People v. Marquis

125 N.E. 757, 291 Ill. 121
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketNo. 13039
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 125 N.E. 757 (People v. Marquis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Marquis, 125 N.E. 757, 291 Ill. 121 (Ill. 1919).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Harvey Marquis left Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the afternoon of August 26, 1919, for Chicago, driving an auto truck loaded with eleven barrels of bottled beer. He was advised not to go through Lake county for fear of being arrested but to go through McHenry county and it would be all right. Accordingly ■ he chose a road through McHenry county, and while in that county after dark, having no lights, he drove off the road, into a farmyard 100 or 200 feet from the road, stopped and went to sleep on the' truck. Soon after he was awakened by a deputy sheriff, arrested and taken to' Woodstock, the county seat, and placed in jail, the deputy sheriff putting the truck and its load under the care of a guard, who watched them until they were taken possession of by the sheriff. The next day the State’s attorney filed an information in the county court against Marquis for violating the Search and Seizure act. On September 5 an amended information was filed charging the defendant with the transportation of intoxicating liquor over public highways, contrary to law, and after a trial, upon his plea of not guilty, • he was convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and,costs. On August 27, 1919, the State’s attorney filed his complaint under oath, • stating that he had reasonable cause to believe that intoxicating liquor was being transported in prohibition territory in a certain auto truck by H. Marquis and others named, and praying for a search warrant. The county judge issued a search warrant bearing the date of the previous day. The warrant was returned by the sheriff showing that he had seized eight and one-half barrels of bottles containing beer and one Diamond-T truck bearing Illinois license number 358408, and that he had arrested and held in custody H. Marquis, the driver of the truck on which the intoxicating liquor was being transported. September 5 an amended complaint was filed, which differed from the other only in stating that the intoxicating liquor was being unlawfully transported, and that the auto truck was in the town of Burton, in McHenry county, instead of in McHenry county. What is called an amended search warrant was issued conforming to the amended complaints. On the same day Bertha Siemon and the Siebold-Schaeffer Company, each claiming to be the owner of the auto truck, filed petitions praying for the delivery of the auto truck to the respective petitioners, and Robert A. Grace, claiming to be the owner of the beer, prayed for its delivery to him. The petitions were summarily heard by the court, which found that the truck was being used as a vehicle to transport illegally over the public highways in prohibition territory, beer containing more than one-half of one per cent, by volume, of alcohol; that the barrels containing the beer were not labeled or marked on the outside cover so as to plainly show the true name and address of the consignor and consignee, or the kind and quantity of liquor contained, or the purpose for which said liquor was to be used by the consignee, or the place where such liquor was to be used by the consignee ; that the beer, at the time of its seizure, was in the truck and was being illegally transported over the highways of McHenry county in prohibition territory, contrary to the provisions of the Search and Seizure law of the State, and said beer and truck were at the time in the possession of Harvey Marquis, the defendant, who was then driving the truck. The judgment of the court was that the auto truck and the beer be adjudged forfeited in accordance with the provisions of the Search and Seizure law, and.it was ordered that the sheriff proceed forthwith to destroy them by taking them to a suitable place within two miles of the court house, thoroughly saturating them with oil of a highly inflammable character, and publicly burning and destroying them between the hours of ten o’clock in the morning and three o’clock in the afternoon, within five days of the date of the judgment. The defendant, Marquis, and the petitioners have sued out a writ of error to reverse the judgment of the county court.

It is contended that the evidence was insufficient to prove Marquis guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, because he had no knowledge of the contents of the barrels other than that indicated by the labels, which stated that the contents were non-intoxicating. He had driven the truck from Chicago to Kenosha with a load of store fixtures and household furniture, with directions from his employer to try to get a return load. While he was trying to get a load to haul back to Chicago he met Grace about two blocks from the Blatz brewery, who wanted him to take a load of barrels, which were labeled non-intoxicating, to Chicago. The barrels were labeled, “Blatz private stock; nondntoxicating.” Grace had the truck taken to the brewery and loaded and brought back to Marquis. The barrels were not consigned to anyone. There was no agreement about the price for their transportation. Marquis was to take them to the .office of his employer in Chicago and Grace was to call at the office and tell where they were to be taken'. Marquis was told not to go through °Lake county on account of the Zion City authorities but to go around through McHenry. The weight of the evidence is a question for the jury, and it is not surprising that they should have believed.that the defendant was seeking to evade the law.

Various objections aré urged against the constitutionality of the Search and Seizure act, on which the prosecution is based. (Laws of 1919, p. 930.) It is argued with apparent earnestness that the statute violates that part of section 3 of article 2 of the constitution which prohibits the giving.of any preference to any religious denomination or mode of worship because its prohibition'does not extend to intoxicating liquors for sacramental purposes. It is said that some religious organizations use wine for such purposes and others do not, and that therefore the act gives a preference to those using wine and grants them a special privilege or immunity. The same, argument would apply to the intoxicating liquor used for medicinal, chemical, mechanical and' manufacturing purposes, all of which aré recognized as legitimate uses of intoxicating liquors. These, as well as sacramental uses, are expressly exempted from the prohibition of the act in question and are left to be controlled by such other restrictions and regulations as are or may be provided by the laws of the State or the United States. The manufacture, transportation and sale of intoxicating liquor for sacramental purposes are in no way interfered with by the - act but are free to all persons and all religious denominations to the same extent as before the passage of the act. The right to use intoxicating liquors for such purposes exists in all. It is not a special privilege in those exercising the right because others who also have the right do not exercise it.

The most serious objection to the judgment questions the court’s authority to order the destruction of the property. Marquis, who was transporting the beer, was not the owner of either the truck or the beer. He was a driver in the employ of the owner of the truck, the Siebold-Schaeffer Company, a corporation engaged in the business of teaming and hauling. There is no evidence that the corporation had any notice of the character of the load which Marquis was hauling and which he had procured independently in Kenosha, or that it was á participant in the violation of the law. Bertha Siemon was. the owner of a chattel mortgage for $600 on the truck.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.E. 757, 291 Ill. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-marquis-ill-1919.