
    Rosenbaum v. The State.
    The act to regulate the retailing of spirituous liquors, &c., approved March 4, 1853, does not prescribe any penalty for selling spirituous liquors on Sunday.
    
    Crimes and misdemeanors, in this state, must be defined, and the punishment therefor fixed, by statute, and not otherwise.
    APPEAL from the Dearborn Court of Common Pleas.
    
      Saturday, December 31.
   Stuart, J.

It is charged that the appellant, being a licensed grocer, &c., sold spirituous liquors on Sunday. Motion to quash the information overruled. Plea of guilty, and judgment accordingly.

The same defect exists in this case as in Divine v. The State at the last term, and the plea operates here as the evidence did in Hare v. The State to cure that defect.

Perhaps the same doctrine might be beneficially carried still further. It may be doubtful whether by the plea the defendant has not shown affirmatively that he is not within any of the provisoes or exceptions in the statute. The plea admits that he has violated its substantive provisions. For the Courts to presume in his favor in the face of his own admissions, might look too much like subtlety. The whole record must be taken together; and it does not appear that the courts should presume against anything which the record affirmatively discloses. However, we reserve that point for future consideration.

If there were any unfairness in procuring the plea of guilty, that would present another question.

On the other hand, there is nothing in the revision that we are aware of, and surely no consideration of sound policy, which should induce the courts to relax the strictness required in all the substantials of criminal pleading and evidence. Any other rule would be pernicious in its tendency. The harmless decision of to-day becomes the dangerous precedent of to-morrow. The people have no better security than in holding the officers of the state to a reasonable degree of care, precision, and certainty in prosecuting the citizen for a violation of the law.

Thus regarded, there is a fatal defect for which the information should have been quashed. By the sixth section it is provided that a license granted under the provisions of the first section shall not authorize the sale of spirituous liquors on Sunday. By the fifth section the penalty only applies to a violation of the preceding sections. On the well-known principle of strict construction applicable to penal statutes, we cannot extend this penalty to the subsequent sections, though this rule seems to be modified by the R. S. of 1852. The subsequent penalties are all applied to specific cases, and do not extend to the sixth section. We cannot seek a penalty in other statutes on the same subject, for they are all repealed by the nineteenth section. Nor can we fall back on the common law; for crimes and misdemeanors must be defined, and the punishment therefor fixed, by statute, and “ not otherwise.” R. S. 1852, vol. 1, c. 61, s. 2. The matter then, in brief, stands thus: The sixth section points out an of-fence, but there is no statutory penalty attached to it, and under our laws there can be no other penalty. As nothing can be taken by intendment, it is a casus omissus of which neither the responsibility nor the remedy rests with the judiciary.

J. Hyman, for the appellant.

E. Dumont, for the state.

It is suggestéd by counsel that retailing on Sunday may perhaps be a breach of the bond; audit might be further suggested that perhaps the offender might be liable under the ninth section for a nuisance. But as these questions are not judicially before us, we cannot speak with authority.”

In the form the charge is made, it is cleai'Iy unauthorized, and should have been quashed.

Per Curiam.

The judgment is reversed. Cause re manded, &c. 
      
      
        Ante, p. 240.
     
      
      
        Ante, p. 241.
     
      
       The judgments in three other cases of Rosenbaum v. The State were reversed, on this day, for the reasons given in this ease.
     