The defendant is indicted for selling spirituous liquor to one Guess in the town of Durham, where such sale is prohibited by virtue of an election had under the provisions of chapter 233, Laws 1903.
The special verdict finds that the defendant was not a druggist, and had no license to sell spirituous liquor within the city of Durham; that he resided in Roxboro, where he had license to sell spirituous liquor; that Guess sent the defendant two dollars by mail with an order to ship said Guess at Durham one gallon of corn whiskey by express, charges prepaid, which the defendant did, and the whiskey was delivered to Guess in Durham; that said Guess was not a druggist, nor was said liquor sold to him upon the prescription of a regularly practicing physician.
The point presented therefore is whether this was a sale at Roxboro, where the liquor was delivered to the carrier by the defendant for transportation to Guess; or was it a sale at Durham, where it was received by Guess and where such sale was prohibited by law.
Laws 1903, chapter 349, section 2, provides: “That the place where delivery of any spirituous, malt, vinous, fermented or other intoxicating liquors is made in the State of North Carolina shall be construed and held to be the place of sale thereof, and any station or other place within said State to which any person, firm, company or corporation shall ship or convey any spirituous, malt, vinous, fermented or other intoxicating liquors for the purpose of delivery or carrying the same to a purchaser, shall be construed to be the place of sale: provided this section shall not be construed to prevent the delivery of any spirituous,
This section is explicit that the place of actual delivery to the buyer, or to which it shall be shipped for delivery to him, “shall be construed to be the place of saleIt is contended that this provision does not have the effect of the plain purport of the words used by the law-making power, because—
1. This section 2 is found in a statute entitled “An Act to prohibit the manufacture, sale and importation of liquors in Cleveland, Cabarrus, Mitchell and Gaston Counties.” Formerly the caption of an act was not at all considered to any extent whatever in construing it, for reasons given in State v. Woolard, 119 N. C., 179, but the modern doctrine is that when the language of the statute is ambiguous, the Courts can resort to the title as aid in giving such act its true meaning, but that this cannot be done when the language used is clear and unambiguous. Randall v. Railroad, 107 N. C., 748, 11 L. R. A., 460, S. C., 104 N. C., 410; State v. Woolard, 119 N. C., 779; Hines v. Railroad, 95 N. C., 434, 59 Am. Rep., 250; Blue v. McDuffie, 44 N. C., 131. To like purport in Hadden v. Collector, 72 U. S., 107, Mr. Justice Field uses the following language: “At the present date, the title constitutes a part of the act, but it is still construed as only a formal part; it cannot be used to extend or to restrain any positive provisions in the body of the act.” The language of section 2 is “that the place where delivery of any spirituous, malt, vinous, fermented or other intoxicating liquors is made in the State of North Carolina shall be construed and held to be the place of sale thereof.” * * * This provision is positive in its character, and its operation cannot be restrained by any reference to the title of the chapter. In the sections of chapter 349, other than sections 1 and 2, there is no reference to the
It is well settled, says Ruffin, C. J., in Humphries v. Baxter, 28 N. C., 439, “that one part of a statute may be public in its nature, while another is local and private.” Part of a statute may be local and another of general application, part may be a public statute of which the Court will take judicial notice, and another part a private statute which .must be set up in the pleadings, and whether an enactment in a statute is general or local, public or private, is a question of law for the Court, and is not determined by the nature of the act in which the enactment is found, nor by its publication in the public or private statutes.” The decisions are uniform as to this. State v. Wallace, 94 N. C., 827; Durham v. Railroad, 108 N. C., 401; State v. Barringer, 110 N. C., 529; Hancock v. Railroad, 124 N. C., at p. 225; Potter’s Dwarris, 53.
2. It is further objected that if the statute had this meaning it is unconstitutional, but we are not pointed to any section of the Constitution which forbids the law-making power to designate the place of sale when the goods are shipped by the vendor to the vendee by a common carrier or other agency. It is true the Courts have held that the place of sale is where the goods are delivered to the carrier, the latter being the agent of the vendee, thus making the constructive delivery, instead of the place of actual receipt of the goods by the purchaser, the place of sale. This rule is of com
Where one upon one side of tfie line of a jmlitical division, as a State or county, shoots across tfie line and kills a person on tfie other side, the Courts have field that tfie act
It was suggested on the argument, though the point is not made in the record, that the statute contravenes the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which provides that in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall be tried by a jury of the State and district where the crime shall have been committed. But aside from the fact that the law has construed the crime to be* committed in Durham, where the forbidden article was actually delivered, instead of at Eoxboro, where it was only constructively delivered, it is well known that the first ten amendments were all passed as restrictions upon the Federal government and courts, and as a concession to States which reluctantly and hesitatingly had entered into the Union upon a pledge that
Reversed.