State v. Spaulding

61 Vt. 505
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 61 Vt. 505 (State v. Spaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Spaulding, 61 Vt. 505 (Vt. 1889).

Opinion

The opinion of thé court was delivered by

Yeazey, J.

I. The testimony of Ashworth was proper. One ■question on the trial was whether the respondent’s dwelling house was a place of public resort! The witness had testified that he went there to get wine, and got it and paid for it. Did he go as a neighbor in a country district might go to another for an accommodation in the particular instance, as for salt or ; sugar, or did he go as one going to a store or saloon where he had reason to expect to find the particular article was kept for sale as a business \ The question why he expected to get wine there and the answer to it tended to prove that the house was as to him a place of public resort, therefore it would be one step towards proving it was a place of public resort. If the house -was sufficiently frequented by the people roundabout for like [511]*511purpose and with similar expectations it would establish the fact .-as to the publicity of the place. The State’s Attorney did not ■ask what its reputation was, or seek to establish it as an independent fact. That the answer tended to show what its reputation was, would not render, the evidence inadmissible if the particular inquiry was admissible on other grounds. Testimony may be admissible' fen- one purpose although inadmissible for •another, but should be limited in application to legitimate use.

II. The testimony of Carey was competent upon the point raised by the respondent, that he and -others were at her house ■on ordinary farm business and that the cider was a mere courtesy to a caller. No claim was made that there was anything unlawful in a farmer giving to a neighbor a drink of cider. Was it this, or was it a business of dealing out cider for profit as at a ■drinking grocery ? Did these men go there as in the one case -or' in the other ?

The inquiries put to Carey were entirely legitimate for the purpose of stripping the guise of innocence from the transaction and showing it in its true colors. The form of the inquiry lay in the discretion of the court.

III. Another question was whether the charge to the jury was -correct as to what constituted a place of public resort within the meaning of the statute. The court was dealing with the facts •of this case and a particular statute, and was not undertaking to define generally a place of public resort, which would have been --a delicate undertaking and of but little profit to the jury. The testimony tended to show that this dwelling house was resorted to by individuals to buy and drink cider, just as they would resort .to a grocery or saloon for that purpose; that in the language of the day, they went there to get a drink as men go to public resorts for drinking purposes. The statute says: But no person shall sell or furnish cider * * * at or in a victualing house, tavern, grocery, shop, cellar, or other place of public -resort.” When one transforms his dwelling house into a place of resort for the • public for éntertainment of any kind in the sense in which the public is impliedly invited to and accommodated [512]*512in the places' specified by name, in the statute, and it is thus-resorted to with the same freedom, it becomes, within the meaning of the statute, a place of public resort. We do not think the Legislature intended by the clause, “ or other place of public-resort ” only such places as had become of public resort for other purposes. It is sufficient if ‘the kind of entertainment made the dwelling house or any place, other than those specified by name, public. It means a place actually'frequented and with the same freedom that, men resort to the victualing house, tavern or- grocery.

The fact that it was cider only that constituted the “ draw’’, would not prevent its being a “ public resort ” within the statute. The Legislature never intended to prohibit the sale in the grocery below and allow it in the dwelling house overhead unless-the latter was a place of public resort 'for other purposes, provided it took the place of the grocery for this purpose. Obviously no particular number of customers could be the test; but was it resorted to, frequented with the freedom and in the sense indicated? Was the legal barrier that bars and protects the house taken down and the public invited, and did the people go as to a tavern ? We interpret the. charge as being upon these lines and think it was sound.

IY. It is further contended that the sale of cider was not prohibited at the places specified in R. L., s. 3800, unless the cider proved to be intoxicating.

The first paragraph of that section contains the general clause of prohibition but does not name cider. In tiic fifth paragraph is this provision: “Nothing in this chapter shall prevent * *" the manufacture,-sale or use of cider, * * nor the-manufacture by any one for his own use of ferm-nted liquors.” Then follows the sixth paragraph, which is first quoted above. The only prohibition as to cider is at the places specified in -the sixth-paragraph, but not there- or anywhere in the statute is there any word qualifying the kind of cider prohibited at such places. The term used is cider. It is said that the juice of apples is not cider-until it is fermented.- This is perhaps technically correct, but [513]*513not in popular understanding. The apple juice when it comes from the cider press is immediately and universally called cider by the people generally. The term should be construed according to such universal use and understanding. Presumably no class of men understand better the difference between sweet and sour or new and old cider than our legislators, because they are mostly farmers who make the cider, and those who are not, living as they do in this cider-producing State, could hardly claim ignorance' on so familiar a subject; yet in their prohibitory enactment they ignore all distinction, and simply say cider. The prohibition is limited to certain specific places, and such as indicate an intent only to prevent cider-selling and drinking at publie resorts, not to interfere with the manufacturer who does not make his establishment a public resort for drinking purposes like the saloon. It is well known also that the fermentation of cider, and the change from sweet to sour, so as to become more or less alcoholic, greatly varies, sometimes being very rapid, at other times very slow. It would be practically impossible to prove whether a particular mug of cider that had been drunk was intoxicating, and to require it would, therefore, render 'the statute nugatory. In view of all these facts, we think it would more likely be carrying out the legislative intent to construe the enactment according to its plain and common meaning, rather than to interpolate qualifying terms and hold that the Legislature meant something different from what it said. We therefore hold that the prohibition as to the places named is absolute, regardless of the stage of fermentation or the intoxicating quality of the cider. This case arose before the statutes of 1888 were passed, therefore they are not considered.

V. The respondent filed a motion in arrest on several grounds, some of which are pressed in argument. One is that no offense against the laws ofYermont is charged in.thesecond count. That count charges the sale or furnishing of cider. The above construction of our statute is an answer to this claim.

[514]*514VI. Another ground is that this count is not in accordance with the form given in R. L. s. 3859.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Dunbar
772 A.2d 533 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2001)
Cox v. Oklahoma Tax Commission
1946 OK 124 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1946)
People v. Ziamkowski
226 N.W. 673 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1929)
Jacob Ruppert v. Caffey
251 U.S. 264 (Supreme Court, 1920)
State v. Hemrich
161 P. 79 (Washington Supreme Court, 1916)
Brown v. State
152 P. 578 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1915)
People v. Rosen
27 N.Y. Crim. 458 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
Lynch's Admr. v. Murray
83 A. 746 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1912)
Commonwealth v. Goodwin
64 S.E. 54 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1909)
Tooke v. State
61 S.E. 917 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1908)
State v. Frederickson
63 A. 535 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 Vt. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spaulding-vt-1889.