37 F.2d 248 | 10th Cir. | 1929
The appellant was convicted on the first count of an indictment which charged him with the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor on March 31, 1928, at a place near his residence and on premises occupied by him; also on the see-’ ond count, identical in temfs with the first count except as to quantity, the first count charging that the liquor so possessed by appellant was about 190 gallons of whiskey and the second that it was about 20 gallons of whiskey. The third count, on winch appellant was acquitted by. the jury, charged appellant with manufacturing intoxicating liquors on April 14,1928, at or near the premises in Adams County, Colorado, occupied by appellant as his residence.
As to the third count, on which appellant was acquitted, it appears that prohibition agents and police officers found a dismantled still near appellant’s residence, and uneontradicted testimony discloses that it was put there in its dismantled state at the direction of appellant’s brother, Roy, who, it seems, was manufacturing whiskey on leased premises about fifteen miles away. When the lessor learned that whiskey was being manufactured on the leased premises he notified the lessee and Roy Bergedorff that the manufacturing plant and everything connected therewith must be immediately moved off, and then it was that Roy dismantled the still and had it hauled to appellant’s premises, where it remained in its dismantled state. So that the trial judge advised the jury that he was in great doubt whether there was any evidence to support the third count, and the jury acquitted appellant on that count. At thet close of all of the testimony the court, over the exception of appellant, refused to direct verdicts of not guilty on the first and second counts, as well as the third. The court’s refusal to so instruct is assigned as error.
It appears that appellant’s residence during the time in question was on á 40-aere tract and in its northwest corner; that about March 31,1928, prohibition agents and State police officers went to appellant’s place and made a search. The greater part of the 40 acres was in alfalfa. They found automobile tracks leading eastward from the vicinity of the house to the east line fence of the 40 acres, and over the fence, 56 feet beyond it, in a creek bottom, they dug up 28 kegs of moonshine whiskey, which they removed. This testimony was offered in support of the first count. One of the police-officers also found, on the same visit, four kegs of moonshine also buried in the sand at another point. This appears to have been on the 40' acres. The officers testified that they were attracted to this last place by indications on the ground that something had been dragged to that point. One Edson testified without contradiction that these four kegs were turned over to him by Roy Bergedorff at a time when Roy ¡had several kegs of whiskey in an automobile in the alfalfa field below the house; and that
Reversed and remanded.