1. The indictment charges the defendant with *24the crime of voting more than once at the general municipal election of the city of Stillwater, held April 1, 1873 — the defendant’s first vote being cast in the first ward, of which he was a resident, and the second, in the second ward.
By the charter of the city, (Sp. Laws, 1870, p. 83, § 1,) it is provided that’ the annual election of municipal officers shall be held at such place within the city as the common council shall designate. By the act of March 4, 1873, entitled “An act to amend the charter of the city of, Still-water,” the election is to be held at such place in each ward as the common council shall designate. Sj>. Laws, 1873, p. 92, § 2, The charter is declared to be a public act, (Sp. Laws, 1870, p. 107, § 14,) and as the act of 1873 is, by its terms, amendatory of the charter, this also is a public act. State v. Bergen, 34 N. J. (Law), 438. The indictment, therefore, charges, with all, if not more than all, the precision necessary, that the election was lawfully held in the two wards in which the defendant is accused of voting. State v. Marshall, 45 N. H. 281; State v. Boynton, 56 Me. 512; State v. Douglas, 7 Iowa, 413.
It is urged that it does not appear that the act of 1873 ever took effect, for it is not shown to have been published. But this amendatory act expressly provides, (p. 102, § 33), that it ‘ ‘ shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage,” and being of later date, it is pro tanto a repeal of Gen. Stat. ch. 4, § 2, which enacts that “no general law shall take effect until published.”
The election at which the defendant’s offence is charged to have been committed, was that designated in the charter as “the general city election.” It is contended that the two votes cast by the defendant, being cast in different wards, were cast not at the same, but at different, elections. But we are clearly of opinion that the general city election is but one election, although held at the same time in three different places within the city, just as the general state election is one general election, and not as many general state elections as there are election districts in the state.
*25The indictment need not, (as it does not,) show that the defendant’s second vote was cast for the officers, (mayor,' treasurer, and city justice,) who were to be voted for at large and in all the wards, and not merely for the aldermen who were to be chosen in the second ward alone. It is the voting more than once at the same election, and not the voting-more than once for the same officers, which the statute prohibits and punishes ; and it makes no difference whether the same or different officers or candidates are voted for on the two occasions. State v. Minnick, 15 Iowa, 125 ; Steinwehr v. State, 5 Sneed, 586.
The indictment, therefore, sufficiently charges the defendant with the offence of voting more than once at the same election, which is made a felony by § 58, ch. 1, Gen. Stat.; and it does not change the character of the crime charged, that, in the commission of this felony, the defendant also committed a misdemeanor by casting his second vote in an election district in which he did not actually reside — an offence made punishable by § 57 of the same chapter. The motion in arrest of judgment was therefore pro[Derly denied.
2. At the trial, the prisoner testified, “I drank considerably during the day (of the election). I don’t recollect voting at any of the polls that day. I might have voted three times and not known it. I must have been very drunk. Don’t recollect what occurred after morning.” Other evidence was introduced, tending to show that the defendant was much intoxicated at the time of the second voting. Evidence was offered, and excluded as immatei-ial, tending to show that defendant was a lumberman, and on the election day had just returned from a six months’ absence in the woods ; that he did not know that more than one polling place had been provided ; that he did not know who were the candidates to be voted for, was not a partisan, and took no part in the election, except by voting. The exceptions taken to the exclusion of this evidence, and to the refusal of the court to give the 3d, 6th and 7th instructions asked by the defendant, present the same question un*26der two aspects. The defendant’s intoxication is relied on as a defence, first, as rendering the defendant incapable of forming the intent to commit a crime; second, as rendering him ignorant of the fact that he was doing the act for which he is indicted.
His counsel insists that ‘ the essence of an offence is the wrongful intent, without which crime cannot exist.” This is true; but in cases like the present, where the law declares the act done by the defendant to be a crime, the only question is, did the defendant intend to do the act which the law has forbidden ? He does not appear to have cast his vote by accident, or under the constraint of superior force. His act was and must have been wholly voluntary. Every man is conclusively presumed to intend his own voluntary acts. As the defendant must have intended to cast the second ballot, he must have intended to commit the offence charged.
The cases cited by his counsel, except one in California, are cases where the crime of which the prisoner was accused, consisted not merely in the doing of an act, with intent simply to do that act, but in the doing of an act, with intent thereby and by means thereof to conrpass a criminal end, to accomplish an unlawful purpose. Thus, in prosecutions for larceny, the act of the prisoner — the mere taking — does not constitute the offence, but the act coupled with the intent to steal; and the question is not, did the prisoner take and intend to take the goods? but, did he take them animo furandif So, in trials for murder in the first degree, the question is not merely did the prisoner intend to inflict the blow, (or do any other act), which resulted in death ? but, had he a premeditated design to effect the death by means of the act done? And in State v. Garvey, 11 Minn. 154, the question was not, did the prisoner intend to make the assault? but, did he also intend to do great bodily harm? In such cases, where the crime consists not alone in the act done, and intended to be done, but also in the intent of the prisoner to effect certain results by means of the act, courts have sometimes admitted evidence of the *27prisoner’s intoxication, as affecting Ms mental condition and the possibility or probability of his forming a premeditated design, or even an intention, to perpetrate, by means of the act done, the crime wherewith he is charged. Swan v. State, 4 Humph. 136 ; Pirth v. State, 9 Humph. 663 ; State v. Schingen, 20 Wis. 74; State v. Bell, 29 Iowa, 316; Roberts v. The People, 19 Mich. 417, where many cases are collected; and see State v. Gut, 13 Minn. 361.
