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  "name": "THE STATE v. J. H. McBRAYER",
  "name_abbreviation": "State v. McBrayer",
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    "parties": [
      "THE STATE v. J. H. McBRAYER"
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "MerrimoN, J.\nWe had occasion in State v. Lawrence, 97 N. C., 492, to construe the statute (The Code, \u00a71077,) forbidding \u201c dealers in intoxicating drinks or liquors \u201d to sell or give the same in any quantity to unmarried minors, knowing them to be such, and we have held that the comprehensive, explicit and unqualified terms employed, and the purpose contemplated by it, excludes any exception arising by implication or allowable by interpretation. It therefore follows that if such a dealer \u2014 that is, in the language of the statute, \u201c if one who keeps on hand intoxicating drinks or liquors for the purpose of sale or profit,\u201d being a practicing physician \u2014 prescribes for such a minor, knowing him to be such, such drinks or liquors as a medicine as in his judgment the minor ought to take, and thereupon sells or gives him the same, he would be guilty of a violation of the statute. This is so, as we have said, because, there is no exception to or limitation upon the sweeping terms of the statute, forbidding such sales and gifts.\nBut it is said, \u201c can it be that a practicing physician shall not sell or give such drinks and liquors to his patients when they require them?\u201d Certainly not, if he is a dealer in them \u2014 otherwise he may do so.\nA practicing physician who is such dealer is prohibited from making such sales and gifts as certainly as other persons. It is suggested that he does not sell or give away such intoxicants as a beverage, but as a medicine.' But the statute makes no such distinction. Why is none provided? Especially, why not in this statute, while such distinction is provided in similar statutes, forbidding the sale of intoxicating liquors generally in certain prescribed localities, as in the town of Shelby, where the sale in question was made .and elsewhere? The striking omission was scarcely an in-.advertance. It is not unreasonable to infer that it was intended, and that by it the Legislature intended the more certainly to eifectuate the purpose of the statute.\nThe counsel for the appellant pressed upon our attention the case of State v. Wray, 72 N. C., 253, which declared \u2018that a druggist might, in good faith, sell as a medicine, by direction of a physician, spirituous liquors in a quantity less than .a quart. That case, it seems to us, went to the extreme limit of the power of interpretation, but treating it as well warranted, it does not apply here. It applied to a statute forbidding generally the sale of intoxicating liquors by a measure less than one quart, and was based upon the views that the statute was intended to prevent and suppress the .abusive use of spirituous liquors generally and to enhance the revenues of the State. But the statute under consideration is different in its purpose and scope from that just referred to. It is not so general \u2014 it is limited in its operation to a class, and is intended to protect a class of young people of immature judgment and inexperience; and the total absence of exceptive provisions tends strongly to confirm the view, that the intention was to cut off all opportunity for dealers \u2014 all dealers in intoxicating drinks and liquors \u2014 to sell or give the same to them for any purpose. The purpose is not to prevent such minors from having such intoxicants for proper purposes at proper times, but to prevent dealers in them from supplying them.\nThe decision of the Court in State v. Wool, 86 N. C., 708, is founded upon the same principle of interpretation as that in the case above cited, and what we have said applies with equal force to it.\nThat the defendant, in good faith, thought he had the right to sell the minor the spirituous liquors, did not excuse him from criminal liability. This could only affect the measure of punishment.\nIt is a mistaken notion that positive, wilful intent, as distinguished from a mere intent, to violate the criminal law, is an essential ingredient in every criminal offence, and that where there is the absence of such intent there is no offence; this is especially so as to statutory offences. When the statute plainly forbids an act to be done, and it is done by some person, the law implies conclusively the guilty intent, although the offender was honestly mistaken as to the meaning of the law he violates. When the language is plain and positive, and the offence is not made to depend upon the positive, wilful intent and purpose, nothing is left to interpretation.\nIt would be a very dangerous exercise of the power of Courts to interpret positive statutes so as, in effect, to interpolate into them exceptive provisions. If the Court could do so, there would be scarcely a limit beyond which it might not go, and thus make, instead of interpret, the law.