State v. Walder

10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 497, 20 Ohio Dec. 25, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67

This text of 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 497 (State v. Walder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Fulton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Walder, 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 497, 20 Ohio Dec. 25, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Killits, J.

The defendant was tried by the court upon an affidavit charging him with the sale of a glass of intoxicating liquor in violation of the county local option law. The evidence of the sale of a beverage in taste, smell and effervescence somewhat resembling lager beer was direct; testimony of its character consisted largely of defendant’s admissions, and defendant went on the stand in his own behalf and testified that he made the liquor by mingling a malt preparation with hop syrup. From his testimony it is plain that a substantial and fundamental element of the beverage was malt liquor, and, in the opinion of the court, when it is shown that an indispensable and material part of the beverage is made from malt, this fact satisfies the'law and justifies the appellation of a malt liquor, and accordingly it is our opinion that the drink sold by defendant in this case was such. No attempt was made by the state to show that the liquor was intoxicating, and the only testimony we have upon this subject [498]*498is that of the defendant who said that in.its preparation he first made a malt liquor out of which he extracted the alcohol by boiling, and that, when he got ready to dispense it as a beverage, he mixed it with a syrup of hops and sugar and immediately put it on tap; that at first it developed alcohol very slowly, reaching a percentage for the first twenty to thirty hour's after mixing, according to the state of the weather, of about five-tenths of 1 per cent, of the drug, but that thereafter it would begin to sour and develop alcohol rapidly and hecome unpalatable. He protested that he sold it only when first made and exclusively to be drank upon the premises.

The evidence demands that the court treat this article as a non-intoxicating malt liquor, and the question is squarely before us whether the sale or furnishing of such a beverage is within the county local option law.

This proposition turns upon the interpretation of Section 3 of the act of March 3, 1908 (99 O. L., 36), which reads:

“The phrase ‘intoxicating liquor’ as used in this act shall be construed to mean any distilled, malt, vinous or any intoxicating liquor whatever.”

It would seem that if the statute had attempted to prohibit, by express terms, the sale of distilled, malt, vinous or any intoxicating liquor, the obvious method of construing the meaning of such an expression would be as if it should read: distilled liquors, malt liquors, vinous liquors, or any intoxicating liquor; and the Supreme Court, in State v. Kauffman, 68 Ohio St., 635, so construed the old Dow law, holding that the terms of Section 1 of the act of February 20, 1896 (92 O. L., 34), imposing a tax upon the business of “trafficking in spirituous, vinous, malt, or any intoxicating liquors,” required the person dispensing á non-intoxicating malt liquor to pay the tax. In the Aiken law, 98 O. L., 99, raising the tax to $1,000, the language of this section was changed, so that it now imposes the tax upon the business of trafficking in “spirituous, vinous, malt or other intoxicating liquors,! ’ and the Guernsey county circuit court has recently held that such a change in the language works a release of the obligation, contained in the old statute, to pay a tax on the dealing in [499]*499non-intóxicating drinks. Murray v. LaFollette, 12 C. C. — N. S., 113.

It would seem plain that the change in the language referred to warrants the construction of the Aiken law which the court in question arrived at, but that decision but emphasizes the necessity of construing the language of the Dow law as the Supreme Court interpreted it. In State v. Kauffman, supra, it was earnestly argued that the title of the act, which was to provide ‘ ‘ against the evils resulting from the traffic in intoxicating liquors,” should be considered as limiting the meaning of the words of description to intoxicating liquors of the several origins, but the Supreme Court held that the language of the statute was equivalent to imposing a tax upon the business of trafficking in intoxicating liquors and also upon the traffic in spirituous, vinous, and malt liquors, and that the term "malt liquors,” was a generic term, including both intoxicating and non-intoxicating beverages. We are unable to see that the change in the phraseology in the Rose law, in attempting to define the meaning of the expression "intoxicating liquors, ’ ’ permits any different construction than that reached by the Supreme Court in State v. Kauffman, supra, and hence we say that the section now before us attempts to, and does, say that the term "intoxicating liquor” shall be held to include and mean any malt liquor, without reference to its intoxicating power, leaving, for further consideration in this opinion, the question of the validity of the application of such a definition-in a case of this kind and the ability of the Legislature to make such a law.

A number of cases have been decided covering this question, and with practical unanimity, upon a variety of circumstances both of statute and fact; they hold that it is within the police power of the state to make it an offense to sell any liquor which may be of such a character as to render easy fraud and evasion of the statutes touching the sale of intoxicating liquor. Some of these cases only will we notice. In Hewitt v. People, 186 Ill., 336, the court says:

"That the Legislature defined a dramshop, and selected spirituous,. vinous and-malt liquors, and branded them as intoxica[500]*500ting without proof of their intoxicating character; that they authorized a license to keep a dramshop and sell intoxicating, malt, vinous, mixed, or fermented liquor, and provided that without such license the sale of any intoxicating liquor should constitute an offense, and subject the offender to punishment.
“Under the statute it is sufficient to prove that a defendant sold spirituous, vinous, or malt liquor, without proving their intoxicating quality.”

In the case of United States v. Cohn, 2 Ind. Ter., 474, the court had before it the duty of interpreting a federal statute which forbade the sale within the territory of “any vinous, malt or fermented liquors, or any intoxicating drinks of any kind whatsoever,” language which is not substantially different from that before us in our county option law. The article sold was a malt preparation known as Rochester Tonic, and it was conceded to be non-intoxicating, unless taken in quantities exceeding the capacity of human consumption. The opinion at length discusses the right of states, in the exercise of their police powers, to prohibit the sale of such beverages, and decides that whatever the states may do in that behalf Congress may do for the territories, and, after quoting the statute at length, proceeds:

“No one can carefully read this statute but that he will be impressed with the idea that Congress, whatever it omitted to do, intended to completely cover the whole case, and to erect a complete and impregnable barrier against the introduction, sale, and use of intoxicating liquor in all of its forms, and to guard against all of the well-known subterfuges resorted to to deceive courts and juries in relation to the matter. * * *
“It will be seen that the only kinds of liquors specifically named by the statute are vinous, malt, and fermented liquors.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 497, 20 Ohio Dec. 25, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walder-pactcomplfulton-1909.