85 So. 475 | Ala. | 1920
A Briscoe automobile, claimed by appellant, was condemned as contraband under the provisions of the act "to further suppress the evils of intemperance," approved January 25, 1919 (Gen. Acts, p. 6 et seq.), and its sale ordered. The claimant appeals. The automobile was seized by the sheriff of Chilton county while being used by J. H. Reeves and another to transport a large quantity of prohibited liquors through that county. The appellant, claimant, asserted its unqualified ownership of the car, and that the use of the car on this occasion was an wholly unauthorized appropriation of the car. The testimony was taken before the register, the court considering the cause upon the written evidence thus taken.
The evidence established appellant's ownership of the car. The evidence was also conclusive to these effects: That neither Reeves nor his companion was an agent or employé of the appellant, and that Reeves took the new car, just received, from in front of appellant's place of business in Montgomery, without the consent, notice, or knowledge of the owner of the car or of any agent or representative of the owner. The positive evidence of Beall and Finney, the former general manager and the latter a salesman of the appellant, is to the effect that they did not know or have any knowledge of Reeves' or his companion's unlawful purpose to use the car in the transportation of prohibited liquors, and did not authorize or sanction such appropriation of the car. Reeves testified that he took the car on his own unaided initiative and without any authority whatsoever. These features of the testimony of the named witnesses were uncontradicted; and, unless its credibility was destroyed by other evidence, submitted by the state, forbade the condemnation of this car under the act cited; for it has been decided in State v. Hughes,
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.