Woodruff v. State
Woodruff v. State
Opinion of the Court
This is an indictment found in the borough court of Elizabeth, for selling liquor, by retail. To the indictment, the defendant demurred, judgment was rendered for the state, and this court is called upon to review and correct that judgment. The counsel for the defendant objects, both to the jurisdiction of the court, and to the sufficiency of the indictment. We will look into, each of these objections. 1. As to the jurisdiction of the court. The law creating the offence charged, (passed 12th February 1814) declares, that the offender may be indicted and convicted, “ before any court of Oyer and Terminer, or General Court of Quarter Sessions of the peace,” &c. This act was evidently intended to.give jurisdiction over the offence, to the several courts
The indicment is objected to, first, because it does not shew that the defendant had no license to sell from the borough of Elizabeth. Nor secondly, from what County Court of Quarter Sessions, he had not obtained his license.
1. The indictment is headed, “ New-Jersey, borough of Elizabeth, ss.” and states, that the defendant, “ late of the township of Elizabeth in the borough aforesaid, on &c.,” at &c., “in the borough aforesaid, and within the jurisdiction of this court, did sell, &c. not having first obtained a license, for that purpose, from the General Court of Quarter Sessions of the county, in the manner directed by the act, entitled ‘ An act concerning inns and taverns or from the corporate authority of the city or borough in which he resided.” This would certainly seem a sufficient averment that he had no license from the borough of Elizabeth, on the strictest principles ever applied to indictments. He is said to be “ of that boroughthe locus in quo is, for the time being, and for that purpose, the place of his residence, and he is averred to have no license from that borough. I am not certain that I exactly comprehended the distinction taken by the *counsel for the plaintiff in error, on this part of the subject. He seemed to insist, that the words used in the law and the indictment, respecting the authority to license, are “ corporate authority of the borough;” that the power to license in Elizabeth, rests in the court in which this bill was found, and that this court is not “the corporate authority” of the borough; and therefore, when the indictment alleges that he sold without license from the corporate authority of the borough, it does not charge a crime, because it might all be true, and he might have received a lawful license to sell, from the court, though not the corporate authority. The whole difficulty, if any really exists, is in the distinction set up between the court and the corporate authority ; a distinction, as to this matter, which exists only in the argument of the counsel. The seventh section of the act
The second objection to this indictment is true in fact, but utterly unsubstantial in law. It was not necessary to say any thing about a license, from the Sessions of Essex or any other county. Every thing in it about the county of Essex and the township of Elizabeth, is mere surplusage, which does not vitiate. The defendant is not called to answer to the offence of ^selling, in the county, but in the borough ; and a hundred licenses from the county would not have justified the act of which he is accused. The limits of the borough, bound the jurisdiction of the court in which this bill was found: and its powers and inquiries can, by no possibility, be extended beyond them. But within them, it forms a perfect and complete jurisdiction, separate, distinct, and independent from that of the county. All that an indictment found there, need to do, is to bring the offence within the state and the borough. And this, the one before us, does in the most complete and ample manner. Expunge from it then,
From the view which I take of this subject, it does not appear to me, necessary to consider whether all or any of the objections can now avail, or whether there should have been a plea, to the jurisdiction in the first instance. They are not available in law, no matter at what period taken. Nor is it important how we shall construe the passage read from Starkie, respecting the necessity of averring the negative ingredient, or making it matter of defence. It is here sufficiently averred.
I am of opinion that the demurrer be overruled, and judgment be given for the defendant in error.
Judgment for the defendant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- A. J. Woodruff against The State
- Status
- Published