In this court motions were made to dismiss, both the main and the cross bills of exceptions.
•1. The motion to dismiss the main bill of exceptions was upon the ground that there had been no final disposition of the case in the. court below at the time the motion for new trial was made and filed. It appears that this same reason was advanced in the cdurt. below for dismissing the motion for new trial, and that the trial judge pronounced sentence upon the accused and then refused to dismiss the motion for new trial. There was, therefore, a final disposition of the case in the court below before the bill of exceptions was sued out to this court. Even if the bill of exceptions complained of nothing except the overruling of the motion for new trial, we think it is no sufficient ground for dismissing it that there had been no final disposition of the case at the time the motion for new trial was made. Before a writ of error can be sued out to this court, the case must be finally disposed of in the court below,, unless the decision complained of would, if rendered as claimed by the plaintiff in error, have finally disposed of the cause; but our attention has been called to no requirement of this sort in connection with the making of a motion for a new trial. Such a motion seeks merely to set aside the verdict, and does not go to errors in the sentence or judgment. Under the common-law practice it had to be made before sentence or judgment (14 Enc. PL & Pr. 863), but under our system it is in time if filed during the term and within thirty days from the date of the verdict (Castellaw v. Blanchard, 106 Ga. 97), whether it be before or after sentence or
2. The motion to dismiss the cross-bill of exceptions was upon the ground that the “ State is not entitled to have and maintain [a] writ'of error or to be plaintiff in error in a criminal case, or to be heard on its bill of-exceptions therein, under the law of this State.” That, in this State, a writ of error does not ordinarily lie in favor of the State or of a municipal corporation of the State, in a criminal case, is established. State v. Jones, 7 Ga. 422; State v. Lavinia, 25 Ga. 311; Cranston v. Augusta, 61 Ga. 572; State v. Johnson, 61 Ga. 640; Mayor etc. of Hawkinsville v. Ethridge, 96 Ga. 326; Mayor etc. of Macon v. Wood, 109 Ga. 149. In fact that question is settled by the Civil Code, which provides (§5527) for a bill of exceptions by “ either party in any civil cause and the defendant in any criminal proceeding;” and by the Penal Code, which provides (§ 1070) for exceptions by “ the defendant in any criminal proceeding.” The Civil Code does further declare (§5527) that “when the successful party to any cause, . . which is oarried to the Supreme Court by the unsuccessful litigant, files a cross-bill of exceptions,” the questions therein made shall be, with certain exceptions, heard and determined; and that (§5535) ‘if a defendant in error excepts in any case by bill of exceptions, he shall prepare his bill of exceptions and proceed” much as does the plaintiff in error in the main bill of exceptions. These sections, however, seem clearly to refer to cross-bills in civil cases only. Judge Nisbet, in State v. Jones, 7 Ga. 425, said: “In criminal trials, the State— the supreme authority — that authority which makes the law and prescribes its penalty and executes its judgments — moves against the citizen. The court, the jury, and the solicitor-general are its agents. The State is not a party — the State is rather an accuser — she charges crime, arrests, tries, convicts, and executes. In criminal causes the State, through her agents, is the judge who tries the accused. In civil cases she stands aside and leaves the parties to litigate upon equal terms before a tribunal independent of both. Thus unequally do the State and the defendant enter upon an issue, the result of which may involve the liberty or life of the one, and no sensible consequence to the other.” “The law . . declares that ‘any criminal cause may be carried up to the Supreme Court, on a bill of ex
3. The indictment in this case had not the prescribed caption giving the State and county, but, instead, gave the State and the name of the court. It was contended that the allegation that the offense was committed “in the county aforesaid” had nothing to which to relate, and that, for this reason, the indictment failed to set forth the State and county in which the crime was alleged to have been committed. An examination of the indictment will show
4. The plea in abatement on the ground of misnomer was stricken npon demurrer thereto. The indictment set out the initials only of the given names of the accused. It is of course best that an indictment should set forth the full Christian name and surname of the accused, but there are cases in which this can not be done. It may be necessary to rely upon another form of description or a fictitious name may have to be employed. “ If a part only of a name is known, it should be given, supplemented by the proper excuse for not stating the rest.” 1 Bish. New Crim. Proc. § 676, 4. Instead -of the true name, the indictment may employ any name by which the accused is commonly called or known. Wilson v. State, 69 Ga. 224; 14 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 277. “ In this State men are frequently as well known by their initials as hy their given or Christian names in full. . . The rule of law as to two names for the same person is, that either is sufficient when the individual is equally as well known by the one as by the othef; and there is at this day no substantial reason for not applying the rule between two usual and customary forms of writing a name. Without shutting the eyes to all the light that surrounds us, there can be no presumption that particular men are less known by their initials than by their given names in full.” Minor v. State, 63 Ga. 318. See also State v. Johnson, 93 Mo. 317, 6 S. W. 77. We are aware that in some of the States it has been held that an indictment setting forth by initials only the Christian name of the accused is subject to a plea in abatement. We think, however, that these cases should not now be followed. They are based upon English cases of early date, and the reasons for them do not apply at the present time. In this State men are commonly known by the initials of their Christian names as well as they are by those names in full. Such initials, followed by
5. The law under which the accused was indicted makes penal the unlicensed sale of spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors. Under this act the offense is committed by one who sells either spirituous liquors, vinous liquors, or malt liquors, or any two of such liquors, or all three of them. See Hardison v. State, 95 Ga. 339. An indictment charging the accused with having sold spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors would have been bad for uncertainty. Grantham v. State, 89 Ga. 121. The indictment should charge the sale of one of these liquors or, conjunctively, of two or of all of them. 1 Bish. New Cr. Proc. § 436. The indictment in the present case charged the sale of spirituous, vinous, and malt liquors. Under this indictment it was not necessary to prove that all of these liquors were sold by the accused, but merely to prove the sale of any one
6. Complaint is made that the court charged that the State did not have to prove that the liquors sold were intoxicating, and that it made no difference whether the liquors were intoxicating or not. This we think was not error. The statute made penal the unlicensed sale of malt liquors, and the offense would be established if the State proved such a sale. We can not see what relevancy the intoxicating qualities of the liquors could have save in determining whether or not they were malt liquors, and as to this the court charged the jury to consider the evidence as to whether the liquors sold were intoxicating, in determining whether they were malt liquors. The point is made that the court should take judicial cognizance that malt liquors are intoxicating, and that a liquor not in- . toxicating is not a malt liquor. Courts are not agreed as to whether judicial notice should be taken that beer is intoxicating (Blankenship v. State, 93 Ga. 814), and certainly courts can not know judicially that all malt liquors are intoxicating. What numerous forms and kinds of malt liquor there may be, and whether all of them are intoxicating, we can not know judicially. The statute under which the accused was indicted was designed to prevent an unlicensed sale of spirituous and vinous liquors and of all malt liquors, whether intoxicating or not. Even if all malt liquors are, as matter of fact, intoxicating, the State need not show the intoxicating qualities of the liquors sold, if it can show in other ways that such liquors were malt liquors.
8. The verdict was authorized by the evidence.
Judgment affirmed. Cross-bill dismissed.