Treuth v. State

87 A. 663, 120 Md. 257, 1913 Md. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 87 A. 663 (Treuth v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Treuth v. State, 87 A. 663, 120 Md. 257, 1913 Md. LEXIS 102 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The traverser was indicted, for the sale of intoxicating liquors, in the City of Baltimore, without a license.

The indictment contains thirteen counts and charges that a sale was made to the persons named in the several counts of the indictment, on the 21st day of July, 1912. He was tried and convicted and fined five dollars and costs.

At the trial, the traverser filed two special pleas to the jurisdiction of the Criminal Court of Baltimore City, alleging, in substance, that the traverser’s place of business, where the sales are alleged to have occurred, is located in Baltimore County, in the State of Maryland, and not in the corporate limits of Baltimore City. That he is a duly authorized licensee to sell liquors, by the proper authorities of Baltimore County; and that the Criminal Court of Baltimore City has no jurisdiction over the alleged offenses.

The State demurred to the pleas, and the Court sustained the demurrer. The traverser was then tried before the Court, adjudged guilty and sentenced to pay a fine of $5 and costs, and from this judgment he has appealed.

*259 By an agreement filed in the case, all errors of pleading are waived. The single question presented by the demurrer to the special pleas on the record, now before us, is one entirely of jurisdiction, and that is, whether the pier or pavilion described in the pleas, the place where the liquor is alleged to have been sold, is within the limits of Baltimore City, for the purposes of requiring persons who sell liquor therein to obtain a license from Baltimore City, and not in Baltimore county.

The facts upon which the determination of the question rest, are set out in the special pleas, and for the purposes of the case, are admitted by the demurrer. The pleas in substance are as follows: first, that the Court is without jurisdiction because, the alleged offenses contained in the indictment were not committed in the City of Baltimore; that at the time mentioned in the indictmen.t and a long time prior thereto, the traverser, was a duly authorized licensee to sell retail liquor in Baltimore county and that the place where said liquor is said to have been sold, is as follows: at a pavilion built on wooden piles in the main branch of the Patapsco River, the piles being driven in the soil, the whole structure having a length of wharf or pier front and wholly located in the navigable waters of the river, of about 100 feet, with a width of about 50 feet; which pavilion is situated at or near the center of the entire structure, and which entire structure is located in Baltimore county about 60 feet easterly or south of easterly from the boundary line of Baltimore City, as defined by Act of Assembly of Maryland of 1816, Chapter 209, which Act defines the limits of Baltimore City, and between the boundary line and the middle of the stream. That on the day mentioned in the indictment access to the pavilion was had in two ways, as follows: By a movable float fastened by a rope at one end to the pier on which the pavilion is built and at the other end of a rope to a bulkhead built on the shore, within the corporate limits of Baltimore City; that the float is not attached to the soil but is a movable boat or raft and is moved from time to time, affording no connection *260 whatever when so moved between the corporate limits of Baltimore City and the pavilion, but is supported by and floated by the water in which it is located, to wit, the main branch of the Patapsco Biver. And said pavilion is also accessible by yachts, steam and motor boats plying in the waters of the main branch of the Patapsco Biver along its water or pier front. And this defendant says that the Circuit Court of Baltimore County has exclusive jurisdiction over said alleged offenses mentioned in said indictment, and that the Criminal Court of Baltimore City has no jurisdiction whatever over said alleged offenses.

And for a second plea to the jurisdiction, after reciting in substance the first plea, further says: the place being a pavilion situated in the main branch of the Patapsco Biver in the corporate limits of Baltimore county and in the navigable waters of the main branch of the Patapsco Biver, and is built upon piles driven in the soil, and is a permanent structure connected with the soil and has been located in its present position for at least twenty-five years; and that this defendant at the time he became the licensee of the pavilion at which he was duly authorized to sell intoxicating liquors by the proper constituted authorities of Baltimore county, had no access whatever with the shore line of Baltimore City, but sometime after obtaining his license in May, 1911, from the proper authorities of Baltimore county, to sell intoxicating liquoi’s at the pavilion, secured the services of two floats so as to form a means of access from the pavilion to the Baltimore City line, the floats being tied the one to the pavilion pier and the other to a stake on the shore, and each floating upon the surface of the water and access from one to the other being by loose boards. That thereafter this defendant used one float and at the time of the alleged offense contained in the indictment, access between the shore line of Baltimore City and the pavilion of this defendant, was by means of a float tied with ropes at one end to the pier on which the pavilion is built and at the other end tied by' a rope to a bulkhead on the *261 shore line of Baltimore City; there being no physical connection whatever between the soil and the said float other than that the float was tied at both ends to keep it in position with ropes; the float resting upon the surface of the waters and wholly within the corporate limits of Baltimore county.

The controlling, and indeed the only question which the record presents, arises on the demurrer and it is this. Is the pavilion described in the pleas, the place where the liquor is alleged to have been sold, situate within the limits of Baltimore City, or in Baltimore county.

The statute provides that the license for the sale of liquor shall be obtained in the city or county, where the place is located, and it is admitted that the appellant in this case secured a license from the proper authorities of Baltimore county, but did not have a license from Baltimore City.

The pavilion is described by the plea, as a structure built on wooden piles in the main branch of the Patapsco River. The piles are driven in the soil and the whole pier is located in the navigable waters of the river. The length of the wharf or pier front is about 100 feet, with a width of about 50 feet. It is situate to the east of the Baltimore City end of the Light street bridge about 50 or 60 feet south from the north shore of the main branch of the Patapsco River.

The entire pier or pavilion is between the Baltimore City shore line and the middle of the stream.

It has been located in its present position for at least twenty-five years and access to it is had by a movable float or scow, one end of which is tied by a rope to the pavilion and the other end to a stake or bulkhead on the shore.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 A. 663, 120 Md. 257, 1913 Md. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treuth-v-state-md-1913.