People v. Safford

5 Denio 112
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 5 Denio 112 (People v. Safford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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. Safford, 5 Denio 112 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

By the Court, Beardsley, Ch. J.

It appeared, on the trial, that the defendant had repeatedly sold wine by retail, to one Bailey, which he drank at the same time in the defendant’s house. The defendant then offered to show that this wine had all been delivered by him to Bailey “ under the direction and prescription of a licenced physician.” The evidence was rejected and the defendant’s counsel excepted.

I am not disposed to deny that the prescription of a licenced physician might justify such a sale; but the liquor or wine sold must have been prescribed “ for medical purposes.” Such are the words of the statute. (Laws of 1845, p. 323, § 5.) The sale, so far as respects the vendor, must be made in good faith, to enable the patient to follow the advice of his physician. A mere sham prescription could be of no possible avail but to aggravate the offence. Here the offer was to show that wine had been prescribed, but not that it had been prescribed “ for medical purposes.” This falls short of -what the statute requires, and the evidence was properly excluded by the court.

All the counts in this indictment are founded on the revised statutes, so that strictly speaking, it is unnecessary to pass upon the question whether an indictment could have been sustained on the act of 1845, while it remained in force. I entertain no doubt, however, that it could. That act may have made it illegal to sell certain liquors, the sale of which was not prohibited by the revised statutes, but it made no sale legal which those statutes branded as a crime. The act of 1845 declares that “ whenever, by the provisions of this act, the electors of any town or city shall have determined that no licence shall be granted in such town or city, whoever shall sell by retail, any intoxicating or spirituous Iiqtlors or wines, or in any manner or by any device, shall sell by retail within such town or city, shall be liable to all the penalties imposed by title nine, of part first, chapter twenty, of the revised statutes for selling of strong or spirituous liquors or wines without licence.” (§ 5.) Here is no exception as to the sale of “ intoxicating or spirituous liquors or wines” of any description whatever, the sale of all being prohibited: but the revised statutes do contain an exception, [115]*115making the sale of “ metheglin, currant wine, cherry wine or cider,” entirely legal. (1 R. S. 682, § 26 ) The act of 1845, therefore, so far as respects these liquors, enlarged the class of illegal sales.

It is made an offence by the revised statutes to “ sell any strong or spirituous liquors or wines to be drank in” the house or shop of the seller, or in any out-house, yard or garden appertaining thereto, or to suffer any such liquors or wines sold by him, or under his direction or authority, to be drank in his house or shop, or in any out-house, yard or garden appertaining thereto, without having obtained a licence therefor as a tavern keeper.” (Id. 680, § 16.) This offence of selling to be drank in particular places, or allowing liquor already sold to be drank in any such place, was not touched by the act of 1845, but remained as it was before the passage of that act. No prosecution, penal or criminal, for this offence, could at any time have been founded on this statute, although it was quite otherwise as to the offence of selling by retail without licence. Where a town had voted no licence, offences of the latter description, except for the sale of “ metheglin, currant wine, cherry wine or cider,” might have been prosecuted on the revised statutes, or on the act of 1845, either being equally applicable to such cases.

It was urged on the argument of this case, as it had been on previous occasions, that the act of 1845 did no more than impose a pecuniary penalty for selling by retail without licence, and did not. subject the offender to a criminal prosecution. That act, as we have seen, declared that for such sales, where no licence had been voted, the offender should “ be liable to all the penalties imposed by” the revised statutes “for selling strong or spirituous liquors or wines, without licence.” Now, the revised statutes imposed but a single specific pecuniary penalty, for such a sale, although it was also declared to be a misdemeanor and punishable by fine and imprisonment. (Id. 680, § 15 ; 682, § 25.) The word penalties was very improperly used in the act of 1845, if it was intended thereby to subject the seller to a specific penalty of twenty-five dollars for [116]*116selling strong or spirituous liquors or wines, without licence/’ and not make the illegal sale a crime. We think the legislature intended more than simply to impose such a penally, and that it w’as intended the act should be a misdemeanor as well as a penal offence. If such was not the object, the plural word penalties has no proper meaning in the statute. It certainly was not intended to abate the rigor of the former law, although such must be the effect of the act of 1845, unless the word penalties extended the criminal as well as penal provisions of the revised statutes to sales by retail in places where- no licence had been voted. We think such was the intention of the legislature in passing the act of 1845, and therefore that such sales as fall within that act are crimes as well as penal offences. In this respect we concur in the opinion expressed by this court in the case of Hodgman v. The People, at the last January term.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Denio 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-safford-nysupct-1847.