State v. Cunningham
State v. Cunningham
Opinion of the Court
It was charged against the defendants, J. P. Cunningham and E. Bitters, that on August 9, 1911, they “unlawfully did keep a grog and tippling shop, and did retail spirituous and intoxicating liquors, to wit, beer and whisky, without previously obtaining a license from the police jury of Caddo parish or the municipal authorities of the city of Shreveport.” And, a similar offense having been charged in a separate proceeding as committed on August 15, 1911, the two prosecutions, involving as they do the same issues of fact and law, were consolidated. After issue joined and trial, defendants were convicted and sentenced for the one offense to pay each a fine of $350 and to serve 90 days on the public roads, and 90 days additional in default of payment of the fines, and for the other offense to pay each a fine of $100 and costs, and in default of payment of the fines to serve 30 days on the public roads. Prom the sentence first mentioned, they prosecute this appeal and present their case by means of certain bills of exception which will be considered, seriatim, to wit:
“That the state had had several witnesses summoned and brought from the former home of said witness Warren for the purpose of sustaining his reputation for truth and veracity, and had kept said witnesses here for several days for said purpose, to which evidence counsel for the defendants objected on the ground that it was irrelevant and that it was not permissible to sustain the character for truth and veracity of said witness Warren by such species of evidence. * * * And, further, the witness Daniels, who testified that he had not lived in the neighborhood where said witness Warren resided for over 10 years, but had heard the character and reputation of said Warren discussed by persons from said neighborhood, was permitted * * * to testify that the character of said Warren for truth and veracity was good in said neighborhood” —to which ruling defendants objected and reserved their bill.
The statement per curiam is:
“That the testimony of Daniels and Fullilove, to the effect that the state had witnesses present at one time for the purpose of sustaining the credibility of state’s witness Warren, was admitted, for what it was worth, to negative the effect that no effort was made to counteract the testimony of the witness, introduced by the defendant, to impeach the testimony of the witness Warren, and that the objection of the defendant went simply to the effect of the testimony objected to and not to its admissibility., and that the testimony of the witness Daniels as to his knowledge of the witness Warren and his reputation for truth and veracity went to the worth of the testimony and not to its admissibility.”
“That, as to the defendant Cunningham, the indictment and bill of particulars having charged that the sale alleged to have been made by him was so made by him in person, he cannot be convicted on proof that it was made by another as his or his company’s employé or agent, * * * and evidence that he made a sale by or through' another as agent or employé is not admissible, under the charge against him, except as disproving that he made the sale as alleged in person.”
It appears from the statement per curiam that Caddo is a parish in which, as a result of a vote of the people, the sale of intoxicating liquor is prohibited agreeably to the provisions of Act No. 221 of 1902, amending and re-enacting sections 1211 and 2778 of the Revised Statutes, and authorizing the police juries and municipal authorities “to make such rules and regulations for the sale or the prohibition of the sale, of intoxicating liquors as they may deem advisable, and to grant or withhold licenses from drinking houses and shops * * * as a majority of the legal voters may determine by ballot.”
This act is supplemented by act 66 of 1902, p. 93, amending and re-enacting section 910, R. S., and providing that:
“Whoever shall keep a grog or tippling shop, or retail spirituous or intoxicating liquors without previously obtaining a license, * * * on conviction shall be fined not less than $100 nor more than $500, and, in default of payment of fine and costs, shall be imprisoned for a term within the discretion of the court, or shall suffer fine and imprisonment as the court may deem proper. * * * ”
And the legislation thus referred to is further supplemented by act No. 46 of 1906, p. 61, which provides:
“That it shall be unlawful for any person, within the limits of any village, town, city, ward, or parish of this state, in which the retailing of spirituous or intoxicating liquors is prohibited, to seek, solicit, or receive orders from anjr one for the purchase of spirituous or intoxicating liquors.” And there is a penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both, imposed for violation of the prohibition.
