Territory of Alaska v. Five Gallons of Alcohol

10 Alaska 1
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMarch 1, 1940
DocketNo. 3426
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Alaska 1 (Territory of Alaska v. Five Gallons of Alcohol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of Alaska v. Five Gallons of Alcohol, 10 Alaska 1 (D. Alaska 1940).

Opinion

MORISON, District Judge.

This is an action in rem. An action against a certain 'untaxed Five Gallons of Alcohol, seeking to have said alcohol declared contraband and sold, and the proceeds thereof deposited in the Territorial Treasury.

The question presented in this case for determination is whether or not alcohol received by a licensed retailer of intoxicating liquor, in the -Territory, and held, and sold and shipped by such retailer to another party in the'Territory, without having the strip tax revenue stamps attached to the containers of said liquor, is contraband liquor subject to seizure by the Territory and confiscation and sale, and the proceeds thereof deposited in the Territorial Treasury under Chapter 78 of the Session Laws of Alaska, 1937.

The right of the Territory to seize the alcohol in question and to condemn and sell the same is resisted by the Nome Mercantile and Mining Company, a corporation, as claimant of the said alcohol.

The libel of information avers substantially that on or about the eighteenth of September, 1939, the United States Marshal, for the Second Judicial Division, acting through his authorized agents, seized the alcohol in question; that the said alcohol was in the possession of the Wien Alaska Airlines, a common carrier, and was consigned to one John Moneymaker at Haycock, Alaska. It further avers that the [4]*4said Five Gallons of Alcohol were shipped into the Territory of Alaska and transferred by sale from the importer thereof into whose hands the liquor first came, to the said John Moneymaker, without the containers of the alcohol having affixed thereto the Territorial liquor strip tax revestamps; and that under sections 7 and 12 of Chapter Session Laws of Alaska 1937, said Five Gallons of Alcohol became and are contraband subject to confiscation forfeiture to the Territory of Alaska.

The said Nome Mercantile and Mining Company, which a corporation engaged in the retail liquor business, intervened in the case as claimant of the said alcohol; filed its answer, and admitted the seizure of the alcohol in the possession of the Wien Alaska Airlines, a common carrier, alleged, and that the said alcohol was consigned to said John Moneymaker. It also admitted that the containers of alcohol were unstamped, as alleged, and that said alcohol is intoxicating liquor.

No witnesses were introduced in the trial but the case was submitted to the Court without the intervention of a jury, on the following agreed statement of facts, to wit:

I. “That the Five Gallons of Alcohol were attached by the U. S. Marshal and that the same is now being held by him under the writ of attachment issued herein and dated the 30th day of September, 1939.”
II. “That the claimant is a corporation engaged in the retail liquor business at Nome, Alaska and has a retail liquor license from the Territory of Alaska authorizing it to engage in the retail of liquors. That the claimant is the person in the Territory of Alaska into whose hands the liquor first came.
“That the claimant delivered said Five Gallons of Alcohol to the Wien Alaska Airlines for shipment to one John Moneymaker at Haycock, Alaska, and that the said Five Gallons of Alcohol were seized by the U. S. Marshal in the office of Wien Alaska Airlines and held under the writ of attachment herein issued. That neither the packages nor [5]*5containers in which said liquor was contained had attached thereto the Territorial Liquor Strip Tax Revenue Stamp.”

From this statement of facts it appears that the Nome Mercantile and Mining Company is a corporation whose place of business is Nome, Alaska; that it is engaged in the retail liquor business; and that “it is the person in the Territory of Alaska into whose hands the liquor first came”; and further, that the said alcohol came into the hands of claimant unstamped; that it was held by the claimant for a longer or shorter period unstamped; and that it was then sold by the claimant to one John Moneymaker, of Haycock, Alaska, and deposited by the claimant with the Wien Alaska Airlines for shipment to the said Moneymaker, still unstamped, when it was seized by the Marshal as contraband liquor.

The sole defense of the claimant, therefore, is that no liquors shipped into the Territory are contraband except such as may be shipped in “to others than licensees”; or in other words that liquor shipped in directly to a licensee, and which is received by him and held, and afterwards sold to another, and in pursuance of that sale, delivered to a common carrier for transportation to the purchaser thereof, is not contraband, even though it was received by the licensee, and held by him for a longer or shorter time, and then sold to a third person, and delivered to a common carrier for transportation to the purchaser without ever having had attached to the containers of the said liquor the strip tax revenue stamps required by the statute.

The statute on which this section is based declares that: “Any intoxicating liquors shipped into the Territory of Alaska other than to licensees hereunder shall be deemed contraband and subject to confiscation by the Territory and any intoxicating liquors so seized shall be sold under the orders of the District Court and the proceeds thereof deposited with the Territorial Treasurer.” Session Laws 1937, Ch. 78, § 5, subsec. 7.

[6]*6Another section of the same Act declares that:

“Every brewer, distiller, bottler or wholesaler selling intoxicating liquor in the Territory shall be required to pay Sk *
“This tax is to be paid to the Territorial Treasurer who will furnish strip tax revenue stamps in the form prescribed by him to be attached to all liquor containers or packages.
“These stamps are to be attached by the brewer, distiller, bottler, wholesaler or importer into whose hands the liquor shall first come.” Sessio'n Laws 1937, ch. 78, § 7.

Now this statute, in subsection 7 of section 5, very clearly declares that all shipments of intoxicating liquors into the Territory other than to licensees shall be deemed contraband and subject to confiscation by the Territory. It defines the offense and fixes the penalty, and sufficiently suggests the procedure to make it effective.

However, in section 12 of this Act, after setting out the penalties for various violations of the Act, we find the following: “Any intoxicating liquors shipped into the Territory, other than to licensees hereunder and contrary to the provisions of this Act, shall be deemed contraband, and subject to confiscation by'the Territory, or any enforcement officer; and any intoxicating liquors so seized shall be sold under the order of the District Court, and the proceeds thereof deposited with the Territorial Treasurer.” Session Laws 1937, ch. 78, § 12.

Now this clause “and contrary to the provisions of this Act, shall be deemed contraband,” is somewhat ambiguous; and in construing it, the question arises — and this is determinative of this case — what was the intention of the legislature when it used the words “and contrary to the provisions of this Act, shall be deemed contraband, and subject to confiscation by the Territory,” immediately following the word “hereunder” and beginning in the third line of above quotation?

Did the lawmakers intend that the contraband character of liquors be limited to shipments made to nonlicensees [7]

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10 Alaska 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-alaska-v-five-gallons-of-alcohol-akd-1940.