Kerr v. State

88 N.W. 240, 63 Neb. 115, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 350
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1901
DocketNo. 12,022
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 88 N.W. 240 (Kerr v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr v. State, 88 N.W. 240, 63 Neb. 115, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 350 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The defendant in the court below was prosecuted for selling intoxicating liquors without having a license therefor as required by law. The information contained several counts of alleged different sales, on two of which he was convicted after a trial to the court and jury on a plea of not guilty. He was adjudged to pay a fine of $200 on one of the counts on which he was found guilty, and $100 on the other, and the costs of the prosecution. To secure a reversal of the judgment thus imposed he brings the case to this court by proceedings in error.

It is practically admitted that the defendant made the sales charged and the defense interposed that the liquor sold is what is denominated “malt mead,” being a “soft” or “temperance” drink as expressed by him, and non-intoxicating. He was engaged in conducting “a temperance saloon,” selling, as is contended, only non-intoxicating drinks, cigars, etc. Among the refreshing drinks he dispensed to his thirsty patrons was a liquor put up in quart bottles, and labeled “Malt Mead,” which he claims he sold at the time the unlawful sales charged were made, and that such liquor was not intoxicating, and did not contain in it a percentage of alcohol sufficient to intoxicate. It also appears from the evidence that besides the malt mead, which was contained in bottles labeled as such, the defendant dispensed liquors from unlabeled quart bottles of which he had a barrel or more, and which it was testified was the liquor sold which was charged -in the information, and that it was beer, and intoxicating. At the time of the [118]*118arrest of the defendant the liquors then in his possession were seized, and in the seizure was a barrel of bottled liquors unlabeled and another barrel the bottles in which were labeled “Malt Mead.” The witnesses for the state testified that the bottles purchased from, the defendant, for the illegal sales of which he was being prosecuted, had no labels upon them. The jury were justified from the evidence, from our view of the record, in finding that the sales of liquor charged were other than malt mead, and were, in fact, as testified, beer, and intoxicating. This finding might properly be reached entirely aside from the question of whether malt mead was an intoxicating liquor, regarding which there seems to be a controversy. The evidence warrants the conclusion that the unlabeled bottles did not contain the same liquors as those labeled “Malt Mead.”

Of the alleged errors complained of it is contended the trial court erred in overruling a motion for a continuance, presented by the defendant at the term of court at which he was tried and convicted. The term began December 17, 1900. On September 17 prior thereto the defendant was arrested, charged with the offense for which he was tried, and after a preliminary hearing was required to enter into a recognizance for his appearance in the district court on the first day of the next term to answer such charge. The motion for a continuance was based on the allegation that H. W. Wiley, of Washington, D. O., and Dr. P. Fisher, of Milwaukee, Wis., were important witnesses on defendant’s behalf ; that they were practical chemists, and would testify that the kind of beverage which defendant was charged with selling contained less than one and one half per cent, of alcohol, and was not intoxicating; that he knew of no other witnesses by whom he could prove the same facts, and that since the preliminary examination he had written to various parties for the testimony set out, and did not find out until December 15 the names and locations of the witnesses mentioned; that the witnesses, if given an opportunity to analyze malt mead, would testify that it was [119]*119not intoxicating. An additional affidavit was filed in support of the motion in which it is stated that the parties selling the liquors to the- defendant, Avho resided in St. Joseph, Mo., Avere material witnesses, and would testify IRat at the time of sale they represented to the defendant that the malt mead sold Avas a temperance drink, and nonintoxicating, and contained less than one and one-half per cent, of alcohol, and that the liquors were purchased upon the representations so made. If such representations were in fact made as alleged and relied on they could hardly operate as a defense, if in fact intoxicating liquors Avere being sold in violation of Iuay. We find no such abuse of discretion in the ruling of the trial court on the motion for a continuance as amounts to prejudicial error. The rule is firmly established that an application for a continuance is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court and Avill not be disturbed, unless it appears that there has been an abuse of discretion. The defendant did not, in his application, shoAV that he had used due diligence in procuring the desired testimony, nor did he shoAV that the liquors sold, or the same kind, could not have been analyzed by other competent practical chemists easy of access and Avithin the jurisdiction of the court, of whom, Ave are all cognizant of the fact, there are many. The materiality of the evidence is not satisfactorily shown. The affidavit was obviously intended to sIioav that there was a brand of malt mead which, upon analysis, would be found to contain less than one and one-half per cent, of alcohol, and non-intoxicating. But the defendant made affidavit to- no state of facts shoAving that the liquors purchased by him and then sold, for Avhich he Avas charged with violating the law, are of that identical brand. The statement in the affidavit that if the absent witnesses had an opportunity to analyze the kind of liquor sold they would testify it contained less than one and one-half per cent, of alcohol, is a mere conclusion. What per cent, of alcohol the liquor sold or that of the same kind unsold contained, and whether or not it was intoxicating, was a matter AAdiich any competent prac[120]*120tical chemist could determine upon analysis; and many of them could have been procured, if desired, within the state, and without the necessary time and expense to secure the testimony of those of the same profession in Washington or Wisconsin. The affidavit disclosed no reasonable probability of securing the testimony of the witnesses mentioned upon any material fact in issue in the case. Their testimony to the effect that a liquor called “malt mead,” which was non-intoxicating, Avas breAved, and sold in the market, could avail the defendant nothing in the absence of any evidence connecting the liquors sold by him as of the same kind and quality.

In the motion for a new trial one of the grounds assigned was newly discoArered evidence. The shoAAdng in support thereof consisted of what are purported to be the depositions of the witness Dr. P. Fisher heretofore mentioned, and another, holding a subordinate position, as analytic chemists of beers malted by the Pabst Brewing Company, of Milwaukee, Wis., in which they testify to the manufacture by that company of a liquor called “malt mead” and that it is non-intoxicating. What has been said regarding the materiality of the testimony spoken of in the affidavit for a continuance applies equally well to the motion for a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. As before stated, the jury were justified in finding that the liquor sold was not malt mead and was intoxicating; and, even though it be conceded that malt mead Avas a non-intoxicant, that fact need not necess.arily and probably would not change the result in the event of a retrial. This of itself is sufficient to sustain the action of the trial court in overruling the application for a neAV trial on that ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 N.W. 240, 63 Neb. 115, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-state-neb-1901.