Weisengoff v. State

123 A. 107, 143 Md. 638, 1923 Md. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 123 A. 107 (Weisengoff 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
Weisengoff v. State, 123 A. 107, 143 Md. 638, 1923 Md. LEXIS 136 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Peter Weisengoff was indicted on January 4th, 1923, by the grand jury of the Circuit Court for Allegany County, for the unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor in that county on September 28th, 1922. The indictment contains two *639 counts, in the first of which the charge is set out in the following words: “That Peter Weisengoff, late of Allegany County aforesaid, on or about the 28th day of September, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and twenty-two, at Allegany County aforesaid, unlawfully did sell a certain quantity of intoxicating, spirituous and fermented liquors, unto a certain Janthan Paul, him, the said Peter Weisengoff, then and there not having a license under the provisions of chapter 140 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland, passed in the year 1894, and the amendments thereto, to sell intoxicating, spirituous and fermented liquors in Allegany County aforesaid,” while in the second count it was charged: “That Peter* Weisengoff, late of Allegany County aforesaid, on or about the 28th day of September, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and twenty-two, at Allegany County aforesaid, unlawfully did sell a certain quantity of intoxicating, spirtuous. and fermented liquors unto a certain Janthan Paul and to divers other persons to the jurors unknown; him, the said Peter Weisengoff, then and there not having a license under the provisions of chapter 140 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland, passed in the year 1894, and the amendments thereto, to sell intoxicating, spirituous and fermented liquors in Allegany County aforesaid.”

A demurrer to that indictment having been overruled, the defendant filed two special pleas, which in effect say that the sale charged was for beverage purposes and not in violation of chapter 140 off the Acts of 1894, and not unlawful, because no license could have been obtained under that act, and that the act itself has been abrogated and repealed by the Volstead Act and the Eighteenth Amendment to the Federal Oonetitntion. .Demurrers interposed to these pleas were sustained, and the general issue plea was then filed. The defendant, on the issue thus tendered, was tried before a jury, convicted of the offense charged, and sentenced to pay a fine of $500 and to be confined in the Maryland House of Correction for eight months. From that judgment this appeal was taken. *640 The only question raised by the appeal is whether' local liquor laws, such as chapter 140 of the Acts of 1894, were abrogated or repealed by the Volstead act and the Eighteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution. We held in the case of Molinari v. State, 141 Md. 565, that such laws were not affected by the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment or by the enactment of the Volstead act, but that, notwithstanding that amendment and that statute, such local laws, in so far as they prohibited the sale of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes, retain and still possess their original force and vigor undiminished and unimpaired.

We ,are asked now in this case to change that conclusion for the reason that the Court in that case rested its decision upon the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the Vigliotti case, whereas, by a proper construction of it, that case really offered no support for the conclusion reached in the Molinari case, but was if anything rather opposed to it. The contention that the Court misconstrued the Vigliotti case is based on the presumption that the Brooks Law, under consideration in that case, was prohibitory and therefore consistent with the federal law, and valid, while the act under consideration here is regulatory and therefore inconsistent with the federal law and void.

This case could be rested upon the Molinari case, supra, because the very act involved here was before the Court in that case, and the very criticisms which are now leveled at that case were fully considered by this Court before it was decided.

The entire argument in this case turns upon the fact that Judge Adkins, who' delivered the opinion in the Molinari case, described the Brooks law, a Pennsylvania statute construed in the Vigliotti case, supra, as a “regulatory” law, while the Court in the Vigliotti case described it as prohibitory. But the question before us is not whether the phrases respectively used in those two cases to describe the Brooks law were adequate for that purpose, but whether the Brooks *641 law, however it may have "been described, is in substance -and purpose similar to the statute involved in this case. For if it is, then obviously the Molinari case was- properly decided, and must control this- case, which depends- upon the statute construed in that ease. The¡ fact that the Cburt- in the Vig liotti case described the Brooks law as prohibitory, while in the Molinari case it was described as regulatory, does not mean that there is any inconsistency in the two decisions, because both laws prohibited the sale of intoxicating liquor in the absence of a license for such sale, and were to that extent prohibitory, and both permitted, and regulated such sales if a license were issued therefor and were to that extent regulatory.

And an inspection of the two- statutes demonstrates their essential -similarity. The Brooks law, in it-s title, is described as, “An act to restrain and regulate the sale of vinous and spirituous, malt or brewed liquors, or any admixtures thereof,” while chapter 140 of the Acts of 1894 is- in its- title described as an act “to regulate the sale of spirituous and fermented liquors in Allegany County.” The Brooks law, as does the Allegany County act, prohibited the sale of any spirituous or fermented liquors without- a license, but permitted such sales if a license were obtained. In construing the Brooks law the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said: “At least this suggestion is warranted, not only by the significant absence from the act of the term ‘intoxicating liquors,’ in connection with the license system there ordained (such term or an equivalent, being rather generally used in the earlier Pennsylvania liquor laws), but also by the whole structure of the statute; for it is so drawn that, by the elimination, through subsequent legislation or otherwise, of the possibility of intoxicating liquors being sold thereunder, its terms would admirably suit the control of the business of dealing in those kinds of liquors which most- readily may become of the intoxicating class or those liquors- under the guise of which intoxicating beverages can be most easily *642 trafficked in. This course — that is, a well-regulated license system, to govern the general supply and distribution of all liquors of the character just described — in the view of many thoughtful people is considered one of the very best aids to efficient control, and, through such control, actual enforcement of practical prohibition. In this connection, witness the series of amendments made to the Brooks law by our last Legislature, which still retain the license plan.” And this Court in the Molinari

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Gildar v. Kriss
62 A.2d 568 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1948)
Hill v. State
197 A. 795 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1938)
Hayes v. State
188 A. 24 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Green v. State
183 A. 526 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Callahan v. State
162 A. 856 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)
McCormick & Co. v. Brown
286 U.S. 131 (Supreme Court, 1932)
Weller v. State
132 A. 624 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 A. 107, 143 Md. 638, 1923 Md. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisengoff-v-state-md-1923.