Craft v. State

Hays County has adopted and is under the provisions of our laws prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors. After making the other necessary allegations in the information, it charged appellant "on or about the 5th day of August, 1911, did unlawfully engage in, pursue and follow the occupation and business of selling and offering for sale, by taking orders therefor, intoxicating liquors, without having obtained a license to follow such business and occupation. He was tried and convicted, and his punishment assessed at a fine of $4,000 and imprisonment in the county jail for ninety days.

The evidence of the sheriff and others would show that on or about *Page 68 the date alleged in the information and for a long period of time prior thereto, appellant three or four times a week would make trips to Hunter in a buggy and bring back from fifteen to twenty quarts of whisky and deliver it to those who had given him orders therefor. One witness says that he had given defendant orders a number of times; that he usually paid him $1.50 for the whisky and would pay ten cents extra for bringing it to him. The sheriff further testified that appellant engaged in no other character of work for livelihood, but was engaged wholly in this character of business — hauling whisky from Hunter, a wet precinct, to San Marcos, in dry territory, a distance of eight miles. It was further proven that appellant had no license to follow this occupation or business.

It will be thus seen that the testimony was ample to support the verdict, if the law under which he was prosecuted is a valid law. The same contentions, as to the constitutionality of this act, are made in this case as were made in the case of Edmanson v. State, 64 Tex.Crim. Rep., 142 S.W. Rep., 887, in which case the various grounds are fully discussed, and we merely refer to that decision, without again discussing that question at length.

The contention that the law is violative of the Federal Constitution in that it is an interference with interstate commerce, is held adversely to appellant by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Delamater v. South Dakota,205 U.S. 96 (51 Law Ed., 727), that court holding that since the passage of what is known as the Wilson bill the different States may pass laws prohibiting orders for interstate shipments of intoxicating liquors in territory where the sale has been prohibited.

The contention of appellant that this becomes a sale in the prohibited territory and the Act is therefore void, is not sound. This court, in an unbroken line of authorities, has held that the actual sale takes place at the point of shipment (where the order is filled) and not where the order is taken. The Legislature in using the phrase it did, did so with the knowledge of what meaning this court had placed on those words. In every instance where a person had taken an order for liquors, it has been held that the actual sale took place at the point of shipment, and that the person to whom the order was addressed and who shipped the goods was the person making the sale, and not the person who took the order. A long list of authorities is cited in Parker v. State, 85 S.W. Rep., 1155. See also Luster v. State, 86 S.W. Rep., 326; Sedgwick v. State, 85 S.W. Rep., 813; Sims v. State, 86 S.W. Rep., 1019; Newbury v. State, 44 S.W. Rep., 843; Beard v. State, 115 S.W. Rep., 592; Weathered v. State, 60 S.W. Rep., 876. The questions here involved are so fully discussed and authorities so numerously cited in the case of Keller v. State, 87 S.W. Rep., 669, we do not deem it necessary to discuss them further, but refer to that opinion wherein it is held that when the Constitution was adopted the word "sale" had a definite and *Page 69 fixed meaning in law, and the Legislature was without authority to change or alter the elements or meaning of that word, or to fix the place of "sale" by law, and that one who takes an order, makes but a conditional bargain, and the sale takes place where the order is filled, and no Act of the Legislature otherwise providing would be valid.

The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

[Rehearing denied June 5, 1912. — Reporter.]