The plaintiff in error was ai*rested and convicted on a charge of selling liquor to a minor. The complaint was made under the statute of 1877. (Chap. 420, Laws of 1877, p. 478.) Section 1 .of that act provided as follows :
Section 1. Section 15 of chapter 628 of the Laws of 1857, entitled “ an act to suppress intemperance and to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors,” is hereby amended so as to read as follows:
“ § 15. No inn, tavern or hotel keéper, or any other person licensed to sell any strong or spirituous liquors or wines shall, either personally or by his wife, servant, employee or other agent, sell or give any such liquors or wines to any Indian or apprentice, knowing or having reason to believe him-to be such, or within the *592knowledge of such agent, without the consent of his master or mistress, nor to any minor under the age of eighteen years, without the consent of his father or mother or guardian. Whoever shall, either personally or by his wife, servant, employee or other agent, offend against either of these provisions shall forfeit ten dollars for each and every offence, to be recovered by the master of such apprentice or servant, or by the parent or guardian of such minor. And any person who shall, either personally or by his wife, servant, employee or other agent, sell or give away any strong or spirituous liquors, ale, beer or wine, to any Indian in this State, or shall sell any beer, ale, wine or any strong or spirituous liquor to any minor under the age of fourteen years, knowing or having reason to. believe such minor to be under such age, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be liable to afine of twenty-five dollars for each and every offence.”
It appears that the complainant, a minor about ten years of age, went to a distillery on Thirty-ninth street, near Ninth avenue, and purchased a quantity of whiskey. He testified that he was sent for the whiskey by one Martin, an adult, who resided in the same house with the boy, and that Martin gave him the money to make the purchase. He further testified that after purchasing the liquor ho carried it to Martin, without drinking any on the ivay, and that after Martin had received it he gave some of it to him to drink. It further appeared that complainant, after drinking it, went out and was found by a police officer in a state of intoxication.
The counsel for the plaintiff in error claims that the sale was to Martin and not to the boy, and that the latter was a mere agent and representative of Martin, and thinks for that reason that the complaint should have been dismissed. In this we think he was decidedly in error.
As properly observed by the learned district attorney, it is an attempt to apply a principal of commercial law to a criminal case. That as the boy was the agent of Martin, therefore, the sale was to Martin as principal. The transaction, however, was between the boy and the prisoner. The liquor was applied for by the boy; delivered to and paid for by him. There was no disclosure at the time of the purchase, that it was to be for any other person.
The object of the statute was to prevent the sale of liquors to *593minors indiscriminately. - There might be cases of great emergency in which a sale to a boy, at the suggestion of a physician and for medical purposes, would be justifiable, but the facts in this case show no such emergency. The sale was to a boy, and the consequences of that sale were just those which the statute was designed to prevent, namely, drunkenness.
It would be a plain perversion of the statute to hold that, under circumstances such as are disclosed by the evidence in this case, the seller should be relieved from the penalties imposed.
We think the judgment should be affirmed.
Present — Beady, P. J., Ingalls and Daniels, JJ.Judgment affirmed.