In re Allen

91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 315
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1915
DocketNo. 14687
StatusPublished

This text of 91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 315 (In re Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Allen, 91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 315 (Ohio 1915).

Opinion

Newman, J.

The petitioner was indicted under Section 12672, General Code, charged with the illegal sale of cocaine, the offense having been committed on March 9, 1911. He entered a plea of guilty and was sentenced indeterminately to a term of from one to five years in the penitentiary under the provisions of what is known as the old indeterminate-sentence law, Section 7388-6, Revised Statutes, and under this sentence he is now confined in the penitentiary.

Section 12672, as amended April 21, 1910, reads as follows: “Whoever sells, barters, furnishes or gives away any quantity of cocaine, alpha or beta eucaine or alypin, or any of their salts or compounds, or any preparation or mixture containing any of the aforesaid drugs or their salts or compounds of any of the combinations, of the same, * * * shall be fined not less than fifty dollars, nor more than five hundred dollars, for the first offense, and for each subsequent offense shall be imprisoned not less than one year nor more than five years in the penitentiary.”

The petitioner had been convicted and punished for an illegal sale of cocaine made on May 19, 1909.. The statute under which he was then convicted did not contain the following language which appears in the amended statute: “for th§ [319]*319first offense, and for each subsequent offense shall be imprisoned not less than one year nor more than five years in the penitentiary.”

The provisions of the statute under which petitioner was first convicted were substantially reenacted in the amended statute. In the latter the sale of additional drugs named therein is made criminal, the sale of cocaine, however, being prohibited both before and after the amendment. The principal difference is the provision for punishment of subsequent offenses by imprisonment in the penitentiary.

One of the grounds upon which petitioner predicates his right to a writ of habeas corpus is that the offense for which he is now serving sentence was his first offense under the amended statute, and he should therefore have been sentenced as a first offender notwithstanding'his prior conviction under the statute before its amendment.

If the amendment to the statute abrogates and repeals the original law as to those parts which have not been altered in the amending act, then his contention is well founded, but not so if the amendment is simply a continuance thereof in so far as the language of both are identical or substantially so.

By the act of April 21, 1910; when this statute was amended, the original statute was repealed. This was done under the requirements of Section 16 of Article II of the Constitution as follows: “No law shall be revived, or amended unless the new act contains the entire act revived, or the sec[320]*320tion or sections amended, and the section or sections so amended shall be repealed.”

As was said in State, ex rel. Durr, v. Speigel, ante, 19, in reference to this constitutional provision: “The obvious purpose of this provision of the constitution was to avoid the confusion caused by the distribution of different parts of the same section in different enactments; but there was no intention to change the operation of the original section as to provisions which are not changed.”

In Eli et al. v. Holton, 15 N. Y., 595, it is held that the effect of the amendment of a statute made by enacting that the statute “is amended, so as to read as follows,” and then incorporating the changes or additions with so much of the former statute as is retained, is not that the portions of the amended statute which are merely kept without change are to be considered as having been repealed and again reenacted, nor that the new provisions or changed portion should be deemed to have been the law at any time prior to the passage of the amended act. The part which remains unchanged is to be considered as having continued the law from the time of its original enactment, and the new or changed portion to have become the law only at and subsequent to the passage of the amendment. To the same effect is the holding in Moore v. Mausert et al., 49 N. Y., 332.

“When a statute amends a former statute ‘so as to read as follows;’ it operates as a repeal by implication of inconsistent provisions in the former law and of provisions therein omitted in the latter. [321]*321When the amendatory act reenacts provisions in the former law, either ipsissimis verbis or by the use of equivalent though different words, the law will be regarded as having been continuous, and the new enactment, as to such parts, will not operate as a repeal, so as to affect a duty accrued under the prior law, although, as to all new transactions, the later law will be referred to as the ground of obligation.” In the Matter of the Estate of Prime, 136 N: Y., 347.

In these New York cases it does not appear that in the amendatory statute there was an express repeal of an existing statute as there was in the statute in the case at bar, but the intention manifested in each instance by the legislature is the same. As is stated in Sutherland on Statutory Construction (2 ed.), section 238, where there is an express repeal of an existing statute and a reenactment. of a portion of it, the reenactment neutralizes the repeal so far as the old law is continued in force. The intention manifested is the same as in an amendment enacted in the form “amended so as to read as follows,” and where there is no express repeal. This author, in section 237, lays down the rule that the provisions of the amended sections which are merely kept without change are not to be considered as repealed and again reenacted but to have been the law all along.

In State, ex rel. Durr, v. Speigel, ante, 22, it is said: “The presumption is that when the legisla[322]*322ture adopts an amendment it intends to make some change in the statute amended, and when it reenacts the original statute as amended it has then made the only change it desires to make, leaving the rest of the provisions undisturbed.”

This seems to be the general rule of statutory construction, and, applying it here, the provision of the statute making it an offense to sell, cocaine otherwise than as pointed out by the statute was continued in force and was undisturbed by the amendment, the conviction of Allen for the offense committed March -11, 1911, was a second conviction under the statute and the provision for the punishment of subsequent offenses applied.

This statute was amended prior to the commission of the second offense. It does not provide additional punishment for an' offense committed before its passage nor does it in any way affect previous crimes. It is applicable to crimes committed after its passage only, and affects all persons similarly situated.

In Blackburn v. State, 50 Ohio St., 428, the court had before it what was known as the habitual-criminal act (82 O. L., 237), which imposed life imprisonment upon one who had been previously twice convicted, etc. It was held that that statute in its operation did not conflict with Section 10 of Article I of the Constitution of the United States prohibiting ex post facto laws, nor with Section 28, Article II of the Constitution of this state, prohibiting retroactive laws, although one or both of the previous felonies charged against the accused [323]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McDonald v. Massachusetts
180 U.S. 311 (Supreme Court, 1901)
Carlesi v. New York
233 U.S. 51 (Supreme Court, 1914)
Moore v. . Mausert
49 N.Y. 332 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Ely and Others v. . Holton
15 N.Y. 595 (New York Court of Appeals, 1857)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-allen-ohio-1915.