Nicholson v. People

29 Ill. App. 57, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 400
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 25, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 Ill. App. 57 (Nicholson v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholson v. People, 29 Ill. App. 57, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 400 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

This was an information in two counts, charging, in the first, that appellant kept a dram-shop at Lewiston in which he sold intoxicating liquors to persons intoxicated and to persons who were in the habit of getting intoxicated, whereby the place became and was a common nuisance; and in the second, that he there sold intoxicating liquors in less quantity than one gallon without having a legal license to keep a dram-shop, and to minors without the written order required by Sec. 6 of the dram-shop act, whereby, etc., as in the first.

That he did there keep a dram-shop and sold in less quantities than one gallon was proved and not denied, but we do not understand that a conviction was sought or claimed on that ground. Evidence was also introduced to show he sold to persons who were in the habit of getting intoxicated, and to minors without the written order required; and the verdict found the defendant “ guilty in manner and form as charged in the information, of selling to a minor;” on which judgment was entered.

We hold that the information does not charge in each or either count distinct and different offenses, but only the one offense of keeping a common nuisance. They allege, in general terms, the violation of several different provisions of the act, but merely as specifications of divers uses to which the place was put, either of which would make it the nuisance charged; and this, we think, is proper pleading.

Since it is known from the verdict which óf these uses was found, and consequently also which were not, we might dismiss without further considering the errors complained of in rulings relating to them. They did no harm to the defendant. Thus, the license excluded might have disproved the alleged use of the place for the sale of liquor without a license, but could have had no tendency to disprove either of the others, including the one found, or to rebut any evidence introduced to prove them. So of the allowance of the question put to several witnesses—whether certain persons used or were in the habit of using intoxicating liquors intemperately; though this court sanctioned a like question in the case of Gallagher v. The People (post), which was affirmed in 120 Ill. 179.

George Weatherlow testified that he was under age, and that on July 28, 1886, he bought beer twice of some one behind the bar at the place “ they say33 was kept by the defendant; but he lived at Ellis ville, twenty-five miles from Lewis-ton, and could not swear as of his own knowledge that it was kept by him. It appeared on his cross-examination that a complaint was made against appellant for these supposed sales and a trial had thereon before the police magistrate of Lewis-ton in September, 1886, and that the witness testified on that trial. He was asked a number of questions as to what he then stated, and claiming, as to some, that his memory did not serve him, was challenged to explain how he could remember any fact as of a particular date, and not the particular date of every subsequent fact that he could remember, or how remember any one thing he had done in July, and not everything he had said in the more recent month of September—a metaphysical mystery that may never be solved to the satisfaction of adverse counsel, and that costs a deal of time which might be saved for better use if they would only consider how little it troubles courts and juries. Ho further attempt was made to show what the witness did say on that trial, but the defense offered, with all due preliminary proof, the docket of the police magistrate showing that the defendant was found “not guilty;33 which the court, upon objection by the State’s attorney, excluded.

Was this error % That the question of fact, whether appellant sold beer to the witness, was alike provable and material in that case and in this; that the docket entry was proper evidence of the verdict in that; and that such verdict and the judgment thereon would be a bar to any subsequent prosecution of the defendant for the same ofíense, are propositions not open to debate. But here the proposed evidence was not offered under a plea of former acquittal of the same offense. It was offered alone, without proof of the particular issue or evidence on which it was rendered, as of itself independent affirmative evidence upon the question of fact, treated as open and triable, to contradict the witness’ statement that he bought the beer, that statement having been corroborated by Foutz, who was with him at the time, and who also knew and identified the place as appellant’s saloon. Its claim to competency for that purpose must rest upon the assumption that a verdict of not guilty in such a case, unaided by further evidence, disproves the allegation of each and every fact that was necessary to maintain the complaint; for, being general, it can have no specific application to only one or some of such facts, and yet the law is that if any one of them be not proved beyond a reasonable doubt the verdict should be “not guilty.” It may therefore be consistent with the existence and full proof of all but one; and since it furnishes no means of determining which one was intended, it can not be evidence to contradict either. It is not like a finding upon a particular issue ; nor have counsel suggested that it negatives the allegation that the witness was under age, or did not present a written order from his parent, guardian or family physician, authorizing the sale. We are therefore of opinion it did not tend to disprove,the allegation of the sale.

For would it have been competent if offered under a plea of former acquittal. In Wragg v. Penn Township, 94 Ill. 11, the Supreme Court, recognizing the difficulty of the question, the conflict of decisions thereon in other States, and the unsteadiness of its own holdings on the subject, seems to have settled the law for Illinois that there is no “ prohibition on the power of the Legislature to declare that the commission of a particular act shall constitute two or more offenses, each of a different grade of criminality, and punishable in a different manner ; ” and that “a conviction or acquittal in such case, under either statute, would be no bar to a conviction under the other, for the accused would not be twice in jeopardy for one offense, but only once in jeopardy for each offense.” Here, though the act of selling involved was the same, the offenses charged were different, as is obvious upon inspection of-the complaints and of the two provisions of the statute. The evidence under the information must therefore be, on the one side and on the other, just as if there had been no complaint and trial before the police magistrate, except so far as the incidents of that trial, and not its result alone, furnished legitimate evidence upon some issue here made; and the docket, unaided, was rightly excluded.

In' giving, refusing and modifying instructions asked, the County Court acted upon the understanding and advised the jury that a single sale of intoxicating liquor to a minor without the written order required, whether the vendor does or does not know the vendee is a minor, is sufficient to make the p’ace of sale a nuisance, and the keeper guilty as such under the statute; and the soundness of this construction is the main question in the case.

The statute forbids the sale of intoxicating liquors in any quantity less than one gallon, or in any quantity whatever to be drank upon the premises, or in or upon any adjacent pi a-re of public resort, without having a license to keep a dram-shop; R. S. Chap. 43, Sec.

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Related

Ray's Liquors, Inc. v. Newland
367 N.E.2d 982 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1977)
Whiteside v. O'Connors
162 Ill. App. 108 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ill. App. 57, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-people-illappct-1888.