And finally we have act No. 176 of 1908, p. 236 (known as the “Gay-Shattuck Law”),, which is, “An act”—
“to regulate and license the business of conducting a barroom, cabaret, coffee house, café, beer saloon, liquor exchange, drinking saloon, grog shop, beer house, beer garden, or other place where alcoholic, spirituous, vinous and malt liquors, or intoxicating beverages, bitters or medicinal preparations, of any kind, are sold, directly or indirectly, in quantities of less than five gallons, and to provide penalties for violations of this act; to limit the effect and operation of this act to cities, towns, villages and parishes * * * where the sale of liquors is permitted; to prevent this act from affecting, modifying, amending or repealing any local option laws; or from interfering with or preventing the exercise of local option on the liquor traffic,” etc. (the balance of the title being omitted).
The first section of the act (last above mentioned) provides that, for every business of conducting a barroom, cabaret, etc. (following the title), in which intoxicating
Section 14 provides:
“That this act shall only apply to cities, ¡towns, villages and parishes where the sale of liquors is permitted, and nothing in this act ■shall be construed to affect, modify, amend or repeal any local option laws or to interfere with or prevent the exercise of local option on the liquor traffic, and that nothing in this act -shall be construed, in any way or manner, as affecting, amending, modifying or repealing any existing special or local act or acts prohibiting •or restricting the sale of liquor from or within any locality or localities in this state.”
Section 15 provides:
“That, subject to the limitations contained 'in section 14 of this act, all laws and parts of laws contrary to, or inconsistent with, this act he and the same are hereby repealed.”
It is-quite evident from the excerpts thus given from the title and context of Act 176 •of 1008 that its purpose is to authorize the licensing and provide for the regulation of the business of selling intoxicating liquors in less quantities than five gallons in places where such sales are not prohibited under the local option laws, and it is equally evident that the lawmakers did not deem it advisable to complicate a statute enacted for the regulation of the sale of intoxicating liquors with the existing laws providing for the prohibition of such sales in particular communities. How such prohibition is to be enforced is therefore to be ascertained from other legislation.
The act of 1902 (No. 66, p. 93), as we have seen, imposes a penalty for the retailing of spirituous or intoxicating liquors without previously obtaining a license. Act No. 221 of 1902, p. 451, as we have seen, authorizes police juries and municipal governments to “grant or withhold all licenses for the sale of intoxicating liquors within their parishes as a majority of the legal voters may determine by ballot.”
There is no law which specifically prohibits the sale of intoxicating liquors at wholesale even in a prohibition parish, but the result is the same, since under the general license law (Act 171 of 1898, § 6, p. 394) it is:
“Provided, that no person or persons shall be deemed wholesale dealers, unless he or they sell by the original. or unbroken package or barrel only, and provided, further, that no person or persons shall be deemed wholesale dealers unless he or they sell to dealers for resale. If they sell in ¡ess quantities than original and unbroken packages or barrels, they shall be considered retail dealers and pay licenses as such. * * * ” Page 395. “Provided, that if any distilled, vinous, malt, or other kind of mixed liquors be sold in connection with the business of retail merchant, grocer, oyster house, confectionery, or in les» quantities than five gallons, the license for such additional business shall be as hereinafter provided in section 13 of this act,” etc. (italics ours). •
The licenses for wholesale dealers having been fixed by section 6, and the proviso first above quoted from that section having furnished definitions of wholesale and retail dealers, the effect of the proviso last quoted is to add to the class of retail dealers those who sell “in less quantities than five gallons,” whether they sell in original or unbroken packages or barrels or otherwise, and section 910, R. S. (as amended and re-enacted by Act 66 of 1902), applies to all persons who retail intoxicating liquors without previously obtaining licenses, whether the sales be made in prohibition territory or elsewhere. Act 46 of 1906, p. 61, applies in terms to
“Under the general license act (No. 171 of 1898, p. 3S7), no person is deemed a wholesale dealer unless he sells to dealers for resale. Hence a dealer in intoxicating liquors who sells to individuals for consumption is a retailer and may properly be convicted as such in a prohibition parish.” State v. Spence, 127 La. 336, 53 South. 596.
