(dissenting). I cannot agree with the conclusion of the majority that the judgment in this case should be reversed. I think that the majority opinion fails to cover the real issue, viz. whether the sales of- intoxicating liquor were made in good faith for medicinal purposes. The trial court charged the jury in part as follows:
“It is my duty to say to you the question of law is or the question of fact for your decision is: Did the defendant at any time between those dates sell any intoxicating liquors — for it is admitted he did not have a license — or was any such liquor sold at his drug store, at his Instance, knowledg-e, or consent? If you find from the evidence that lie did, or that it was so clone at his store, it would be your duty as jurors and as officers of this court in this casé to. convict, unless you find he was justified in so doing- by reason of his ¡being a practicing physician during the period referred to. It is prescribed by our law upon this subject relating to practicing- physicians (Political Code, § 279) : ‘That a physician may supply to his patients such articles as may seem to him proper, provided that no part of this section shall be so construed as to give the right to any physician to furnish any intoxicating liquors to be used as a beverage, on prescription or otherwise.’ Now notice: ITe has the right to ‘supply to his patients such articles as may seem to him proper, provided that no part of. this section shall be so> construed as to give the right to any physician to furnish any intoxicating- liquors to be used as a beverage, on prescription or otherwise.’ -So the further and important question in this case is presented: If you find the doctor did furnish any of tjie parties to* whom reference has been made such liquors, was it furnished as a beverage, that is, for the purpose merely of being drank, not, in truth, for medicinal purposes? The question of fact for your decision is largely one of good faith. If you find such liquor was sold or furnished any of these persons at this store, the burden would *457be upon the 'doctor to show that he did it in the conscientious performance of his professional duty as a physician, not at the instance of any of them to get such- liquors as a beverage, or from a desire for drink, or from any desire of gain, if any, on his part. If you find any of them got such liquor from him, or from his store in the way stated, but it was through the exercise of his honest professional judgment as a physician in prescribing for his patients, he should be acquitted, otherwise convicted.”
No. exception was taken to these instructions; so for the purposes of this case the instructions stand as properly embodying the law applicable thereto. We say no exceptions were taken because -the alleged exception shown in the brief, viz. “the defendant duly excepted to said charge and every part thereof,” is no exception at all. Wood v. Dodge, 23 S. D. 95, 120 N. W. 774; Comeau v. Hurley, 24 S. D. 275, 123 N. W. 715.
In Woolen & Thornton on Intox. Liq¡. § 512, we find the following:
“ ’The statute contemplates the bona fide administering of such liquors as a mediciné in cases of necessity, not otherwise. We are all of the opinion that the giving by a physician of an order for a quart of whisky, on a drug store in which he himself was a partner, without more, is not the administering, of medicine within the meaning of the law, but an illegal sale of spirituous liquor, contrary to the terms of the statute.’ Brinson v. State [89 Ala. 105] 8 South. 527. Tie must make the sale as a physician, and reasonably believe that the patient needs it, and not upon the suggestion of the patient that he needs it nor that his wife or a member of his family need's it.’ ”
The circumstances attending the sales made by defendant were sufficient to justify the trial court in submitting to the jury the question of good faith. When a man goes to a doctor and says he wants a quart of whisky or a quart'of brandy and asks if the doctor can furnish it to him, in other words, when the patient prescribes liquor for himself and asks the doctor to- “O. K.” it, the jury have the right to determine from that and the other evidence whether -the sale was actually for medicinal purposes or not. Under those instructions the jury found the defendant guilty. In the absence of error, the judgment and order denying a new trial should be affirmed. .
WHITING, J., concurs in views of GATES, P. J.