United States v. Marshall

26 F. Cas. 1169, 1 Cin. L. Bull. 36
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 1169 (United States v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Marshall, 26 F. Cas. 1169, 1 Cin. L. Bull. 36 (circtsdoh 1876).

Opinion

SWING, District Judge

(charging jury). The charge against the defendant is that he is carrying on the business of a distiller without having given the notice or the bond required of distillers, and without registering his still. The evidence in the case shows that defendant had registered his still, and the government has therefore abandoned the third count in the indictment. Your attention will therefore be directed to the evidence under the first and second counts only. The defendant admits that he did not give notice or bond, as a distiller, but denies that he is carrying on the business of a distiller, and claims that he is carrying on the business of a rectifier. The government admits that the defendant gave notice of his intention to carry on the business of a rectifier, and does not contend that he has failed in any respect to comply with all the requirements of law in relation to rectifiers; but it is asserted that instead of carrying on the business of a rectifier, he was engaged in carrying on the business of a distiller. If he was carrying on the business of a rectifier there could be no verdict against him; but if under/his notice as a rectifier he was in fact carrying on the business of a distiller, he would be guilty, as it is not claimed that he gave notice or bond as a distiller. So that the question for your determination is: Was he, in fact, carrying on the business of a di stiller V

The law defines a distiller to be: “Every person who produces distilled spirits, or who brews and makes mash, wort, or wash, fit for distillation or for the production of spirits, or who, by any process of evaporation, separates alcoholic spirit from any fermented substance, or who, making or keeping mash, wort, or wash; has also in his possession or use a still, shall be regarded as a distiller.” And the law defines a rectifier to be: “Every person who rectifies, purifies, or refines distilled spirits by any process other than by original and continuous distillation from mash, wort, or wash, through continuous closed vessels, until the manufacture thereof is complete, and every wholesale or retail liquor dealer who has in his possession any still or leech tub, or who keeps any other apparatus for the purpose of refining in any manner distilled spirits, and every person who, without rectifying, purifying, or refining distilled spirits, shall by mixing such spirits, wine or other liquor with any materials. manufacture any spurious imitation, or compound liquors for sale under the name of whiskey, brandy, gin, rum, wine, spirits, cordials, or wine bitters, or any other name, shall be regarded as a rectifier, and as engaged in the business of rectifying.” The rectifier may rectify, purify or refine distilled spirits or wines by any process other than original and continuous process, etc. He may mix or compound any kind of spirits; he may transform it from one spirit to another, by the addition of any substance which may change its character or impart to it a different flavor or taste; he may manufacture out of the same spirits a dozen different kinds of liquors by the use of as many different substances. All this he may do, and it is for you to determine whether this was [1170]*1170the business he was engaged in, or whether he was in fact carrying on the business of a distiller. That is the simple question for your determination. As bearing upon this, however, there are other questions for your examination.

The notice given by the defendant is as follows:

“United States Internal Revenue. Notice by Rectifiers. Cincinnati, O., May 1, 1875. Notice is hereby given that W. T. Marshall, of the city of Cincinnati, county of Hamilton, and state of Ohio, intend under the name of W. T. Marshall, to carry on or engage in the business of rectifying, on and after May 1, 1875, in the building owned by Moses Swasey, situate No. 29 Sycamore street, Cincinnati, Ohio, which said building is situated more than six hundred feet in a direct line from any authorized distillery. The following process of rectification will be used: Re-distilling. The following utensils will be used in said business, viz.: Number and kind of still, and cubic contents of each: Two (2). One (1) copper still, capacity 200 gallons. One (1) wooden still, capacity 640 gallons. Number of leech and mixing tubs, and capacity of each: Three (3). Two (2) receiving tubs, capacity 800 gallons each. One (1) receiving tub, capacity 100 gallons. Kind of liquors proposed to be,used in rectification: Highwines, cologne spirits, and saloon washings, other than those containing fermented liquors, and rectified charcoal, upon which the spirit tax has been paid. Kind of liquors proposed to be produced by such rectification: Gin, neutral spirits, brandy and whiskey. Whether engaged in the business of distilling, or wholesale and retail liquor dealing: Re-distilling for other parties; wholesale liquor dealer. Estimated quantity of spirits which can be rectified every twenty-four hours in the establishment: 26 barrels. Name of every person interested, or to be interested in the business, and nature of interest, with residence: W. T. Marshall, residence, Butler county, Ohio. (Signed) W. T. Marshall. To Lewis Weitzel, Collector, 1st District, O.

“Received this 1st day of May, A. D. 1875. Lewis Weitzel, Collector.”

This notice shows that he estimated the quantity of spirits to be produced by him every twenty-four hours at 26 barrels. It also gives the name of the person interested and his residence. It also shows that he proposed, to use two stills, and three tubs; that he proposed to use highwines, cologne spirits, and saloon washings which did not contain fermented liquors, also charcoal. Under this notice he had a right to use both still and the three tubs, the high-wines, the cologne spirits, and saloon washings, if they did not contain fermented liquors, the charcoal, and all the machinery and implements described, and it is a matter to be taken into consideration that he proposed to produce neutral spirits, and to re-distill for other parties, and it is claimed a large proportion was in fact re-distilled for others. He had no right to use any saloon washings which contained fermented liquors. He had no right to use any fermented liquors, whether contained in saloon washings or not. He had, however, the right to use highwines and cologne spirits, and he had a right to recover from any substance, no matter what, any spirits which existed in that substance, upon which tax had been paid. He had a right to take the charcoal used by rectifiers and recover, by any process, all the spirits which were in it. He had a right to take elderberries, peaches, prunes,—every article of that kind that contained spirits by reason of their former use by rectifiers, not out of which spirits might have been manufactured, but that contained those spirits in a spirit form; and he had a right to recover or separate it from the substance it had gone into and get it back free from any substance with which it was connected. But he had no right to create spirits—that is, he had no right to take prunes, and peaches, and elderberries, or beer, or any other fermented substances, and make spirits out of them. He had no right to put it through such a process as would convert the elements which existed in these several articles, and out of which by a process of distillation he could create spirits. He had a right to take all the saloon washings which he could find in the city of Cincinnati, if they contained no fermented liquors or substances,' recover from- these all the spirits that existed in them, separating It from the water or other substance with which it might he held in solution.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 1169, 1 Cin. L. Bull. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marshall-circtsdoh-1876.