“As there can be no lawful retailer of intoxicating liquors in a prohibition parish, local .sales by a wholesale dealer to illicit venders of liquor will be treated as unlawful sales to individuals.” State v. Pomeranky, 57 South. 994, ante, p. 339. See, also, State v. Foster, 57 South. 895, ante, p. 219; State v. Monsour, .58 South. 144, ante, p. 450.
The trial judge has found as fact that the «ales charged against defendants were made by them in person.
Bill No. 3 was reserved to the overruling •of a motion for new trial, in which the matters presented by the two bills just considered were relied on.
Defendants are prosecuted under Act No. 66 of 1902 which amends and re-enacts section 910, R. S., denounces the offense with which they are charged, and imposes as the penalty therefor a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $500, and imprisonment in default of payment of the fine within the discretion of the court (elsewhere limited to two years), or fine and imprisonment, as the court may deem proper. Act No. 46 of 1902 provides that (save in the parish of Orleans) any person sentenced to imprisonment in the parish jail, or to fine and imprisonment, or to imprisonment in default • of payment of fine, may, at the discretion of the court, be set to work on the roads, levees, or other public works of the parish, or may be hired out or leased for work in the parish, during the term for which he may be sentenced to imprisonment:
“Provided, that convicts sentenced to imprisonment alone, or to imprisonment and fine, shall not be hired out except for the fine, but, for the term of their imprisonment, shall be worked on public works only under public officials; and, further, provided, that no convict shall ever be hired out for a less sum than the aggregate of their fine, costs of court and fees of officers.”
“An act to provide that in all criminal prosecutions, sentences to imprisonment, or to imprisonment without qualification, and all sentences for the violations of ordinances, shall mean imprisonment with labor; regulate the employment of such prisoners; and to repeal all laws, in conflict herewith.”
“Section 1. * * * That, in all criminal prosecution where any person is sentenced to imprisonment, or to imprisonment in default of the payment of the fine imposed, whether in the parish jail or without qualification as to the nature of such imprisonment, or where any person is sentenced to imprisonment in default of the payment of the fine imposed, for the violation of any valid ordinance of any of the political subdivisions of the state, such imprisonment shall mean imprisonment with labor; and every person so sentenced, if not put to work under the provisions of Act No. 29 of 1S94, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1902, shall be required to work on the public roads, streets, or levees, of the parish or municipality responsible for the costs of the prosecution of such person or within the walls of the jail, under such rules and regulations as shall be prescribed by the police jury or city council of such parish or municipality.
“Sec. 2. * * * That all law or parts of laws in conflict herewith be and the same are repealed; provided, that this act shall not apply to persons committing offenses prior to the adoption hereof, but all such persons shall be sentenced in accordance with existing- laws.”
The single object of the act as expressed in the title is to provide that all sentences to imprisonment, whether with fine or in default of payment of fine, and wliether under state law or municipal or parish ordinance, unless otherwise qualified (as, for instance, by the addition of the'words “at hard labor,” which would mean in the penitentiary), shall mean imprisonment with labor, and the additional language of the title (“regulate the employment of such prisoners, and to repeal all laws in conflict herewith”) merely indicates the purpose to prescribe the manner in which that object is to be accomplished and to remove obstacles in the way of conflicting laws. And nothing more is attempted in the body of the act. The title and text are therefore within the rule that:
“Whatever is germane or incidental to the purpose expressed is embraced within it; hence an act has not more than one object by reason of its containing provisions for the carrying out of that object, nor is it necessary to set out in the title the means by which the purpose of the act is to be accomplished.” Marr’s Or. •Tur. § 3, p. 7.
The act does not purport to revive or amend any statute, but is a piece of independent legislation which in terms and according to the accepted canons of construction repeals all prior legislation with which it conflicts. Dehon v. Lafourche Basin Levee Board, 110 La. 767, 34 South. 770; State v. De Hart, 109 La. 574, 575, 33 South. 605; Cyc. vol. 36, pp. 1071, 1073, 1081.
There are some other matters discussed in the brief filed on behalf of defendants, but they are not covered by the bills' of exception, do not appear to have been presented in the trial court, and need not be here considered.
Finding no reversible error therein, the convictions and sentences appealed from are affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.