State v. . Collins

62 A. 1010, 27 R.I. 419, 1906 R.I. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 3, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 62 A. 1010 (State v. . Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Collins, 62 A. 1010, 27 R.I. 419, 1906 R.I. LEXIS 19 (R.I. 1906).

Opinion

Parkhurst, J.

This is a criminal case wherein the defendant was brought before the District Court of the Third Judicial District, charged with keeping and maintaining a liquor nuisance in violation of certain of the provisions of chapter 92 of the General Laws.

Upon arraignment the defendant pleaded not guilty, and after one continuance the court proceeded with the examination of the case.

It appears from the transcript of evidence offered by the complainant during the examination, and now before this court, that the defendant was, during the time covered by the complaint, engaged in business as a retail druggist at the place alleged in the complaint to be a nuisance; and that on a certain day during the time covered by the complaint a search warrant was executed at the place in question, and a large quantity of intoxicating liquors of various kinds was seized under said warrant, a part of them in the drug store, part in the back room, and part in the stable on the premises. The complainant also offered other evidence in support of the several allegations of the complaint, making a prima facie case in support of the charge alleged, showing the existence of a back room, connected *420 with the drug store, having the appearance of a barroom, with beer, glasses, liquors, ice-chest, etc.; also evidence as to selling and drinking liquors on the premises. Evidence was also introduced as to .the notoriously intemperate character of persons frequenting the place, and as to the notorious character of the place.

At the conclusion of the complainant's evidence the following motion was offered by the defendant: “It appearing in the above entitled case that the respondent was during all the time covered by the complaint in this case a retail druggist and apothecary; and now during the trial of said case the respondent raises the constitutionality of sec. 1 of chapter 1223 of the Public Laws passed at the January session A. D. 1905, entitled ' An act in amendment of and in addition to chapter 102 of the General Laws entitled “Of the suppression of intemperance;’ ” and the respondent avers that said section 1 of Chapter 1223 is unconstitutional and void because it conflicts with section 10 of article 1 of the constitution of this State, and with section 1 of article 14 of the amendments to the constitution of the United States; and moves that if the respondent shall be found probably guilty, that said constitutional question together with a record of the case and a transcript of the testimony, or so much thereof as pertains to the constitutional question, shall be certified and transmitted forthwith to the Supreme Court for decision.”

After argument upon this motion, the defendant was adjudged probably guilty. The defendant’s motion was then granted by the court, and the following record of the case was made: “Arraigned, Oct. 27, 1905. Pleaded not guilty. Continued to Nov. 10th, 1905. Required to give recognizance in the. sum of 11000 with surety. Surety, Gurdon B. Hiscox, of Westerly. Nov. 13th 1905. On examination adjudged probably guilty and the constitutionality of section 52 of chapter 102 of the General Laws as amended by chapter 1223 of the Public Laws, making the finding of any liquors enumerated in said section, so amended, upon the premises of any retail druggist or apothecary, in quantities exceeding one half gallon, evidence that the same is kept for sale, having been *421 raised by the respondent, it is ordered that the constitutional question thus raised, together with a record of the case and a transcript of the evidence, be certified and transmitted to the Supreme Court for decision.”

Upon the record, papers, transcript, etc., in the case being certified to this court by the justice of the court below, the complainant filed in this court the following motion: “ In the above entitled case the complainant moves that said case be remanded to the District Court of the Third Judicial District with directions to said court to proceed with said case in the same manner as if a constitutional question had not been raised by the respondent, and the complainant so moves, because he says:

“ 1. That the offense with which the respondent is charged in the above entitled case, namely, keeping and maintaining a common nuisance in violation of the provisions of chapter 92 of the General Laws of this State, is an offense which is not 'within the jurisdiction of the District Court of the Third Judicial District to try and determine.
2. That section 475 of chapter 27 of the court and practice act, under and by virtue of the provisions of which it was moved to certify the above entitled case to this court, and under and by virtue of the provisions of which said case was certified to this court, does not extend to or apply to a criminal case wherein the offense charged is beyond the jurisdiction of the court before which the same is pending to try and determine, and consequently said case was improperly and unlawfully certified to this court.
“3. That the respondent in the above entitled case was adjudged probably guilty of the offense charged in the complaint, by the justice of the District Court of the Third Judicial District, as appears by the record in said case, and it thereupon became the duty of said justice forthwith to certify the complaint in the above entitled case and all papers connected therewith to the clerk of the Superior Court for the county of Washington, in accordance with the requirements of section 172 of chapter 10 of the coúrt and practice act.
“4. That all the evidence offered by the complainant and received by the court (claimed by the respondent to raise a *422 constitutional question under the provisions of section 52 of chapter 102 of the General Laws as amended by section 1 of chapter 1223 of the Public Laws) in the trial of the case below would have been competent, relevant, and proper in proof of the offense alleged in the complaint aside from the provisions of section 52 of chapter 102 of the General Laws as amended by section 1 of chapter 1223 of the Public Laws.
“5. That the fact of the constitutionality or unconstitutionality of section 52 of chapter 102 of the General Laws as amended by section 1 of chapter 1223 of the Public Laws can not affect the present case, because all the evidence submitted by the complainant in the trial of the case is competent evidence, under said chapter 92 of the General Laws, and at common law, in support of the charge contained in the complaint.
“6. That the complainant could not, and can not, obtain for any of the evidence submitted by him in support of the nuisance charge the probative force to which the same would be entitled in a prosecution under the provisions of section 52 of chapter 102 of the General Laws as amended by section 1 of chapter 1223 of the Public Laws, and the court below would have been in error to have attached the presumption therein created to the evidence submitted.”

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State v. Pedie
224 N.W. 898 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 1010, 27 R.I. 419, 1906 R.I. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-collins-ri-1906.