L. B. Oliver was indicted in the circuit court of Kanawha county, for selling in that county, without a State license therefor, “spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, beer, and drinks of like nature” against the • peace, &c. To this indictment the defendant pleaded not guilty, and neither party requiring a jury, by consent of parties the cause was tried by the court in lieu of a. jury, and having heard the evidence and argument of counsel, the court found the defendant guilty, who thereupon and before judgment, moved the court to arrestthe judgment, and to set aside its finding, because the same was contrary to the law’ and the evidence, and award him a new trial, which motions the court overruled, to which rulings of the court the defendant excepted aud filed his hill of exceptions, wherein all the facts proved at the trial are certified by the court, which then entered upon its finding, a judgment against the defendant for a fine of ten dollars and the costs of the prosecution.
It appears from the defendant’s hill of exceptions that the State to maintain the issue on its part proved the following facts : “That the defendant, Oliver, in the county of Kana-wha, within a year before the finding of the indictment, sold crab-cider once to one party and received pay therefor, and said cider when drank in large quantities will intoxicate, and in sufficient quantities is intoxicating,” and this was all the evidence in the cause.
The plaintiff assigns as error.
Tñrst. — That crab-cider is not embraced within the meaning of the statute prohibiting the sale of “spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, beer, or drinks ot like nature;” and
Second. — If it is so embraced the facts proved were insufficient to convict him of the offence charged in the indictment.
The second ground of error is easily disposed of, for if crab-cider is a spirituous liquor, or wine, or a drink of like nature of either, or of porter, ale or beer — then it would seem clear that he was rightfully convicted, for there is no doubt that the court acting in lieu of a jury was fully warranted, in finding that he did sell ci’ab-cider in Kanawha county to some person within one year before the finding of the indictment.
The only material question here presented for consideration, is whether by a proper construction of the statute in regard to the sale of spirituous liquors, &c., without license, the sale of crab cider is prohibited. But for the provisions of this statute, the sale of all these liquors would be lawful; every-one would be at liberty to engage in the traffic in them that was inclined to do so, as iu the traffic in every other article of commerce; but because the unrestricted sale of spirituous liquors, leads to great domestic and social evils, the legislature has, in its wisdom, from time to time, regulated, restricted and even prohibited, the trafie in spirituous and other liquors, by requiring special licenses, to conduct the business and imposing fines and penalties upon such persons as engage in this business without being specially authorized to do so. Unless restrained by constitutional inhibitions from doing so, the power of the legislature to
"While there is no direct proof, wherein crab-cider, in any respect differs-if at all, from common cider, yet it seems to be a fact admitted on the part of the State, that crab-cider, is cider made from the crab apple, wild or cultivated.
It is not going too far to assert, that among all the artificial or manufactured beverages in common use in this State, and we may add in the "United States, the expressed juice of the apple or “cider,” is the most common, the least expensive, and the most harmless; in its untormented state, it is absolutely innoxious, and even when fermentation has commenced, unless arrested, it is very soon changed into vinegar. This common beverage found in every locality, used more or less at certain seasons by all classes of our people, as well for many culinary purposes, as for a beverage, would naturally be present in the mind of every legislator who was endeavoring to classify and arrange such artificial drinks, the trafic in which he would deem hurtful to the public, and which ought to be restricted, limited or prohibited altogether. The same would be true of distilled spirits of every kind, whether known as alcohol, whisky, rum, brandy, gin, and all combinations or mixtures thereof, as the foundation, or active principle in all of them, would necessarily be the free alcohol entering into their composition; with these he would naturally associate, other liquors in common use, not the result of distillation, but such as by experience and observation were found to contain appreciable quantities of alcohol, and to produce intoxication, such as wine, and the different forms of drinks'manufactured from malted grain of various kinds and commonly known as ale, porter and beer.
The first section of ch. 107 of the Acts of the Legislature 1877 declares that “ No person without a State license therefor shall * * * sell, offer or expose for sale spirituous liquors, wine, porter, beer, or any drink of a like natrrre. And all
It will be observed that four classes of liquors are here designated :
First: “ Spirituous liquors,” including all mixtures known as “ bitters ” or otherwise, which will produce intoxication. Second: Wine. Third: Ale, porter, beer, and fourth, any drink of a like nature.
