State v. Raper

149 P.2d 165, 174 Or. 252, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 19
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 165 (State v. Raper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Raper, 149 P.2d 165, 174 Or. 252, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 19 (Or. 1944).

Opinion

*253 BAILEY, C. J.

The defendant, Alma Raper, was indicted for and convicted of the crime of unlawfully selling alcoholic liquor on January 3, 1943, to one Robert Cover, a minor then between eighteen and nineteen years of age. The crime is alleged to have been committed at Bend, Oregon. From a judgment sentencing him to imprisonment in the county jail for a period not to exceed two months and to payment of a fine of three hundred dollars, the defendant has appealed.

Three assignments of error are presented, the first two qf which raise the same question. An exception was taken to the court’s instruction that:

“In connection with the charge, it is not necessary for the state to charge or prove an intentional or wilful violation of the law. If a person makes a sale of alcoholic liquor to one who is under the age of twenty-one years, he violates this law. He makes his sales at his peril.”

The defendant also excepted to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that before the defendant could be found guilty of the crime charged, “you must also find from the evidence, that the defendant knew, or should have known that the said Robert Cover was, at the time of such sale, under twenty-one years of age, and that the defendant intentionally sold him, the said Robert Cover, alcoholic liquor knowing him to be under twenty-one years of age”. The question raised by those two assignments of error was therefore whether or not the state is required to prove that the defendant intentionally violated the law. Stated otherwise, was it necessary for the state to show that the defendant knew or should have known that Robert Cover was, at the time of the sale of alcoholic liquor to him, under the age of twenty-one years?

*254 Section 24-137, O. C. L. A., provides in part as follows : “It shall be unlawful: * * * For any person to sell alcoholic liquor to any person under the age of twenty-one (21) years”. The section from which this excerpt is taken was amended in 1941 (chapter 249, Oregon Laws 1941) and 1943 (chapter 108, Oregon Laws 1943), but not in any Avay affecting the matter quoted. Section 24-137, supra, was originally enacted as § 33 of chapter 17, Oregon Laws 1933, Second Special Session, Avhich chapter Avas designated as the “Oregon liquor control act”.

This court in State v. Gulley, 41 Or. 318, 70 P. 385, passed upon the identical question presented by the two foregoing assignments. In that case the defendant was convicted of selling intoxicating liquor to Hreinhold Zimmerman, a minor nineteen years of age, in violation of § 1913, Hill’s Ann. Laws. That section, as far as applicable to the case then before the court, thus read: “If any person shall sell any intoxicating liquor to any minor in this state . . . such person shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished” as therein provided. The jury in its verdict therein stated the age of the minor to whom the liquor was sold and further stated that before selling liquor to him the defendant had asked him his age and received an answer to the effect that Zimmerman was twenty-one years old, and that the defendant honestly believed that Zimmerman was over the age of twenty-one years at the time of selling liquor to him.

In upholding the conviction of that defendant the court in its opinion stated that it was “committed to the doctrine that the vendor’s belief, hoAvever honestly *255 entertained, that a purchaser of intoxicating liquor is of lawful age, constitutes no defense to a violation of the statute prohibiting such sales to minors.” The opinion further pointed out that guilty knowledge on the part of the accused was not an essential element of the crime and that one who undertook to sell intoxicating liquor must at his peril ascertain whether or not the buyer had reached the age of majority. The doctrine of that case was approved in State v. Brown, 73 Or. 325, 144 P. 444, which also involved the sale of intoxicating liquor to a minor.

It must be presumed that the legislature, in enacting the law here under consideration, was familiar with the construction which this court had, in the above-mentioned cases, given a similarly worded statute, and therefore intended a like construction to be given the language hereinabove quoted from § 24-137, O. C. L. A., inasmuch as a contrary purpose is not indicated: Overland v. Jackson, 128 Or. 455, 463, 275 P. 21; 59 C. J., Statutes, § 625, page 1061; 25 R.C.L., Statutes, § 297, page 1075.

That part of § 24-137, O. C. L. A., hereinabove quoted does not require that the act be done “knowingly” or “wilfully” or use other words of equivalent meaning, and therefore ignorance is no defense: State v. Gulley, supra; Feeley v. United States, 236 F. 903 (C. C. A., eighth circuit), and authorities therein cited. The commission of the act prohibited — the sale of alcoholic liquor to minors — constitutes the offense, irrespective of the motive or knowledge of the accused. Such is the holding in the majority of the jurisdictions which have passed upon the question: annotation, 115 A. L. R. 1230.

*256 The defendant argues that this court in State v. Cox, 91 Or. 518, 179 P. 575, overruled its earlier decision hereinabove cited. In State v. Cox it was charged that the defendant on a designated date “did then and there unlawfully and wrongfully possess intoxicating liquor” contained in a suitcase. Prom the facts therein it appears that the defendant was a porter employed by a Medford hotel, and that it was his duty to meet all passenger trains at the railroad station and receive the baggage of guests of the hotel. The baggage would be received from the guests or from the railroad porters and would then be transported by the defendant to the hotel. The defendant testified that he had received the suitcase in question from the porter of a sleeping-car under the same conditions that he took baggage belonging to incoming guests; that he received it as, and believed it to be, the baggage of a guest of the hotel; that he had no property interest in the suitcase and no suspicion that it contained intoxicating liquor; and that the only possession or control that he ever had of the suitcase or its contents was in his capacity of porter, for the purpose of transporting the suitcase from the station to the hotel.

The trial court in that case instructed the jury that intent was “not a necessary ingredient of the crime, the law absolutely prohibits intoxicating liquor in his possession ’ ’. By a majority of four to three, this court held that the instruction was erroneous. The reasoning on which the majority based the decision is well stated by Mr. Justice Harris in his concurring opinion, as follows:

“ ... The legislature intended to prohibit persons from possessing intoxicants when they know or have reasonable ground to believe or have *257

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Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 165, 174 Or. 252, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-raper-or-1944.