State v. Lohman
State v. Lohman
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
In the first of these cases, it will only be necessary to consider and decide the 1st, 3d and 4th grounds of the motion in arrest of judg, meet; a decision upon them will either decide or supersede all the other grounds made in the case.
The 3d Section of the Act of .1834, under which the defendants are indicted, is in the following words, viz : “ If any free white per-.sow, being a distiller, vendor, or tetailer of spirituous liquors, shall sell, exchange, give, or in any otherwise deliver any spirituous li. quors to any slave, except upon the written and express order of the owner, or person having the care and management of such slave; such person, upon conviction, shall be imprisoned not exceeding six months, and be fined not exceeding one hundred dollars.”
The fourth ground in arrest of judgment in Schroder’s cases objects to the indictment, inasmuch as the defendant is not described
The 3d ground objects to the sufficiency of the indictment, because the defendant is described as s vendor, and not as a vendor and retailer of spirituous liquors. The words of the Act are, “ being a distiller, vendor, or retailer;” any one of these characters are sufficient; jt is not necessary that a man should combine all three, or the two last, before he would be liable under the Act. If the defendant be a vend- or of spirituous liquors, and deliver spirituous liquors to a slave, he is .clearly, within the words 6f the Act, guilty of the offence described by it. He who vends spirituous liquors, would not necessarily be a yetailer, but every retailer is a vendor.
The first ground insists that the description of the slave in the indictment, without either his own uame, or that of the master, is insufficient. The general rule in framing an indictment, is, that the of-fence should be so described, that the defendant may know how to answer it, the Court what judgment to pronounce, and that a conviction or acquittal in it, may be pleaded in bar to any subsequent or other indictment for the same offence. The count on which the defendant is convicted, is for delivering spirituous liquors to a “ slave of a person and name unknown.” This, it seems to me, is entirely too general.
But it is urged that a case may arise, in which, unless this general form is allowed, the defendant may violate the law, and yet escape. This may be true: and I would answer it by a first principle in crim
In the case of the City Council vs. Johnston, decided at this place in February, 1826, the point which I have been considering was, it seems to me, in a perfectly analogous case, considered and decided by the Court of Appeals.
That case was a suit brought to recover a penalty of twenty dollars, under an ordinance of the city, which ordained — “ That if any person shall, after the passing of this ordinance, give a ticket to any negro, or negroes, or other person or persons of color, to remain out of his, her, or their owners or employer’s premises, after the beating of the tatoo, without the consent and knowledge of such owner and employer, he shall forfeit and pay the sum of twenty dollars, to be recovered in the City Court, to the use of such owner and employer.” The perfect analogy between that case and this, will be seen by comparing the clause of the ordinance just cited, with that of the act of 1,834: The words in the ordinance — “Any negro or negroes, or other person or persons of color,” are as general as the words “any slave,” used in the act. Under the ordinance, the offence was not complete unless done “without the consent or knowledge of the owner, or employer;” so under the act there is no offence, unless the trading or delivery be without the written and express order of the owner, or person having the care and management of such slave* This comparison shews that the essential requisites of the offence under the ordinance and act, as to the person with whom it is committed, and the consent of the master or employer are the same; and hence the rule of that case must in these particularse govern this. In that case, my brother Johnson, in . delivering the opinion of the court upon the question, whether it was necessary in the process to set out the name of the slave and the owner or employer, stated the rule to be — “That the facts constituting the injury or offence, must be
“ There were circumstances which were well Calculated to define and specify the offence, and were readily ascertained, and- ought to have been stated.”
That decision, by a change of the name of the defendant, would be' a decision of this case upon this point, and seems to me to be conclusive of it. But whether conclusive or not, it is greatly in aid of our view of the law applicable to this case. The motion to arrest the judgment in the cases of The State vs. Jacob Schroder, is grant, ed on the first ground.
In Lohman’s case, no judgment can be given on the verdict; for it does not find the facts charged in the indictment, of giving and delivering liquor to a slave named Sam, the property of Jacob F. Mint-zing, but merely “ the giving and delivering liquor to a slave.”
This is not a conviction of the offence charged. The motion in arrest of judgment, in the case of the State vs. Diedrick Lohman, is also granted on the first ground.
JOHN B. O’NEALL:
We concur.
The State vs. Scott, 1 Bailey, 270.
Concurring Opinion
I concur, as to the case of Lohman.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.