State v. Jones

New, C. J. —

This was a prosecution by indictment against the appellees, upon a charge of unlawfully selling “ whiskey” on Christmas day. Section 2098, R. S. 1881.

Upon the motion of the appellees, the indictment was quashed. The State appeals to this court.

We have not been favored with a brief from the counsel for the appellees, but are informed by the brief of the prosecuting attorney that the only objection made to the indictment, and the one on which the court based its ruling upon the motion to quash, was, that the indictment charged the appellees with the unlawful sale of one gill of whiskey, without alleging that the whiskey sold was “intoxicating, liquor,” the words used in the statute.

It is sufficient to allege merely that the liquor sold was intoxicating, without specifying the particular kind. On the *122other hand, the word intoxicating may be omitted, if the liquor charged as having been sold unlawfully is such that the court judicially knows that it possesses the intoxicating quality, such liquor, for example, as whiskey. Carmon v. State, 18 Ind. 450 ; Eagan v. State, 53 Ind. 162 ; Schlicht v. State, 56 Ind. 173 ; Klare v. State, 43 Ind. 483, where Carmon v. State, supra, is approvingly referred to. See, also, Myers v. State, 93 Ind. 251; Mullen v. State, 96 Ind. 304 ; Stout v. State, 93 Ind. 150 ; Fenton v. State, 100 Ind. 598 ; Dant v. State, 106 Ind. 79 ; Callahan v. State, 2 Ind. App. 417 ; Commonwealth v. Peckham, 2 Gray, 514; Gillett Crim. Law, section 591.

Filed Nov. 13, 1891.

The court below erred in sustaining the motion to quash.

The judgment is reversed, at the costs of the appellee; cause remanded, with instiuctions to overrule the motion to quash the indictment, and for further proceedings.