Hamilton v. Goding

55 Me. 419
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 Me. 419 (Hamilton v. Goding) 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
Hamilton v. Goding, 55 Me. 419 (Me. 1867).

Opinion

Kent, J.

The defendant, who is sheriff of the county, took and carried away, by his deputy, from the possession of, the plaintiff, who was the owner, certain liquors. Although this was done under the command of a writ, against a third party, as appears by the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, yet the defendant sets up no defence on that ground, but at the trial abandoned all attempts to justify the taking under legal process.

The defendant then appears to stand as a naked trespasser, having taken the property away and setting up no defence for his act peculiar to himself, but claiming that he, or any other private citizen, might do the acts that he did with legal impunity, because the articles taken were not property, protected by law, for the taking or destruction of which the law would 'afford redress. The case presents the naked question, whether intoxicating liquors, owned and possessed by an individual, he having an intention to sell them illegally at some time thereafter, are, by this intention, unexecuted, so absolutely and entirely put out of the protection of the law, that any other person may, at his will and pleasure take, carry away and convert them to his own use, or destroy them, with entire impunity, and without color of legal authority, or individual right in them; or in other words, are they outlawed ?.

It is admitted that there is nothing in the nature of the article in question, which, independently of any statute, renders it incapable of being a subject of property. The common law never has so declared. Indeed, until within a few years, spirituous liquors have been regarded as property, without limitation or qualification. A hogshead of rum was exactly the same, as an article of property and merchandise, as a hogshead of sugar. And, whatever the Legislature might do if it saw fit, we find no existing provision [423]*423which declares that no person can acquire property in liquors. But, on the contrary, we find a constant recognition of such right of property in individuals for their own use, by towns, and even in those liquors which have been seized and confiscated under process of law, and delivered by decree to the municipal authorities. This purging process restores the liquors to their original condition as articles of property. This point is fully discussed and clearly stated in Preston v. Drew, 33 Maine, 558, where the generality of the language which prohibited any action of any kind for the recovery or possession of intoxicating liquors or the value thereof was limited and restrained so as not to apply to liquors held legally and not intended for illegal sale. And this, on the ground that such must have been the intention of the Legislature, notwithstanding the very positive and apparently all embracing language of the statute. Otherwise property which the law had always protected and still recognized would be precluded from the benefit of the constitutional provision, — the right of every man to acquire; possess and have protected, property, and its practical enforcement in the provision that " every person for an injury done him in person, property, reputation or immunities shall have remedy by due course of law.” These provisions would be rendered nugatory and unavailable. Fisher v. McGinn, 1 Gray, 33. It is therefore clear, to start with, that something more must be established against the liquors, than the fact that they are spirituous and intoxicating and by their use cause serious and sad effects in the community.

If then, such liquors are property at the common law, and entitled to protection as such against the unjustifiable or inexcusable acts of third parties, —the question is how far the Acts of the Legislature restricting or prohibiting the manufacture, sale or keeping or possessing of such liquors, have given or attempted to give a right to any and all persons at their pleasure to take and carry away, and convert to their own use, or to destroy them, when held with an illegal intent.

[424]*424It is certain that there is no such express provision, —no language which directly and in terms confers such powers. If it exists it must be derived by inference drawn from the language of the statute, and its scope and purpose. It is a power of too transcendent a nature, and too much opposed to the general spirit of our laws to bo legally inferred, or hastily sanctioned.

It is to be observed that the general scope of all the provisions is to remedy or prevent a public evil, —one affecting the community as a body politic, and calling for the aid of the law and its officers to enact and execute such provisions as shall reach and overcome, if possible, such evil. Individuals are, undoubtedly, sufferers, but it does not therefrom follow that the law is to be executed, without the sanction of the forms of law, by the individuals who may suffer, in one form or another, the evils resulting from the uncontrolled sale of liquors. The apparent intent is, that this law, like all other laws for preventing and punishing crime, is to be enforced by the officers of the law, under the forms provided, and by the existing courts of law.

The status of this liquor in question before us, is exactly this: — It was the property of the plaintiff, if it was capable of being the subject oí property. It was held by him at the time it was taken, with the intention on his part to sell it in violation of the law of the State. What was the legal effect upon this liquor, when this intent was formed ? Before such intent, it was property and fully recognized and protected. Did the intent, when formed, take from it the capacity of being property, — divest the owner of all right to have it protected, and take away all remedy by due course of law for the injury done to his property? Did it become derelict, so that any one might seize it and destroy it, or convey it away ?

That its status, character, condition in the eye of the law, ■ was essentially changed by the provisions of the statute, is unquestionable. The intention to sell it in violation of law rendered it liable to seizure, confiscation and destruc[425]*425tion, or to be transferred to the town or city for lawful sale by its agent. But the same law made distinct and clear provision for such seizure and condemnation by the officers of the law, under legal process and procedure, after due notice and giving a right to any claimant to appear and claim the property. But this liquor was never so seized. Nothing is said in the law about the rights of private persons to seize or convert the liquors. Now, on what ground is it claimed that, before any such action by the authorities under the law, any unauthorized person may anticipate the regular action of those entrusted with the duty, and take the property from the possession of the owner, and do with it all, and more than all, that the legal officers could do.

Is it on the ground that the liquor thus held becomes at once a nuisance, public or private, and may be abated, as such, by any private person?

It would be difficult for the most ingenious and ardent friend of temperance to seriously maintain the proposition, that liquors, against which all that could be proved is that the owner intended them for sale, but had never so offered them, — were at common law a nuisance, within any recognized definition of that offence. Liquor is not in itself a nuisance. Preston v. Drew, ubi supra; Brown v. Perkins, 12 Gray, 89. We do not question the right of the Legislature to determine what shall be regarded as a nuisance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Me. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-goding-me-1867.