\nHence, in State v. Dickerson, 1 Hay., 468 (407), where the defendant was indicted for extortion in demanding and receiving unlawful fees, he could not be excused upon the ground that he did so through mistake and bad advice. And also in State v. Boyett, 10 Ired., 336, where the defendant was charged with voting unlawfully, he was held to be guilty, although he honestly thought he had the right to vote, and had been so advised by an intelligent person supposed to be familiar with the law. In that case PearsoN, Judge, said: \u201cThe question, in effect, was, shall a man be allowed, in excuse of a violation of the law, to prove that he was ignorant of the very law under which he professed to act and under which he claimed the privilege of voting? If he was not ignorant of the law, and that he cannot be heard to allege, he voted knowingly and, by necessary inference, fraudulently.\u201d And likewise in State v. Pressnell, 12 Ired., 103, it was held that it is not a sufficient justification for a person who does a criminal act under a statute to show that he did not believe it was unlawful. In that case Chief Justice Ruffin said: \u201cIt was said that when one believes he is not doing an unlawful thing, there is not the guilty mind necessary to constitute a crime. But this is not correct. When the act is unlawful and voluntary, the quo animo is inferred necessarily from the act.\u201d And so also in State v. Hart, 6 Jones, 389, it was again held that the defendant was guilty of unlawful voting, although he honestly thought he had the right to vote and had been so advised, RuffiN, Judge, saying: \u201cThe defendant voluntarily gave an illegal vote, and necessarily the unlawful purpose attaches prima facie to the act. \u2022 It is neither a justification nor an excuse for such an act, that other persons advised the party that it was lawful, and much less that other persons thought and believed it to be lawful. * * * He acted on his own mistaken or wilfully erroneous judgment, and must abide the consequences.\u201d lgnorantia legis neminim excusat.\nThe correctness of these decisions has not been seriously questioned, and decisions to the same effect, made in this and other States in large numbers, might be cited, some of them interpreting statutes more or less like that now under consideration. Whar. Cr. Law; \u00a7\u00a72441, 2442, and numerous cases there cited ; Bish. Stat. Cr., \u00a7\u00a71019, 1020, 1023, and cases there cited.\nIt is only when the positive, wilful purpose to violate a criminal statute, as distinguished from a mere violation thereof, is made an essential ingredient of the offence, that honest mistake and misapprehension excuses and saves the alleged offender from guilt.\nThe statute (Acts 1876-77, ch. 115, 1873-74, ch. 133,) prohibiting the sale of spirituous liquors in the contingency-prescribed therein in the town of Shelby, does not modify or affect the statute (The Code, \u00a71077,) forbidding the sale or gift of intoxicating drinks or liquors to minors as first above pointed out. The latter is a general public statute. The former is a local public statute, and there is nothing in it that, in terms or by implication, repeals or modifies the provisions of the general law, nor is there anything in the nature pr purpose of the local statute that has such effect.\nThere is no error. Let this be certified to the Superior Court, according to law.\nAffirmed.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "MerrimoN, J."
      },
      {
        "text": "Davis, J.,\n(Dissenting). It is with diffidence that I dissent from my senior brethren, but the facts in this case negative any purpose to violate the spirit and intent of the' statute, and I cannot concur in the opinion that the defendant is guilty.\nThe spirit of the law is its life and substance, and the letter is but \u201cthe bark.\u201d As the spirit may be violated without violating the letter, so, \u201c the letter of the law \u201d may be broken without violating its spirit. It has often been held that evasions of the laws are violations \u2014 often the most criminal violations \u2014 of the law, and so it has been held that a violation of the\u201c letter,\u201d when the spirit has not been violated, is-, no crime.\nI regard the law in question as a most wholesome and just-one, intended to protect the youth of the country from the evils of intemperance, with its attendant vices and crimes, and every violation of its intent and meaning \u2014 of its spirit, and purpose \u2014 should be followed by its penalties.\nThe mischief and evil, the prevention of which was con-tempi ated and intended by the statute, was the corruption of youth \u2014 by giving or selling to them intoxicating drinks or liquors; it is this that the spirit and purpose of the law as well as its letter makes criminal; but when it appears, as is conceded in this case, that there was no purpose to violate the law, but a bona fide different purpose, that was to supply a medicine admitted to be necessary and proper for the youth for whom it was honestly prescribed, it \u201cis sticking in the bark \u201d to say that the accused is guilty.