Appellants Lucille Waker and Acie Hamilton, both residents of Etowah County, Alabama, were convicted by a jury of violating 26 U.S.C. § 5205(a) (2). More specifically, they were each convicted of selling eight one-gallon jugs of moonshine whiskey. The Government’s only witness was an agent for the Treasury Department named McGinnis. He testified that on March 29, 1967 he went to the home of Lucille Waker concealed in the trunk of an automobile driven by a man named White. Mr. White went to the house and purchased eight one-gallon jugs of moonshine from Mrs. Waker for $72 which had been furnished by Mc-Ginnis. The agent was able to observe the transaction some distance away by means of a crude periscope which he had run from inside the trunk through the radio grill into the back seat of the automobile.
On March 31, White and McGinnis repeated the same procedure. Using the periscope, the agent saw White buy eight gallons of moonshine from Acie Hamilton for $72. Mrs. Waker was on hand to oversee the transaction. The prosecution was based entirely on testimony by McGinnis as to what he observed on March 29 and March 31. No physical evidence was introduced. Mrs. Waker and Mr. Hamilton both took the stand and categorically denied selling any whiskey to Mr. White at any time. They acknowledged having seen him at Mrs. Waker’s house some time in March.
One of the contentions advanced by counsel for appellants — the one to which he devoted the least space in his brief and the U.S. Attorney none at all — persuades us to reverse for a new trial. 1 After Mrs. Waker had taken the stand and denied ever selling any whiskey to Mr. White, the prosecutor brought up a prior conviction on cross-examination:
Q. I will ask you if in 1965, in Etowah County, Alabama, if you weren’t convicted of violating the prohibition law and fined $100.
Mr. Floyd: We object; incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial; it is not a crime involving moral turpitude.
*930 Mr. Weaver: It is a crime involving the present crime.
The Court; It is a prior similar offense admitted to the jury not for the purpose of proving the guilt or innocence of the defendant in this case; but for the purpose of the jury, at the proper time, and I will so instruct them at the proper time, that they may consider it in considering the intent.
There was further discussion as to the nature of the prior offense with the trial judge finally instructing the jury to assume that it was for possession of taxpaid whiskey in a dry county as opposed to possession of moonshine. Mrs. Waker testified that she pled guilty and was fined $100 for possession of beer in a dry county. In his charge, the trial judge again reminded the jury that the prior offense was relevant only insofar as it might demonstrate that the particular act under consideration was done intentionally and not as a result of mistake, inadvertence, or other innocent reason. 2
Absent a requirement of showing system or intent, evidence of offenses not charged in the indictment is not only inadmissible but prejudicial if admitted. Helton v. United States, 5th Cir. 1955,
In Baker v. United States, 5th Cir. 1955,
We think that there could have been no real question of Trice’s criminal motive if, in fact, he changed the numbers on the stolen automobiles. Proof of the commission of the act carried with it the evident implication of a criminal intent. In such instances, evidence of the perpetration of other like offenses is not needed to- establish criminal motive or intent and is not admissible for such purpose.
Fallen v. United States, 5th Cir. 1955,
While the improper admission of prejudicial evidence would not at first blush seem to affect Acie Hamilton’s case, we have come to the conclusion that he is also entitled to a new trial. The cases against the two defendants went hand-in-hand. Though Mrs. Waker was alleged to have made the March 29 sale and Hamilton the March 31 sale, both sales were alleged to have taken place at the Waker home and both defendants were identified as being present at the March 31 sale. They both testified and corroborated each other by admitting they had seen Mr. White at the Waker home some time in March but denying they ever sold him any whiskey. With the Government’s evidence tying the defendants together and their defenses tying together, the jury could have believed both defendants or disbelieved them both, but it is almost inconceivable that they would have believed one and not the other. Since their cases were to rise and fall as one, the damage done to Mrs. Waker’s credibility by the inadmissible evidence must have had an adverse effect on Hamilton’s chances for acquittal. Put another way, once the jury decided Mrs. Waker was lying, they would have reached the same conclusion as to Hamilton as a matter of course because he was identified by the same Government witness and he gave the same testimony as his co-defendant. Thus, if the decision that Mrs. Waker had lied was influenced by the prior conviction, then the decision that Hamilton had lied was equally tainted. The chance that the prior conviction directly influenced the verdict as to Mrs. Waker and indirectly influenced the verdict as to her co-defendant is great enough to require a new trial for both.
In Cucchia v. United States, 5th Cir. 1927,
The error in the ruling on the evidence was clearly prejudicial as to Cucchia, and should not have been admitted even as against Megna, because the defendants were acting in concert, and they corroborated each other in their testimony. The discrediting of Cucchia as a witness weakened Megna’s defense.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The remaining specifications of error pertain to certain questions asked of Mrs. Waker by the trial judge and a portion of his charge to the jury. Since neither the questioning nor the charge is likely to recur in exactly the same form upon retrial, we find it unnecessary to comment on either.
. Neither the trial judge nor the prosecutor suggested that the prior offense might be admissible for impeachment. The probable explanation is that the prior offense was a misdemeanor and therefore not admissible for such purpose. See Daniel v. United States, 5th Cir. 1959,
. See
also
Burt v. United States, 5th Cir. 1943,
. See, 24A C.J.S. Criminal Law § 1841 and cases cited under fn. 38.
