Guptill v. Richardson

62 Me. 257
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Me. 257 (Guptill v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guptill v. Richardson, 62 Me. 257 (Me. 1874).

Opinion

Danxorth, J.

This is an action of trespass to recover the value of a quantity of cider, and the vessels in which it was contained, alleged to have been illegally seized by the defendant, as marshal and constable of the city of Lewiston. It comes before us upon’ a report of the testimony, from which we learn that the cider was the property of the plaintiffs, of them own manufacture, unadul[262]*262terated, intended for sale by themselves, and at the time of taking was in the possession of one George H. "Ward, who was selling the same as their servant. There are in the writ five counts setting out as many distinct and separate trespasses; all of which were in the month of July, 1872. As the law then was, cider under these circumstances was not liable to forfeiture, though it was, as a general rule, classed among intoxicating liquors, and as such, forbidden. By the R. S., c. 27, § 22, amended by the act of 1872, c. 63, § 2, cider is declared to be “intoxicating” within the meaning of that chapter. By the same act, as amended by said c. 63, § 3, “The provisions of this chapter shall not extend to the manufacture and sale of unadulterated cider by the manufacturer.” The taking, as alleged, is not denied, but justified under and by virtue of five different warrants, issued from the Municipal Court of the city of Lewiston, or the clerk thereof, and a decree of forfeiture passed by said court.

Copies of the different warrants under which the defendant and his servants or deputies acted, with copies of the several libels filed in pursuance of said warrants, are in evidence, and it is conceded that in each case a decree of forfeiture was passed by the court, no one appearing as claimant.

Upon these facts the only question raised is whether these several processes were sufficient to justify the officer in making the seizures. '

The first objection is a general one and lies to all of them equally. All the warrants with one exception, not material to be noticed, were issued upon complaints against “intoxicating liquors” deposited in certain places therein described, “for the purpose of sale * * * in this State contrary to law.” Such a complaint and warrant it is said does not authorize the seizure of cider situated as this was, because by the statute referred to, it was not intoxicating liquor and was not subject to forfeiture. If under the law it were not to be considered as intoxicating liquor, the objection would be well founded. But that it was not liable to forfeiture would not excuse the officer for disobedience to his precept. [263]*263Whether it was or was not thus liable, must depend upon the testimony introduced in the subsequent judicial investigation and the judgment of the court thereon, and was not a matter upon which the officer would have any authority to'adjudicate. Was it then to be considered as “intoxicating liquors” as described in the warrants % The statute in the enacting clause so says, without any qualification or modification whatever. It is only in a subsequent and distinct clause that it is excepted from or taken out of the provision of the law. It is not cider as such or any modification of it, that is exempted, but it is only cider that is manufactured and sold by the same person. It is not a difference that can be ascertained by an examination of the article itself, which is the only means within the province of the officer, but must, depend upon extrinsic testimony which is for the court alone. In all cases under the law it is to be considered an “intoxicating liquor,” and the prohibition is removed from it not on account of any inherent change in its nature, but by a change of external circumstances.

Perhaps this will appear more clearly by stating the objection in another form. If valid, it would be necessary to negative the exception made by the statute in the complaint. But the rules of pleading either in civil or criminal cases, do not require this. When the exception is in.the enacting clause, it must be negatived in the complaint, because it then modifies the prohibited act, or in' other words it is a part of, and necessary to, a full description of the offence; but when the exception is in a subsequent clause, it is not descriptive of the offence; it in no way modifies or changes the nature of the act prohibited, but under certain circumstances excuses that which is otherwise forbidden. In the latter case the exception need not be negatived but is :a matter of pleading and proof on the part of the defendant. The rule in many of the books is thus stated, viz: “If there is an exception in the enacting clause, the party pleading must show that his adversary is not within the exception; but if there be an exception in a subsequent clause, or a subsequent statute, that is a matter of defence, and is to be shown by the other party.

[264]*264This principle is more fully illustrated in' Commonwealth v. Hart, 11 Cush., 130, a case very much in point. State v. Gurney, 37 Maine, 149; Commonwealth v. Edwards, 12 Cush., 187; Commonwealth v. Fitchburg Railroad Co., 10 Allen, 189; State v. Robinson, 33 Maine, 564; State v. Keene, 34 Maine, 500.

In Commonwealth v. Edwards, the objection to the complaint was substantially the same as that we are now considering. Shaw, C. J., there says: “It was objected, that the complaint does not aver that the liquors kept and intended to be sold, were not eider or wine kept for special purposes, which were authorized and excepted by the statute. But this is a matter of exception, not part of the description of the offence, but matter of defence and therefore need not be negatived.” It is clear then that the form of the complaints in the warrants under consideration was sufficient to hold the cider to answer; it must, therefore, necessarily be sufficient, to authorize the officer to make the seizures.

Many objections are however raised to each of these warrants and the proceedings under them, which it is necessary to examine, as they cannot be a justification to the officer unless issued by a court or magistrate of competent jurisdiction, which must appear upon the face of the process. No presumption can be made in favor of a precept coming from a tribunal of limited jurisdiction.

I. The warrant of July 10, was signed by Everett A. Nash, clerk, and issued upon a complaint on oath made before him as clerk of the Municipal Court for the city of Lewiston. By R. S., c. 27, § 35, such complaints may be made on oath or affirmation “before any judge of any municipal or police court or trial justice.” By this act all complaints in the Municipal .Court of Lewiston must be made before the judge and the oath must be administered and warrant signed by him. The only law transferring this or any of the duties of the judge to the clerk is found in the Special Laws of 1872, c. 177. By the sixth clause of section 1 of that chapter, the act establishing the Municipal Court in the city of Lewiston is amended so as to transfer the duties of the judge in relation to criminal business to the clerk “whenever the said judge [265]*265shall be engaged in the transaction of civil business, or be absent from the court room.” It does not appear that in relation to this complaint or warrant either of these contingencies had occurred. The only allegation tending to show the authority of the clerk to act in this respect is that in the complaint viz.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Me. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guptill-v-richardson-me-1874.