\nFor some maladies and poisons, and the bite of some reptiles and poisonous insects, spirituous liquor is 'a specific remedy; and in answer to the suggestion, that in such cases,if the person attacked should be an unmarried minor, he might have to die, because the druggist could not sell or give to him .the absolutely necessary medicine, it was said that, in such cases, the dealer might give or sell it to some one for him. This would he an evasion, and if it would be no crime to evade, it would be no crime to give or sell.\nIn State v. Wray, 72 N. C., 254, it is said that spirituous liquor is an \u201c essential medicine, frequently prescribed by physicians, and often used; and in this case it was bought in good faith as a medicine and was used as such. The letter ,of the law has been broken, but has the spirit of the law been violated ? * * * * In favor of defendants criminal statutes are both contracted and expanded. Now, unless this sale comes within the mischief which the statute was intended to suppress, the defendants are not guilty; for it is a principle of the common law that no one shall suffer criminally for an act in which the mind does not concur.\u201d\nA similar construction has been placed upon other criminal statutes. The statutes against carrying concealed weap.ons (The Code, \u00a71005,) is as absolute and imperative as this, and yet in the case of the State v. Gilbert, 87 N. C., 527, indicted for carrying a pistol concealed, the fact being shown that -there was no criminal purpose to violate the law, the Court said: \u201cIt is true it will always be presumed to be a man\u2019s intention to do what in fact he does, and that he must contemplate the natural consequences of his conduct; but when the jury expressly find the contrary, and that, notwithstanding the act done, there was no criminal intention connected with it, that must put an end to the prosecution.\u201d This is in accord with the construction to be placed upon such statutes as deduced from a review of the decisions upon the subject, to be found in Bishop on Statutory Crimes, \u00a7\u00a7 1019, 1020 and 1021: \u201cWe may presume,\u201d says he, \u201cthat the law makers had in mind the distinction between medicine and drink, and when they forbade the sale of a particular kind of \u201cdrink\u201d or \u201cliquor,\u201d they did not intend to prohibit the sale of medicine necessary to restore life, and restore the sick to health, even though the medicine should happen to be composed of the same ingredients as the drink.\u201d\nI think it may be said to be a common-law rule of construction of criminal statutes, that when the act done is not malum in se, but is proper and necessary in itself, and is not within the mischief designed to be remedied by the statute, it is not criminal. This rule of construction applies to all criminal statutes, general in their terms. Bishop, \u00a7230, sums up the result of the authorities in the simple statement \u201c that whenever the thing done comes not within the mischief which evidently the statute was intended to suppress, though it comes within its words, the person doing the thing i s not punishable. The case must come not only within the words of the statute, but also within its reason and spirit and the mischief it was intended to remedy,\u201d \u00a7232; and for this he cites a long list of authorities. This seems to me the well settled and just rule of construction of statutes, and to which they must bend.\nThis common-law rule of construction gives full force and effect to the spirit of the statute, and controls the letter, and keeps it within the mischief to be remedied. \u201cThere is,\u201d says Bishop, \u201c in perhaps all cases of statutory crime a greater or less mingling of common-law principles with the statutory words. Indeed, there is no place where the principles of the common law prevail, where statutory crime, pure and simple, and as an existence entirely separate from the common law, is known. The statute may be the strong swimmer that boasts of being moved by no current, and of possessing all force in its own arm; still, around it in all its extent, and in all its parts, and constantly bearing it up, is the ever present arm of the common law.\u201d\nI think the rule that \u201c ignorance of the law excuseth not\u201d has no application to this case, as it had to the cases of State v. Dickerson, 1 Hay., 468; State v. Boyett, 10 Ired., 336; State v. Presnell, 12 Ired., 103; State v. Hart, 6 Jones, 309.\nIt is conceded that the defendant was bound to know the law, and that the letter of the statute was broken; but if the sale was made, not as an \u201cintoxicating drink or liquor,\u2019\u2019 but in good faith as a medicine, prescribed by a physician as necessary to cure the sick, then -it was not within the mischief and contemplation of the statute, and therefore not criminal and within its penalties; and for this I think the cases of State v. Wray and State v. Gilbert are conclusive authorities.\nIt appearing in this case t.hat there was no purpose to violate the spirit of the law, for the reasons given I do not think the defendant ought to be convicted.",
