Atlantic City v. Thornhill
Atlantic City v. Thornhill
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Before the recorder of Atlantic City the plaintiff in -error was summarily convicted of selling and offering to sell and deliver brewed liquors in quantities of one quart or more without a license-, in violation of a city ordinance,
The indisputable facts are that the plaintiff in error is one of the proprietors of a house in Atlantic City, called the Waldorf: that on the evening of August 27th, 1900,. two detectives engaged a room in the house, and at nine fifty-five o’clock rang the bell for the bell boy; that on his appearance they ordered two bottles of beer, and the bell boy forthwith informed the plaintiff of the order; that after some hesitation and discussion with him she loaned the bell boy thirty cents, with which he went to a neighboring store and bought the beer, and that when he delivered it at the room the detectives paid him for it, and he returned to the plaintiff what he had borrowed; that shortly afterwards they rang again for the bell boy and ordered of him two more bottles, which he likewise bought at a neighboring store, using his own money in the purchase; that on delivering the beer to the detectives they handed him a $5 bill out of which to take payment; that on liis application to the plaintiff she refused to change it, and the bell boy returned it to them, but the next morning, when paying the room rent, they paid also for the beer, and the price was at once turned over to the bell boy. Before the recorder the plaintiff testified that she never sold a bottle of beer in her life, never had any to sell.
The only legitimate conclusions from the facts above stated is that the seller of the beer was the proprietor of the neighboring store; that the detectives were the buyers directly from him, and that the bell boy was their agent in procuring the purchase. There is no evidence that in that transaction the bell boy was the plaintiff’s agent; that the title to the beer was ever vested in her, or that she ever held herself out, or authorized any person to hold her out, as having beer for sale. The testimony was therefore incapable of sustaining the adjudication that she had sold the beer or offered it for sale.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.