State v. Hewitt
State v. Hewitt
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant was convicted at Aiken, S. C., before Judge Rice, and a jury, on May 11, 1917, of delivering more than one gallon of liquor to one J. H. Hall on February 25, 1917, and of transporting liquor for delivery on February 4, 1917, he being the agent of the Southern Express Company at Montmorenci, in violation of the act of legislature of February 20, 1915 (29 Stat. 140). Before sentence defendant made a motion for arrest of judgment on the ground that the act of 1915 had been repealed by the act of February 24, 1917 (30 Stat. 69), and consequently that the Court had no jurisdiction to sentence him under the act. The motion was overruled, and the defendant sentenced by the Court. From this sentence the defendant appeals, and raised by his exceptions two grounds.
In this case the rule is fully stated where a person commits an offense under a statute which is repealed by subsequent statute before sentence is pronounced against him.
All exceptions are overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Hewitt.
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- 1 case
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- Syllabus
- 1. Criminal Law—Evidence—Good Character.-—In a prosecution for illegally delivering and transporting more than one gallon of intoxicating liquor to one person in one month, where the accused admitted that he delivered the liquor at night, and his evidence was in substantial accord with that of the State, the question of his good character was not in the case. 2. Criminal Law — Appeal — Harmless Error. — Error, if any, in prosecution for illegal delivery of liquor, where accused admitted the delivery, in instructing on defendant’s right to show good reputation that one’s reputation might have been of the best, and yet he might succumb to temptation, was not prejudicial, since the question of good reputation was not properly in the case. 3. Intoxicating Liquors — Illegal Delivery—Statutes—Construction.—Act February 24, 1917 (30 Stat. 69), prohibiting the delivery of more than one quart of liquor to one person in one month did not repeal act February 20, 1915 (29 Stat. 140), prohibiting the delivery of more than one gallon of liquor to one person in one month, but continued the offense defined by the earlier act. 4. Intoxicating Liquors — Illegal Delivery — Sentence. — Where accused wa scharged with a violation of act February 24, 1917 (30 Stat. 69), prohibiting the delivery of more than one quart of liquor to one person in one month, and of violating act February 20, 1915 (29 Stat. 140), prohibiting the delivery of more than one gallon of liquor in one month to one person, and he was sentenced under the earlier act, which was more favorable to him, he could not complain.