
    FULLER v. STATE.
    (No. 7365.)
    (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.
    Oct. 17, 1923.)
    Intoxicating liquors <&wkey;l3l — Transportation for medicinal purpose without permit not penal offense.
    The transportation of intoxicating liquors for medicinal purposes, though done without a permit, is not a penal offense, and the refusal of the court in a prosecution therefor to submit the issue of defendant’s purpose, when raised by evidence, was reversible error.
    <gamFor other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
    Appeal from District Court, Milam County.
    L. A. Fuller was convicted of unlawfully transporting intoxicating liquor, and he appeals.
    Reversed and remanded.
    U. S. Hearrell, of Cameron, for appellant.
    A. J. Lewis, Co. Atty., of Cameron, and R. G. Storey, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
   LATTIMORE, J.

Appellant was convicted in the district court of Milam county of unlawfully transporting intoxicating liquor, and his punishment fixed at one year in the penitentiary.

The legal question upon which the decision of this case hinges is identical in effect with that involved in No. 7363. Horak v. State, 255 S. W. 191, this day decided. That appellant transported in his buggy four quarts of liquor, which he claimed to have just bought, is without dispute. He swore that he had gotten it; and was transporting it for medicinal purposes only, and because of a lung trouble. He asked that the' jury be told that, if he was transporting said liquor for medicinal purposes, he should be acquitted. The learned trial judge refused to submit said issue, apparently because appellant had no permit to so transport such liquor. The law does not penalize the transportation of liquor without a permit, and no such charge was made in the indictment. Whether such transportation was bona fide for medicinal purposes or not was a question of fact. The state was not bound to accept appellant’s testimony or claim that he got said liquor for medicinal purposes, but might have combated said proposition by showing, for instance, that he had no such disease, or that whisky was not medicine, or that it had no curative power, or that appellant had gone to no physician for a prescription, or that the quantity he had precluded the idea that it was being transported for medicine, even if it could have such purpose, etc.; but the court cannot refuse to submit the issue as to whether such liquor is being transported for medicinal purposes, when fairly raised by the proof. Mayo v. State, 92 Tex. Cr. R. 624, 245 S. W. 241.

For the error above mentioned, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.  