132 S.W.2d 881 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1939
Conviction is for having possession of whisky in a container to which no stamp tax was affixed; punishment assessed being a fine of one hundred dollars.
The sheriff of Shelby County, Texas, had a telephone conversation with an agent of the Louisiana Liquor Control Board by which he learned that appellant was on his way into Shelby County with a load of untaxed whisky. The officer intercepted appellant on the highway. When he saw the sheriff appellant began backing his car, driving with one hand, and beating with a hammer with the other. The officer ran to the car and found one unbroken pint bottle of whisky, and a quantity of broken glass and spilled whisky in the car. The unbroken bottle had on it the Federal liquor stamp tax and the Louisiana stamp tax, but no evidence attached to the container showing payment of the tax due the State of Texas. *523
The chief complaint is that the officer had no warrant for appellant's arrest and no warrant to search his car, and therefore the search was illegal and the evidence as to what was found as the result thereof should not have been admitted in evidence. He relies on Weeks v. State, 132 Tex.Crim. R.,
"Under the two provisions pointed out it occurs to us that officers now have the same right to search a vehicle upon probable cause as under the former state-wide prohibition law, that is, where the searching officer prior to the search has knowledge or information of facts constituting probable cause. The subject will be found treated in 38 Tex. Jur., Secs. 60-68, p. 85, etc. with many cases annotated in the footnotes which illustrate our holding upon the phases arising under varying facts. It appears from the facts here present that the sheriff had information amounting to probable cause even before he stopped appellant's car." The foregoing remarks are peculiarly applicable here under the facts.
Appellant urges that the question of probable cause should have been submitted to the jury. The facts from which probable cause arose were undisputed. Whether information received by the officers constituted probable cause is a question primarily for the court, but if the facts upon which the officers claim to act are controverted it becomes an issue of fact for the jury under proper instructions. McPherson v. State,
It appears that appellant was transporting the liquor from Louisiana into Texas. Our State's attorney calls attention to Horton v. State, 132 Tex.Crim. R.,
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.