So, in another class of cases — for instance, prosecutions for passing counterfeit money — where the prisoner’s knowledge of its falsity is of the essence of the offence, he has been permitted to show that, when he uttered the money, he was so drunk as not to know that it was counterfeit. Pigman v. State, 14 Ohio, 555.
But it is obvious that such cases have no analogy to the case at bar. This defendant’s motive and purpose in voting-are alike immaterial. His offence is the same although his two votes were cast for opposing candidates, so that the second neutralized the first. Here, the only question is, did the defendant, having voted in the first ward, intend to vote a second time at the same election? In no case can a defendant, by proof of intoxication, rebut the legal presumiDtion that he knows and intends his voluntary acts. In the instances above cited, the prisoner cannot show that, by reason of his intoxication, he did not intend to take the goods he is charged with stealing; to strike the blow which resulted in death; to pass the money which proved to be counterfeit; nor can he show that, by reason of his intoxication, he did not know that he took the goods, struck the blow, or passed the money.
It is claimed that the defendant was so drunk when he voted the second time that he did not remember that he had already voted, and that the act was innocent, because done in ignorance of this material fact. But this plea of want of memory is like those of want of intent and want of knowledge. The defendant had cast his first vote but a few hours before. In the ordinary course of things, had he remained *28sober, it would be no excuse for his offence that he had forgotten, at three o’clock in the afternoon, that he had voted in the morning. It is not pretended that he is not a man of. ordinary memory, and he must be held to the reasonable exercise of the power of memory that he possesses. A man is not the less responsible for the reasonable exercise of his understanding, memory and will, because he has enfeebled his memory, perverted his will, and clouded his understanding, by voluntary indulgence in strong drink. A drunken man, equally with a sober man, is presumed to know and intend the acts which he does, and to remember the acts which he has done. There is, accordingly, no reason why this case should form an exception to the general rule of the criminal law, that ‘ ‘ an intoxicated man shall have no privilege by his voluntarily contracted madness, but shall have the same judgment as if he were in his right senses.” Hale P. C. 32; 1 Bishop Cr. Law, § 489, and cases cited; People v. Garbutt, 17 Mich. 19.
In People v. Harris, 29 Cal. 678, cited by the defendant’s counsel, the prisoner was indicted, under a statute similar to our own, for the offence of which this defendant stands convicted. It was held that evidence of his intoxication should be admitted upon the question of his intent to commit a crime, and whether a crime had in fact been committed ; but the opinion was strongly expressed, and often reiterated, that “ a state of intoxication can be of no avail as an excuse for crime.” It seems to us that a prisoner would have no need of an excuse for an act which his intoxication made innocent, and no crime. There can be no practical difference in the result between holding that intoxication is an excuse for crime, and holding that the acts of a man sufficiently intoxicated cannot be criminal. In either case, a man would be exempted from criminal responsibility for acts done in a state of voluntary intoxication. This doctrine is novel, anomalous and startling. It is a dangerous innovation upon the well established principles of the criminal law, and we have no hesitation in rejecting it.
*29The 10th charge of the court is taken from 1 Bishop Cr. Law, § 488. The same doctrine, as stated in almost the same words in the following section, was admitted to be the law in Roberts v. The People, 19 Mich. 417. The correctness of the author’s theory of the rule, by Avhich drunken men are held to intend their criminal acts, is immaterial. The rule itself is correctly stated.
There Avas no practical error in the 11th instruction, viz. : ‘ ‘ The defendant is equally guilty whether he intended the act complained of or not. The onlJ fact for the jury to find in this case is, whether or not the defendant deposited a ballot both at the first and second Avards of this city, on the occasion of the city election, held April 1, 1873. And if you find that he did so deposit the two ballots, you will find him guilty, in manner and form as .charged in the indictment.”
The language of this instruction is not happily chosen, and cases might easily be -supposed where such a charge Avould unduly restrict the province of the jury, and mislead them into an erroneous verdict. But, as Ave have already shown, the present case falls within the general rule, that men are presumed to intend their voluntary acts; and it Avas the duty of the jury, upon satisfactory proof of the acts done, to find the intent in accordance with the legal presumption. The instruction, in its application to the facts of this case, was therefore substantially correct.
The judgment and the orders appealed from are affirmed, and it is directed that the sentence pronounced by -the district court be executed.