The statute of force in 1847 and 1848, which prohibited the retailing of spirituous liquors except *48by licensed persons, permitted merchants and shopkeepers to sell by the quart, if the liquor was not drank in their stores, or on the premises where they resided or had their .stores. In 1847, in Swan v. The State, 11 Ala. 594, this court held, that the term “premises,” as used in that statute, meant “something over which an individual has control, either by actual possession, or by claiming and exercising the right to prevent the occupation by others.” In 1848, in Downman v. The State, 14 Ala. 242, this court manifested its dissatisfaction with that definition of the term, by giving to it a materially different definition, and holding that it meant “some place over which the shop-keeper has the legal right to exercise authority and control.”
Some four years after these decisions had been made,, the Code was framed and adopted. The presumption must be indulged, that its framers knew of those decisions.. "With that knowledge, they inserted in the Code a section, to-wit, section 1058, which declares it unlawful for' any person, without a license, to sell vinous or spirituous liquor, in any quantity, “if the same is drank on or about the premises.” Looking at the former law, the decisions made under it, and the introduction into section 1058 of' the Code of the phrase “about” the premises, which was. not in the former law, we think it clear that the term premises was used in that section in the sense given to it in the decision last above cited — the decision latest in point of time. The plain object of that section was, to-prevent the drinking of any vinous or spirituous liquor,, sold by an unlicensed person, on or about his premises. The phrase, “about the premises,” was used to embrace places over which the unlicensed seller of such liquor had no legal right to exercise authority or control, but which were yet so near to his premises, and so situated in relation thereto, that to permit the liquor sold by him to be drank at them would produce the very evil in hind, though not in degree, which the prohibition against drinking it on his premises was intended to prevent.
But, where the premises of the unlicensed seller of such liciuor are on one side of a public street twenty or thirty feet *49Avide, and tbe buyer takes it in tbe quart measure of tbe seller, to tbe front of tbe store of another on tbe opposite side of tbe street, and out of tbe view of tbe seller’s bouse, and about fifty feet therefrom, it is not a conclusion of law from these facts, without more, that tbe place where tbe liquor was drank was either tbe premises of tbe seller, or about bis premises, within tbe meaning of section 1058 of tbe Code.
As that place did not appear to be “on tbe premises” of tbe seller, and as tbe facts proved, independent of inferences which the jury might have been authorized to draio from the evidence, did not, in legal contemplation, establish tbe proposition that tbe place was uabout tbe premises” of tbe seller, — it was error in tbe court to pronounce, as matter of law, that upon tbe facts proved tbe defendant was guilty. On a trial by jury in a criminal case, tbe court may announce presumptions of law in its charge to tbe jury, but it cannot make out tbe guilt of tbe defendant by drawing an inference of fact. In such case, it is tbe exclusive province of the jury to draw such inference.
For tbe error in tbe charge above pointed out, tbe judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.