Appellant was convicted for violating the local option law. Appellant asked the court to give the following special charge, which was refused: "You are instructed that any liquor intended for use as a beverage, and capable of being so used, which contains alcohol, either obtained by fermentation or by the additional process of distillation in such a proportion that it will produce intoxication, when taken in such quantities as may practically be drunk, is an intoxicant. And in this case, if you have a reasonable doubt as to whether the liquor charged to have been sold by defendant as above defined, — then you will give defendant the benefit of such doubt and acquit him." The court should have given this charge.
We find the following charge requested, which was refused by the court: "If you believe from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that the drink sold in this case was intoxicating, as alleged in the information, but shall further believe that at the time the defendant sold the same, if he sold it, he honestly believed that it was not intoxicating and would not produce a state of intoxication when drunk in reasonable quantities, such as the human stomach will ordinarily hold, then and in such event, the defendant would not be guilty, and *Page 496 it will become your duty to acquit him." The evidence on the part of the appellant was that he did not think the concoction he sold prosecuting witness was intoxicating. Other witnesses testified to the same fact. This was a pertinent issue in the trial. This court has held where the defendant sells in a local option district a concoction that he does not believe and had a right to believe was not an intoxicant under a mistake of fact, that he should not be convicted. It follows, therefore, that the court erred in refusing this charge.
We do not deem it necessary to pass upon the other questions. For the errors discussed, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.