Clifford v. State

Dixon, C. J.

Tbis was a complaint under section five of tbe excise law, now found as cb. 147, Laws of 1862-, (1 Taylor’s Statutes, ch, 35, § 5, p. 730), instituted before a justice of tbe peace of Winnebago county, and taken thence by appeal to tbe county court of tbat county, where, after conviction, and a motion in arrest of judgment, wbicb was overruled, tbe defendant, now plaintiff in error, took bis bill of exceptions and sued out tbis writ. It is only necessary to consider tbe first point made in tbe court below, in support of tbe motion in arrest, wbicb was, tbat the complaint charged no offense known to tbe laws. We are of opinion that tbis objection was well taken, and should have been sustained. Tbe complaint is fatally defective in respect to tbat certainty required in criminal pleading, even in cases of misdemeanor, so tbat tbe defendant ought not to have been held to trial (bis motion to quasb having been improperly overruled), and so also, tbat no judgment could be pronounced against him after verdict for tbe state.

*329It is wholly uncertain what offense is charged, and such a complaint or indictment may be properly said to charge no offense. The complaint is in the disjunctive, and charges the supposed offense, omitting the formal parts, in words as follows, to wit: “ did vend, sell, deal or traffic in, and give away for the purpose of evading the act, spirituous, ardent or intoxicating liquors or intoxicating drinks, viz.: rum, gin, brandy, whisky, ale and beer or wine.” The general and almost unvarying rule which forbids this mode of stating the offense is well understood. 1 Chit. Crim. Law, 231; 1 Bishop on Crim. Procedure, §§ 333 to 340, and cases cited. Where a statute makes it a crime to do this, or that, or the other, mentioning several things disjunctively, all of which are punished alike, it is a general rule that the whole may be charged con-junctively in a single count, as constituting but a single offense; in which case there can be but one conviction and one punishment, as for one offense. This has been so held by this court under the excise law here in question. State v. Bielby, 21 Wis., 204.

But disjunctive allegations in such cases are not allowed; the only exception being where the word “ or ” is used in the sense of “ to wit,” that is, in explanation of what precedes, and making it signify the same thing. In the latter instance a complaint or indictment which adopts the words of the statute, is well framed. Brown v. Commonwealth, 8 Mass., 59; The State v. Gilbert, 13 Vt., 647; Commonwealth v. Grey, 2 Gray., 502. Within this exception would fall the word “ or ” in the statute, and in this complaint, as used between the words “ deal ” and “ traffic in,” these last words being synonymous, or meaning the same thing. But it is not so with the or ” occurring in the expression “spirituous or intoxicating liquors,” and again “ ale and beer or wine.” Spirituous liquor and intoxicating liquor are not the same, and the word intoxicating ” is hot used in the statute in mere explanation of the word “ spirituous,” but is intended to signify something different, *330The two words are’ not synonymous. Upon this question the ease of Commonwealth v. Grey, supra, is directly in point. In that case it was held that a complaint or indictment, which in the words of the statute alleged an unlawful sale of “ spirituous or intoxicating liquor,” was bad for uncertainty, even after a plea of nolo contendere. The court say “ All spirituous liquor is intoxicating; yet all intoxicating liquor is not spirituous. In common parlance, spirituous liquor means distilled liquor; and such we believe is its meaning in the statute. Fermented liquor, though intoxicating, is not spirituous.”

And the reason of the rule which condemns this uncertainty of pleading is obvious. The accused is entitled to know certainly with what offense he is charged, and especially is he entitled to have' the offense so charged that upon acquittal or conviction he may plead the same in bar of a subsequent prosecution for the same offense, and establish his plea by production of the former record. Upon such rambling, disjunctive and ambiguous statement, charging that the defendant committed one offense or another, but none with certainty, the record would establish nothing whatever in his favor. If separately so charged, at the choice of the prosecution, the statute under consideration creates several distinct offenses as the vending, dealing in, or giving away with unlawful intent, of any spirituous or ardent liquors or drinks, or the vending, dealing in, or giving away with like intent, of any intoxicating liquors or drinks; and should the defendant in a case like the present, be subsequently complained against for the commission of any one of these six several offenses, stated by itself, or of all of them, each being separately stated in different counts or complaints, or the whole alleged conjunctively, and any one or all of them should be the identical offense or offenses of which he was formerly convicted, it would, nevertheless, be impossible for him to protect himself by pleading and producing the first record. It is not so, however, where the several acts specified in the statute are charged conjunctively, or the word “ and ” instead of *331“ or ” is nsed; for, in that case, all are regarded as constituting but one ofíense, and the conviction or acquittal is a complete bar to any subsequent prosecution for all or either, whether separately or otherwise pleaded and alleged.

By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions that the motion in arrest be granted.