State v. Hanner
State v. Hanner
Opinion of the Court
after stating tbe case: A special verdict must include all tbe essential elements of tbe offense charged, or there can be no conviction, and it follows that if tbe findings are not responsive to tbe allegations of tbe indictment they will not sustain a judgment. Tbe jury must find tbe facts, and not merely state tbe evidence which'may tend to prove them. There can be no aider of tbe verdict by intend
It is said by Chief Justice Ruffin, for the Court, in State v. Watts, 32 N. C., 369: “It is common learning that a verdict is defective which finds only the evidence; since the Court cannot draw inferences of fact, but only apply the law to facts agreed or found. To authorize judgment for the State, therefore, on the verdict, it ought to have contained direct findings of the _ necessary facts.” Hawkins in his Pleas of the Crown, bk. 2, eh. 47, sec. 9, states the rule to be that the Court in adjudging upon a special verdict is confined to the facts expressly found, and cannbt supply the want thereof, as to any material part, by any argument or implication from what is expressly found. It was accordingly adjudged in Rex v. Plummer, Kel., Ill, and other cases he cites, that where the jury failed to find an essential fact, the Court could not take it as established from the other evidential circumstances of the fact which were expressly found, though they were as full to the purpose as they could well be that the omitted fact existed. And so in State v. Blue, 84 N. C., 807, it is said: “In judging upon a special'verdict the Court is confined to the facts expressly found, and cannot supply the want thereof, as to any material part, by an .argument or implication from what is expressly found. And when the facts are of an equivocal character, which may mean one thing or another, the Court cannot determine as a question of law the guilt or innocence of the defendant. A special verdict is in itself a verdict of guilty or not guilty as the facts found in it do' or do not constitute in law the offense charged. There is nothing to do but to write a judgment thereon for or against the accused. There-
The jury in this case have stated in their verdict certain facts and circumstances, related by the defendant to the witness, which may tend or not to establish his guilt. But after all, they are but evidence and not the facts themselves upon which the law can adjudge guilt or innocence. The facts recited tend just as much to show that the liquor was sold, in good faith, to he shipped from Danville, as they do to prove that the defendant’s method of selling was a subterfuge and a mere cover by which to conceal a violation of the law, or to evade its provisions, in order to escape its penalty, and certainly it tends to prove the former fact just • as fully as it does the one that the defendant sold the liquor in Lexington, by himself delivering the jug at the express office for the defendant, who was to call and get it. What the defendant said to the witness, James Eastep, was mere evidence, and not the facts themselves, which the jury should have found before the Court could proceed to judgment. This is the fatal defect in the verdict. We would assume a
As said by Chief Justice Shepherd in State v. Finlayson: “Evidently a very important question concerning” interstate commerce was intended to be presented, but we cannot consider it upon this verdict.” Judging from the nature of the findings, the course of the argument here and the briefs of counsel, it was supposed below, we could infer, that the verdict was equivalent to a finding that the whiskey was actually and in good faith sold for shipment from Danville, Va., and the question was whether the transaction was so far interstate traffic as to protect the defendant from prosecution under our law against the unlawful sale of liquors, and also whether the act of -Congress, sometimes called the Wilson Act, applied to the case. But this matter we cannot consider, as it is not at all presented in the record, owing to the imperfection of the verdict in the respect we have indicated.
Where a special verdict is so defective that the Court cannot pronounce judgment upon it, the rule is to order a new trial. State v. Wallace, 25 N. C., 195; State v. Curtis, 71 N. C., 56; State v. Blue, 84 N. C., 809; State v. Brittain, 89 N. C., 481. “If the verdict does not sufficiently ascertain the fact, a venire facias de novo ought to issue.” 2 Hawkins P. C., p. 622, and note 2. It is of course within the power of the trial Court to direct the jury to retire and further deliberate for the purpose of remedying any defects
Our conclusion is that there has been no sufficient- verdict rendered for the Court to determine, as matter of law, the guilt or innocence of the defendant, and the case stands, therefore, as if there had been a mistrial. State v. Curtis, supra. It follows that there was error in entering judgment as upon a conviction, for which there must be another trial.
New Trial.
