Southern Express Co. v. State

58 S.E. 67, 1 Ga. App. 700, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 3, 1907
Docket160
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 67 (Southern Express Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Express Co. v. State, 58 S.E. 67, 1 Ga. App. 700, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 84 (Ga. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Russell, J.

The Southern Express Company was presented for the offense of furnishing spirituous, malt, and intoxicating liquors to three certain minors, named in the presentment. The Express Company is a corporation under the laws of Georgia, and was presented as a corporation. Before arraigment, the company demurred to the presentment, on the ground that the charge is set out in such a way as to word the same in the alternative, in that the charge is that the defendant did sell, give, and furnish to Wofford Cox, Cleveland Wofford, and Charlie Gresham, minors, spirituous, malt, and intoxicating liquors. It also demurred because the description of the liquor is not sufficiently definite to put the defendant on notice of the kind of liquor which the State expects to prove was given, sold, or furnished by the defendant. It also demurred upon the ground that the defendant, as a corporation, can not be indicted under section 444 of the Penal Code; and further because there was no statement in the presentment as to where the defendant was incorporated. This demurrer was overruled, and exceptions pendente lite were properly allowed, and are presented in the bill of exceptions.

The evidence developed the following state of facts: One of the three minors, in behalf of all of them, ordered some whisky from a liquor dealer in Chattanooga, Tennessee. It came by express, consigned to Wofford Cox, one of the three. Cleve Wofford paid the express charges and Wofford Cox received it. The three minors were each about eighteen years of age. These minors, after its deliver}1, took the whisky to a pine thicket, “opened it up,” and drank it. Each of them testified that the fluid was corn whisky. This whisky was not ordered at or from the express office in Calhoun. It was ordered at Ballew’s, in Calhoun, Georgia. The whisky was delivered' by a boy, whom the testimony showed to be from twelve to fifteen years old, and who was referred to by the witnesses as “George Gardner’s little boy.” It was uncontradicted that he was not employed by the defendant. He was •employed by the Western Union Telegraph Company, which had an office in the same place as the express company. The agent for the Western Union Telegraph Company was also agent for the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company and for the Southern Express Company. There is conflict in the evidence as to whether the agent, Mr. Parrott, was in the office at the time of [702]*702the delivery. Some witnesses testified 'that they did not know whether he was present, and others, including Parrott himself, swore positively that he was not present; but the only witness who testified that Parrott, the agent of the express company, was present also testified that he (Parrott), so far as the witness knew, had no knowledge of the delivery of the whisky. This witness (Cleveland Wofford) testified, “I seen Mr. Parrott in there then. T am sure about that. I don’t think Mr. Parrott was up town then. At that time he was looking over some boxes and looking around for some express for somebody else. I don’t know whether he (Parrott) was engaged with the express company’s business at the time I was there or not. He was attending to some business around there in the office — I don’t know what it was,- — looking around for some boxes or something or another, hunting some express for somebody else I think.” It was further in evidence that the young boy who delivered the whisky was not employed by the ■express compa^, and received no compensation from it; and the agent testified that he was not authorized by the express company to employ him or to delegate any authority to him. There was evidence that Cleveland Wofford, who paid the express charges liad scattering beard on his face. He could not recollect whether he was the one who asked for the whisky or not. There was. no ■evidence showing that the company had knowledge of the contents ■of the jug, or knowledge of the fact that it contained intoxicating liquor. Hpon conviction the defendant made a motion for new trial, based on various exceptions to the charge of the court and refusals to charge as requested; the motion was overruled, and the writ of error presents for consideration the overruling of the demurrer, excepted to pendente lite, and the refusal of the new trial.

We think the demurrer was properly overruled. It is well settled that the offense defined in section 444 of the Penal Code may be properly set out by an allegation of sale to more than one minor, and sustained by proof as to any one of them. Dukes v. State, 79 Ga. 795. The word “give” may be treated as synonymous with “deliver,” which is the meaning of the word “furnish,” in this ■section; and it may, therefore, be regarded as surplusage. And it is well settled that a corporation is included in the word “person,” used in the criminal statute. Penal Code, §2. It is true that the doctrine of holding corporations responsible for violation [703]*703of penal laws is one developed by gradual evolution, but it is none the less the law, and is of healthful necessity and utility. Mr. Thompson, in his work on Corporations, §6285, uses the following language: “The rule that laws are to be-construed with such strictness as to restrain the real purpose of the legislature where they are penal, is believed to have no just principle upon which to rest, as there is no reason why a corporation should be included in the word ‘person’ for the purpose of jurisdiction, and be excluded from it for the purpose of being exempted from liability to penal actions for the commission of wrongs for which the statute law makes individuals so liable. On the contrary, such an interpretation gives to an .aggregate body of wrong-doers an immunity from punishment which individuals do not enjoy. The sound, rule is that corporations are to be construed as persons, when the circumstances in which they are placed are identical with those of a natural person expressly included in a statute, and where the statute can be as aptly applied to them as to corporations.” Wells v. Muckitine, 4 Iowa, 302; Stewart v. Waterloo Turn Verein, 71 Iowa, 226. In South Carolina R. Co. v. McDonald, 5 Ga. 531, it is held that corporations are embraced in the word “person.” A corporation “is a person under the law — an artificial person, created by the legislature. It has a name — a local habitation too. It is not a citizen in every sense of the word, but it is an inhabitant — it dwells where by law it is located. 2 How. S. C. Rep. 497. A corporation is a ‘judicial person’ — a legal entity. . . Where the law-making power uses the word person — where it is found in the .statute book, it is to be presumed that the legal meaning is intended, and not the social or ordinary meaning. . . The General Assembly . . intended to guard against the very construction . . that the act applies only to natural persons.”

There, can be no question that while, at an early period, it was supposed that a corporation could not even commit a tort, for the reason that, being created for lawful purposes and having no power to do acts unlawful, whenever its agents, or servants exceeded the charter authority they necessarily committed the act as individuals, and not as representatives of the corporation, still that view was found to be untenable, and it was found necessary to hold the corporation responsible for the torts of its servants. And for the same reason, while the corporation has no arm or hands by which [704]

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 67, 1 Ga. App. 700, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-express-co-v-state-gactapp-1907.