State v. Cooper
State v. Cooper
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The indictment under which the defendants were convicted charged them with the illegal
The defendants- admit the truth of the state’s evidence, but they insist, first, that their conduct was not a violation of the law of New Jersey, because of the fact that their sales were made on the open navigable waters of the Delaware river while -their boat was in motion, and that, consequently, they were without the jurisdiction of the state. And they insist, further, that aside from the question of jurisdiction, their conviction cannot be supported for the reason that the sales proved against them were not those charged in the indictment; in other words, that the grand jury had specified that these sales were made, not oh the waters of the Delaware river, but at a place known as Penns Grove, and located within the limits of the borough of Penns Grove.
We think the first contention, that is, lack of jurisdiction, is without merit. The tidal waters of the Delaware river separate this state from the State of Delaware. Ity a compact entered into between these two sovereign powers, the jurisdiction of each state, both civil and criminal, extends to the middle line of the river. The acts proved against the defendants all occurred well to the east of that middle line,
The contention that the defendants had been convicted of a crime other than that charged against them by the grand jury cannot, we think, be successfully controverted. The criminal offence laid against them was the sale of intoxicating liquor on Sunday at a place within the borough limits of the borough of Penns Grove specifically mentioned. Yot only did the proofs show sales in the open waters of the Delaware, instead of at the place designated in the indictment as “Penns Grove” (which we assume was a grove within the borough limits), but there was no attempt made on the part of the state to show that the boundaries of the borough extended below" the low-water mark of the Delaware river. By the act of 1856 (Comp. Slat., p. 5371), the judicial investigation and deiermination of any capital or other offence committed within or upon the waters of the river Delaware, which this state is entitled to enjoy and exercise by virtue of its agreement with the state of Delaware, “shall belong to and be exercised by the courts and officers of the county lying and being nearest to the place whore.such offence, trespass or act was committed,” and the offence shall be described “as having been committed in or upon the water of the river Delaware in the said county.” Yot only is the offence specified by the grand jury different from that proved at, the trial, but the fact that the indictment did not describe, the offence as having been committed in or upon the water of the’ river Delaware, in the county of Salem, was, by implication, a declaration by the grand jury that the jurisdiction exercised was not that conferred upon the criminal courts of Salem county by the act of 1856, and, consequently, the present conviction would be no answer to an indictment submitted by a subsequent grand jury based upon the statute just referred to, and charging the identical offence which has been proved against the defendants in this case.
The judgment under review must be reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.