Concurring Opinion
concurring: In a special verdict the Court is not at liberty to infer anything not found. State v. Custer, 65 N. C., 339. The facts found are that the defendant sold a gallon of whiskey and received $2 therefor; that he said he would send the order to Danville, Va., and have the whiskey sent out by express, and the purchaser did get the whiskey at the express office next morning. But there is no evidence that he did in fact send the order to Danville, nor that this particular whiskey came by express from Danville addressed to Eastep. The tag on the jug bore Eastep’s name, but nothing to indicate that it had come by express from Danville or elsewhere for him. Neither the express agent nor his books were in evidence, and the defendant availed himself of his privilege of not going on the stand, and neither proved the sending of the order nor the shipment of whiskey in pursuance thereof. The jury did not find that these things were done, and the Judge could not draw that' inference. If authorized to draw any inference, he might possibly have inferred that the whiskey was already in the express office, or elsewhere in Lexington, and that the gallon jug was merely tagged with defendant’s name ready for Eastep next morning. We do not know how this was. If the whiskey was in fact ordered by defendant from Danville, and was in fact shipped thence in a
If these facts had been found, the question would have been presented whether our statute, making the place of actual delivery to the purchaser the place of sale, would apply to this case. State v. Patterson, 134 N. C., 612; Delamater v. South Dakota, U. S. Supreme Court, 11 March, 1907. But in the absence of such facts we cannot discuss an abstract proposition of law without facts on which to base the proposition. But it may be noted that even if those facts had been found, there would still arise other questions. The size of the package has been held material. Austin v. Tennessee, 135 U. S., 100; Cook v. Marshall County, 196 U. S., 261, in which last case Justice Brewer says: “It may be shown that the intent of the party concerned was not to select the usual and ordinary mode of transportation, but an unusual and more expensive one, for the- express purpose of evading or defying the police laws of the State. If the natural result of such method be to render inoperative laws intended for the protection of the people, it is pertinent to inquire whether the act was not done for that purpose, and to hold that the interstate commerce clause is invoked as a cover for fraudulent dealing, and is no defense to a prosecution under the State law.” The State has sole power to regulate or prohibit the sale of liquor. Barbier v. Connally, 113 U. S., 31. Was the shipment of one gallon of whiskey by express in a single jug from Danville, Va., to Lexington, N. C., a usual and legitimate act of interstate commerce, or was it merely an attempt to evade a law which the people of this State have enacted under their right of local self-government? If the transaction was merely “a cover for fraudulent dealing, it is no defense to a prosecution under the State law,” says the
“4. The size of the package in which bona, -fide transactions are carried on between the manufacturer and the wholesale dealer residing in different States is a material consideration.
“5. The motive which actuates the particular method of shipment may be determined from «several circumstances: (a) The trifling value of each parcel. (b) The absence of an address on each package, (c) The fact that many parcels, for the purpose of the shipment, are aggregated.”
The State will not allow its police regulations to be violated under cover of fraudulent shipments from another State, nor will the Federal courts, as the highest Federal Court has said, permit “the interstate commerce clause to be invoked as a cover” for defying or evading the State law. Calvert Regulation of Commerce, 124. Indeed, it is immaterial whether the defendant took orders for liquor to be shipped from a point outside or inside the State, for his act being in violation of the State law which regulates the liquor traffic, neither he nor the carrier is protected by the interstate commerce clause of the Federal Constitution. Delamater v. South Dakota, U. S. Supreme Court, 11 March, 1907.
If in this case the whiskey had in fact been shipped from Danville, Va. (though it is not so found), but was already, at the time of the purchase, in the express office, or elsewhere in this State, and was thereafter tagged with purchaser’s name, the defendant was ■ guilty, under the Wilson Act. Pabst Brewing Co. v. Crenshaw, 198 U. S., 17; In re Rahrer, 140 U. S., 545. If whiskey is manufactured in
In view of the enormous business notoriously done in the shipment of liquor into this State by express in jugs, the fact should be found whether such shipment is a bona fide exercise of interstate commerce or whether it is an attempt merely to evade the State’s regulation of the traffic in intoxicating liquor in the exercise of the police power.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. W. LEE HANNER
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- 8 cases
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- Published