Keith v. State

91 Ala. 2
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 91 Ala. 2 (Keith v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith v. State, 91 Ala. 2 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

CLOPTON J.

These cases, involving the same questions, were submitted and will be considered together.

The appellants were separately indicted and convicted for selling whiskey in DeKalb county, in violation of the provisions of a statute prohibiting the sale, or otherwise disposing of spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, in the county of DeKalb. Acts 1880-1, p. 167. The sale by each of the appellants, within twelve months before the finding of the indictment, is clearly proved. The defense is, that the liquor was imported into this State from another State, and sold by appellants as the agents of the importer, in the original packages in which it was shipped. Before the passage of the late act of Congress, intoxicating liquors could be imported from one State into another, and there sold, without subjecting the seller to the punishment imposed by the State prohibition law, provided the original package was not broken; the Supreme Court of the United States having decided in Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100, that the right of importation oí distilled liquors from one State into another includes the right to sell in the original packages at the place where importation terminates; and that a State statute prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors, as applied to a sale by a non-resident importer in the original packages, unbroken and unopened, in which they were brought from another State, in the absence of congressional permission, is repugnant to the clause of the Constitution granting to Congress the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several States, and is inoperative. The decision being binding on this court, it is our duty to recognize it as authoritative in all cases coming within its scope and purview. According to the principle of the decision, however, the constitutional protection terminates, ‘■when the importer has so acted upon it, that it has become incorporated and mixed up with the general mass of property in the country, which happens when the original package is no longer such in his hands” — when it is opened and broken. When this occurs, the State may interfere to prohibit its sale. [7]*7Under the influence of the decision, the question is narrowed by the facts of the present cases to the inquiry, whether the liquor was sold by the appellants in the original packages, unbroken; which involves the further question, what constitutes an original package for importation, in the meaning of the decision ?

A succinct statement of the facts in each case, which vary somewhat, is necessary to a proper understanding of the precise question involved. In Rion's case, the liquor was shipped by B. L. Lowenthall & Son, wholesale and retail dealers, residing and doing business in Nashville, Tennessee, in half-pint, pint, and quart bottles. The bottles were separately wrapped in tissue paper, each labelled “original package,” with the name of the importer, and shipped in an open box, with hay laid between them, each box marked with the number of bottles, and their sizes, contained therein. From the bill of lading put in evidence, it appears that the boxes contained ten hundred and seventy-five bottles, and twenty-five jugs of liquor, and that shipped at the same time were twenty casks containing bottles of beer, and three casks containing bottles of ale; this was done to facilitate the shipment. Rion sold the whiskey as the agent of the importer, by the single bottle, wrapped and labelled in the manner stated.

On these facts, the question arises, whether the bottles having been placed and shipped in an open box, each bottle, or' the box containing them, constituted the original package. The small size of the packages, if the bottles be otherwise considered original packages, should have no bearing upon the answer to this question. As said In re Beine, 42 Fed. Rep. 545, the importer may determine, in the absence of a regulation by Congress, the form and size of the packages he puts up for export. We do not controvert the proposition, that under the decision of the Supreme Court, intoxicating liquors may be shipped in single bottles, as distinct and separate packages, and that the importer, in such case, has the right to sell a single bottle as in the original package. Conceding this, was the liquor sold by Rion so shipped ? In re Beine, supra, sheds no light upon this question. In that case, single bottles of beer and whiskey, packed and sealed, or nailed up in boxes of paste-board or wood, were shipped and sold in that shape. The boxes containing one bottle were not packed in any other box. In this case, the bottles, separately wrapped in paper, were shipped in a box, and sold singly. Merely labelling each bottle “original package,” did not make it one, if it Avas not really an original package. The term to pack, in its ordinary signiication, especially when used in reference [8]*8to carriage, means to place together and prepare for transportation, as to make up a bundle or bale; and package is a bundle or líale made up for transportation. It may consist of a single article; but, when separate articles are placed together, and prepared for transportation in a bundle, or bale, or box, or other receptacle, they do not form as many separate and distinct packages as there are articles, though they may be wrapped separately. The case, or box, or bale, in which separate articles are placed together lor transportation, constitutes the original package in the commercial sense. It appears from the bill of lading, that the transportation was not of the bottles as distinct and separate packages, but of a specified number of bottles of' liquor contained in boxes, each box indicating by mark thereon the number and sizes of the bottles contained therein. Had the boxes been covered and nailed, or otherwise secured, it would not have admitted of serious question, that they formed the original packages. The purpose of securing a box with a fastened cover is the protection of its contents against ioss by theft or otherwise, and for convenience for handling. A distinction between a box securely covered end one uncovered, in respect to its character and status as an original package, is a distinction without a difference, unsupported by principle'or reason. The mode of shipment adopted was manifestly a mere contrivance to evade the con: sequences of a violation of the State prohibition law, under the pretext of inter-state commerce, which does not entitle appellant to the protection afforded by the Federal Constitution to importers and sellers of original packages. The evidence in Biorís ease fails to show an importation and sale coming within the principle decided in Leisy v. Hardin, supra.

On account of the paucity of facts, we have had'more difficulty in reaching a satisfactory conclusion on Keith)s appeal. In reference to the mode of shipment shown by the bill of exceptions, the facts are: The liquor was shipped by a retail liquor dealer, engaged in business and residing in Rising Fawn, Georgia, in bottles (sizes not stated) securely corked and wrapped separately in paper bags, each marked with the kind of liquor and the name of the shipper, and consigned to him at Fort Fayne, Alabama. The bottles were sometimes placed, for the purpose of transportation, loosely on the floor of the cars, and sometimes loosely in an open box, which was fastened in some manner. The agent of the railroad company at Fort Payne counted the bottles, and checked them out to the defendant, who carried them to his store, and put them on shelves, where there was no other kind of goods.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ala. 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-state-ala-1890.