Carody v. Commonwealth

198 Ky. 440 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The appellants, together with one Dan Bogsdon, were indicted for the offense of unlawfully manufacturing intoxicating liquors. When the case was called for trial in the court below they entered a demurrer to the indictment, which was followed by the filing of a plea of former jeopardy. The court sustained the demurrer and on motion of the Commonwealth’s attorney the prosecution was referred to the grand jury. No action was then taken, or requested by the defendants, on the plea of former jeopardy.

The grand jury found and returned another indictment against all the parties charging the same offense, under which they were all tried. By verdict of the jury Bogsdon was acquitted and the appellants found guilty, their punishment being fixed at a fine of $300.00 and confinement of five months in jail each. The refusal to them of a new trial resulted in this appeal.

The appellants complain of error of the trial court; (1) In failing to pass on their plea of former jeopardy; (2) in instructing the jury; (3) in refusing a directed verdict of acquittal.

It will be unnecessary to consider the plea of former jeopardy, or upon what it was made to rest. This plea was only filed under the first indictment, and it was not passed on as it required the introduction of proof which was never offered, for that indictment went out on demurrer without a trial under it; and as the plea of former jeopardy was never filed or renewed by the appellants after the return of the second indictment under which they were tried and convicted, and the court was never asked to pass on it, it was never acted on and could not properly have been; consequently, the failure of the court to pass on it was not error. The overruling by the court of the appellants’ motion to dismiss the indictment *442was not error. Such a motion could not take the place of a formal plea of former jeopardy.

The refusal of the peremptory instruction was not error as the evidence .strongly conduced to prove the appellants’ guilt. The building in the city of Louisville in which they were engaged in the manufacture of whiskey was entered and searched by police officers under a search warrant properly issued. A still was- found in operation on the second floor, also quite a quantity of mash and a number of kegs of new moonshine whiskey.

The appellants were on the first floor when the officers entered, as the latter testified, and had in their possession a small quantity of whiskey. They were garbed in working clothes, which were freshly smeared in many places with mash smelling of the still. They then, as the officers further testified, voluntarily admitted their employment by the owner of the still to assist in operating it, but on their trial they denied such admission and claimed that they were only employed to keep the first floor of the building clean, and had no connection with the operation of the still and knew nothing of its presence in the building; and that they were Roumanians and talked English poorly, which might have led the officers to believe they made a confession of guilt.

In brief, the jury could not reasonably have rendered any other verdict than that returned by them, and the punishment awarded was not, as claimed by appellants, so severe as to give any appearance of being the result of passion or prejudice. The instructions were free of substantial error and correctly gave all the law of the case.

No reason is shown for disturbing the verdict and the judgment is affirmed.