by the Blooms as a place of business for the purchase and sale of bottles and bags. These half barrels contained beer having an alcoholic content exceeding one-half of one per cent. No answer was filed to the Commonwealth’s petition for forfeiture and condemnation of these seventeen half barrels of beer and an order of condemnation was accordingly entered by the court below as to them. At the same *86 time the officers seized seventy-two tanks- or vats of beer (containing some 22,000 barrels) in the adjacent brewery of the Bergner and Engel Brewing Company at the southeast corner of 32'nd and Master Streets. The Commonwealth presented to the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County its petition for the forfeiture and condemnation of the liquor and its containers. In this petition it was averred that the liquor and property “were unlawfully held and possessed [on the premises situated at the southeast corner of 32nd and Master Streets in the City of Philadelphia] in that no permit (as permit is defined by the National Prohibition Act) had been issued......for the possession of the said liquor and/or property on the said premises”; that “the said liquor and/or property was intended to be unlawfully used and was used by the possessor thereof in violation of the provisions of section 3 and section 11 of the aforesaid act, that is to say, the said property was intended to be used and was used for the manufacture of liquor intended to be sold, bartered and disposed of in violation of the provisions of the said act and the said sections”; and that the owner of the liquor and property was unknown to the district attorney.

On July 13, 1926, the Bergner -and Engel Brewing-Company filed its petition to intervene and for dismissal of the Commonwealth’s petition, which petition of the brewing company is, in effect, an answer to the Commonwealth’s petition and a claim of lawful ownership of and right of possession to the liquor contained in the seventy-two vats. It is admitted in the answer of the brewing company that it is the owner of the brewery in which the tanks were seized and of the tanks but it is denied that it either owned or possessed the seventeen half barrels of beer recited in the petition or that they were on its premises. In reply to the averment in the petition that the property and liquor *87 were unlawfully held and possessed in that 'no permit had been issued for their possession, the language of the answer is “it denies sub-section (a) of said paragraph — that the said liquor and property were unlawfully held and possessed thereon in that no permit (as ‘permit’ is defined by the National Prohibition Act) had been issued.” There is no positive averment in the answer that claimant had a permit. It is admitted that the property in which the tanks a’nd contents were located had been used and possessed as a brewery and it is averred that “in August of 1925 said brewery property, in a proceeding brought before the Court of Common Pleas No. 1 of the City and County of Philadelphia, was padlocked, and since that time has not been operated as a brewery; and that at the time said padlock proceedings and injunction issued therein, the contents of the said tanks mentioned in the petition were a beverage in the course of manufacture and not a beverage in a condition to be marketed, nor was the said beverage intended to be marketed at the time of said proceedings.” It is also denied “that said property was intended to be used at the time of its alleged seizure for the manufacture of liquor, intended to be sold, bartered and disposed of in violation of the provisions of said Act.” Under the provisions of paragraph IV of sub-section (D) of section 11 of the act the proceeding was at issue under these pleadings and the burden of proof resting upon the respective parties at the ensuing hearing is defined therein. The charge of the Commonwealth, in brief, was that the liquor was intoxicating and possessed within this Commonwealth for beverage purposes in violation of the third section of the act and by section four it is provided “that proof of the possession of such intoxicating liquor shall be prima facie evidence that the same was acquired, possessed and used in violation of this act.” By paragraph V of sub-section (D) of section 11 it is enacted that “At the time of *88 said hearing, if the Common-wealth shall produce evidence that the property in question was unlawfully possessed or used, the burden shall be upon the claimant to show; (a) that he is the owner of said property; (b) that he lawfully acquired the same; [and] (c) that it was lawfully used and possessed by him.”

The reply of the claimant, in the language of the brief of its counsel, was that the liquor seized “was a beverage in the course of manufacture, and not a beverage in condition to be marketed, nor was it intended to be marketed at the time of the proceedings,” and, being in the course of manufacture, an alcoholic content in excess of one-half of one per cent, was permissible. The proviso to section 3 of the act says “that nothing in this act shall prohibit the alcoholic contents of malt or brewed liquors from exceeding one-half of one per cent, during the process of manufacture only thereof.” As a result of the hearing the learned judge of the Court of Quarter Sessions before whom it was held dismissed the Commonwealth’s petition for condemnation with respect to the seventy-two vats of beer seized on the premises of claimant but, as stated, granted a decree of condemnation as to the seventeen half barrels of beer seized on the premises of J. Bloom and Sons. From that portion of the order which refused condemnation of the vats and contents we have this appeal, by the Commonwealth.

At the hearing the Commonwealth showed that a chemical analysis of samples taken from the vats disclosed that fifty-six of them contained beer, the alcoholic content of which exceeded one-half of one per cent, by volume, — practically four per cent. — and the remaining sixteen contained beer with an alcoholic content less than one-half of one per cent. The Commonwealth also showed the seizure of the vats and their contents in the brewery of claimant, which was not then in operation, and the arrest of three of its employes in the office; also the seizure of the seventeen *89 half barrels of beer in the Bloom plant and the arrest of two employes of claimant, who were operating a racking-machine on the second floor of the Bloom plant and racking beer into several of the seventeen half barrels, and who, after their arrest, went to the claimant’s brewery to change their clothing.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Hefferman and Brodski
96 Pa. Super. 351 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Commonwealth v. Heffernan
12 Pa. D. & C. 331 (Delaware County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1929)
Commonwealth v. Seventeen Half Barrels of Beer
94 Pa. Super. 430 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Commonwealth v. Seventeen Half Barrels of Beer
10 Pa. D. & C. 566 (Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 Pa. Super. 84, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-seventeen-one-half-barrels-seventy-two-tanks-of-beer-pasuperct-1927.