State v. Fargo Bottling Works Co.

124 N.W. 387, 19 N.D. 396, 1910 N.D. LEXIS 2
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 124 N.W. 387 (State v. Fargo Bottling Works Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fargo Bottling Works Co., 124 N.W. 387, 19 N.D. 396, 1910 N.D. LEXIS 2 (N.D. 1910).

Opinions

Ellsworth, J.

At its session in 1909 the Legislative Assembly of North Dakota passed an act, the wording of which, including the title, is as follows:

“An act to amend section 9366 of the Revised Codes of North Dakota, as amended by chapter 191 of the Laws of 1907, defining intoxicating liquors.”
“Be it enacted by the Legislative Assembly of the state of North Dakota:
“ ‘Sec. 9366. Intoxicating liquor defined. The following liquors are hereby declared to be intoxicating and their intoxicating quality shall, by all courts, be presumed, viz.: Alcohol, whisky, rum, brandy, beer, ale, porter, wine and hard cider, also all spirituous malt, vinous, fermented or other intoxicating liquors or mixtures thereof by whatsoever name called whether mentioned in section one of this act or not, that will produce intoxication of any degree; or any mixtures of such, or any kind of beverage whatsoever, which retaining •the alcholic principle or other intoxicating qualities as a distinctive force, may be used as a beverage and become a substitute for the ordinary intoxicating drinks, or any liquors or liquids which are made, sold or offered for sale as a beverage and which shall contain coculus indicus, copperas, opium, cayenne pepper, picric acid, Indian hemp, strychnine, tobacco, darnal seed, extract of logwood, salts of zinc, copper or lead, alum or any of its compounds, methyl alcohol or its derivatives, amyl alcohol or any extract or compound of any of the above ingredients, shall be considered and held to be intoxicating liquors within the meaning of this chapter.’
[400]*400“Sec. 2. Emergency. Owing to the inadequate definition of intoxicating liquors now existing there is an emergency existing and this act shall take effect immediately upon its passage and approval.”

This act was approved by the Governor of North Dakota on March 11, 1909, and under the emergency clause attached took effect immediately. On June 30, 1909, the state’s attorney of Cass county filed in the district court of the Third judicial district for that county an information against the Fargo Bottling Works company, the defendant and appellant here, the charging part of which is to the effect that the said defendant “a corporation, late of the county of Cass and state aforesaid, did commit the crime of selling intoxicating liquor, committed in the manner following, to wit: That at said time and place the said defendant was and is a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of North Dakota; that at said time and place the said defendant did wilfully and unlawfully sell to one Arthur W. Fowler a quart bottle full of a certain beverage, which said beverage was then and there labeled ‘Purity Malt,’ and is commonly called and known throughout the state of North Dakota as ‘Malt’ and was and is a malt liquor, and that in the manufacture and production of which said beverage no alcohol was or is used as an ingredient, but in which, during such manufacture, the alcohol hereinafter referred to was and is produced by chemical action in the beverage itself, and which said beverage therefore then and there had and retained, by reason of the facts aforesaid, the alcoholic principle as a distinctive force, and was then and there and is sold and used throughout the state of North Dakota as a substitute for beer; that said beverage aforesaid contained one and seventy-five one-hundredths (1.75) per cent, of alcohol by volume, and one and forty one-hundredths (1.40) per cent, of alcohol by weight. This against the peace and dignity of the state of North Dakota, and-contrary to the form of the statutes in such cases made and provided.”

To this information the defendant corporation, when summoned to appear and answer pursuant to article 4, c. 15, Code Cr. Proc. (Rev. Codes 1905, Sections 10222-10230), interposed a demurrer on the ground “that the said information did not state facts sufficient to constitute a public -offense.” This demurrer was argued before the district court and overruled by the court on July 23, 1909. Thereafter, on August 18, 1909, the defendant filed a writ[401]*401ten plea by the terms of which it “pleads guilty to the specific facts charged in the information herein without conceding, however, that such facts, if true, constitute a public offense.” This plea being received and the state’s attorney having moved for judgment against defendant upon its plea, the defendant interposed a motion in arrest of judgment upon the ground “that the information herein does not state facts sufficient to constitute a public' offense.” The court on the same day denied the motion in arrest of. judgment and holding that the defendant by commiting the facts charged in the information was guilty of a public offense, to wit: that of selling intoxicating liquor contrary to the provisions of chaptér G5 of the Penal Code as amended (Rev. Codes, 1905, Sections 9353-9395) as penalty imposed a fine of $400 and made an order that plaintiff have judgment against the defendant corporation for that sum together with its costs and disbursements of the action. A judgment in accordance with the mandate of this order was entered on the same day, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

In this court defendant submits for consideration four points,any of which, if sustained, require a reversal of the judgment of the the district court: (1) That a true interpretation of the terms of chapter 187, Laws 1909, does not include within the definition of intoxicating liquors or the prohibition of the statute liquors which, in fact, are non-intoxicating; (2) that if the interpretation contended for by the state in this case is the true interpretation of chapter 187, Laws 1909, then the provisions of said chapter offend section 61 of the state Constitution, in that the subject of the act is not expressed in its title; (3) that if the interpretation contended for by the state in this case is the true interpretation of chapter 187, Laws 1909, then the statutory amendment embraced in said chapter offends section 64 of the state Constitution so far as applied to the facts of this case, because section 9353, Rev. Codes 1905, upon the penal provisions of which this prosecution is based, is not “re-enacted and published at length”' in the amendatory act; and (4) that chapter 187, Laws 1909, even though not vulnerable to the constitutional objections heretofore urged, so far as it attempts to include within the penal provisions of our statutes one prohibiting the manufacture and sale of a liquor not intoxicating, is a violation of an essential part of the rights of liberty and property as guaranteed to the defendant by section 1 of our Constitution, in that it seeks to interfere with defendant’s enjoyment upon terms of equality with [402]*402all others in similar circumstances 'of the privilege of pursuing an ordinary calling of trade and of acquiring, possessing, and protecting property to an extent not warranted by a legitimate exercise of the police powers of the state.

Considering these points in the order in which they are enumerated, we will now determine whether or not chapter 187, Laws 1909, as fairly and •‘•easoriably construed, embraces within its terms any liquors not generally recognized as intoxicating.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W. 387, 19 N.D. 396, 1910 N.D. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fargo-bottling-works-co-nd-1910.