101 Ga. App. 48 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1960
1. Lester Bobo was charged in the City Court of Floyd County in a special accusation with the possession of non-tax-paid whisky on August 14, 1959. The officers testified that they observed the house wherein the defendant resided for some time and that the defendant, whom one of the officers positively identified, came out of his house and out the back gate onto an old railroad bed, or right-of-way, and stooped down, “scratched around” and opened a trap buried in the ground which was located nine feet from the defendant’s back gate and off the property rented by him, that he took therefrom a %-gallon jar containing whisky; that when the officers approached, the defendant ran back into his house and that the officers found 57 gallons of non-tax-paid whisky, all in half-gallon fruit jars, buried in the trap. The evidence thus adduced was sufficient to directly connect the defendant with the whisky, to authorize the finding of “guilty,” and the finding of the jury that the defendant was guilty as charged was not wholly dependent on circumstantial evidence.
2. Special ground 1 complains because the trial court failed to charge without request on the law of circumstantial evidence as embodied in Code § 38-109. The conviction in this case did not depend wholly on circumstantial evidence, and failure of the court to charge in this regard was not, therefore, error. Acker v. State, 78 Ga. App. 819, 820 (e) (52 S. E. 2d 559); King v. State, 86 Ga. App. 786 (1) (72 S. E. 2d 502).
3. Special grounds 2, 3, 'and 4 complain because the trial court charged in substance the provisions of § 11c of the Revenue Tax Act to Legalize and Control Alcoholic Beverages and Liquors (Ga. L. 1937-38, Ex. Sess., pp. 103, 117; Code, Ann., § 58-1056) and the provisions of that portion of the first paragraph of § 11 respecting the duty of the Revenue Commissioner to prescribe suitable stamps and the duty of manufacturers and wholesalers to affix the stamps to the containers of whisky, which provisions are embodied in Code (Ann.) §§ 58-1050 and 58-1051. The argument and contention with regard to these portions of the charge is that they were confusing and misleading to the jury because they inferred that the Revenue Commissioner had made a provision for such stamps when there was no evidence in the record that any such provision had been made, and that the latter portion ex
(a) “There is a legal presumption until the contrary appears that a public officer has regularly and properly performed his official duty. Fine v. Dude County, 198 Ga. 655, 663 (32 S. E. 2d 246).” Southern Airways Co. v. Williams, 213 Ga. 38 (3) (96 S. E. 2d 889). The requirements of § 11 of the Revenue Tax Act to Legalize and Control Alcholic Beverages and Liquors that the Revenue Commissioner provide suitable stamps for denoting the payment of taxes and the requirements that the stamps be affixed by the manufacturer, distiller or wholesaler are mandatory, and in the prosecution of one charged with possessing non-tax-paid whisky, the evidence that the defendant was in possession of a quantity of whisky in containers on which no stamps had been affixed is sufficient to show, when viewed in the light of the aforesaid presumption, that the whisky thus possessed by the defendant was non-tax-paid whisky as charged in the accusation.
(b) The portions of the charge complained of in special grounds 2, 3, and 4 were not erroneous for any of the reasons assigned, since they simply instructed the jury as to this duty of the Revenue Commissioner to prescribe the stamps and the duty of the manufacturer, distiller or wholesaler to affix them, and these portions of the charge were not subject to the criticism that they raised an inference, that the defendant was within one of these categories. The court fully charged that the burden was on the State to show that the defendant was in actual possession of non-tax-paid whisky.
4. The fifth special ground of the motion for a new trial complains of the following portion of the charge: “I charge you further that the owner or tenant in possession of a house or residence is presumed to be the owner or possessor of all personal property, including liquor found on the premises or
Judgment affirmed.