        "type": "dissent",
        "author": "Davis, J.,"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "The Attorney General and Mr. E. C. Smith, for the State.",
      "Mr. John F. Hoke, for the defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "THE STATE v. J. H. McBRAYER\nCriminal Intent \u2014 Liquor Dealer- \u2014 Statutes\u2014Physicians\u2014-Sales to Minors.\n1. A practicing physician, who keeps on hand intoxicating liquors for the purposes of sale or profit, is a \u201c dealer\u201d within the meaning of the statute (The Code, \u00a71077,); and if he prescribe for a minor, knowing him to be such, any of said liquors as medicine, and thereupon sells, or gives them to him, he is guilty of a violation of the statute, notwithstanding he acted in good faith.\n2. \u201cWhen a statute plainly forbids an act to be done, and it is done, the-law conclusively implies the guilty intent, although the offender was honestly mistaken as to the nature of his act.\n3. When the nature of the act is plainly made to depend upon the positive, wilful purpose to violate the law, the intent with which it was done will become an essential element of the offence.\n4. The statute, Ch. 115, Laws 1876-7, and Ch. 133, Laws 1873-4, prohibiting the sale of liquors in the town of Shelby, are local, and do-not affect the general law in respect of sales of liquors to minors.\n(Davis, J., dissenting).\n{State v. Wray, 72 N. C.. 253, and State v. Wool, 86 N. C., 708, distinguished ; State v. Dickerson, 1 Hay., 468 (407); State v. Boyett, 10\u2019 Ired., 336; State v. Presnell, 12 Ired., 103: States. Hart, 6 Jones, 389, cited and approved).\nThis was a criminal ACTION, tried before Graves, Judge, at Fall Term, 1886, of Cleveland Superior Court.\nThe defendant was indicted under the statute for selling liquor to a minor. It was in evidence that the minor purchased one half pint of liquor from the defendant in the-town of Shelby, in January or February, 1886; that the defendant was a regular licensed practicing physician and owned a drug-store in Shelby; that the minor called at the defendant\u2019s store and was laboring under a congestion of the-lungs from a severe cold ; that the defendant gave him an examination and was satisfied that he needed the prescription, and prescribed whisky and sold to him a half pint; that at the time of the sale the defendant prescribed how it should be used, and the quantity. It was in evidence that the liquor was sold to the minor as a medicine, and for medical purposes only; that it was necessary for the minor that he should have the spirits, and that whisky was used by doctors as a medicine for such attacks. It was in evidence by the defendant that he invariably used whisky in such cases for his patients, and that he would not have sold it to the minor except for the fact that he honestly believed that it was necessary as a medicine, and that it was not sold or prescribed to the minor for any other purpose. The physician also testified that the minor\u2019s father and mother resided in South Carolina; that he had practiced in their family and knew that lung affections were hereditary in that family; that the minor, who was about 16 years of age, was working at a livery stable in Shelby and had been subject to much exposure.\nThe defendant introduced a statute regulating the. sale .of liquor in the town of Shelby and within two miles thereof, which was passed in 1873-4, Laws 1873-4, Chap. 133, reenacted Chap. 115, Laws 1876-7. This local act prohibited the sale of intoxicating liquors in the town of Shelby except by \u201c practicing physicians and for medicinal purposes only.\u201d\nThe counsel for the defendant asked the Court to charge the Juiy that if he was a regular licensed and practicing physician in the town of Shelby, and sold to the minor the liquor as testified to, and that he honestly believed that it was necessary for the minor to take the liquor as a remedy for his affection of the lungs, and that the defendant, after \u2022examination of the patient, prescribed and sold the liquor for medicinal purposes only, he would not be guilty, and that they must find a verdict for the defendant.\nThe Court refused to give these instructions, or any part thereof, but charged the jury that if the boy was a minor, and unmarried, and the defendant sold him a pint of liquor as testified by the witnesses, he would be guilty of a violation of the statute.\nThe defendant excepted to this charge.\nVerdict of guilty and' judgment thereon, from which the defendant appealed.\nThe Attorney General and Mr. E. C. Smith, for the State.\nMr. John F. Hoke, for the defendant.\nThe opinion, of the Court was filed at last term, but by inadvertence was not-published in the \"Reports of the Decisions of that term. \u2014 Reporter."
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