The words “ spirituous liquors,” do not include wine, or other fermented liquor, for they imply that the beverage is composed in part or fully of alcohol extracted by distillation. Bishop on Statutory Crimes, sec. 1009. Wines may or may not be spirituous — depending upon the absence or presence of alcohol in each evolved in the process of the fermentation of the juice of the grape or other fruit out of which it is made. Ale, porter and beer are neither the result of distillation, nor of the fermentation of the juice of any kind of fruit. Webster defines beer — “a fermented liquor made from any kind of malted grain, with hops or other flavoring matters; also as a fermented extract of the roots and other parts of various plants, as spruce, ginger, sassafras.” lie defines ale to be a liquor made from an infusion of malt by fermentation, differing from beer in having a smaller proportion of hops. In like manner he defines “ porter ” to be “ a malt liquor of a dark brown color, moderately bitter and possessing tonic and and intoxicating qualities.” From these definitions it will be perceived, that ale, porter and beer, are drinks of like nature, differing from, but similar to each other, but wholly different from spirituous liquors and wine. How many other different drinks of like nature may be made from different malted grains or mixtures thereof, or from grains differently malted and flavored, or whether they would in a greater or less degree than ale, porter or beer, produce intoxication, we have no means of determining. All spirituous or distilled liquors, and all wines, being by the terms of the act embraced within the prohibition, other drinks could not be of a like nature without at the same time being of the same nature, and if ot the same nature, it would he a useless proceeding to describe
Cider is neither produced by distillation nor by fermentation, and although liable to fermentation, and when subjected to distillation, it is capable of producing a spirituous liquor, yet the ultimate product is no more like cider, than rum is like the juice of sugar-cane from which it is manufactured/ neither is eider the result of any process of fermentation whatever, nor is it in any proper sense a mixture of any liquor other than water, which is common to all spirituous liquors wines, ale, porter, beer and all drinks of like nature. Not being a distilled liquor, neither is it a mixture known as “bitters” or otherwise, which will produce intoxication and therefore declared for the purpose of the act “spirituous liquor.” Nothing can be so included unless both of these qualities unite in it; first it must be a mixture, second, a mixture which will produce intoxication. Being the unadulterated juice of the apple, it is no mixture, and under ordinary circumstances incapable of producing intoxication, it can not be classed as a spirituous liquor, neither can it with any degree of propriety be called “wine,” and it is wholly unlike any fermented liquor made from a malted grain, or from the roots of plants or bark of trees as spruce, ginger, sassafras, birch and sarsaparilla. It must be observed that the act of the legislature lays no stress whatever upon the fact, that any of the liquors mentioned or included in it, the selling of which without licence is prohibited, are “intoxicating.” It is therefore wholly immaterial whether all or any of them are intoxicating or not, and no inquiry as to this fact can be entered into; and it would be no defence if the accused were able to prove that any of the prohibited liquors was absolutely free from all intoxicating qualities. The unlicensed sale of any or all of them is unlawful, because the legislature has so declared, and not for any other reason. "With the motives which induced the legislative mind to in-
By sec. 18 of ch. 38 of the Code of 1849, the provision
In pursuance of sec. 46 of the Article VI. of the Constitution of 1872, authorizing the legislature “to pass laws regulating or prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors within the State,” an act was passed April 4,1873, entitled “An act to provide against the evils resulting from the sale of intoxicating liquors in the State of West Virginia.” Many of the provisions of this act were entirely novel to the former legislation of the State, and highly penal in their character, and if it had been permitted to remain upon the statute-book, and its provisions could,have been enforced in the spirit of its enactment, the expectations of its friends, who hoped to arrest the evils resulting from the sale of intoxicating liquors, might have been in a great degree realized.
By sec. 1 of the last mentioned act, it was enacted, that “It shall be unlawful for any person or persons by agent or otherwise without first having obtained a license therefor, to sell in any quantity intoxicating liquors to be drunk on, upon, or about the building or promises where sold, or to sell
By the second section it was made unlawful for any person by agent or otherwise to sell intoxicating liquors behind screens, frosted windows, or any other device designed or intended to protect the seller from public observation.
And by the. third section it was made unlawful for any person to to sell intoxicating liquors to minors unless upon the written order of their parents, guardians or family physicians, orto persons who are in the habit of getting intoxicated.
