State v. Conley

48 A. 200, 22 R.I. 397, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 8, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 48 A. 200 (State v. Conley) 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. Conley, 48 A. 200, 22 R.I. 397, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 23 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

This is a petition for a new trial by the defendant, who was convicted on March 15, 1900, before a jury on a complaint and warrant charging him with an illegal sale of intoxicating liquor to one Frank Babineau in the town of Warwick on the 22d day of July, 1899. The defence did not deny the sale alleged in the complaint, but set up in justification thereof a license purporting to have been issued by the town council of Warwick on July 10, 1899.

The building in which the sales took place set about twenty feet back from the highway and ran back about fifty feet. The barroom was in the basement on the back side of the building, and the only entrance thereto, so far as appeared by the testimony, was through the back side of the building; that is, the side farthest from the highway. A highway ran in front of the building, but there was no public traveled way along the other three sides of the building. There was no conflict of testimony upon any material fact.

(1) The presiding justice ruled that such an entrance to a barroom was one “other than directly from a public traveled way,” and that the allowing such an entrance to exist after the license had been granted was a violation of section 5, chapter 102, of the General Laws of Rhode Island and rendered the license thereby void, and charged the jury that if they believed the testimony of the witnesses as to the sale and the location of the entrance to the barroom, they must find the defendant guilty.

Section 5, chapter 102, is as follows :

“No license shall be issued for the sale of intoxicating liquors in any place, except licensed taverns, where a dwelling-house, or a place used as a dwelling-house, is connected *400 therewith from within such licensed place; and no license shall be granted for the sale of intoxicating liquors in any placé, except licensed taverns, to which an entrance shall be allowed other than directly form a public traveled way ; and if any such entrance shall be allowed, or any such connection be made after such license is granted, said license shall thereby be rendered void.”

The defendant asks for a new trial on the grounds:

1. That he. did not have a full, fair, and impartial trial.

2. That the presiding justice erred in his rulings at the trial of said case.

3. That the verdict in said case was against the evidence and the weight thereof.

As to the first ground, we are of the opinion that the defendant had a full, fair, and impartial trial. The proceedings were regular, and no objection to any of them was made by the defendant, -except as hereinafter mentioned.

The only exceptions taken to the rulings of the presiding justice were to the construction of the word appearing as “ form ” in section 5 of chapter 102 of the edition authorized by the General Assembly of the General Laws of 1896 ; to the construction of said section 5 as to what constitutes an entrance to a barroom ‘ ‘ other than directly from a public traveled way; ” and to the refusal to grant defendant’s requests to charge.

(8) We are of opinion that the presiding justice held that the word in section 5 of chapter 102 of the General Laws after ' “ directly ” and before “ a ” was, and was meant to be and to mean, “from.”

The error in the authorized edition is purely typographical. The word “form” is entirely foreign to the context, and the word “from” is in harmony with the context. Moreover, said section 5 is identical with section 5 of chapter 816 of the Public Laws, passed August 1, 1889, except that in section 5 of chapter 816 the word “from” is correctly spelled. Said section 5 of chapter 816 was not amended or repealed until the revision of 1896. ,

(1) The presiding justice properly ruled that “direct” means *401 straight, that a circuitous way or a crooked way was not a direct way, and that an entrance to a barroom requiring a circuitous or crooked route of travel from the highway to the barroom was an entrance “ other than directly from a public traveled way.”

The word “directly ” is derived from the Latin “directus,” straight, p. p. of “ dirigere,” to set in a straight line. The primary idea is of space, in a straight line, rectilinearly, undeviating, etc. All the secondary meanings are analogous to the idea of straightness in space. The following are the primary definitions of the leading authorities :

The Century Dictionary. (1) In a straight line or course, literally or figuratively. (2) In a direct manner without the intervention of any medium.

Webster’s International Dictionary. (1) In a direct manner ; - in a straight line or course. (2) In a straightforward way, without anything intervening.

Worcester’s Dictionary. In a direct manner; rectilinearly.

Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, (direct) Straightforward.

Anderson’s Dictionary of Law. (direct) Straight; not circuitous ; immediate, the first or original.

This' construction is in harmony with the intent of the statute and necessary to accomplish its purpose.

The clause of the statute under consideration is commonly known as “the back-door law.” Its intent is to promote the observance of the laws relating to liquor saloons and to prevent the violation thereof by requiring that entrance to such saloons be under direct public observance from the highway.

An analogous statute passed by the General Assembly with the same general intent is section 62 of chapter 102 of the General Laws, commonly known as the “screen law,” which requires that on Sundays everything be removed from the licensed premises which would prevent a clean view of the interior by passers-by. This section does 'not expressly provide that the view shall be from the highway, but it implies as much, since the public ordinarily would have no right to pass by saloon windows not opening on a highway. This statute is additional evidence of the intent of the General *402 Assembly to require barrooms to be located close to the highway, under easy public observance.

The defendant claimed at the trial that section 5 of chapter 102 prohibited only entrances through other rooms or buildings. We are of opinion that the statute includes in its prohibition such entrances also, but that it cannot be limited to prohibit such entrances only.

(2) As prohibiting entrances through other rooms, buildings, etc., which may have doors successively in a straight line' from the street, the language of the statute must be given a secondary meaning — as immediately for directly. A secondary meaning may be included with, but should not be preferred to or exclude, a primary meaning.

Again, the construction suggested by the defendant, if exclusive, would defeat the intent of the statute. Under such a construction entrances to barrooms might be located not only in the rear parts of buildings, but also in buildings behind other buildings — entirely screened from observation from the street.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Ferden
6 N.E. 239 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 200, 22 R.I. 397, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-conley-ri-1901.