The defendant is indicted for a violation of the statute (Acts 1891, ch. 290, § 1) which prescribes “ that it shall be unlawful for any person to sell or deal in. tickets issued by any railroad company unless he is a duly authorized agent of said railroad company, and it shall be the duty of said agent to exhibit his authority to sell or deal in said tickets, and the company whose agent he is shall be responsible for his acts as such agent. . That any violation of this law shall be a misdemeanor.”
The important words that limit and define the grievance thus prohibited are “ to sell or deal in tickets issued by any railroad company.” These words imply not. simply the sale of a single such ticket as a person may have or obtain not of purpose to sell the same, but the practice or business of selling such tickets for others, or buying and selling them as is ordinarily done by “ticket dealers or ticket brokers.” If the purpose had been to forbid the sale of a single ticket that a person might have and could not use himself, the appropriate terms used would have been, “ no person shall sell any ticket issued by a railroad company,” or “ it shall be unlawful for any person to sell any ticket issued,” etc., or the like broad and sweeping terms. The phrases, “to sell tickets, to deal in tickets,” imply, ill business parlance, the business of selling or buying and selling such tickets; they imply not particulars — simply a sale — but a multiplicity of .such sales in the sense of a business. The buying and selling of tickets issued by railroad companies to persons traveling over their roads by “ticket dealers” is a common and serious grievance to such companies, and the purpose of the statute is to remedy that evil. It does not extend to the simple sale of a ticket an individual may happen to have that he cannot use. Such sale does not come within the mischief to be remedied. . .
That the statute (§§ 2,3) requires such companies “to redeem the unused portions” of certain classes of such tickets, does *739not extend or enlarge the meaning, and the purpose of the section above interpreted. This requisite is intended simply to provide and facilitate a measure of justice and fair-dealing between such companies and passengers over their respective roads. The scope and purpose of a penal statute cannot be enlarged by mere implication. Such purpose must appear by its terms or necessary implication.
Note. — State v. Clarke (appeal from the Criminal Court of Buncombe County) presented the same question, and was disposed of in same manner.
In this case the indictment fails to charge'the offence prescribed and defined by the statute. It charges the sale of a single ticket, and fails to charge that the defendant sold or bought and sold, or dealt in such tickets, as a business, as it should have done. The special verdict of the jury is in harmony with the imperfect indictment. The Court ought, therefore, to have adjudged that the defendant was not guilty, and- that he go without day. The judgment must be reversed, and judgment entered in favor of the defendant as indicated.
Error.