Judges: Parker
Filed Date: 1/27/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The first question presented upon this appeal is whether such demurrer should not have been sustained. It is a familiar rule that the complaint must state “ in a plain and direct manner the facts constituting the cause of action.” Code, § 2986. In the complaint before us the statements of what the defendant did do not show any violation of the excise law, nor any right to a judgment against him for the penalty claimed. The defendant might have sold to Charles White and others, on the day charged, the intoxicating liquors specified, and yet have not violated any law. Something further than a sale of intoxicating liquors must appear to show an illegal sale. It must appear that they were sold without a license, or, if a license was had, that less than five,gallons were sold at the time, or that the amount sold was to be “ drunk or used on the premises,” before the sale can be said to be unlawful. Laws 1892, c. 401, § 31. Also such' sale to Charles White was not necessarily a violation of any of ■ the many prohibitions contained in section 32 of that act. It is manifest, therefore, that unless the phrases “ unlawfully ” and “ contrary to law ” can be deemed an averment of all the omitted facts necessary to complete the charge, the complaint fails to state a cause of action. Such phrases are a mere statement of a conclusion of law. It is true that “facts may be stated according to their legal effect.” So a resultant fact, or “a conclusion of fact,” may be pleaded. Brown v. Champlin, 66 N. Y. 214; Thayer v. Gile, 42 Hun, 268. But that is very far from holding that a mere conclusion of law may be stated as a fact. To aver that the defendant sold liquor contrary to law states no facts. The facts are in the mind of the pleader; his conclusion merely is stated in the pleading. The object of the complaint is to apprise the defendant of the facts upon which the plaintiff relies for a cause of action, so that he may meet and disprove them. In the case before us, if the averment that the sale is contrary to law is to be deemed an averment of all the omitted facts necessary to show that the sale made to Charles White on the day charged was a violation of the excise law, the plaintiff would have the right under it to show either one of a dozen modes by which such a violation occurred, not one of which can be discovered from his complaint; and the defendant would be left in ignorance of which one, or how many,, the plaintiff expected to prove, until he entered upon the trial. We think that it would defeat the very purpose of a complaint to allow such an averment to have the effect which the plaintiff claims for it.
Judgment of the county court and of the justice’s court reversed, with costs.
All concur.