Niles v. Rhodes

7 Mich. 374, 1859 Mich. LEXIS 72
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 Mich. 374 (Niles v. Rhodes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Niles v. Rhodes, 7 Mich. 374, 1859 Mich. LEXIS 72 (Mich. 1859).

Opinions

Christiancy J.:

A preliminary objection is made to the form in which the errors are assigned. The 12th rule requires every assignment of error to be special. By this we understand that every error relied upon must be pointed out with such certainty that the defendant in error, and the court, may see from the assignment itself, every particular ground upon which a reversal of the judgment is claimed, and that the record may always disclose the grounds upon which the judgment may have been reversed or affirmed.

[379]*379There were, in the court below, three distinct requests to charge, made by defendant’s counsel in writing. The court in answer to these several requests, charged substantially as requested. The counsel for plaintiffs also made three separate requests to charge, each of which was refused. In answer to two of these the court charged directly the contrary, without qualification, and simply refused the last. To each of these- charges and refusals plaintiffs took a distinct exception. These several requests, refusals and charges, are separately and distinctly set forth in the bill of exceptions. The assignment of errors clearly refers to the bill, which is thus in effect made part of it. By this reference the errors complained of become as certain and specific, as if the assignment had repeated each of these separate requests, refusals and charges, in hcec verba, with the usual allegation of error to each; and needless repetition is avoided. The words “ several instructions” used in the assignment are to be rendered distributively as applying separately to each. True the assignment does not, in so many words, allege any error in the instructions given in answer to the first and second of the plaintiffs’ requests, but as these instructions were the direct contrary of the requests, and exceptions were taken to the refusals,' the same questions are raised, This form of assignment would not, of course, be sufficient in any case where the grounds of error relied upon were not rendered certain by reference. Here they could have been rendered no more certain by repetition in the assignment.

We must therefore consider the questions presented by the. exceptions. Before doing so it may be well to take a general view of some of the main features of the statute, under which the questions arise.

By the first section, “No person shall be allowed to manufacture or sell at any time, by himself, his clerks, sex-vants or agents, directly or indirectly, any spirituous or intoxicating liquors, or any mixed liqxxors, a part of which [380]*380is spirituous or intoxicating, [except cider, beer, and wine of domestic manufacture,] and except, also, as hereinafter provided.” I have placed in brackets the words inserted by the amendment of February lith, 1851.

The second section is in the following words:

“ Sec. 2. All payments for such liquors hereafter sold in violation of law, shall be considered as having been received without consideration, and against law and equity, and any money or thing paid therefor may be recovered back by the person so paying the same, his wife, or any of his children; and all sales, transfers, grants, releases, quitclaims, surrenders, mortgages, pledges and attachments of real or personal estate, and liens and securities thereon, of whatever name or nature, and all contracts or agreements relating thereto hereafter made, the consideration whereof, either in whole or in part, shall have been the sale or agreement to sell any such liquor, shall be utterly null and void against all persons and in all cases, excepting only as against the holders of negotiable securities, or the purchasers of property who may have paid therefor a fair price, and received the same upon a valuable and fair consideration, without notice or knowledge of such illegal consideration; nor shall any suit at law or in equity be had or maintained upon any contract or agreement whatever hereafter made, the consideration whereof shall be either wholly or in part the sale of such liquors in violation of law, excepting only when such suit is brought by such bona fide holders of negotiable paper, or purchasers of property without notice: nor shall any demand, arising upon any such contract or agreement whatever, be offered or allowed as a set-off or defense in any action whatever.”

By the third. and several following sections heavy penalties are imposed for the sale of liquors in violation of the law.

By the fourteenth section those sellers of drugs and [381]*381medicines, and those only, are exempt from the penal provisions of the act, whose sole or principal business is the selling of drugs and medicines other than intoxicating liquors, and who shall, with ¡.sufficient sureties, give bond to the People of the state, a part of the condition of which is, that they wilT not sell any such liquors except to be used as medicines, as a chemical agent, in scientific, mechanical or manufacturing purposes, or wine for sacramental purposes; that they will sell to no one who they have reason to believe intends to use it as a beverage, &c. This section further requires certain precautions to be exercised by such druggists: they are to make special inquiries of the persons to whom they sell, of the purposes for which it is intended; and if they sell without the proper answers to such inquiries they lose the benefit of the exception in their favor. And if any person shall make false answer to such inquiries he becomes liable to the same penalties as for selling.

By the nineteenth section it is provided, that this act shall not be construed as prohibiting the manufacture of the alcohol of commerce, containing not less than eighty per cent, of pure alcohol; Provided that the manufacturer shall not be at liberty to sell the same within this state, excepting only to the persons who may have given bond pursuant to section fourteen.

The twentieth section is in the following words :

“Sbc. 20. The provisions oí this act shall not be construed to apply to such liquors as are of foreign production, and which have been imported under the laws of the United States, and in accordance therewith, and contained in the original packages in which they were imported, and in quantities not less than the laws of the United States prescribe. To entitle any liquors to the exemption contained in this section, it must be made to appear by, positive proof, that they are of the character in this section ■described; nor shall custom house certificates of importa[382]*382tion, and proofs of marks on the casks or packages corresponding therewith, be received as evidence that the liquors contained in such packages are those actually imported therein.”

In view of all these provisions, and of the act as a whole, I think it very clear that the effect of the act is to establish, as a general rule, that the sale of intoxicating liquors, including ale or beer, and wine, and contracts made wholly or in part in consideration of such sales, are Void and illegal; that the legality of such sales, and of such contracts, can only be maintained in virtue of some Specific exception of the statute which has the effect to take the particular sale or contract out of the general prohibitions of the act.

Illegality is the rule; legality, the exception. And the party claiming the benefit of the exception, in civil cases, takes upon himself the burden of proving his case within it.

Such was, by the unanimous decision of this court, held to be the rule in Paton v. Coit, 5

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mich. 374, 1859 Mich. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niles-v-rhodes-mich-1859.