State v. Wills

136 S.W. 25, 154 Mo. App. 605, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 61
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 25 (State v. Wills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wills, 136 S.W. 25, 154 Mo. App. 605, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 61 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

COX, J.

Prosecution for sale of liquor in violation of the Local Option Law within the city of Neosho. Defendants were convicted upon the first count in the information and have appealed.

The information contains eight counts all of which are in the same form, and the sufficiency of the information is assailed upon the ground that the names of the parties to whom the liquor is charged to have been sold are not given. It is conceded that ordinarily it is [609]*609not necessary in charging a violation of the Dramshop Law or Local Option Law to give the name of the party to whom it is claimed the liqnor was sold, but the evidence in.this case shows that these defendants were druggists, and it is now contended that, being druggists; the same rule would apply to them in a prosecution for sale of liquor in violation of the Local Option Law as would apply in case they were prosecuted under the druggists’ law.

It was formerly held in this state that druggists and merchants were each in a class to themselves, and if either of these parties should sell liquor in violation of the law they could only be prosecuted under the particular statute applicable to the class to which they belong. [State v. Piper, 41 Mo. App. 160; State v. Williams, 69 Mo. App. 284; State v. Witty, 74 Mo. App. 550; State v. Steele, 84 Mo. App. 318.] But these cases have been overruled. [State v. Quinn, 170 Mo. 176, 67 S. W. 974.] And since the decision in that case the rule now is in this state that the class idea as applied to druggists and merchants is no longer in vogue unless the prosecutor sees fit to prosecute under the sections applicable to those businesses. The prosecutor has the right to elect under which statute he will proceed. If he proceeds under the local option statute then it is no defense to a prosecution under that statute to show merely that the defendant is a merchant or druggist, but they stand as to i;hat charge just as any other person, and to justify a sale the defendant must show that it was made in conformity to the merchant or drug law. This being true, it was not necessary to state in the information the name of the party to whom the liquor had been sold.

Error is also assigned in the giving and refusing of instructions, and in the admission of testimony.

In a general way the evidence disclosed the fol[610]*610lowing state of facts: Defendants were druggists doing business as partners in the city of Neosho. Certain parties who were witnesses for the state bought whiskey at defendants’ store, and also bought what was called Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters, Peruvian Strengthening Elixir, and Waukasha Cream Ale. There was evidence that the Waukasha Cream Ale Avas sold as a beverage and that some of the other liquor was bought without any statement as to whether it was being bought for medicine or not, and upon some of it, one witness at least, became intoxicated. The evidence on the part of the state further showed that bottles of various shapes and sizes, bearing labels showing what had been in the bottles, were found, and that they had contained alcohol ■in some per cent, and that they had the name of Wills and Armstrong thereon. These bottles were found scattered around the town at various places behind buildings and supposedly in places to which parties might resort to drink intoxicating liquors. Except in one or two cases there was no testimony to connect defendants with these bottles. On the part of defendants the testimony tended to show that the whiskey sold by them was sold upon prescriptions and that the bitters and other compositions sold by them were sold for medicinal purposes.

In the general instructions the jury were told that if they believed from the evidence that defendants “sold certain intoxicating liquors, drinks and beverages, containing alcohol, to-Avit: whiskey, Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters, Peruvian Strengthening Elixir and Waukasha Cream Ale, or other drinks and beverages containing alcohol, you will find the defendants guilty.” The objection to these instructions is that they assume that all the compositions mentioned are “intoxicating liquors, drinks and beverages containing alcohol.” These instructions are correct as applied to the sale of whiskey, but are erroneous as to the others. The court may assume or may instruct the jury that whiskey, alcohol. [611]*611wine, beer and all other well known spirituous or fermented liquors are intoxicating, but Peruvian Strengthening Elixir, Harter’s Wild Cherry Bitters and Waukasha Cream Ale have not yet reached such a distinction as intoxicating beverages as will warrant the court in taking judicial knowledge that they are intoxicating. The instruction should have submitted to the jury the question whether these liquids contained alcohol in any quantity and were capable of being used as a beverage, or contained, alcohol and were sold as a beverage. There was abundant evidence from which these facts might be found, but the strength of the testimony did not warrant the court in assuming the fact to exist, but the determination of the fact should have been left to the jury. The jury were told in another instruction that before they could find defendants guilty the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendants sold “intoxicating liquor or beverage containing alcohol” but this did not remove the effect of the other instructions in which the jury were practically told that the Cherry Bitters, Peruvian Strengthening Elixir and Waukasha Cream Ale were intoxicating.

Defendants asked and the court refused the following instruction:

“The court instructs the jury that although you may believe from the evidence that the defendants made sales of ‘Peruvian Strengthening Elixir,’ and that the same contained alcohol, yet if the amount of alcohol therein contained was no more than was necessary to draw out and preserve the medicinal qualities, of the other ingredients therein contained, and on account of the other ingredients therein contained could not be taken in sufficient quantities to produce intoxication, then you should acquit the defendants of said charge.”

This instruction embodies defendants’ construction of the term “intoxicating liquor” which is, that to be an intoxicating liquor it must be capable of producing intoxication.

[612]*612In the absence of a statutory definition the térxn intoxicating liquor is understood to include any liquor intended for use as a beverage, or capable of being so used, which contains such a proportion of alcohol that it will produce intoxication when imbibed in such quantities as it is practically possible for a man to drink. [23 Cyc. 57.] But when the term is defined by statute the courts are bound by the statutory definition, and when the statute includes in the definition of intoxicating liquor “any composition of which spirituous liquor is a part” as our dramshop, statute does (section 3016, R. S. 1909), then it is a violation of the law to sell as a beverage any compound containing any alcohol whatever. [State v. Martin, 129 S. W. 93 (Mo.); State v. Intoxicating Liquor, 76 Iowa 243, 41 N. W. 6, 2 L. R. A. 408.]

In the Martin case our Supreme Court quotes approvingly the following language from the Iowa case: “The statute provides that the words ‘intoxicating . liquors,’ as used therein, ‘shall be construed to mean alcohol, wine, beer, spirituous, vinous and malt liquors, and all intoxicating liquors whatever.’ Alcohol is therefore an intoxicating liquor, regardless of the fact that the quantity drank at any one time would not have that effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 25, 154 Mo. App. 605, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wills-moctapp-1911.