135 So. 420 | Ala. | 1931
In Ex parte State ex rel. Attorney General (Harbin v. State),
It appears from the opinion of the Court of Appeals on rehearing that this petitioner testified that the liquor was not his, that he did not know where it came from, and that it was the same found in his store by a rural mail carrier that morning after many people had been in there, and that his only connection with it was to remove it to another place in the store after his attention was called to it. That court expressed the view that from such evidence they thought that petitioner merely took hold of the bottle of whisky for the purpose of destroying it. But they thought that such testimony showed that he was guilty of the charge of unlawfully possessing the liquor.
We are, however, of a different opinion, and think that the possession merely for the destruction of the liquor is not made a crime under the statute.
The Court of Appeals,
Writ awarded; reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.