For a violation of either of these provisions, the offender, was required to pay a fine of not less than $20.00 nor more than $100.00, and be imprisoned in the county jail not less than ten nor more than thirty days. This act, for the first time in the legislation of Virginia or West Virginia abolished the specification of the different prohibited liquors or drinks, and for the first time made it necessary to allege that any particular kind of liquor sold, was or was not intox-cating. The statute made the sale of all intoxicating liquors, alike unlawful. Tinder this act, the sale of such kinds of beer as were not intoxicating became lawful, which under the former acts -were criminal, because they were in terms prohibited by it. This act was repealed by ch. 107 of the Acts of 1877, under which the indictment in the case now under consideration was found.
The first section of this act as we have already seen readopts the language of the 1st section of the 32d chapter of the Code of West Virginia and forbids every person not having a State license therefor, “to sell, offer or expose for sale spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, beer, or any drink of like nature.”
The Attorney-General in his learned argument, has referred the Court to a large number of adjudicated cases in various States, wherein some branches of this subject have been considered, but after a careful review of them ho frankly admits they do not afford much assistance here to the Court upon the point now under consideration, as they have been made upon statutory provisions there existing, which do not exist in this State. We have carefully reviewed all these cases, and we find that all of them have been decided with reference to the effect or operation of some particular statute, not in operation in this state. This is especially true of the cases of State v. Starr, 67 Maine 242; State v. Page, 66 Ib. 418.
State v. McNamara, 69 Ib. 133; State v. Preston, 48 Vt. 12; Raw v. People, 63 N. Y. 277. The State v. Packer, 80 N. C. 439, was an indictment for selling “intoxicating liquors,” and the proof showed that the liquor sold was port wine, and this was properly held to be “intoxicating liquor.”
State v. Lowry, 74 N. C. 121—was an indictment for selling spirituous liquors, and the proof showed the sale was of domestic blackberry wine, and the court held that whether such wine was spirituous liquor, was a question for the jury.
Godfriedson v. People, 88 Illinois 284, was an indictment for selling “intoxicating liquors” and the proof was that the liquor sold was a kind of malt liquor of an intoxicating quality
State v. Biddle, 54 N. H. 379, was an iudictment for keeping for sale “intoxicating liquors” — and the proof showed .that the liquors kept for sale were ale and cider. The trial court ruled that ale and cider after firmentation is completed are “intoxicating liquors,” without proof of the amount of alcohol which they may contain; but the supreme court reversed this judgment of the trial court, and held, that whether the are intoxicating or not, is a question for the jury. State of Vermont v. Reynolds, 47 Vt. 297, was an indictment for owning, keeping, and possessing intoxicating liquors with intent to sell the same &c., and the court held that by the terms “intoxicating liquors,” any kind of liquor,.that would intoxicate was included. The Board of Commissioners of Excise of Tompkins county v. Taylor, 21, N. Y. 173, was a prosecution for selling without a license, “strong or spirituous liquors,” and the court held that “strong beer” or any liquor is within the statute whether fermented or distilled, of which the human stomach can contain enough to produce intoxication.
Commonwealth v. Bloss, 116 Mass. 56, was an indictment for keeping a tenement used for the illegal sale of “ intoxi: eating liquors,” and the proof was that the liquor sold, was neither distilled spirits, ale, porter, strong beer, or lager beer, but was an entirely distinct and different article, and recognized as such in the trade, containing not more than half the stock as lager beer, and known as “ schenk beef,” which was fit for use in a short time after it was'brewed ; the court held, that whether the liquor sold was intoxicating or not was a question for thejm’y, and the fact that although alcohol was discovered i n it upon chemical analysis, though competent evidence, does not necessarily prove that the liquor sold was “ spirituous ” within the statute.
In Commonwealth v. Dean, 14 Gray 99, which was also an indictment for selling “ intoxicating liquors,” and the proof was, that the liquor sold, was unfermented cider; it was held that the trial court correctly refused to instruct that the sale of unferm'euted cider was not prohibited, because by the
And this Court proceeding to render such judgment as the said circuit court ought to have rendered upon the facts certified do find the defendant not guilty, and judgment must be entered for the defendant.